Sunday, October 23, 2011

Find and Use Your Voice

In Cognitive Therpy Group we have been talking about productive versus destructive emotions. Last week's topic was resentment versus righteous anger. The outcome to resentment is revenge or medicating with symptoms. Resentment can last forever. It can be passed to the next generation to hold the grudge, and, eventually, exact revenge. Anger, however, when assertively expressed, stops injustice, corrects wrongs and improves relationships. Recovery involves finding and using your voice. Being able to say no, setting healthy limits, and expressing your truth will improve your life and relationships beyond measure.

A simple, but very effective, 4-step assertiveness technique:

1) Describe what happened factually.
2) Express your feelings about it.
3) Ask for what you want to be different.
4) Explain the consequences if things do not change.

- Dr. Kilmer

Friday, September 30, 2011

Beach tips suggested by the Body Acceptance Group:

- Really see all the different shapes and sizes of people. Don't be unfair and only notice people you think look better than you. See that your size is part of a continuum and there is beauty at ever shape and size.

- Notice that others seem to really enjoy themselves regardless of appearance.

- Look around and see that people are not just staring at each other. They are having fun... playing, swimming, laughing. Join them. There is no audience you must please.

- Assert your needs with the people you are with. Get support to stay out of your head.

- Leave E.D. at home...he wasn't invited today. If he shows up, send him away.

- There is no beauty contest today and they will not be awarding tiaras. If you start comparing or competing, knock it off. The prize today is being at the beach. Everyone there wins.

- Function not form, function not form, function not form. Celebrate what your body can do.

- Play with some children. Play like a child.

- Lose your mind and come to your senses. Feel, smell, move, listen, see, taste. Be here now, think someother time.

- Dr. Kilmer

Friday, September 16, 2011

Recovery involves being uncomfortable. Are you willing to tolerate some discomfort to have the life you want, the life where you have true freedom and choice? It is dangerous and untrue when your mind says, "I can't stand to feel...X" or "I can't handle...Y". The truth is that you can tolerate any emotion or sensation involved in recovery. When your mind tells you that you cannot stand ...fullness, weight gain, sadness, losing control...then your only option seems to be to medicate or take desperate measures to escape. That is not necessary. Think of all the difficult things you have tolerated in your life. You can handle discomfort. You can learn new skills and ways to cope. You can recover.

Dr. Rick Kilmer, Cognitive Therapy Group

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Rick Kilmer, Ph.D.: We have seen a tremendous increase in males coming to ACE for help. Because we now know that dieting is the "Gateway Drug" to eating disorders, with more boys and men dieting or trying to "eat healthy", more are getting hooked by eating disorders and body image struggles. Given the training program we still put boys through to not admit or express feelings, to not be vulnerable, to not ask for help... adding eating disorders to the self-medicating addiction list is not surprising. More and more men struggling with eating and body image issues are finding that they are not alone.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/08/16/eating-disorders-men_n_928206.html

Male Athletes Struggle With Eating Disorders














Friday, July 15, 2011

H.O.W. can you stay in recovery today?

With Honesty....Openness....Willingness.

If you begin struggling...hesitate...can you journal or sit with the questions... Am I being honest? Am I being open? Am I willing? (note: different than willful)

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Is the plane falling out of the sky?

Rick Kilmer, Ph.D., Cognitive Therapy Group:
I knew a psychiatrist who said he could cure fear of flying in one session. He began by establishing that fear was only appropriate when one is in danger of being hurt or killed. He would then have the patient visualize the flight at different points asking, "Is the plane falling out of the sky?" If the answer was "no", then he'd say, "So you are not in danger...you can relax." As you recover today, if you get anxious or scared, ask yourself, "Is the plane falling out of the sky?" Will food attack you? Will your feelings kill you? Could you release some fear?