Values Checklist

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A checklist to help clients/patients identify their values.

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Mandalas

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Mandalas

 

[ originally from http://www.arttherapyblog.com/art-therapy-activities/making-mandala-art-for-self-discovery-and-healing/#more-44 ]

 

The core of mandala designs is the circle. You are not bound by any particular colors or materials to create your mandala art, so let your feelings and instincts guide you through the creative process.

 

Decide What Art Materials You Need

 

You will first need to select your drawing materials. Again, you are not limited here…some ideas to help you get started might be markers, watercolors, pastels, colored pencils, oils, etc. You will also need something to draw or paint on like a piece of paper, canvas, poster board, or anything else you can think of. I would suggest something around the size of 12×18 inches. If you have a compass lying around (or anything that will help you draw a circle), that would be helpful as well. Hint: you can use anything round and solid…a cup, a pan, or anything else that will help you draw nice clean circles.

 

A Good Location Is Important

 

It is also recommended that you create your mandala in a space that provides the least amount of distractions. The experience is meant to be a personal one. Unless, of course, you are participating in a group mandala.

 

Let Your Feelings & Emotions Inspire You

 

Again, there are no rules or constrictions with regard to mandala designs. You don’t have to use only circles, though your art should have some semblance of a circular design. Otherwise, you can do whatever strikes you. In fact, it’s encouraged to let your feelings inspire your mandala art and designs.

 

Your finished mandala will represent and reflect who you were at the time of creation. If you want, you can give your mandala a title and date of creation.

 

Now That You’ve Finished Your Mandala Art Activity

 

Once you’ve finished your mandala art activity, take note of the colors you used. Recognize, maybe even write down, what the predominant colors are in your mandala. Also take note of the least-used color(s). Now look at the images and shapes you’ve created. Take notice of any hard and soft lines, jagged or smooth edges. Are there any areas of high contrast? Now write down, in detail, your feelings and/or memories when you think about the colors, shapes, images, and designs on your mandala. You should be able to make some connections between your mandala and the feelings and emotions that you experienced while creating it.

 

This is meant to be a very personal and introspective activity and process, so the results are bound to vary. Again, it’s important to recognize that your mandala is a symbol, a reflection, of who you were when you created it. Ideally, the process of creating the mandala results in some form of self-healing, self-expression, and/or self-exploration.

 

Good Luck!

 

Mandala Template

 

Relaxation Techniques For Relief Of Anxiety & Stress

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© Susan M. Lark M.D.

(Excerpted from The Menopause Self Help Book)

Women with increased levels of anxiety and nervous tension often need to develop more effective ways of dealing with day to day stresses the minor everyday pressures that women with a healthy emotional balance handle easily but that can be overwhelming for women whose anxiety responses are easily triggered. Such stress can include riding in an elevator, being in crowds, going to the dentist, or any situation, place, or person that sparks a woman’s emotional charge. Often these charged issues evoke anxiety, fear, or upset feelings. Moreover, significant lifestyle changes death of a loved one, divorce, job loss, financial problems, major changes in personal relationships can be almost impossible to handle when a woman is already feeling anxious and tense. Being unable to cope with stress effectively can also damage a woman’s self esteem and self confidence. A woman with anxiety episodes may feel a decreasing sense of self-worth as her ability to handle her usual range of activities diminishes. Life stresses themselves don’t necessarily change, so how a woman copes with them can really make the difference.

How Stress Affects the Body Your emotional and physical reactions to stress are partly determined by the sensitivity of your sympathetic nervous system. This system produces the fight or flight reaction in response to stress and excitement, speeding up and heightening the pulse rate, respiration, muscle tension, glandular function, and circulation of the blood. If you have recurrent anxiety symptoms, either major or minor lifestyle and emotional upsets may cause an overreaction of your sympathetic system. If you have an especially stressful life, your sympathetic nervous system may always be poised to react to a crisis, putting you in a state of constant tension. In this mode, you tend to react to small stresses the same way you would react to real emergencies. The energy that accumulates in the body to meet this “emergency” must be discharged in order to bring your body back into balance. Repeated episodes of the fight or flight reaction deplete your energy reserves and, if they continue, cause a downward spiral that can lead to emotional burnout and eventually complete exhaustion. You can break this spiral only by learning to manage stress in a way that protects and even increases your energy level.

