vivaldifollia:

Omg there were these poster sales at school and ofc there wasn’t any Vivaldi (they only had posters of Living People) but they had a sheet where you can write suggestions for posters for next year and ofc I was like

Vivaldi

Antonio Lucio Vivaldi

Antonio Vivaldi

Vivaldi

Antonio Vivaldi

Antonio Vivaldi ♡

  • Vivaldi
  1. Antonio Lucio Vivaldi

But wait!

Why not make one yourself 🤔 hmmm

Alternative Coping Mechanisms To Help Avoid Or Reduce Self-Harming

lithium-x-bpd:

This post is going to be very long so I apologize in advance but it is going to be worth the read. I got this 8 page handout from my psychiatrist so I figured I would share it with you guys. Credit goes to whoever originally came up with this.

Alternatives for when you’re feeling angry or restless:

  • Scribble on photos of people in magazines 
  • Viciously stab an orange 
  • Throw a pair of socks against the wall 
  • Have a pillow fight with the wall 
  • Scream very loudly 
  • Tear apart newspapers, photos, or magazines 
  • Go to the gym, dance, exercise 
  • Listen to music and sing along loudly 
  • Draw a picture of what is making you angry 
  • Beat up a stuffed bear
  • Pop bubble rap 
  • Pop balloons 
  • Splatter paint
  • Scribble on a piece of paper until the whole page is black 
  • Throwing darts at a dartboard 
  • Go for a run 
  • Write your feelings on paper then rip it up 
  • Use stress relievers 
  • Build a fort of pillows and then destroy it 
  • Throw ice cubes at the bathtub wall, at a tree, etc 
  • Brush the fur of a stuffed animal or real animal 
  • Slash an empty plastic soda bottle or a piece of heavy cardboard or an old shirt or sock 
  • Make a soft cloth doll to represent the things you are angry at; cut and tear it instead of yourself 
  • Flatten aluminum cans for recycling, seeing how fast you can go 
  • On a sketch or photo of yourself, mark in red ink what you want to do. Cut and tear the picture. 
  • Break sticks 
  • Cut up fruits 
  • Make yourself as comfortable as possible 
  • Stomp around in heavy shoes 
  • Play handball or tennis 
  • Yell at what you are breaking and tell it why you are angry, hurt, upset, etc.
  • Buy a cheap plate and decorate it with markers, stickers, cut outs from magazines, words, images, whatever that expresses your pain and sadness and when you are done, smash it. (Please be careful when doing this)

Alternatives that will give you a sensation (other than pain) without harming yourself:

  • Hold ice in your hands, against your arm, or in your mouth
  • Run your hands under freezing cold water 
  • Snap a rubber band or hair band against your wrist 
  • Clap your hands until it stings 
  • Wax your legs 
  • Drink freezing cold water 
  • Splash your face with cold water
  • Put glue on your hands and then peel it off 
  • Massage where you want to hurt yourself 
  • Take a hot shower/bath 
  • Jump up and down to get some sensation in your feet 
  • Write or paint on yourself 
  • Arm wrestle with a friend or family member 
  • Take a cold bath 
  • Bite into a hot pepper 

Alternatives that will distract you or take up your time:

