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Distractions list (add/take away as desired):
Torah: Listen or watch a shiur, learn with a chavrusa, learn something interesting yourself. Chores: Shop, clean, cook, wash dishes, iron, garden, laundry Exercise: Brisk walk, run, swim, pilates, weights, bike, push ups, outdoor activities, sports Games: Get games on your computer/phone that will fully engage your mind (and your hands…). Figure out a Rubik's Cube, play a strategy game, tetris, chess, sudoku, crossword puzzle. Drive or walk somewhere: Write down three places you can go that might help the craving or urge subside. Art: Draw, paint, write, photography, play music Read or listen: Favorite music, Read an engross book (non fiction, fiction), GYE forum, handbook, articles or videos. Social activities: Call a supportive friend. talk to a family member (parents, siblings, spouse, children), hang out with a friend, write an email or text/whatsapp message to a friend. Call a GYE partner or mentor. Write names or initials of two people that you can talk to whenever you begin to have a craving or urge. Team sports: table tennis, hockey, soccer, softball, kick ball-just be with others Trades and crafts: Paint, build, work on car, tinker in your garage Vent feelings: Talk, start a journal, draw, throw eggs (just kidding.) Volunteer: start or join a chessed project. (Doing something for someone else is a great way to get out of our own problems and be constructive. Not only does helping others distract us from our distressing thoughts, but it also makes us feel like we are contributing and are playing a valuable role in another's life) Food: Eat or drink something, make popcorn, make beer (yg), cook, bake, eat a healthy snack (nuts, cheese, fruit). drink a glass of water, make a good coffee. Organize: email inbox, wallet, room, desk, pictures, plan on redecorating your home or room Refresh yourself: Drive somewhere, take a shower, hold an ice cube until the urge passes, splash cold water on your face to “reset”, Deep breathing, belly breathing, gratitude breathing. Tighten the muscles in your body in a particular sequence, over and over (tighten your feet, then your calves, then your thighs, then your pelvis, then your stomach, then your chest, then your shoulders, then your neck, then your face, over and over again). Plan your next vacation-if you haven't done that yet since your last vacation Pre corona Reduce sexual tension: Take a cold shower. Hobbies: Work on your favorite hobby (e.g. look into your genealogy on the Internet). Redirect your attention:
What is the happiest place you can imagine? Think about being there. Think of every sensory detail—see, hear, smell, taste, and touch these. Picture yourself by a stream, in the mountains, or staring at the passing clouds in the sky. Let yourself feel, smell and hear your surroundings in your virtual reality. If distressing thoughts intrude, try to let them pass and refocus on your peaceful surroundings. Make a list of good memories that you can refer to when you need it, or a list of pleasant activities you can use as distractions. Thoughts can be of events, people, songs, phrases, or even places that are special to you in some way. Focusing on your Hierarchy of Values (i.e. the top five values in your life) is a positive form of distraction.
Or you can imagine wierd and impossible things ie a pink elephant walking a tightrope.
Echoing. Echoing can be compared to counting sheep while trying to fall asleep. The goal is to have a repetitive thought or task taking the cognitive space that distressing thoughts and feelings occupy.
Replay a song, recite a quote or poem over and over, count ceiling tiles, steps, heart beats or anything else in your environment. When you do this, your body will start to calm. Play the "alphabet game" by looking at license plates, book titles or a printed page and find an A, then a B, then a C, etc. Even simple activities like saying the alphabet or alef beis backwards can fill up your attention so that you have nothing for the urge. Look around you. Is there something in the room that you could count? It might be ceiling tiles, floor tiles, designs on wallpaper or paneling, window blinds, leaves of a plant, or something that you can observe through a window outside the room. Count the objects that you see as rapidly as you can. For instance, count the number of blinds that you see on a window. If you count very rapidly and as accurately as you can, you will find that other thoughts that were on your mind go away, because you are focused on the counting. Subtract numbers (for instance, subtract 7 from 1,000 and get 993, subtract 7 again and get 986, subtract 7 again, and so on) Say the alphabet backwards Read words backwards (say the word correctly but read the sequence backwards: "backwards words read")
Thanks menachem
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