Ozy, in their sequence on Dialectical Behavioral Therapy
I can’t find it here on LW. Can you point me to it?
Radical Acceptance says, “It’s okay to screw up. …”
I recently attended a meditation retreat organized by the Berlin LW group. Buddhist meditation is a lot about seeing yourself and your needs and actions as it is. Seeing pain as pain. Seeing feelings as feelings and distractions as distractions. In a way the thoroughness of this could be called radical. But it goes beyond acceptance. Acceptance relates to or alters your identity. But Buddhism goes farther: There is nothing to accept. Which part of you is doing the accepting?
I can’t find it here on LW. Can you point me to it?
I recently attended a meditation retreat organized by the Berlin LW group. Buddhist meditation is a lot about seeing yourself and your needs and actions as it is. Seeing pain as pain. Seeing feelings as feelings and distractions as distractions. In a way the thoroughness of this could be called radical. But it goes beyond acceptance. Acceptance relates to or alters your identity. But Buddhism goes farther: There is nothing to accept. Which part of you is doing the accepting?
Related to https://wiki.lesswrong.com/wiki/Litany_of_Gendlin
Linking Ozy’s DBT Sequence 2015-2017 here from ze’s blog, for the sake of completeness:
DBT Sequence: Assumptions
DBT Sequence: Dialectics
DBT Sequence: Chain Analysis
DBT Sequence: Crisis Survival
DBT Sequence: Radical Acceptance
Radical Acceptance Practice
Coping With Compulsive Behavior
Dealing With Relationship Conflict
Introduction to Emotion Regulation
Understanding and Naming Emotions
Changing Emotional Responses
Reducing Vulnerability To Emotions
Troubleshooting Emotion Regulation
Mindfulness: What Is Mindfulness?
Mindfulness: Doing and Being Mind
Mindfulness: Six Mindfulness Skills
Mindfulness: Thoughts Are Not Reality
DBT: Interpersonal Effectiveness Introduction
Book Post for January
Interpersonal Effectiveness: Obtaining Objectives Skillfully
Interpersonal Effectiveness: Building and Ending Relationships
DBT: Walking The Middle Path
Avoid vs. Accept
With Borderlines, Validate, Don’t Reassure
An Emotion Regulation Technique That Works For Me
How To Get A Therapist Who Does What You Want
Meditation For People Who Hate Meditating
[edit: added missing links]