Techniques for Relaxation Many patients have asked me about techniques for coping more effectively with stress. Although I send some women for counseling or psychotherapy when symptoms are severe, most are looking for practical ways to manage stress on their own. They want to take responsibility for handling their own problems observing their inadequate methods of dealing with stress, learning new techniques to improve their habits, and then practicing these techniques on a regular basis.

I have included relaxation and stress reduction exercises in many of my patient programs. The feedback has been very positive; many patients report an increased sense of well being from these self help techniques. They also note an improvement in their physical health. This chapter includes fourteen stress reduction exercises for women with anxiety. They will take you through a series of specific steps to help alleviate your symptoms. The exercises will teach you the following helpful techniques: focusing and meditation, grounding techniques (how to feel more centered), exercises that help you to relax and release muscle tension, erasure techniques (how to erase old programs), healing the inner child, visualizations, and affirmations. These techniques will help you cope with stress more efficiently, make your thoughts more calm and peaceful, and help you learn to relax, while you build self esteem and self confidence. Try them all; then decide which ones produce the greatest benefits for you. Practice these on a regular basis.

Quieting the Mind and Body Women with recurring symptoms of anxiety and nervous tension are usually barraged by a constant stream of negative “self-talk.” Throughout the day your conscious mind may be inundated with thoughts, feelings, and fantasies that trigger feelings of upset. Many of these thoughts replay unresolved issues of health, finances, or personal and work relationships. This relentless mental replay of unresolved issues can reinforce the anxiety symptoms and be exhausting. It is important to know how to shut off the constant inner dialogue and quiet the mind.

The first two exercises require you to sit quietly and engage in a simple repetitive activity. By emptying your mind, you give yourself a rest. Meditation allows you to create a state of deep relaxation, which is very healing to the entire body. Metabolism slows, as do physiological functions such as heart rate and blood pressure. Muscle tension decreases. Brain wave patterns shift from the fast beta waves that occur during a normal active day to the slower alpha waves, which appear just before falling asleep or in times of deep relaxation. If you practice these exercises regularly, they can help relieve anxiety by resting your mind and turning off upsetting thoughts.

Exercise 1: Focusing Select a small personal object that you like a great deal. It might be a jeweled pin or a simple flower from your garden. Focus all your attention on this object as you inhale and exhale slowly and deeply for one to two minutes. While you are doing this exercise, try not to let any other thoughts or feelings enter your mind. If they do, just return your attention to the object. At the end of this exercise you will probably feel more peaceful and calmer. Any tension or nervousness that you were feeling upon starting the exercise should be diminished.

Exercise 2: Meditation

  • ·Sit or lie in a comfortable position.
  • ·Close your eyes and breathe deeply. Let your breathing be slow and relaxed.
  • ·Focus all your attention on your breathing. Notice the movement of your chest and abdomen in and out.
  • ·Block out all other thoughts, feelings, and sensations. If you feel your attention wandering, bring it back to your breathing.
  • ·As you inhale, say the word “peace” to yourself, and as you exhale, say the word “calm.” Draw out the pronunciation of the word so that it lasts for the entire breath. The word “peace” sounds like p-e-e-a-a-a-c-c-c-e-e-e. The word “calm” sounds like: c-a-a-a-l-l-l-l-m-m-m. Repeating these words as you breathe will help you to concentrate.
  • ·Continue this exercise until you feel very relaxed.

 

Grounding Techniques

Many women suffering from anxiety episodes often feel ungrounded and disorganized. There is a pervasive sense of “things falling apart.” When anxiety episodes occur, it often takes a concentrated effort just to get through the day, accomplishing such basic daily tasks as cooking, housecleaning, taking care of children, or getting to work or school. The next two exercises teach you grounding techniques that will help you feel more centered and focused. Practicing either of these exercises will allow you to organize your energies and proceed more effectively with your daily routine.

