@Link Removed
Good things like: I feel this way because of what happened to me; Hardly anyone is all bad, therefore I have some good in me; I am good deep in my soul; I'm not stupid; I care about others; I like doing for others; I am conscientious about my work; I am honest (at least I strive to be); My children [or fill in the blank_____] need me; I love my family; my dog; I just made a mistake, it doesn't make me stupid, worthless, etc.
As I practiced this over several months the negative thoughts came less often and I was able with time to respond to stress, anger and frustration more easily with self-compassion. Now I when I make a really good blunder I say something like "Good one, Sam' or "That was elegant" and laugh. The result was amazing as the depression and debilitating anxiety became less intense.
In depth answer:
About telling yourself good things - I first had to see how many times each day I said or thought bad things about myself. My T had me buy one of those handheld counters (Google: hand tally counter - Staples, etc carry them for a few $).
He said my depression and acute anxiety was being driven and made worse by my negative thoughts and words against myself. You know like when I would mess up and say things like "I such a worthless POS; I'm such an idiot; I'm so stupid, I should've known better; I don't deserve to live," etc, etc,
So he had me begin counting each negative thought or word. In the beginning the count each day was between 80 and 90 times that I bombarded my mind and soul with self-hatred and loathing. Words are powerful, whether thought or spoken. Counting them made me see what I was doing to myself.
Counting them also made me want to lower the daily numbers. This was the first step.
The next was to say or think something positive about myself after each time I either had a negative though or word, or better yet, stop the negative before it fully developed in my mind and say the positive word instead, regardless whether I actually believed the positive or not.
In the beginning I didn't believe any of the positives my T had me write down during a session.
Things like: I feel this way because of what happened to me; Hardly anyone is all bad, therefore I have some good in me; I am good deep in my soul; I'm not stupid; I care about others; I like doing for others; I am conscientious about my work; I am honest (at least I strive to be); My children [or fill in the blank_____] need me; I love my family; my dog; I just made a mistake, it doesn't make me stupid, worthless, etc.
As I practiced this over several months the negative thoughts came less often and I was able with time to respond to stress, anger and frustration more easily with self-compassion. Now I when I make a really good blunder I say something like "Good one, Sam' or "That was elegant" and laugh. The result was amazing as the depression and debilitating anxiety became less intense.
This isn't to say it was all easy, or that this one practice will completely heal or remove any disorder/affliction. But it is one tool to help reduce the self-hatred that is one of the causes driving self-destructive behavior. There are other causes, surely.
To manage PTSD took other methods under the guidance of a good therapist, and to find the initial wound took peeling back the layers of events from my past. For me it was physical abuse accounting for the PTSD.
But another factor, or result, of the violence, was that being abused caused a deep sense of rejection, and my thinking as a child was that there must be something wrong with me since an adult surely wouldn't use violence and display such hatred toward me, otherwise. Since my mother allowed it, therefore it must be my fault, I reasoned. I believed she hated me for this unknown fault I carried, so I began, as a small child to also hate me.
I didn't mean to answer so in depth, it just all seems tied in together.
The short answer:If I may ask what kind of good things did you say to yourself?
Good things like: I feel this way because of what happened to me; Hardly anyone is all bad, therefore I have some good in me; I am good deep in my soul; I'm not stupid; I care about others; I like doing for others; I am conscientious about my work; I am honest (at least I strive to be); My children [or fill in the blank_____] need me; I love my family; my dog; I just made a mistake, it doesn't make me stupid, worthless, etc.
As I practiced this over several months the negative thoughts came less often and I was able with time to respond to stress, anger and frustration more easily with self-compassion. Now I when I make a really good blunder I say something like "Good one, Sam' or "That was elegant" and laugh. The result was amazing as the depression and debilitating anxiety became less intense.
In depth answer:
About telling yourself good things - I first had to see how many times each day I said or thought bad things about myself. My T had me buy one of those handheld counters (Google: hand tally counter - Staples, etc carry them for a few $).
He said my depression and acute anxiety was being driven and made worse by my negative thoughts and words against myself. You know like when I would mess up and say things like "I such a worthless POS; I'm such an idiot; I'm so stupid, I should've known better; I don't deserve to live," etc, etc,
So he had me begin counting each negative thought or word. In the beginning the count each day was between 80 and 90 times that I bombarded my mind and soul with self-hatred and loathing. Words are powerful, whether thought or spoken. Counting them made me see what I was doing to myself.
Counting them also made me want to lower the daily numbers. This was the first step.
The next was to say or think something positive about myself after each time I either had a negative though or word, or better yet, stop the negative before it fully developed in my mind and say the positive word instead, regardless whether I actually believed the positive or not.
In the beginning I didn't believe any of the positives my T had me write down during a session.
Things like: I feel this way because of what happened to me; Hardly anyone is all bad, therefore I have some good in me; I am good deep in my soul; I'm not stupid; I care about others; I like doing for others; I am conscientious about my work; I am honest (at least I strive to be); My children [or fill in the blank_____] need me; I love my family; my dog; I just made a mistake, it doesn't make me stupid, worthless, etc.
As I practiced this over several months the negative thoughts came less often and I was able with time to respond to stress, anger and frustration more easily with self-compassion. Now I when I make a really good blunder I say something like "Good one, Sam' or "That was elegant" and laugh. The result was amazing as the depression and debilitating anxiety became less intense.
This isn't to say it was all easy, or that this one practice will completely heal or remove any disorder/affliction. But it is one tool to help reduce the self-hatred that is one of the causes driving self-destructive behavior. There are other causes, surely.
To manage PTSD took other methods under the guidance of a good therapist, and to find the initial wound took peeling back the layers of events from my past. For me it was physical abuse accounting for the PTSD.
But another factor, or result, of the violence, was that being abused caused a deep sense of rejection, and my thinking as a child was that there must be something wrong with me since an adult surely wouldn't use violence and display such hatred toward me, otherwise. Since my mother allowed it, therefore it must be my fault, I reasoned. I believed she hated me for this unknown fault I carried, so I began, as a small child to also hate me.
I didn't mean to answer so in depth, it just all seems tied in together.