DBT Skills Collection

Distress Tolerance Skills

The following group of DBT Skills can be described as distress tolerance skills, which cause distraction from the situation by applying the acronym ACCEPT:

  • A - Activities
  • C - Contributing
  • C - Comparisons
  • E - Emotions
  • P - Pushing Away
  • T - Thoughts

Distraction through Activities - Get yourself moving:

  • Watch the lights of the city in the evening - from far away, reflected on the water and above you the stars
  • Mindfulness exercises
  • Watch old movies / watch black and white movies
  • Sitting by the water, going for a walk and letting your thoughts drift away
  • Play video games
  • Watch Anime movies
  • Go to the sea
  • Do breathing exercises (e.g. conscious slow and deep breathing, Wim Hof Method)
  • Go to a fair
  • Clean up
  • Play Sudoku
  • Memorize
  • Drive around in your car - just driving and listening to music
  • Autogenic training
  • Baking and Cooking
  • Walk barefoot in the woods
  • Tinkering
  • Begleri (Greek game of skill)
  • Prepare gifts for close people
  • Boxing
  • Write a letter / e-mail
  • Read books in the library
  • Ironing
  • Stroll around your city
  • Chat with your loved ones
  • Sing in a choir
  • Play computer games
  • Looking out the window to the sky and count clouds
  • Consciously listening to the sounds of nature
  • Feeling nature with all senses
  • Use the advantages and disadvantages of the weather (heat, cold etc.)
  • Walking through vineyards
  • Playing an instrument (piano, drums, guitar, ...)
  • Do an activity that you enjoy or have always wanted to do (e.g. going to a trampoline hall, stand-up-paddling, etc.)
  • Draw any route on the city map and then walk, jog, cycle along this route.
  • Learning a foreign language
  • Take a trip
  • Hug a tree
  • Thoroughly clean up, rearrange or muck out a particular room
  • Shopping
  • Play or watch football, basketball, soccer, rugby, ice hockey, etc.
  • Drink an Energy Drink
  • Practice relaxation exercises
  • Cook your favorite dish
  • Look at something (looking into the washing machine, into the wood-burning stove, into an aquarium, out of the window or into the sky...)
  • Decorate something
  • Wear something comfortable
  • Plan something (an excursion, a trip, a special hour in which you only take time for yourself, a party, a surprise...)
  • Repair something
  • Write something (letter, diary, poem, history, pro and contra list, shopping list...)
  • Do something crazy
  • Ride a bike
  • Watch TV
  • Play fidget spinner
  • Watch movies (nothing sad)
  • Pinball
  • Photograph something interesting
  • View photos
  • Breathe fresh air or sea air consciously
  • Drink cappuccino or coffee in peace
  • Write down feelings, thoughts and feelings like a kind of poem
  • Crochet
  • Handwork
  • Handicraft projects
  • Housework (ironing, cleaning, washing dishes, chopping wood, doing some repairs, cleaning up, washing clothes, cooking...)
  • Hot/cold showers
  • Chop wood
  • Listen to audio books
  • Playing online games
  • Walking in the rain
  • Walking in the forest, pausing and taking a deep breath
  • Walking in nature, looking, letting your eyes wander, looking for sunlight
  • Go to a nice café
  • Go to an amusement park, the movies, the theatre
  • Viewing candlelights
  • Put on your favorite clothes
  • Play the piano
  • Puzzle books: crossword puzzles, Sudoku
  • Put headphones on and listen to music really loud
  • Strength training, abdominal muscle exercises, push-ups, Thera-band, knee bends, self-defence techniques, boxing
  • Doodle around on a piece of paper
  • Baking cakes or cookies - regardless of the season
  • Click pen
  • Let yourself be massaged
  • Learning for school or work
  • Read a book
  • Watch people in a park walking by
  • Write songs
  • Dance
  • Maintain a list of beautiful moments
  • Read funny paperbacks
  • Watch funny videos on Youtube or movies on Netflix
  • Make yourself pretty, put on make-up, do your hair
  • Painting
  • Painting - Adult coloring pages
  • Paint - Coloring Pages
  • Paint - Coloring pages for kids and adults
  • Paint - point to point
  • Paint - Connecting points
  • Painting (with colored pencils, pencils, finger paints, pastel chalks, chalk, acrylic paints, emulsion paints...)
  • Painting by numbers
  • Painting Mandala
  • Meditation in completely darkened rooms without external stimuli
  • Walking the dog
  • Playing with a pet or cuddling
  • Talking to someone, fooling around, just being there, playing, sports,
  • Playing with a child, doing handicrafts, having fun
  • Assemble furniture
  • Moorland and mudflat walks
  • Go out into the fresh air at sunrise in the morning
  • Ride a motorbike
  • Listen to music and sing along
  • Make music
  • Sewing / Tailoring
  • Nordic walking
  • Online Sudoku
  • Crumple/tear paper
  • Prepare and read pros and cons lists
  • Progressive muscle relaxation
  • Cleaning, tidying, arranging and thus making and keeping the home beautiful
  • Puzzles, counting puzzle pieces
  • Renovation (e.g. repainting a room, sanding down a table)
  • Read schmaltzy novels
  • Go for a walk (alone or not alone) and listening to music
  • Play parlor games
  • Sports/training (badminton, table football, table tennis, volleyball, football, jogging, boxing, swimming, running, walking, cycling, skating, dancing, horse riding, weight training, hiking, aerobics, Zumba, yoga, etc.)
  • Petting enclosures in the zoo
  • Knitting
  • Writing a diary
  • Dancing, Zumba or Bailaro
  • Go for a cup of tea
  • Phoning with friends/family
  • Deep breathing in rhythm 3-3-6
  • Watch an animal documentary
  • Spend an evening together with good friends
  • Washing or folding laundry
  • Watch wrestling (distraction)
  • Yoga
  • Drawing
  • Zen and Anti-stress coloring pages for adults
  • Go to the lake, look at the water and let your thoughts drift

