A liberated mind How to pivot toward what matters

Steven C. Hayes

Book - 2019

"Life is not a problem to be solved. ACT shows how we can live full and meaningful lives by embracing our vulnerability and turning toward what hurts. In this landmark book, the originator and pioneering researcher into Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) lays out the psychological flexibility skills that make it one of the most powerful approaches research has yet to offer. These skills have been shown to help even where other approaches have failed. Science shows that they are useful in virtually every area--mental health (anxiety, depression, substance abuse, eating disorders, PTSD); physical health (chronic pain, dealing with diabetes, facing cancer); social processes (relationship issues, prejudice, stigma, domestic violence);... and performance (sports, business, diet, exercise). How does psychological flexibility help? We struggle because the problem-solving mind tells us to run from what causes us fear and hurt. But we hurt where we care. If we run from a sense of vulnerability, we must also run from what we care about. By learning how to liberate ourselves, we can live with meaning and purpose, along with our pain when there is pain. Although that is a simple idea, it resists our instincts and programming. The flexibility skills counter those ingrained tendencies. They include noticing our thoughts with curiosity, opening to our emotions, attending to what is in the present, learning the art of perspective taking, discovering our deepest values, and building habits based around what we deeply want. Beginning with the epiphany Steven Hayes had during a panic attack, this book is a powerful narrative of scientific discovery filled with moving stories as well as advice for how we can put flexibility skills to work immediately. Hayes shows how allowing ourselves to feel fully and think freely moves us toward commitment to what truly matters to us. Finally, we can live lives that reflect the qualities we choose"--

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Subjects
Genres
Self-help publications
Published
New York : Avery [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Steven C. Hayes (author)
Physical Description
xvi, 428 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 391-415) and index.
ISBN
9780735214002
  • Acknowledgments
  • Author's Note
  • Part 1.
  • Chapter 1. The Need to Pivot
  • Chapter 2. The Dictator Within
  • Chapter 3. Finding a Way Forward
  • Chapter 4. Why Our Thoughts Are So Automatic and Convincing
  • Chapter 5. The Problem with Problem Solving
  • Chapter 6. Turning Toward the Dinosaur
  • Chapter 7. Committing to a New Course
  • Chapter 8. We All Have the Ability to Pivot
  • Part 2. Introduction: Starting Your Act Journey
  • Chapter 9. The First Pivot Defusion-Putting the Mind on a Leash
  • Chapter 10. The Second Pivot Self-The Art of Perspective-Taking
  • Chapter 11. The Third Pivot Acceptance-Learning from Pain
  • Chapter 12. The Fourth Pivot Presence-Living in the Now
  • Chapter 13. The Fifth Pivot Values-Caring by Choice
  • Chapter 14. The Sixth Pivot Action-Committing to Change
  • Part 3. Introduction: Using Your Act Toolkit to Evolve Your Life
  • Chapter 15. Adopting Healthy Behaviors
  • Dieting and Exercise
  • Coping with Stress
  • Sleep
  • Chapter 16. Mental Health
  • Depression
  • Anxiety
  • Substance Abuse
  • Eating Disorders
  • Psychosis
  • Chapter 17. Nurturing Relationships
  • Helping Others Nurture Flexibility
  • Parenting
  • Relationships with Romantic Partners
  • Combating Abuse
  • Overcoming Prejudice
  • Chapter 18. Bringing Flexibility to Performance
  • Tackling Procrastination
  • Learning and Creativity
  • Dealing with Constraints at Work
  • Sports Performance
  • Chapter 19. Cultivating Spiritual Well-Being
  • Practicing Perspective-Taking
  • Cultivating Forgiveness
  • ACT and Religion
  • Chapter 20. Coping with Illness and Disability
  • Chronic Pain
  • Diabetes
  • Cancer
  • Tinnitus
  • Terminal Illness
  • Chapter 21. Social Transformation
  • Epilogue
  • Notes
  • Index