Exercise 3: Oak Tree Meditation

  • ·Sit in a comfortable position, your arms resting at your sides.
  • ·Close your eyes and breathe deeply. Let your breathing be slow and relaxed.
  • ·See your body as a strong oak tree. Your body is solid like the wide, brown trunk of the tree. Imagine sturdy roots growing from your legs and going down deeply into the earth, anchoring your body. You feel solid and strong, able to handle any stress.
  • ·When upsetting thoughts or situations occur, visualize your body remaining grounded like the oak tree. Feel the strength and stability in your arms and legs.
  • ·You feel confident and relaxed, able to handle any situation.

Exercise 4: Grounding Cord Meditation

  • ·Sit in a comfortable position, your arms resting comfortably at your sides.
  • ·Close your eyes and breathe deeply. Let your breathing be slow and relaxed.
  • ·Imagine a thick wide cord attaching itself to the base of your spine. This is your grounding cord. It can be a thick piece of rope, a tree trunk, or any other material that feels strong and stable. Make sure your cord is wide and sturdy enough. Then imagine a thick metal hook attaching itself to the end of your cord.
  • ·Now visualize your grounding cord dropping down two hundred feet below the earth and hooking on to the solid bedrock below the earth.
  • ·Continue to breathe deeply and notice the sense of peace and stability that your grounding cord can bring you.
  • ·Replace the cord with a new one each day or whenever you feel your emotions getting out of control.

Releasing Muscle Tension

The next three exercises will help you get in touch with your areas of muscle tension and then help you learn to release this tension. This is an important sequence for women with emotional symptoms of anxiety and nervous tension since habitual emotional patterns cause certain muscle groups to tense and tighten. For example, if a person has difficulty in expressing feelings, the neck muscles may be chronically tense. A person with a lot of repressed anger may have chest pain and tight chest muscles. Contracted muscles limit movement and energy flow in the body, since they tend to have decreased blood circulation and oxygenation and accumulate an excess of waste products, such as carbon dioxide and lactic acid. Therefore, muscle tension can be a significant cause of the fatigue that often accompanies chronic stress. The following exercises help release tension and the blocked emotions held in tight muscles.

Exercise 5: Discovering Muscle Tension

  • Lie on your back in a comfortable position. Allow your arms to rest at your sides, palms down, on the surface next to you.
  • Raise just the right hand and arm and hold it elevated for 15 seconds.
  • Notice if your forearm feels tight and tense or if the muscles are soft and pliable.
  • Let your hand and arm drop down and relax. The arm muscles will relax too.
  • As you lie still, notice any other parts of your body that feel tense, muscles that feel tight and sore. You may notice a constant dull aching in certain muscles.

Exercise 6: Progressive Muscle Relaxation

  • ·Lie on your back in a comfortable position. Allow your arms to rest at your sides, palms down, on the surface next to you.
  • ·Inhale and exhale slowly and deeply.
  • ·Clench your hands into fists and hold them tightly for 15 seconds. As you do this, relax the rest of your body. Visualize your fists contracting, becoming tighter and tighter.
  • ·Then let your hands relax. On relaxing, see a golden light flowing into the entire body, making all your muscles soft and pliable.
  • ·Now, tense and relax the following parts of your body in this order: face, shoulders, back, stomach, pelvis, legs, feet, and toes. Hold each part tensed for 15 seconds and then relax your body for 30 seconds before going on to the next part.
  • ·Finish the exercise by shaking your hands and imagining the remaining tension flowing out of your fingertips.

Exercise 7: Release of Muscle Tension and Anxiety

  • ·Lie in a comfortable position. Allow your arms to rest at your sides, palms down. Inhale and exhale slowly and deeply with your eyes closed.
  • ·Become aware of your feet, ankles, and legs. Notice if these parts of your body have any muscle tension or tightness. If so, how does the tense part of your body feel? Is it viselike, knotted, cold, numb? Do you notice any strong feelings, such as hurt, upset, or anger, in that part of your body? Breathe into that part of your body until you feel it relax. Release any anxious feelings with your breathing, continuing until they begin to decrease in intensity and fade.
  • ·Next, move your awareness into your hips, pelvis, and lower back. Note any tension there. Notice any anxious feelings located in that part of your body. Breathe into your hips and pelvis until you feel them relax. Release any negative emotions as you breathe in and out
  • ·Focus on your abdomen and chest. Notice any anxious feelings located in this area and let them drop away as you breathe in and out. Continue to release any upsetting feelings located in your abdomen or chest.
  • ·Finally, focus on your head, neck, arms, and hands. Note any tension in this area and release it. With your breathing; release any negative feelings blocked in this area until you can’t feel them anymore.
  • ·When you have finished releasing tension throughout the body, continue deep breathing and relaxing for another minute or two. At the end of this exercise, you should feel lighter and more energized.