Distraction through Contributing - Support others to distract yourself. For example, you can offer help or prepare a surprise:

  • Encourage other people when they do something that makes sense and is positive for yourself
  • Recognize and praise the achievements of others
  • Helping to wash the dishes
  • Helping to put on and take off the laundry, ironing
  • Chatting, writing in a forum
  • Making or wrapping a gift
  • Talk to close friends
  • Talk to parents/ mother/ father
  • Plan or give away a joint activity
  • Write a letter/ e-mail or SMS/ WhatsApp
  • Visit or call a friend
  • Getting hugged without having to talk
  • Give someone a present (e.g. handicraft, paint, buy flowers)
  • Send a card to someone
  • Encourage someone
  • Listening to / encouraging someone
  • Doing someone a favor
  • Mending clothes or darning socks
  • Meet people who are good for you, who understand you
  • Cuddle with your partner and hold him tight
  • Cuddling with the kids
  • Doing something with the family
  • Talk to former fellow patients from the medical center
  • Play something with a friend (e.g. board games)
  • Self-help groups
  • Ask for something or help
  • Embrace loving people
  • Going among people
  • Query vocabulary or have it queried

Distraction through Comparisons - Think of people who are worse off. For example, read the BILD newspaper, deal with misfortunes and famines or think about how bad things used to be ("Today I have a nice apartment, in the past ..."):

  • Others feel sorry for me - I do something to make me feel better!
  • They have the same chances as me, but don't take it!
  • Reality check
  • What do I have that others don't?
  • What else could be worse?
  • I have something that others don't have (e.g. a job, a nice apartment...)
  • Compared to the past, I have achieved a lot today (e.g. I have completed an apprenticeship, I have some good friends...)

Distraction through Emotions - You can "replace" a painful situation by consciously leaving the situation inwardly for a while and creating situations for yourself which can create a pleasant feeling. It is important that you promise yourself to come back to the distressed situation at a later time and deal with it:

  • Act contrary to the feeling
  • Changing the moment
  • Watching schmaltzy movies or soap operas
  • Watch a funny movie
  • Read a novel
  • Write something (e.g. diary, letter, poem)
  • Listen to happy music
  • Write down thoughts/feelings and put them away until the next conversation with a friend or until the next therapy - distract yourself until then or maybe put them in the safe
  • Keeping a feelings log
  • Children's program, funny series, watch a funny movie
  • Light smiling
  • Do something good for yourself (drink something warm in a café, take a warm bath, give yourself a flower, go to sleep, get a massage, buy a new diary, put yourself under the tanning bed, etc.)
  • Let a friend cheer you up
  • When I have negative feelings, I consciously try to create more pleasant feelings...

Distraction through Push Away:

  • Build a wall between you and the situation in your imagination (Important! Deal with the situation at a later time)
  • Push it aside (not too long, otherwise the displacement mechanism becomes like a "ball that you want to hold under water and which then pushes up all the more violently!)

Distraction through Thoughts (Brain-Flick-Flacks) - Distract yourself through thought games and thus step out of the emotional crisis:

  • "Thinking around the corner"
  • Diving into my fantasy world
  • Accepting the situation
  • Reduce to a minimum everything that needs to be done
  • Get everything off my chest
  • Working with skills... mindfulness, dealing with emotions and self-esteem
  • Saying no sometimes
  • Unconditional love
  • Push it aside (not too long)
  • Paint any points on a sheet of paper and try to draw a figure by connecting them
  • Pray
  • Hang paper clips together and take them apart again as quickly as possible
  • Allow the bad day to pass by, it will pass and the next one has a chance to get better
  • Build up the willpower to say "No, I never want to fall back into that deep black hole!"
  • Just cry - frees the soul
  • Letting go of emotional suffering
  • Search for something on the Internet (or do puzzles or skill games)
  • Count backwards in steps of 7
  • IQ tests
  • Juggling (with balls, with silk scarves)
  • Set small goals that you can achieve and then be happy about them - no matter how small they are e.g. watering flowers, making beds
  • Concentration or skill games
  • Solve crossword puzzles or Sudoku
  • Create your own crossword puzzle
  • Light smiling
  • Allow lethargy
  • Solve math problems
  • Name 10 female names beginning with the letter "A"
  • Don't be too hard on yourself
  • Switch off your guilty conscience, let yourself drift and let go
  • Taking pleasure in little things
  • Become aware that you are loved - by family, friends, animals - even when you are ill
  • Just keep telling yourself I'm fine
  • Accepting yourself as you are - and that is good as you are
  • Be happy about everything you have achieved
  • Writing a diary
  • Translate texts from a different language
  • Writing texts with the other hand or foot
  • Dreaming
  • Cry and then go out strengthened

 

Important Disclaimer:
This is an information website and is maintained and supported by affected persons, volunteers and helpers. Under no circumstances does the information replace professional advice or treatment by trained and recognized doctors. We do not offer medical, legal or psychological advice. Our compilations and information are based on our own experience, personal assessments and Internet research. The information & skills presented are intended to help you and support you in your everyday high-stress situations or dangerous situations. And, to encourage you - you are not alone!
The contents of stress-killers.com cannot and may not be used to make diagnoses or start treatments on your own.
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