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Distress Tolerance Skills: Radical Acceptance Worksheet

On this page, we will provide you with the Distress Tolerance Skills: Radical Acceptance Worksheet. It will help you to let go of negative emotions and accept reality.
What is Distress Tolerance Skills: Radical Acceptance Worksheet?
Radical acceptance is a technique used in Dialectical behavioral therapy for Distress tolerance, a person's ability to manage actual or perceived emotional distress. It also involves being able to make it through an emotional incident without making it worse. In radical Acceptance, you learn to accept the reality as it is, without making any changes. You know, to let go of your anger and emotional turmoil. You learn to live a regret-free and forgiving life.
How Distress Tolerance Skills: Radical Acceptance Worksheet will help?
Radical acceptance is about accepting the truth and facing reality as it is. You learn to accept your fact; you understand that you have no control over certain things and situations in your life than just to get them. You know to live with all the flaws and issues that you can’t control. It is about coming to terms with your
Instructions on how to use the Distress Tolerance Skills: Radical Acceptance Worksheet
Radical Acceptance is not just a technique to be applied once or twice a week. Instead, it is a lifestyle.
You can download this worksheet here.
Other worksheets you maybe interested in
Below are links to a few more worksheets which are closely related to the worksheet above.
Distress Tolerance Handout #1: Distracting Worksheet
Distress Tolerance Skills-PTSD Worksheet
DBT Distress Tolerance Skills Worksheet
Conclusion
On this page, we provided you with a Distress Tolerance Skills: Radical Acceptance worksheet, which hopefully helped you to let go of negative emotions and accept reality.
If you have any questions or comments, please let us know.
Resources
The worksheets on this site should not be used in place of professional advice from a mental health professional.
You should always seek help from a mental health professional or medical professional. We are not providing any advice or recommendations here.
There are various resources where you can seek help.
You could use Online-Therapy if you feel you need counselling.
If you live in the UK then this list of resources from the NHS may help you find help.
If you live in the USA then you could contact Mental Health America who may be able to assist you further.