Erasing Stress and Tension

Often the situations and beliefs that make us feel anxious and tense look large and insurmountable. We tend to form representations in our mind that empower stress. In these representations, we look tiny and helpless, while the stressors look huge and unsolvable. You can change these mental representations and cut stressors down to size. The next two exercises will help you to gain mastery over stress by learning to shrink it or even erase it with your mind. This places stress in a much more manageable and realistic perspective. These two exercises will also help engender a sense of power and mastery, thereby reducing anxiety and restoring a sense of calm.

Exercise 8: Shrinking Stress

  • ·Sit or lie in a comfortable position. Breathe slowly and deeply.
  • ·Visualize a situation, person, or even a belief (such as, “I’m afraid of the dark” or “I don’t want to give that public speech”) that makes you feel anxious and tense.
  • ·As you do this, you might see a person’s face, a place you’re afraid to go, or simply a dark cloud. Where do you see this stressful picture? Is it above you, to one side, or in front of you? How does it look? Is it big or little, dark or light? Does it have certain colors?
  • ·Now slowly begin to shrink the stressful picture. Continue to see the stressful picture shrinking until it is so small that it can literally be held in the palm of your hand. Hold your hand out in front of you, and place the picture in the palm of your hand.
  • ·If the stressor has a characteristic sound (like a voice or traffic noise), hear it getting tiny and soft. As it continues to shrink, its voice or sounds become almost inaudible.
  • ·Now the stressful picture is so small it can fit on your second finger. Watch it shrink from there until it finally turns into a little dot and disappears.
  • ·Often this exercise causes feelings of amusement, as well as relaxation, as the feared stressor shrinks, gets less intimidating, and finally disappears.

Exercise 9: Erasing Stress

  • ·Sit or lie in a comfortable position. Breathe slowly and deeply.
  • ·Visualize a situation, a person, or even a belief (such as, “I’m afraid to go to the shopping mall” or “I’m scared to mix with other people at parties”) that causes you to feel anxious and fearful.
  • ·As you do this you might see a specific person, an actual place, or simply shapes and colors. Where do you see this stressful picture? Is it below you, to the side, in front of you? How does it look? Is it big or little, dark or light, or does it have a specific color?
  • ·Imagine that a large eraser, like the kind used to erase chalk marks, has just floated into your hand. Actually feel and see the eraser in your hand. Take the eraser and begin to rub it over the area where the stressful picture is located. As the eraser rubs out the stressful picture it fades, shrinks, and finally disappears. When you can no longer see the stressful picture, simply continue to focus on your deep breathing for another minute, inhaling and exhaling slowly and deeply.

Healing the Inner Child

Many of our anxieties and fears come from our inner child rather than our adult self. Sometimes it is difficult to realize that the emotional upsets we feel are actually feelings left over from childhood fears, traumas, and experiences. When unhealed, they remain with us into adulthood, causing emotional distress over issues that competent “grown up” people feel they should be able to handle. For example, fear of the dark, fear of being unlovable, and fear of rejection often originate in early dysfunctional or unhappy experiences with our parents and siblings. While many of these deep, unresolved emotional issues may require counseling, particularly if they are causing anxiety episodes, there is much that we can do for ourselves to heal childhood wounds. The next exercise helps you to get in touch with your own inner child and facilitates the healing process.