  • Say “I will self-harm in fifteen minutes if I want to” and keep going for periods of fifteen minutes until the urge fades
  • Color your hair 
  • Count to ten getting louder until you are screaming 
  • Sing on the karaoke machine 
  • Complete something you’ve been putting off 
  • Take up a new hobby 
  • Make a cup of tea 
  • Tell and laugh at jokes 
  • Play solitaire
  • Count up to 500 
  • Surf the net 
  • Make as many words out of your full name as possible 
  • Count ceiling tiles or lights 
  • Search ridiculous things on the web
  • Color coordinate your wardrobe 
  • Play with toys, such as a slinky 
  • Go to the park and play on the swings 
  • Call up an old friend
  • Do school work 
  • Play a music instrument 
  •  Watch TV or a movie 
  • Paint your nails 
  • Alphabetize your CDs or books 
  • Cook
  • Make origami to occupy your hands 
  • Dress up and try on old clothes 
  • Doodle on sheets of paper 
  • Play computer games or painting programs, such as photoshop.
  • Write out lyrics to your favorite song 
  • Play a sport 
  • Read a book/magazine 
  • Do a crossword 
  • Draw a comic strip 
  • Make a chain link out of paper counting the hours or days you’ve been self-harm free using pretty colored paper 
  • Knit, sew, or make a necklace 
  • Hunt for things on eBay or Amazon 
  • Go shopping 
  • Memorize a poem with meaning 
  • Learn to swear in another language 
  • Look up words in a dictionary 
  • Play hide-and-seek with your siblings 
  • Go outside and watch the clouds roll by 
  • Plan a party 
  • Find out if any concerts will be in your area
  • Make your own dance routine 
  • Trace your hand on a piece of paper; on your thumb, write something you like to look at; on your index finger, write something you like to touch; on your middle finger, write your favorite scent; on your ring finger, write something you like the taste of; on your pinky finger, write something you like to listen to; on your palm, write something you like about yourself
  • Plan regular activities for your mot difficult time of day 
  • Finish homework before it’s due
  • Take break from mental processing 
  • Notice black and white thinking 
  • Get out on your own, get away from the stress
  • Go on YouTube
  • Make a scrapbook 
  • Color in a picture or coloring book 
  • Make a phone list of people you can call for support. Allow yourself to use it.
  • Pay attention to your breathing. (breath slowly, in through your nose and out through your mouth)
  • Pay attention to the rhythmic motions of your body (walking, stretching, etc.)
  • Choose a random object and try to list 30 different uses for it
  • Pick a subject and research it on the web – alternatively, pick something to research and then keep clicking on links, trying to get as far away from the original topic as you can 
  • Take a small step towards a goal you have

Alternatives that are completely bizarre. At the least, you’ll have a laugh:

  • Crawl on all fours and bark like a dog or another animal
  • Run around outside screaming 
  • Laugh for no reason whatsoever 
  • Make funny faces in a mirror 
  • Without turning orange, self-tan 
  • Pluck your eyebrows 
  • Put faces on apples, oranges, other sorts of food 
  • Go to the zoo and name all of the animals 
  • Color on the walls 
  • Blow bubbles 
  • Pull weeds in the garden 

Alternatives for when you’re feeling guilty, sad, or lonely:

  • Congratulate yourself on each minute you go without self-harming
  • Draw or paint 
  • Look at the sky 
  • Instead of punishing yourself by self-harming, punish yourself by not self-harming
  • Call a friend and ask for company 
  • Buy a cuddly toy 
  • Give someone a hug with a smile 
  • Put a face mask on 
  • Watch a favorite TV show or movie 
  • Eat something ridiculously sweet 
  • Remember a happy moment and relive it for awhile in your heard 
  • Treat yourself to some chocolate 
  • Try to imagine the future and plan things you want to do 
  • Look at things that are special to you 
  • Compliment someone else 
  • Make sculptures 
  • Watch fish 
  • Let yourself cry 
  • Play with a pet 
  • Have or give a massage 
  • Imagine yourself living in a perfect home and describe it in your mind 
  • If you’re religious, read the bible or pray 
  • Light a candle and watch the flame (but please be careful)
  • Go chat in a chat room 
  • Allow yourself to cry; crying is a healthy release of emotions 
  • Accept a gift from a friend 
  • Carry tokens to remind you of peaceful comforting things/people 
  • Take a hot bath with bath oil or bubbles 
  • Curl up under a comforter with hot cocoa and good book 
  • Make a tray of special treats and tuck yourself into bed with and watch TV or read

Alternatives for when you’re feeling panicky or scared:

