Module
Interpersonal Effectiveness
Method
DBT
Display
Interpersonal Effectiveness | Social Support
Interpersonal relationships can be very challenging when you are also dealing with unstable emotions. As a consequence, many of us struggle to maintain healthy relationships. This module will help you attend to your relationships.
The following skills will help you
- Take care of your relationships
- Balance your needs with others’ demands
- Balance your “wants” with your “shoulds”
- Build mastery and self-respect
Everyone has these skills to a certain extent. We are all at least somewhat able to ask for something or say no. For example, you might be able to say no to more water at a restaurant but not to a friend asking for a favor. Maybe you have these skills but aren’t sure when to use them. In order to sort out which skills to use and when to use them, you need to know what your goals are in a situation.
There are three types of goals:
- Objective Effectiveness: obtain something you want
- Relationship Effectiveness: maintain or improve a relationship
- Self-Respect Effectiveness: maintain your self-respect
In most circumstances, you’ll have more than one goal in a situation. You may have all three. If the other person is important to you, you’ll want to maintain the relationship while obtaining something you want. And you’ll probably want to keep your self-respect in the process. The skills for each goal can be used simultaneously.
It is crucial to practice these skills. Practice them with your therapist. Practice them with strangers, with loved ones, with pets. If a situation arises where you can ask for something or say no, do so skillfully. If nothing arises, dream up a situation to practice. Go to a store and ask for something. Don’t wait for a situation where you can practice, actively search one out. DBT is learned by doing.