Life should be getting easier, but it's not. It's a paradox of the modern world. At the very moment that science and technology are providing us previously unimagined longevity, health, and social interaction, too many of us struggle to live meaningful, peaceful lives full of love and contribution. There is no question that we've made incredible progress over the last fifty years. That computer in your pocket called your phone is 120 million times more powerful than the guidance computer for Apollo 11-the first rocket to land people on the moon. Progress in health technology has been similar. Leukemia killed 86 percent of the children who contracted it fifty years ago-now it kills less than half that. In the last twenty-five years, child mortality, maternal mortality, and deaths from malaria all declined 40 to 50 percent. If physical health and safety were the issue and you could pick only the moment to be born in the world but not to whom, you could not do better than to choose today. Behavioral science is another matter. Yes, we are living longer. But it is hard to make the case that we are living happier, more successful lives. We have more accurate information than ever about illnesses that are largely due to lifestyle. Yet despite billions of dollars spent on research, our healthcare systems are staggering under the dramatically rising rates of obesity, diabetes, and chronic pain. Mental illness is rapidly becoming much more of a problem, not less. In 1990, depression was the fourth leading cause of disability and disease worldwide after respiratory infections, diarrheal illnesses, and prenatal conditions. In 2000, it was the third leading cause. By 2010, it ranked second. In 2017 the World Health Organization (WHO) rated it number one. Approximately forty million Americans over age eighteen have been diagnosed as having an anxiety disorder, and almost 10 percent of Americans report "frequent mental distress." We don't feel as though we have adequate time. We don't take care of ourselves the way we'd like. Our health suffers. Many of us are putting one foot in front of the other while lacking a real sense of purpose and vitality. Every day, someone who seems to have a good life decides to eat a bottle of pills rather than continue one more day. How can this be? I believe it is because we have not risen to the challenges of being human in the modern world. Some of the very things we have been doing over the last hundred years to foster human prosperity have created our conundrum. Take the case of innovations in technology. Each step forward-radio to TV to the Internet to the smartphone-has created greater mental and social challenges, and our culture and minds haven't adjusted rapidly enough in effective and empowering ways. As a result of our technology, we are all exposed to a constant diet of horror, drama, and judgment. In addition, many of us are left feeling overwhelmed and threatened by the rapid pace of change. A concrete example: only a few decades ago children ran and played freely in ways that could bring child endangerment complaints today. This increased protectiveness is not due to the world actually becoming more dangerous; research suggests it has not. Our impression that the world is less safe results more from exposure to uncommon events through the media. No matter how calm we feel, we can turn on our computers and see a tragedy unfold, complete with images of those who died just minutes ago. The twenty-four-hour news cycle shreds our veil of safety with constant videos of capricious violence. When the external world changes at this speed, our internal world needs to change too. That sounds logical, but it is hard to know what steps to take. The good news is that behavioral science has developed a plausible answer to how we can do better. Over the last thirty-five years, my colleagues and I have studied a small set of skills that say more about how human lives will unfold than any other single set of mental and behavioral processes previously known to science. That is not an exaggeration. In over one thousand studies, we've found that these skills help determine why some people thrive after life challenges and some don't, or why some people experience many positive emotions (joy, gratitude, compassion, curiosity) and others very few. They predict who is going to develop a mental health problem such as anxiety, depression, trauma, or substance abuse, and how severe or long-lasting the problem will be. These skills predict who will be effective at work, who will have healthy relationships, who will succeed in dieting or exercise, who will rise to the challenges of physical disease, how people will do in athletic competition, and how they will perform in many other areas of human endeavor. This set of skills combines to give us psychological flexibility. Psychological flexibility is the ability to feel and think with openness, to attend voluntarily to your experience of the present moment, and to move your life in directions that are important to you, building habits that allow you to live life in accordance with your values and aspirations. It's about learning not to turn away from what is painful, instead turning toward your suffering in order to live a life full of meaning and purpose. Wait, turning toward your suffering? That's right. Psychological flexibility allows us to turn toward our discomfort and disquiet in a way that is open, curious, and kind. It's about looking in a nonjudgmental and compassionate way at the places in ourselves and in our lives where we hurt, because the things that have the power to cause us the most pain are often the things we care about most deeply. Our deepest yearnings and most powerful motivations lie hidden inside our most unhealthy defense systems. Our impulse is usually either to try to deny our pain, by suppression or self-medication, or to get caught up in dwelling on it through rumination and worry, allowing it to take charge of our lives. Psychological flexibility empowers us to accept our pain and live life as we desire, with our pain when there is pain. I believe psychological flexibility is a means of achieving human liberation; it is the counterweight that people need to rise to the increasing challenges of the modern world. And hundreds of studies show that the skills that allow us to develop psychological flexibility can be learned, to a degree even through books such as this one. I know these are big claims, but if I do my job, by the end of this book you will understand why the skills that build flexibility are so powerful and how you can begin developing them in yourself. It's perhaps not surprising that the core message of turning toward our pain echoes other approaches, such as the mindfulness literature developed out of spiritual traditions, or the emphasis on exposure in cognitive behavioral therapy. But the new science of psychological flexibility is not aping old themes-by repeatedly asking why these methods work, it has arrived at a deeper understanding of the importance of flexibility skills and how to establish them. This understanding was produced by a scientific community that followed a new path of research, resulting in a new and more integrated set of methods for living happier and healthier lives. Excerpted from A Liberated Mind: How to Pivot Toward What Matters by Steven C. Hayes All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.