Affective Interventions

Affective Interventions · Equilibrium PCS

Affective Techniques

Mental Wellness · Strategy Sheet
Affective techniques work directly with emotional experience — not to eliminate difficult feelings, but to change our relationship to them. Drawn from DBT, ACT, and IPT, these interventions build the capacity to identify, tolerate, regulate, and process emotions without being overwhelmed or derailed by them.
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1Emotional RegulationDBT

intense emotions are escalating rapidly and leading to behaviors you later regret

Learn to identify, name, and modify intense emotional responses before they reach crisis levels. Key skills: checking the facts (is the emotion warranted by the situation?), opposite action (act opposite to the urge when the emotion is not justified), and building positive experiences to increase baseline emotional resilience.

Example

Intense anger before a meeting: ‘Is this anger warranted by the actual facts, or am I adding interpretations? If I act on this anger, what happens? What is the opposite action — and would it serve my values better right now?’

2ValidationDBT

shame, self-dismissal, or the sense that feelings are wrong or excessive is present

Recognize that feelings make sense given the context — even when they are painful or inconvenient. Validation does not mean endorsing every thought or behavior; it acknowledges the legitimacy of the emotional experience. Self-validation is critical for those whose emotions were routinely dismissed.

Example

‘It makes complete sense that I feel overwhelmed — I have been managing an enormous amount with very little support. My feelings are not weakness; they are a reasonable response to an unreasonable situation.’

3Radical AcceptanceDBT

fighting against an unchangeable reality is creating more suffering than the situation itself

Fully accept a painful reality — not because it is okay or because you approve, but because non-acceptance is causing additional suffering without changing anything. Radical acceptance is not resignation; it creates the foundation for effective action from reality rather than from resistance to it.

Example

‘I cannot change what happened. Fighting against this fact is exhausting and keeping me stuck. I can accept that this happened AND still work toward a better future from this point forward.’

4AcceptanceACT

attempts to suppress or avoid uncomfortable emotions are increasing their intensity

Allow difficult thoughts and feelings to exist without trying to change, remove, or escape them. Acceptance is an active willingness-based stance toward inner experience, grounded in evidence that emotional suppression amplifies the very states we are trying to avoid.

Example

‘I notice anxiety rising. Instead of fighting it, I will let it be here. It is uncomfortable — not dangerous. I can feel anxious and still do what matters to me. The feeling is not my enemy.’

5Mindfulness of EmotionsACT

emotions are being treated as emergencies requiring immediate resolution

Observe emotions as temporary phenomena with a beginning, middle, and end — rather than states that must be immediately fixed. Mindful observation includes noticing the emotion’s physical location, quality, and intensity without evaluative judgments. The emotion becomes something you have, not something you are.

Example

‘There is sadness here. I notice it in my chest — heavy, slow. I do not need to make it go away. I can be curious about it. Emotions move when we stop blocking them and simply let them be witnessed.’

6Compassionate Self-TalkACT

self-criticism is the dominant internal voice, especially after perceived failure

Deliberately shift internal dialogue toward the warmth you would offer a good friend. Self-compassion — more effective than self-criticism as a motivator — includes self-kindness, recognition of common humanity, and mindful awareness of difficulty without over-identification.

Example

‘I would never speak to someone I love the way I just spoke to myself. What would I say to a friend who was struggling with exactly this? Can I offer myself that same response right now?’

7Self-SoothingDBT

in acute distress and needing to stabilize before problem-solving is possible

Engage one or more of the five senses deliberately and comfortingly to reduce emotional intensity. Self-soothing creates a window of calm in which more reflective coping becomes possible. Identify in advance which sensory inputs are genuinely soothing for you personally.

Example

Prepare a personal self-soothe kit: a calming scent, a piece of music, a comforting texture, a warming visual. Use these intentionally when distress is rising — before it peaks and before the window for intervention closes.

8Grief WorkIPT

a significant loss — of a person, relationship, role, or identity — has not been fully processed

Create structured space to acknowledge, express, and work through grief. This includes naming what was lost, exploring emotional complexity (anger, guilt, relief alongside sadness), and gradually rebuilding with the loss integrated rather than avoided. Unprocessed grief frequently presents as depression, numbness, or relational withdrawal.

Example

In session: ‘Let’s talk about who they were to you and what life looked like with them in it. What do you miss most? What was complicated? How has this loss changed you — and is there any part of that change you want to carry forward?’

A note on affective work

The goal is not the absence of difficult emotion — it is the capacity to have feelings without being controlled by them. Emotions are information, not commands. Regulation means responding rather than reacting.

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