Mindfulness Skills Manual
Mindfulness Skills Manual
Mindfulness Skills Manual
SERVICES
REHABILITATION
PATIENT EDUCATIONSERVICES
MANUAL
PATIENT EDUCATION MANUAL
emotion
Mindfulness
regulation
Skills
skills
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SAN FRANCISCO
Langley Porter Psychiatric Hospital & Clinics
Don’t think of your Emotional Mind as a bad thing. Intense love often motivates us;
strong desires can keep us focused on a hard task. People high in Emotional Mind
are often passionate about people, causes and beliefs.
Emotional Mind is your “hot” part. When you’re in your Emotional Mind, it’s very
hard to think logically. Facts get distorted by whatever intense emotion you’re
feeling. It’s as though you see everything through emotion-colored shades.
How do you experience your Emotional Mind? In the circle below draw or write
something that expresses your experience of Emotional Mind.
WISE MIND
Wise Mind is a balancing or blending of your
Reasonable Mind and your Emotional Mind.
You can’t overcome your Emotional Mind with
your Reasonable Mind. Nor can you create
emotions with reasonableness or logic. You
must go within and integrate the two.
Everyone has a Wise Mind, but some people have not experienced it. Wise Mind is
like having a heart. Everyone has a heart, whether they experience it or not. Here
are some ways people experience Wise Mind:
It’s that
It feels place in me
quiet and where I know I’m in
peaceful what I know Wise Mind
is true when I trust
my
intuition
I feel
I’m in Wise Mind it when I
when I listen to my follow my
inner voice When breath in
I’m and out I
in experience
nature it in the
center
of my body
It’s the *
calm that follows the I feel In my
storm…after the chaos… Wise Mind belly
between my
It’s seeing and knowing eyes
something clearly
HOW DO YOU EXPERIENCE YOUR
WISE MIND?
Mindfulness Skills are the first to be taught and are the core of
all the DBT (Dialectical Behavioral Therapy) Skills taught in
many of our verbal and expressive arts therapy programs.
These skills are drawn from both Western and Eastern
meditation practices. Mindfulness Skills are the vehicle for
balancing “Emotional Mind” and “Reasonable Mind” to
achieve “Wise Mind”. Mindfulness means learning to take
control of your mind instead of your mind controlling you.
REMEMBER
Mindfulness Skills take time and can only be mastered with practice, practice, practice.
Be patient with yourself. Do your best. But know that your best when you’re feeling
great is different than your best when you are depressed. Do your best today.
PRACTICING:
OBSERVE, DESCRIBE, PARTICIPATE
Try some of the following exercises and then write
down a few words to describe your experience.
Attend to and try to sense your feet, your
stomach and your shoulders. What do you notice?
Stroke your finger just above your lip, then stop stroking and notice
how long it takes before you can’t sense your upper lip
any longer. What did you notice?
WALKING
MEDITATION
“If you’re going through hell, keep going” --- Winston Churchill
SEEING MEDITATION
Find an object within your line of vision that you might want to fix your eyes on…a
painting, a wall or a plant. Take several belly breaths and glue your eyes to the
object. Let it capture your interest, as though it were the only object around you. Try
not to judge what you are seeing. Look at it as an artist might: lines…shapes…colors.
See if you can have the experience of “just seeing”. When thoughts arise, notice
them and return your focus to the object.
SIMPLE MEDITATION
Any simple activity can become a meditation when you try to continuously focus
your attention on it. A good mindfulness exercise to do is to choose an activity you
do every day, preferably a short one…like brushing your teeth, washing your face
or drinking a glass of water. Practice concentrating on every action and every
sensation involved in the activity. As thoughts occur, notice them and then go back
to the task with renewed concentration. Sometimes it helps if you switch to your non-
dominant hand when you do the activity. The awkwardness is a reminder that you
want to concentrate on what you’re doing.
LOVING KINDNESS MEDITATION
The Feeling Good Handbook by David D. Burns, M.D., Penguin Books, 1999.
Full Catastrophe Living: Using the Wisdom of Your Body and Mind to Face Stress,
Pain, and Illness by Jon Kabat-Zinn, Ph.D., Dell Publishing, 1990.
Practicing the Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle, publisher New World Library,
(www.newworldlibrary.com), 1999.
The Relaxation & Stress Reduction Workbook by Martha Davis, Ph.D., New Harbinger
Publications, 2000.
Turning Suffering Inside Out:A Zen Approach to Living with Physical and Emotional
Pain by Darlene Cohen, Shambhala Publications, 2000.
Women, Anger & Depression: Strategies for Self Empowerment by Lois P. Frankel,
Ph.D., Health Communications, Inc., 1992.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Many of the materials discussed in these manuals are based on the works of Marsha M.
Linehan, Ph. D. as presented in her books Cognitive-Behavioral Treatment of Borderline
Personality Disorder and Skills Training Manual for Treating Borderline Personality
Disorder. Both are available through the Guilford Press, 1993.