DBT For Dummies. Gillian Galen

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target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="#fb3_img_img_2f397062-ceed-5af0-b833-e39eddea4939.png" alt="Bullet"/> Stepping through DBT’s stages of treatment

      

Considering core DBT skills

      

Seeing the mechanics of DBT

      

Using DBT to treat specific conditions

      Entering the world of DBT (dialectical behavior therapy) is entering into a world that focuses on the philosophical process of dialectics, while also attending to the psychological process of behaviorism and change. Imagine entering into a therapy that tells you that everything is composed of opposites, that these opposites are all true, that everything changes except for change itself, and that the way out of suffering is to start by accepting that all of these things are true. This chapter introduces the basics.

      

DBT stands on three big philosophical and scientific pillars. These pillars are specific assumptions that hold the treatment together:

       All things are interconnected. Everything and everyone is interconnected and interdependent. We are all part of the greater tapestry of all things, a community of beings that supports and sustains us. We are also connected to our family, friends, and community. We need others; others need us.

       Change is constant and inevitable. This is not a new idea. The pre-Socratic philosopher Heraclitus said, “The only constant in life is change.” Life is full of suffering, but because change happens, change being the only thing of which you can be certain, your suffering will change as well.

       Opposites can be integrated to form a closer approximation of the truth. This is at the core of dialectics. A dialectical synthesis combines the thesis (an idea) and the antithesis (its opposite). In coming up with the synthesis of the two ideas, the process never introduces a new concept not found in either the thesis or the antithesis. Strictly speaking, the synthesis incorporates one concept from the thesis and one from the antithesis.

      Check out Chapter 2 for more about DBT’s main pillars.

      DBT was originally developed by Dr. Marsha Linehan for the treatment of people who struggled with self-destructive and suicidal behavior, and it subsequently became the gold-standard treatment for the condition known as borderline personality disorder (BPD), which we review comprehensively in Chapter 20. The treatment appeals to many therapists and patients, not only because it is very helpful, but because it integrates four essential elements in a comprehensive treatment by addressing the biological, environmental, spiritual, and behavioral elements of a person’s struggle. It’s also unique in its focus on balancing the need for a person to change while being completely accepted for who they are in the present moment.

      As you find out in Chapter 2, DBT delivers the treatment through four modes, and these four modes address the five functions of a comprehensive treatment.

      The four modes of therapy

      

There are four modes of therapy, which are detailed completely in Chapter 14:

       Individual therapy: In this mode, a trained therapist works with you to apply newly learned skills to your personal life challenges.

       Group skills training: In this mode, together with a group of other patients, you’re taught new behavioral skills, you complete homework assignments, and you role-play new ways of interacting with others.

       Phone skills coaching: In this mode, you can call your therapist between sessions to receive guidance on coping with difficult situations as they arise.

       Therapist consultation team meetings: In this mode, your individual therapist meets with other therapists who are also providing DBT treatment. These meetings help therapists navigate difficult and complex issues related to providing therapy, and give them new ideas for what to do when they are stuck. Chapter 17 goes into more detail on the consultation team.

      The five functions of treatment

      

As you see in the previous section, DBT is a comprehensive treatment program. In this way, DBT is a collection of treatments, rather than a single treatment method conducted by a single therapist and a single patient. Any program, whichever you choose to do, should address five key functions of treatment (which are fully reviewed in Part 4):

       Increasing your motivation to change: Changing self-destructive and maladaptive behaviors can be very difficult, and it can be easy to become disheartened. Your individual therapist will work with you to make sure you stay on track and reduce any behaviors that are inconsistent with a life worth living. Within individual and group therapy, your therapist will ask you to track your behaviors and use skills coaching in order to achieve this goal.

       Enhancing your capabilities: DBT assumes that people who struggle either lack or need to improve several important life skills, including skills that help you regulate emotions, pay attention to the experience of the present moment, effectively navigate interpersonal situations, and finally, be able to tolerate distress.

       Generalizing what you’ve learned in therapy to the rest of your life: If the skills you’ve learned in group and individual therapy sessions don’t transfer to your daily life, then it’s going to be difficult to say that the therapy was successful for dealing with your problems.

       Structuring your environment in order to reinforce your gains: An important function is to make sure that you don’t slip back into maladaptive or problematic behaviors or, if you do, to make sure that the impact isn’t enduring. Structuring the treatment in a manner that promotes progress toward your goal is a way to do this. Typically, your individual therapist will make sure that all of the elements of effective treatment are in place for you. At times, they may intervene for you if you aren’t yet skilled enough to do so for yourself, with the understanding that such intervention is temporary until you have acquired the skills to manage.

       Increasing your therapist’s motivation and competence: Although helping people who come to therapy with multiple problems can be very rewarding for both patient and therapist, the behaviors that people present with can be very taxing for the therapist, and so the therapist needs help

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