Exercise 10: Healing the Inner Child

  • ·Sit or lie in a comfortable position. Breathe slowly and deeply.
  • ·Begin to get in touch with where your inner child resides. Is she located in your abdomen, in your chest, or by your side? (This may actually be the part of your body where you feel the most fear and anxiety, such as your chest or your pelvis.) How old is she? Can you see what clothes she is wearing? What are her emotions? Is she upset, anxious, sad, or angry? Is she withdrawn and quiet?
  • ·Begin to see her upset feelings flow out of her body and into a container on the floor. Watch the upset feelings wash out of every part of her body until they are all gone and the container is full. Then seal the container and slowly watch it fade and dissolve until it disappears completely, carrying all the upset feelings with it.
  • ·Now begin to fill your inner child with a peaceful, healing, golden light. Watch her become peaceful and mellow as the light fills every cell in her body. Watch her body relax. Give her a toy animal or a doll or even cuddle her in your arms.
  • ·As you leave your inner child feeling peaceful, return your focus to your breathing. Spend a minute inhaling and exhaling deeply and slowly. If you like working with your inner child, return to visit her often!

Visualization

The next two exercises use visualization as a therapeutic method to affect the physical and mental processes of the body; both focus on color. Color therapy, as it applies to human health, has a long and distinguished history. In many studies, scientists have exposed subjects to specific colors, either directly through exposure to light therapy, or through changing the color of their environment. Scientific research throughout the world has shown that color therapy can have a profound effect on health and well-being. It can stimulate the endocrine glands, the immune system, and the nervous system, and help to balance the emotions. Visualizing color in a specific part of the body can have a powerful therapeutic effect, too, and can be a good stress management technique for relief of anxiety and nervous tension.

The first exercise uses the color blue, which provides a calming and relaxing effect. For women with anxiety who are carrying a lot of physical and emotional tension, blue lessens the fight or flight response. Blue also calms such physiological functions as pulse rate, breathing, and perspiration, and relaxes the mood. If you experience chronic fatigue and are tense, anxious, or irritable, or carry a lot of muscle tension, the first exercise will be very helpful.

The second exercise uses the color red, which can benefit women who have fatigue due to chronic anxiety and upset. Red stimulates all the endocrine glands, including the pituitary and adrenal glands. It heightens senses such as smell and taste. Emotionally, red is linked to vitality and high energy states. Even though the color red can speed up autonomic nervous system function, women with anxiety-related fatigue can benefit from visualizing this color. I often do the red visualization when I am tired and need a pick me up. You may find that you are attracted to the color in one exercise more than another. Use the exercise with the color that appeals to you the most.

Exercise 11: Tension Release Through Color

  • ·Sit or lie in a comfortable position, your arms resting at your sides. As you take a deep breath, visualize that the earth below you is filled with the color blue. This blue color extends 50 feet below you into the earth. Now imagine that you are opening up energy centers on the bottom of your feet. As you inhale, visualize the soft blue color filling up your feet. When your feet are completely filled with the color blue, then bring the color up through your ankles, legs, pelvis, and lower back.
  • ·Each time you exhale, see the blue color leaving through your lungs, carrying any tension and stress with it. See the tension dissolve into the air.
  • ·Continue to inhale blue into your abdomen, chest, shoulders, arms, neck, and head. Exhale the blue slowly out of your lungs. Repeat this entire process five times and then relax for a few minutes.

Exercise 12: Energizing Through Color

  • ·Sit or lie in a comfortable position, your arms resting easily at your sides. As you take a deep breath, visualize a big balloon above your head filled with a bright red healing energy. Imagine that you pop this balloon so all the bright red energy is released.
  • ·As you inhale, see the bright red color filling up your head. It fills up your brain, your face, and the bones of your skull. Let the bright red color pour in until your head is ready to overflow with color. Then let the red color flow into your neck, shoulders, arms, and chest. As you exhale, breathe the red color out of your lungs, taking any tiredness and fatigue with it. Breathe any feeling of fatigue out of your body.
  • ·As you inhale, continue to bring the bright, energizing red color into your abdomen, pelvis, lower back, legs, and feet until your whole body is filled with red. Exhale the red color out of your lungs, continuing to release any feeling of fatigue. Repeat this process five times. At the end of this exercise, you should feel more energized and vibrant. Your mental energy should feel more vitalized and clear.

Affirmations

The following two exercises give you healthful affirmations that are very useful for women with anxiety. As described earlier, anxiety symptoms are due to a complex interplay between the mind and body. Your state of emotional and physical health is determined in part by the thousands of mental messages you send yourself each day with your thoughts. For example, if fear of public places triggers your anxiety symptoms, the mind will send a constant stream of messages to you reinforcing your beliefs about the dangers and mishaps that can occur in public places. The fright triggers muscle tension and shallow breathing. Similarly, if you constantly criticize the way you look, your lack of self-love may be reflected in your body. For example, your shoulders will slump and you may have a dull and lackluster countenance.

