Hi Lisa,
The program advises to keep the following points in mind when it comes to planning your exposure work:
1. Learning occurs at moderate levels of anxiety and arousal. In planning your exposure work don€™t make it too easy or too hard. If you pick something that doesn€™t cause you any anxiety (a fear rating of 1 or 2) you won€™t experience a drop in your fear rating because there's really nowhere to go. As a result, you won't unlearn anything. On the other hand, if you pick something that causes a fear rating of a 9 or 10, it may be too difficult. Try to stay in the 3-8 range.
2. Exposure should be predictable. Plan your exposure work in advance and stick to the plan. Unplanned exposure doesn€™t work well. Planning your exposure makes it a bit more controllable and a little less frightening.
3. Set a goal for the exposure that you can reach. Set a goal for the exposure session. You may want to stay in the situation for at least a certain amount of time (say 30 minutes) or experience a certain decrease in you fear rating (say go from a 7 to a 5). Setting a reachable goal will give you something to aim for. Achieving your goals step-by-step will allow you to feel good about what you're accomplishing.
4. Stay in the situation until your fear goes down. This can happen in two ways. First, if you pick a situation for an exposure that causes you a fear rating of a 4 to 8, then after an hour you should be experiencing a drop in your fear rating. If not, maybe it was harder than you thought. However, there€™s another way to experience a decrease in fear, which is to repeat the exposure again and again. So for example, if your anxiety doesn't come down from an 8 in the first hour, try it again the next day. Eventually, if you repeat the experiment every day, it will start to drop.
5. If something is too hard, pick something just a little bit easier. If you end up having a fear rating of 9 or 10 try to figure out what you could do that would be almost the same but would result in a fear rating of 7 or 8.
For tomorrow, keep in mind that you have already succeeded. Let the previous successes give you the strength to take on these future challenges.
Many here share your same driving concerns. You may want to use the site's search feature to view previous members experiences and discussions on this topic.
Stick close and let us know how tomorrow goes.
Casey
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The PC Support Team