DISCLAIMER: this isn’t a substitute for therapy and/or medication. Sometimes therapy isn’t accessible. Sometimes we have a bad week and need to recenter ourselves.
I think we can learn from each other and find methods we didn’t even know about! What’s helpful to another may be ineffective to another, and I think learning about an array of methods would be valuable.
What’s been helpful for me:
- Spending time in nature
- Journaling (I would google journal prompts pertaining to my predicaments)
- Guided meditations on Youtube
- Free worksheets: https://www.therapistaid.com/therapy-worksheets (my therapist who specialized in CBT used some of these during our sessions, I’m glad they’re free)
Bicycling by far!
You can get a cheap used bike if you don’t want to nerd out about parts etc.
The way my mind is cleared when I’m going for a ride is something that I have not achieved by any other means. Also the mood boost lasts quite a while for me.
Just make sure the bike fits your body and also get a helmet.
- Singing
- Crying it out
- Journaling
- Getting enough sleep
- Spending time in the sun
- choosing to avoid arguments
- Taking walks in nature
- Meditating
- Dragging myself away from the doomscroll box.
- Going out and seeing friends
- Seeing a therapist (OK, that one’s not so low-cost…)
For me it was helpful to start running :)
This might be more darkly humorous than you are looking for, but at the onset of WWII I’ve read that many civilians suddenly had a full or partial remission of symptoms for the duration of the war.
Being part of a society in crisis that’s all pulling in the same direction can take your mind off your own problems, at least for a while. Call it the Ozymandias effect?
It’s not enough to hope a war breaks out, but maybe there’s something at the heart of it we can grasp. Maybe what some of us really lack is purpose, or a sense of belonging. These aren’t easy to solve for, but I’m sure it’s worth a look inward.
That’s beautiful and horrifying at the same time
Humanity in a nutshell innit
Lemme toss in here the symptom management checklist in DBT:
- Take your meds on time, as per directed.
- Sleep eight hours a day (or the amount that works for you.)
- Eat square meals on a consistent schedule. Most of us work with three, with light snacking. Stay fluidated.
- Get some exercise, a bit of moving about should do (say a walk around the block).
- Engage in some social contact, ideally with a friend or loved one with whom you’re not dealing with immediate drama.
Doing these things consistently should reduce the likelihood of your symptoms getting unmanageable (mileage will vary).
I can only speak for my self but gardening has really helped me find my center
@CantSt0pPoppin @phonecase Me too. Knitting gives me a sense of focus and presence too.