Affirmations provide a method to change these negative belief systems to thoughts that preserve peace and calm. Positive statements replace the anxiety inducing messages with thoughts that make you feel good.

The first affirmation exercise gives you a series of statements to promote a sense of emotional and physical health and well being. Using these affirmations may create a feeling of emotional peace by changing your negative beliefs about your body and health into positive beliefs. The second affirmation exercise helps promote self-esteem and self-confidence and also helps to reduce anxiety. Many women with high anxiety lose their self-confidence and feel depressed and defeated by their condition. They feel frustrated and somehow at fault for not finding a solution. Repeat each affirmation to yourself or say them out loud 3 to 5 minutes. Use either or both exercises on a regular basis to promote healthful, positive thought patterns.

Exercise 13: Positive Mind/Body Affirmations

  • ·I handle stress and tension appropriately and effectively.
  • ·My mood is calm and relaxed.
  • ·I can cope well and get on with my life during times of stress.
  • ·I think thoughts that uplift and nurture me.
  • ·I enjoy thinking positive thoughts that make me feel good about myself and my life.
  • ·I deserve to feel good right now.
  • ·I feel peaceful and calm.
  • ·My breathing is slow and calm.
  • ·My muscles are relaxed and comfortable.
  • ·I feel grounded and fully present.
  • ·I can effectively handle any situation that comes my way.
  • ·I think through the solutions to my emotional issues slowly and peacefully.
  • ·I am thankful for all the positive things in my life.
  • ·I practice the relaxation methods that I enjoy.
  • ·My body is healthy and strong.
  • ·I eat a well balanced and nutritious diet.
  • ·I enjoy eating delicious and healthful food.
  • ·My body wants food that is easy to digest and high in vitamins and minerals.
  • ·I do regular exercise in a relaxed and enjoyable manner.

Exercise 14: Self-Esteem Affirmations

  • ·I am filled with energy, vitality, and self-confidence.
  • ·I am pleased with how I handle my emotional needs.
  • ·I know exactly how to manage my daily schedule to promote my emotional and physical well-being.
  • ·I listen to my body’s needs and regulate my activity level to take care of those needs.
  • ·I love and honor my body.
  • ·I fill my mind with positive and self-nourishing thoughts.
  • ·I am a wonderful and worthy person.
  • ·I deserve health, vitality, and peace of mind.
  • ·I have total confidence in my ability to heal myself.
  • ·I feel radiant with abundant energy and vitality.
  • ·The world around me is full of radiant beauty and abundance.
  • ·I am attracted only to those people and situations that support and nurture me.
  • ·I appreciate the positive people and situations that are currently in my life.
  • ·I love and honor myself.
  • ·I enjoy my positive thoughts and feelings.

More Stress-Reduction Techniques for Anxiety

The rest of this chapter contains additional techniques useful for relief of anxiety and relaxation of tight and tense muscles. These methods induce deep emotional relaxation. Try them for a delightful experience.

Hydrotherapy For centuries, people have used warm water as a way to calm moods and relax muscles. You can have your own “spa” at home by adding relaxing ingredients to the bath water. I have found the following formula to be extremely useful in relieving muscle pain and tension.

Alkaline Bath. Run a tub of warm water. Heat will increase your menstrual flow, so keep the water a little cooler if heavy flow is a problem. Add one cup of sea salt and one cup of bicarbonate of soda to the tub. This is a highly alkaline mixture and I recommend using it only once or twice a month. I’ve found it very helpful in reducing cramps and calming anxiety and irritability. Soak for 20 minutes. You will probably feel very relaxed and sleepy after this bath; use it at night before going to sleep. You will probably wake up feeling refreshed and energized the following day. Heat of any kind helps to release muscle tension. Many women find that saunas and baths also help to calm their moods.

