Tame Your Mood Newsletter
In This Issue:
Feature Article: What is Depression?
My new book
Archive of Past Newsletters
Audio Recordings
About Marty

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 Marty L. Cooper, MFT

 

4831 Geary Blvd.

San Francisco, CA 94118

 

martycooper@

 

 

 

 

 

 

 







































































 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

mlcooper.com

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October 2011                   Vol. 3, Issue 11
Saturday, Nov. 12th One-Day Workshop:  

"Coping with Depression: Mindfulness-Based, Cognitive Strategies for Relating to Depression"

 

This introductory workshop will be from 10a-4pm on Saturday the 5th. For more information on MBCT, click here, or to register, click here.or to request registration forms, please click here.

Greetings! 

Happy Early(ish) Autumn! 

 

http://www.freedigitalphotos.net/images/view_photog.php?photogid=851 San Francisco is having it's token summer, but I think in the rest of the U.S., folks are looking at a coming Autumn.  I hope you're enjoying the changes, whatever they may be in your  neck of the woods.  

 

In this month's essay, I'm sketching out a mini-map of acceptance, because, although it is often thought of as one thing, it actually has four discrete stages. Confusion (and resistance) can often come out of a simple confusion about where you actually are in relation to acceptance.

 

Enjoy,

Marty

The Four Stages of Acceptance

 

In this month's article, I'm going to focus on a little mini-map of the path of acceptance.  Acceptance itself is often misunderstood in what it is and what it isn't (e.g., confusing it with resignation or passivity), but it's also often a conflation of what are actually different phases or depths of the experience. 

 

So:  Acceptance has four stages (plus a prelude):

 

Prelude:  Denial:  "There is no problem.  There is no difficulty.  I'm not doing anything wrong.  All good."  Except that there is a problem, because when a third party looks into this person's life, there is, objectively, a describable problem.   This is the not-accepting in the form of simply being asleep at the wheel.

 

Stage 1:  Recognition:  "I see that I'm depressed, but I refuse to accept it.  I'm going to keep fighting."  The mind cognizes the issue, but refuses to surrender to it.  "I recognize that I'm depressed, but I refuse to accept it," and therefore instead of dealing  with the depression as it is, there is a heroic, if Pyrrhic, struggle.

 

Stage 2:  Resignation:  "I see that

http://www.freedigitalphotos.net/images/view_photog.php?photogid=1256

 I'm depressed, and I see that I can't beat it, so I guess there's just nothing I can do."  Resignation is closer to a full holding of the truth, but while a resigned person accepts the limits of their situation, they then interpret those limitations too broadly:  "I'm helpless."  This is the stage where part of the experience is accepted, but the different possibilities of response, another aspect of the truth, is not seen fully and therefore there's a collapse.

 

Stage 3:  Acceptance:  "I see I'm depressed, and I can't beat it by struggle.  Ok, so that's how it is now.  So what can I do?"  This is where the "problem" is understood for what it is and also that there are multiple possibilities for responding.  You accept that you've hit your golf ball into the rough, but you see that you can use whatever club you want to get it out (and also that some clubs work better than others...).  There's not an emotional reaction to the "problem," but rather a neutral acknowledgement and openness to what comes next, knowing that it's not strictly defined.

 

Stage 4:  Embrace:  "I see I'm depressed, and I accept it, will work with it openly, and am so curious about what this experience is coming along to teach me."  With embrace, there is not only an acceptance, but an actual draw into the experience, as if to a loved one.  You don't resent, you don't deny, you don't even see it as simply a neutral phenomenon.  With embrace, you see that the experience in itself, even if difficult or painful, has inherent value, is not trying to hurt you, and even moreso, has a diamond hiding out int the muck.  This is not a Pollyanna stance, either, where, with gritted teach and white knuckles, you tell yourself, "Everything is OK!!!"  Rather, the Embrace stage is where you really see the value of an experience and, therefore, move towards it.

 

This mini-map is offered in order to give some granularity to the often-bandied word "acceptance," so that it (as Wikipedia puts it) the concept is disambiguated.  There really are these discrete stages, and knowing this can help both spot where you are in relation to a certain "problem," and what work needs to be done to deepen in "acceptance."

 

 


My New Book is Now Available

Anxiety and Depression:  42 Essays on Overcoming the Wild Moods

My new book,

Anxiety and Depression:  42 Essays on Overcoming the Wild Moods, is now available.

 

It is a collection of short essays, focusing on the challenge of managing, and ultimately, uprooting depression and anxiety.  You can find a few sample articles here, and can purchase the book on Amazon here.

Archive of Past Newsletters
   All past issues of Tame Your Mood can be found here.
Audio Recordings
   Various audio recordings can be found here.
About Marty

I am a San Francisco psychotherapist who helps individuals struggling with anxiety and depression to not only manage theseMarty L. Cooper, MFT "wild
moods," but eventually learn how to overcome them.  I work comprehensively with mental, emotional, bodily, and spiritual dimensions and anxiety and depression, all
of which are necessary to overcome the chronic quality of anxiety and depression.


If you are interested in exploring working together in psychotherapy, please contact me at:

 

415.835.2162,
or email at:  martycooper@mlcooper.com.