Emotional regulation — the ability to manage and modulate emotional experiences — is a core skill for adverse childhood experiences management. It can be learned at any age.
Emotional Dysregulation in Adverse Childhood Experiences
Many presentations of adverse childhood experiences involve emotional dysregulation: emotions that feel overwhelming, uncontrollable, or disproportionate. This is often the most distressing aspect.
DBT Emotional Regulation Skills for Adverse Childhood Experiences
Dialectical Behavior Therapy offers the most comprehensive emotional regulation skill set:
Check the facts: Identify if your emotional response fits the actual situation or is fueled by adverse childhood experiences
Opposite action: When adverse childhood experiences urges withdrawal, engage. When adverse childhood experiences urges anger-fueled action, act opposite.
PLEASE skills: Treat PhysicaL illness, balanced Eating, Avoid mood-altering substances, balanced Sleep, Exercise — the physiological foundations of emotional regulation.
Ride the wave: All emotions, including adverse childhood experiences-related ones, are temporary. Building capacity to 'ride' rather than act on them is core.
Building Emotional Regulation for Adverse Childhood Experiences
Emotional regulation is a skill built through practice. Therapy, mindfulness, and consistent self-care all develop it over time.