Sound Music can have a tremendously relaxing effect on our minds and bodies. For women with anxiety and nervous tension, I recommend slow, quiet music classical music is particularly good. This type of music can have a pronounced beneficial effect on your physiological functions. It can slow your pulse and heart rate, lower your blood pressure, and decrease your levels of stress hormones. It promotes peace and relaxation and helps to induce sleep. Nature sounds, such as ocean waves and rainfall, can also induce a sense of peace and relaxation. I have patients who keep tapes of nature sounds in their cars and at home for use when they feel more stressed. Play relaxing music often when you are aware of increased emotional and physical tension.

Massage Massage can be extremely therapeutic for women who feel anxious. Gentle touching either by a trained massage therapist, your relationship partner, or even yourself can be very relaxing. Tension usually fades away relatively quickly with gentle, relaxed touching. The kneading and stroking movement of a good massage relaxes tight muscles and improves circulation. If you can afford to do so, I recommend treating yourself to a professional massage during times of stress. Otherwise, trade with a friend or partner. There are also many books available that instruct people how to massage themselves.

Putting Your Stress-Reduction Program Together This chapter has introduced you to many different ways to reduce anxiety and stress and make each day calm and peaceful. Try each exercise at least once. Then find the combination that works for you. Doing the exercise you most enjoy should take no longer than 20 to 30 minutes, depending on how much time you wish to spend. Ideally, you should do the exercises daily. Over time, they will help you gain insight into your negative feelings and beliefs while changing them into positive, self nurturing new ones. Your ability to cope with stress should improve tremendously.

 

Where Do You Feel It?

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by Angelique Bagley, LMFT

 

Purpose: Learn to identify different emotions and the connection to how they are physically felt in one’s body.

Modality: Individual, Group, or Family

Age Range: 5 – Adult

Materials:

1) rough outline of a body on a sheet of regular paper, or person can outline themselves

on a sheet of butcher paper

2) round stickers found at an office supply store

Description: Clients often describe that they “suddenly” feel angry, fearful, or sad. Often, there are early warning signals from the body before the client has the thought “I am angry.” This exercise is designed to help them identify early signals from their body so that they may make good use of coping skills to calm down.

Have the client think about a time when they were mad. Give them examples of where they might feel it in their body (i.e. fists clenched, jaw clenched, muscles tense, etc). Ask them to place the round stickers (small ones for a small sheet of paper, large ones if it is a life-size drawing) on the parts of their body that they feel mad in. Discussion can center on paying attention to the early warning signs and identifying positive coping skills to help diffuse the feelings before they have erupted.

An adaptation of this exercise is to use different color stickers for different feelings. The client may have sweaty palms when they are angry, but get a stomachache when they are afraid. The client assigns a feeling to a color

(red = anger, yellow = nervous, purple = fear). In addition, this exercise may be used to explore feelings related to a specific traumatic event. (i.e. witnessing domestic violence). Discussion can center on having multiple feelings about an event and the places you may feel the feelings. This may also lead to an age-appropriate discussion about Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder symptoms that they might be dealing with as well.

Angelique Bagley is a licensed Marriage and Family Therapist in private practice and MFT supervisor for Teen and Family Counseling Center in San Jose, California with over 15 years experience working with children and families. Angelique specializes in working with children with multiple traumas using play therapy to help heal their wounds. She enjoys introducing people to the joys of working with children in therapy through her supervision with interns and in trainings to licensed professional, interns, and trainees. She is a past president of CALAPT and a current Member-At-Large for the CALAPT Board of Directors.

 

Group Flag

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by Kate Rome, LMFT, PPS

 

Population: Groups, ages elementary school through adult, families, step-families, couples

 

Materials Needed: White poster board, markers, art materials

 

Directions:  At a session early in therapy, the therapist asks the people in the group or family to gather around the white poster board. The participants are directed to come up with both a group name and images that represent what is positive about the group, and with these ideas, they are asked to create a group flag. They work on this for as long as the therapist deems necessary/practical.  Once finished, each of the group members shares his or her experience in the flag-making process.

The flag is then kept by the therapist and, if appropriate, brought out and displayed during every group meeting.

