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Recovery Workshop: Lesson Forty-FiveUrge Control: Isolating the EmotionsBy now, you should have a little better idea of what your 'core identity' is and how it functions. Remember, it is not an actual entity, but rather, a conceptual one. It is the virtual command center for your thoughts, values, feelings, emotions, etc. Its purpose is to allow you to manage your life based on the information currently being stored there. Learning to communicate with your core identity is the ultimate tool in developing a healthy decision-making process.
The Role of Emotions in Urge Control Earlier in the workshop, you were introduced to the concept of 'measuring your compulsive behavior'. What you were doing, in fact, was measuring the emotional stimulation that that behavior provided. If you recall, you were asked to assign arbitrary values to any number of common elements involved in compulsive behavior (recall the Wheel of Sexual Compulsion). Although you were asked to use numerical values, the actual unit of measurement was irrelevant, as you could have assigned apples just as easily as numbers. The idea was to allow you to begin visualizing a concrete perception of how the compulsive elements work together to produce varied changes in your emotional state. The goal of today's lesson is to identify the emotions that are associated with those elements.
We will begin by identifying an actual compulsive ritual in your life. If you would like, feel free to use a ritual that you have already 'mapped out' in a previous lesson. Or, create a new one based on more recent behavior. The more experience you gain in mapping rituals, the faster you will master the skills for managing urges...and the faster you will move away from the concept of mechanically measuring your behavior. If you decide to use an older ritual, remember that it should represent each step of your compulsive behavior--when that step involves some type of emotional simulation. So if you have since gained more insight into that behavior, take the time to update the map of that ritual to reflect your current awareness.
The following is an example of a mapped compulsive ritual:
Again, this is a basic ritual--focusing on the functionality of the behavior. You may benefit by mapping out a more complex ritual (or if you are really ambitious, an entire chain that involves all of your behaviors/fantasies), but it is not necessary for this lesson. For instance, the fantasy example used could have been broken down further into types of fantasies...or the masturbation could have (and probably should have) been broken down into the use of fetish objects, anal penetration, types of sensory stimulation, etc.
Once you have mapped out a personal compulsive ritual, your role shifts to identifying the emotions that are produced by each element of that ritual. For instance, using the ritual from above, the emotions would be as follows:
Keep in mind that there are no set emotions for any of the elements. One person may experience intense feelings of achievement upon orgasm; another may experience feelings of failure. Which leads to guilt and shame. Which leads to further emotional imbalance. Which leads to... It is YOU who needs to identify the emotions that YOUR core identity has attached to these elements. No one else can do it for you.
Once you have mechanically identified these emotional elements, consider the practical role they play in the development/continuation of your compulsive behavior. Forget for a moment the technical side (e.g. measuring them) and focus only on the more general, personal role they play. Focus on how your emotions guide the decisions that you make. And while I am certain that you have already done this many times by now, this time...do so outside of the context of this workshop. Consider your 'core identity'. Consider how your core identity is used in making the ultimate decisions in your life. Then consider your emotions and how they influence that core identity--which influences the decisions that you make.
Why do this? Because it is only in a practical awareness of how emotions influence your core identity that you will be able to isolate those destructive emotions from your identity--which is the focus of the next lesson on urge control.
Exercise 45 1. Identifying the impact of emotions in compulsive urges is essential to objectifying that urge. In previous exercises, you have identified compulsive rituals that presented a linear look at your emotional state across a single action. In this lesson, you are being asked to isolate those emotional elements to the point where action can be taken that will break the chain itself.
II. Document only A and C in your recovery thread.
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