Radical Acceptance for Moral Injury: The Power of Fully Accepting Reality

How radical acceptance reduces suffering from Moral Injury — the DBT skill of accepting what cannot be changed.

Radical acceptance — completely accepting reality as it is, without fighting what cannot be changed — is one of the most transformative skills for moral injury.

What Radical Acceptance Means for Moral Injury

Radical acceptance does not mean:

  • Approving of moral injury or the situation that caused it
  • Giving up on change
  • Being passive

It means: stopping the war against reality. The suffering from moral injury is partly the fight against the fact of moral injury.

How Non-Acceptance Amplifies Moral Injury

'I shouldn't feel this way' → additional layer of suffering on top of moral injury 'This shouldn't be happening' → added distress that changes nothing but worsens everything

Practicing Radical Acceptance for Moral Injury

  1. Observe that you are fighting reality
  2. Remind yourself: reality is as it is, even if you don't like it
  3. Consider the causes that led to moral injury
  4. Practice accepting with your whole body — not just your mind
  5. Create a coping statement: 'This is what is happening right now. I can accept it.'

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