 

Purpose: The purpose of this intervention is two-fold. First, the group works together to create a tangible representation of itself and gives itself a name and an identity. This idea fosters cohesion, identity and pride for the group members. It gives the group a chance to get to know each other through a directed project and to have a finished product that can be brought out and referred to throughout the group process. Creating a positive identity can be especially beneficial for families that are struggling or step-families that are trying to blend. Secondly, the therapist may gain important information about the group dynamics, strengths and difficulties by watching how they manage this task. It also gives the therapist a tool to refer to and bounce off of in the group work to follow.

 

About the Author: Kate Rome is a licensed MFT and credentialed school counselor (PPS) who has worked extensively with children and families in a variety of settings. Kate is currently employed as Adjunct Faculty at John F. Kennedy University, teaching graduate courses in play therapy and child abuse reporting. Kate has been actively involved with the California Association for Play Therapy since 2003 and has served both locally and on the Executive Board of Directors.

 

Family Clay Play

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by Kate Rome, LMFT

 

Purpose: Improve & strengthen family communication patterns

Modality: Family

Age Range: 4 years – Adults

Materials: Model Magic™, clay, Play-Doh®, or other clay-type material

Description: By the time families arrive at therapy, they often have difficulty connecting and communicating. The intervention, “Family Clay Play”, has proven to be an excellent technique to facilitate dialogue and understanding.

The intervention begins with family members selecting whatever colors of clay they would like. Model Magic is a versatile and appealing medium to use, but any clay material will work.

Once the clay has been selected, the family is given different directives including such things as make a gift for other family members of something you think the person needs, create a symbol for the family, or make a representation of a worry they have about the family.

When family members are finished, each member is given the opportunity to share their creation and receive feedback from others in the family.

The playfulness of the clay, as well as the experience of working with the material, often lowers defenses and opens up channels of communication that had previously been stuck.

About the Author

Kate Rome is a licensed MFT and credentialed school counselor (PPS) who has worked extensively with children and families in a variety of settings. Kate is currently employed as Adjunct Faculty at John F. Kennedy University, teaching graduate courses in play therapy and child abuse reporting. Kate has been actively involved with CALAPT since 2003 and has served both locally and on the Executive Board of Directors.

Care Tags

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By Myrysha Rosa, MSW

 

Theme: Feeling Expression & Communication

Recommended Age Range: Teens & Adults

Treatment Modality: Individual

Goals

* Increase self awareness

* Improve positive and clear communication

* Increase ability to appropriately express needs

 

Materials

* Construction paper cut in the shape of a tag (see example)

 

Description

The therapist begins with a discussion of how everyone expresses his or her feelings differently (give examples: “Some people cry when they are sad, some shut down, others look/act angry”). Additionally, different people want/need different things when they feel different emotions (give examples: “Some people want to be left alone when they are sad, others want a hug or to talk”). Begin to process how everyone is different, and that we cannot assume that everyone knows what we are feeling, or knows what we need from them. Explain that people are not like clothes or other things that come with care tags or instruction manuals.

The therapist then explains the activity as follows:

Wouldn’t be nice if everyone came with a care tag that told others exactly how to take care of them (give examples of clothing care tags such as “Delicate,” “Dry clean only,” “Handle with care”). In order to do that, we first need to understand the link between our own behaviors, feelings, and needs. We are going to create several care tags that will help you better understand your feelings, communicate to others what you are feeling, and identify what you need from them (or yourself) when you are feeling that way.On the back of each care tag, you can draw a picture that either represents that feeling or something that makes you feel that way.

 

Each care tag will say.  “When I _________ (behavior, action or situation)_________ , I am feeling __________ (emotion)________,

and I need __________.”

 

Discussion

For many clients this can be a very difficult activity. Have the client begin with a feeling with which they are comfortable before moving on to more intense or sensitive emotions. This activity also works well if the client has entered the session expressing a problem that easily fits this format (i.e.: “I had a really bad day at school yesterday and I just needed a little time alone, but my mom wanted me to go with her to the store”). The therapist can then work with the client to break this down on the care tag (“How would your mom know you were mad?”). It is generally easier for the client to start with the feeling, then move to how others will know when they are feeling that emotion, and end with what they need. When completed, discuss the possibility of sharing these care tags with their parents.  If possible, and if the client is in agreement, arrange for the parents to join the session and support the client in sharing the care tags.

This activity easily adapts to family sessions, with each family member creating their own “tags” and then sharing them with the family.