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OUTLINE Working with emotions Schema Schema Avoidance The Antidote Conceptual framework/Schema model
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OUTLINE Teaching Mindfulness in Therapy (Clinical Applications) Beginning to practice Key Elements Of Mindfulness Techniques Designing Exercises for Patients
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Working with emotions
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Schema protect us from experiencing emotional pain or deep emotions that is found in the recesses of our unconscious make us behave and think in ways that keeps us from these emotions
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Schema Avoidance The tendency to avoid intense emotional setbacks triggered by deep emotions hidden in the unconscious
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The Antidote Mindfulness Getting in touch with your feelings and thoughts It counters schema avoidance
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Conceptual framework /Schema model Two Methods Wise reflection Sustained Awareness
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Teaching Mindfulness in Therapy (Clinical Applications)
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I. Beginning to practice 1.Remembering to Be 2.Getting Motivated 3.Practicing 4.Therapist Credentials
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I.1: Remembering to Be The instruction to slow down and notice what is happening in the present involves being rather than doing.
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I.2: Getting Motivated The patient must recognize the grounds and be willing to make a priority Therapy usually starts at a time of ‘creative hopelessness’
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I.3: Practicing Practicing mindfulness has its catch – we never get it right and we never get it wrong either. This idea of ‘practicing’ suggests that we can steadily progress, but lifelong repetition is part of practice.
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I.4: Therapist Credentials the therapist has to have spent a lot of time in formal meditation practice has to have learned to work with a skilled teacher the need for them to practice mindfulness may depend on how much mindfulness we bring into therapy
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II. Key Elements Of Mindfulness Techniques 1.Awareness 2.Present Experience 3.Acceptance
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II.1: Awareness Stop It is a way of preparing our mind for mindfulness awareness We may also slow down to develop mindfulness so that it could be observed in greater detail
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II.1: Awareness Observe As we become conscious of our attention, we can then begin to note feelings and thoughts that arise naturally within ourselves
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II.1: Awareness Return When we notice we have become out of focus, we return awareness to its original focal point and watch where the mind takes us from there
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II.2: Present Experience One of the main goals of mindfulness is to be unified with ourselves All exercises bring awareness to the present This practice is therefore training attention to center on the present moment
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II.3: Acceptance This means to consider our experience without judgments or preferences It relies wholly on full recognition of our experience But this is always incomplete because we never stop judging
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III. Designing Exercises for Patients This selection is more of art than science The techniques chosen must fit in the patient’s lifestyle Here, the therapist can point out experiences the patient is avoiding, rejecting or not acclaiming
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III. Designing Exercises for Patients A good mindfulness exercise brings the patient into a closer, more aware relationship to any experience The techniques should be negotiated with the patient and progress be monitored Misunderstandings that cause the patient to suspend sessions should be addressed
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