Read Mind-Body Workbook for PTSD Online
Authors: Stanley Block
Body Tension:
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3. Do the Trigger map again, writing the same trigger at the top of the map and the same requirement in the oval. Before you start writing,listen to background sounds and feel your body’s pressure on your seat, your feet on the floor, and the pen in your hand. Once you are settled, keep feeling the pen in your hand as you start writing. Watch the ink go onto the paper and listen to background sounds. For the next few minutes, jot any thoughts that come to mind.
Trigger Requirement Map with Bridging
My trigger is
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It’s now clear that your unmet requirement, rather than the event, is what causes your distress. Your ability to find and defuse your requirements is vital for you to heal from your PTSD.
Day Three Date:____________
1. Keep tuning in to your senses and finding your hidden requirements whenever a current event triggers your I-System. How did it go?
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2. Log any troubling behaviors or symptoms that come up during your day related to your trauma experiences; for example, avoiding people or situations; going numb; abusing alcohol or drugs; being easily angered; feeling restless or depressed; being unable to concentrate; or having relationship issues, or work or school problems. What are the current triggering events? Also note your requirement and the traumatic event.
3. Do a map for a requirement from the previous chart that you’ve had trouble defusing. Write the triggering event at the top of the map and the requirement in the oval. Around the oval, scatter any thoughts that come up when you think about that requirement going unmet. Write for three to five minutes without editing your thoughts. Describe your body tension at the bottom of the map.
Requirement Map
My trigger is
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Body Tension:
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Finding the requirement (
Helicopters shouldn’t fly over my house) hidden beneath the trigger (helicopter sounds) may not quiet your I-System at first, but if you keep it up, bubble mapping will show you hidden requirements like The medevac helicopter should have arrived before Tom died. Getting clear about your requirements through mapping helps you defuse the current trigger in real time.
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4. Do this map again, writing the same event at the top of the map and the same requirement in the oval. Before you start writing,listen to background sounds and feel your body’s pressure on your seat, your feet on the floor, and the pen in your hand. Once you are settled, keep feeling the pen in your hand as you start writing. Watch the ink go onto the paper and listen to background sounds. For the next few minutes, jot any thoughts that come to mind.
Requirement Map with Bridging
My trigger is
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Day Four Date:____________
1. Often, our distressing experiences relate to fearful thoughts. Throughout the day, notice what events make you fearful. Find the hidden requirement for each.
2. List your three greatest fears about your life. Find and list the hidden requirements for each:
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3. Do a Fear map, writing your greatest fear in the oval. Scatter your thoughts around the oval for three to five minutes, without editing them. Write about your body tension at the bottom of the map.
Fear Map
Body Tension:
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Fear is an emotion from natural functioning that signals you about possible danger. When the I-System captures your fears, it convinces you that you can’t cope, which paralyzes you, making you a victim of your fear. Fighting the fear never works. It is helpful to consider the fear as having two parts: a thought and a body sensation.
4. Do this map again, writing the same fear in the oval. Before you start writing, listen to background sounds and feel your body’s pressure on your seat, your feet on the floor, and the pen in your hand. Once you are settled, keep feeling the pen in your hand as you start writing. Watch the ink go onto the paper and listen to background sounds. For the next few minutes, jot any thoughts that come to mind.
Fear Map with bridging