This is part 3 of the guide facing your fears. In part 1, you learned about the current research on approaches to facing your fears; in part 2 you learned how to face your fears in the service of your values by creating a values-based exposure menu.
Now, as you take steps to approach situations, activities, objects, thoughts, or images you’re afraid of, let’s consider the many ways you can practice your values-guided exposures.
Basically, you can use a situation, your imagination, or your body when facing your fears; academically speaking, those types of exposures are called situational, imaginal, and interoceptive exposure respectively. In this post, you will learn in detail about each one of them and how to connect them with your values. You can definitely mix them up in any way when working through your values-based exposure menu. Let’s learn more about them!
Using a situation: Situational exposure
This type of exposure means physically approaching an activity, situation, person, or object and getting in contact with all the discomfort that comes with it.
Example:
Rose has been avoiding driving on the freeway for years, and she manages this phobia by asking everyone in her house to give her a ride wherever she needs to go: to school, her girlfriend’s apartment, work, and basketball games. When she cannot find a ride, she plans ahead for the extra time it will take her to use public transportation, or she checks if she can afford a taxi. His exposure menu looks like this:
- Sitting in a parked car on a side street watching the freeway
- Riding on a freeway with someone else driving and me sitting in the back seat
- Riding on a freeway with someone else driving and me sitting in the passenger’s seat
- Driving for 5 minutes with a person sitting in the passenger’s seat
- Driving for one exit with a person sitting in the passenger’s seat
- Driving for 10 minutes with a person sitting in the passenger’s seat
- Driving for two exits with a person sitting in the passenger’s seat
- Driving for 10 minutes with a person sitting in the passenger’s seat during heavy traffic
- Driving for 10 minutes alone during heavy traffic
- Driving for 10 minutes alone with the radio on during heavy traffic
Using your imagination: Imaginal exposures
Another way to do exposure exercises is by using your imagination, based on a script you develop for that purpose. You can practice values-guided imaginal exposure if one of the following situations is happening:
- You are dealing with triggering situations that you cannot approach as a situational exposure.
(for example, obsessions about stabbing your loved ones, contracting AIDS, exposing your private parts, or molesting your child).
- You have tried a values-guided situational exposure first, and even though you tried to tune it up, you’re feeling terribly anxious, terrified, and fearful about that particular situation.
Here are the key elements to writing a script for a values-based imaginal exposure:
- Write the script in the present tense, as if it’s happening right now.
- Write the script in the first person, using “I” as a pronoun.
- Write the script using as many details as possible that involve the five senses (describe what you see, hear, feel, sense, and smell).
- Write the script describing your private experiences when having those obsessions. (for example, “I feel…,” “My body will…,” “I’m thinking…”.
- Write down the script, including the worst-case scenario.
- Do not include reassurance statements (for example, “Everything was okay, I was fine,” “They were fine,” “This would never happen,” “This will end soon”).
- Do not engage in mental rituals (such as counting, praying, saying special words, etc.).
- Don’t worry about the length of the script, it doesn’t matter. It’s more important to have a script that has the elements described in points 1 through 6.
Imaginal exposures have two steps:
Step 1: Recording your imaginal script
When conducting your imaginal exposures, you’ll need a device to record your voice. Sit in a comfortable position, with your recorder and written script handy, take a deep breath, and start the recording of your imaginal script.
When recording your imaginal script, you may experience some degree of discomfort and urges to neutralize your reactions. Do your best to continue the recording, keep talking, keep recording, until you complete recording your full imaginal script.
Step 2: Listening to your imaginal script
Find a comfortable place to listen to your recording, and then play it for at least 30 minutes a day. If you can, set the replay option on your device; if not, do so manually. After writing your script, you can put into action your imaginal exposure by reading it, recording it, and listening to it.
Example:
Let’s think for a moment of Jason, a very religious person of faith experiencing blasphemous obsessions, such as, Does God really exist? Is the Bible a trustworthy resource? When having these obsessions, Jason feels guilty and ashamed. He spends hours praying as proof of his faith. When considering the consequence of his fear, Jason knows that he is afraid of losing his faith. So he writes an imaginal script about it.
“I’m walking in the street, wandering around and feeling a strong sense of emptiness. God has left me. He’s not protecting me any longer. I’m sad, feeling abandoned, and upset that He’s not watching over me. No one is watching over me. I keep walking in the street feeling a strong hollow sensation and pain in my chest. My sense of loneliness is bigger than my existence. I cry quietly while walking in the street; no one notices anything.
As I walk, I see so many homeless people, smell bad smells, watch people driving pretentious cars in a rush. Everyone is doing their own thing, nobody cares about anybody. This is evidence that God doesn’t exist, that I cannot trust the Bible, and that He’s not in charge. I know that I lost my faith. There is no God, there are only humans existing on their own.”
Using your body: Somatic or interoceptive exposures
Sometimes the triggers of a habitual safety-seeking behavior are physical sensations—breathing, swallowing, not feeling full after eating, to name a few—that act as a barrier in a person’s life. So an exposure focusing on these physical sensations is handy to expand your life. These types of exposures are called somatic or interoceptive.
For this type of values-guided exposure, you need to identify those specific physical sensations that are related to your triggering episodes. Then do two things:
- Think about regular physical activities that are part of your day-to-day life that may trigger some of those bodily sensations (for example, if your heart beating fast is a trigger for your fear of having a heart attack, one exposure exercise could be going for a run for 30 minutes).
- Practice interoceptive exercises that mimic or activate that particular physical sensation.
Here are the most common interoceptive exercises you can start with: holding your breath, swallowing fast, jumping up and down in the same place, breathing through a straw, staring in a mirror, drinking water really fast, running up and down the stairs, staring at a light, smelling strong smells, wearing a scarf around your neck a bit tight, shaking your head from side to another, stretching muscles for long periods of time so you experience a tingling sensation, or doing ab workouts with books on your stomach.
Now that you’re familiar with three different types of exposure exercises, you can play with them in your values-based exposure menu so you have a broad range of activities to engage with all the stuff you have been avoiding because of anxieties, fears, worries, obsessions, and panic.
PART 4: Where do you start?