  • “See, hear and feel” – 5 things, then 4, then 3, and count down to one which make you focus on your surroundings and will calm you down 
  • Listen to soothing music; have a CD with motivational songs that you can listen to 
  • Meditate or do yoga 
  • Name all your soft toys 
  • Do a “reality check list” – write down all the things you can list about where you are now
  • With permission, give someone a hug 
  • Drink herbal tea 
  • Crunch ice 
  • Hug a tree 
  • Go for a walk if it’s safe to do so 
  • Feel your pulse to prove you’re alive 
  • Go outside attempt to catch butterflies 
  • Put your feet firmly on the floor 
  • Accept where you are in the process. Beating yourself u p, only makes it worse 
  • Touch something familiar/ safe. Leave the room. 
  • Lay on your back comfortably (eyes closed), and breathe in for 4, hold for 2, out for 4, hold for 2. Make sure to fill your belly up with air, not your chest.
  • Give yourself permission to….(Keep it safe)

Alternatives that will hopefully make you think twice about harming yourself:

  • Think about how you don’t want scars
  • Treat yourself nicely 
  • Remember that you don’t have to hurt yourself just because you’re thinking about self-harm 
  • Create a safe place to go 
  • Acknowledge that self-harm is harmful behavior: say “I want to hurt myself” rather than “I want to cut (or anything else)”
  • Repeat to yourself “I don’t deserve to be hurt” even if you don’t believe it 
  • Remember that you always have the choice not to cut: it’s up to you what you do 
  • Think about how you may feel guilty after self-harming 
  • Remind yourself that the urge to self-harm is impulsive: you will only feel like self-harming for short bursts of time 
  • Avoid temptation 
  • Get your friends to make you friendship bracelets: wear them around your wrists to remind you of them when you want to cut 
  • Be with other people 
  • Make your own list of thing to do instead of self-harm 
  • Make a list of your positive character traits 
  • Put a Band-Aid  on the area where you’d like to self-harm 
  • Recognize and acknowledge the choices you have NOW 
  • Pay attention to the changes needed to make you feel safe
  • Notice “choices” versus “dilemmas”
  • Lose the “should-could-have-to” words. Try…. “What if”
  • Kiss the places you want to SH or kiss the places you have healing wounds. It can be a reminder that you about yourself and that you don’t want this
  • Choose your way of thinking, try to resist following old thinking patterns 
  • The Butterfly project – draw a butterfly on the place(s) that you would self-harm and if the butterfly fades without self-harming, it means it has lived and flown away, given a sense of achievement. Whereas if you do self-harm with the butterfly there; you will have to wash it off. If that does happen, you can start again by drawing a new one on. You can name the butterfly after someone you love
  • Write the name of a loved one, or anyone else who cares about you where you want to self-harm. When you go to self harm remember how much they care and wouldn’t want you to harm yourself
  • Think about what you would say to a friend who was struggling with the same things you are and try to be a good friend to yourself 
  • Make a bracelet out of duct tape, and put lines on it every day you go without self-harm. When it’s full of lines, take it off and make a chain out of all the bracelets and hang it up somewhere where you can be reminded of your great progress

Alternatives that give the illusion of seeing something similar to blood:

  • Draw on yourself with a red pen or body paint, or go to a site such as this where you ‘cut’ the screen (be aware that some people may find this triggering, so view with caution)
  • Cover yourself with plasters where you want to self-harm 
  • Give yourself a henna or fake tattoo
  • Draw on the areas you want to self-harm using ice

Alternatives to help you sort through your feelings:

  • Phone a friend and talk to them 
  • Make a collage of how you feel 
  • Negotiate with yourself 
  • Identify what is hurting so bad you need to express it in this way 
  • Write your feelings in a diary 
  • Free write 
  • Make lists of everything such as blessings in your life 
  • Make a notebook of song lyrics that you can relate to 
  • Call a hotline 
  • Write a letter to someone telling them how you feel (but you don’t have to send it if you don’t want to)
  • Start a grateful journal where everyday you write down three: good things that happened/ things that you accomplished/ are grateful for/ made you smile. Make sure the journal is strictly positive things. Then when you feel down you can go back and look at it