Ooh, I know this one!
I do too. And it feels sucky.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Ooh, I know this one!
I do too. And it feels sucky.
I thought Tom's way was the only right way.
Timelies. I hope Fay gets the good job that values her; C gets the familyl that she deserves; Suzi gets a break; and everyone else gets candy.
The method *I* use is to blame Tom Scola. You see, if he's heaping the weight of the world on himself anyway whats a little bit more? He probably didn't even notice until just now.
Ooh, I know this one!
Me, too! Me, too!
(I'd be interested in your paper too, vw. I personally practice radical hiding, but it's not working out so well.)
I thought Tom's way was not only right, but the only possible way. Hmm.
Ginger, you may want to consider adding Radical Banging Your Head Against A Wall to your repertoire. It opens up the options considerably.
the only possible way. Hmm.
Yes, this. I'm having a difficult time wrapping my head around what vw is even talking about.
Writing about 31? That'd be half-assed.
I had that figured and one and a half-assed. I'll never get the math(s).
Marsha Linehan, the person who developed DBT, has handouts about the different skills learned in therapy. Here are the bullet points from the Radical Acceptance handout:
It sounds kind of hokey, and takes a little while to "get it" (or at least it did for me), but it really can be helpful. I don't want to bore the whole board with my-therapy-loves-carrots. But, anyone who's interested in reading my chapter on Radical Acceptance, let me know, and I can e-mail it to you later today.
It sounds kind of hokey
Mostly, it sounds very Buddhist. I'm not sure why I wasn't making that connection when you've talked about it before.
Mostly, it sounds very Buddhist.
Yeah. A lot of her ideas come from Buddhism. Mindfulness is another big one.