| Jane presents for the treatment of pregnancy anxiety in the context of previous miscarriage. Recent therapy sessions have focused on changing her relationship to difficult thoughts/feelings in the service of increasing meaningful life engagement (e.g., being fully present and engaged with her 4-year-old daughter during playtime even while feeling anxious). |
| Documentation |
| Note Excerpt 1: Today's session focused on helping Jane slow down, step back and notice her thoughts/feelings, rather than automatically reacting to them, by practicing the “I notice…” exercise (e.g., “I notice that I'm feeling anxious, I notice that my heart is racing, I notice I'm having the thought “something is wrong with my baby”).ACT Process: function of documentation•Acceptance: reading about the specific thoughts/feelings she described in session provides another opportunity for her to interact with these difficult experiences in new way. •Cognitive defusion: labeling the thought (i.e., I notice I'm having the thought that) and using quotation marks helps the client observe the thought as a product of the mind, decreasing its influence on behavior. •Present moment awareness: naming practice of moment-to-moment awareness supports skill acquisition and generalization. •Self as context: using observer language reinforces that the patient is separate and distinct from her experiences. Sample experiential exercise utilizing open notes:•Patient and clinician practice “I notice…” exercise while reviewing a note together. The clinician cues observing momentary experience with openness and curiosity (e.g., “What thoughts/feelings arise as you read this part of the note?”) |
| Note Excerpt 2: Discussed Jane's value of being a mother who “fully shows up” for her daughter and reviewed homework (committed action) to spend longer periods of time more fully engaged with her daughter during playtime, and less time in her head focused on her worries or unnecessarily checking fetal heart rate. Jane reports that while this was challenging, acknowledging and making space for anxiety (rather than fighting it) helped her spend more time with her daughter and check the monitor less frequently.ACT Process: function of documentation•Acceptance: describing positive consequences associated with allowing difficult thoughts/feelings reinforces acceptance. •Values: focusing on values helps the client orient toward valued-living rather than anxiety reduction and increases willingness to experience difficult thoughts/feelings by placing doing so in a frame of coordination with something that is important and meaningful. •Committed Action: stating the client's committed action reviewing progress reinforces behavior change and invites opportunity for reflection and growth. Sample experiential exercise utilizing open notes:•The clinician and patient practice noticing what it is like to notice herself behaving in a way that is consistent with her values (e.g., “What this like for you, to see yourself being the mom you want to be? Not perfectly, we are never perfect in our intentions, but moving with conviction in that direction?”). |