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Home»Lifestyle

Distress tolerance might be what separates good decisions from regrettable ones

Shekari PhilemonBy Shekari PhilemonApril 23, 2026 Lifestyle No Comments4 Mins Read
Distress
Photo Credit: shutterstock.com/DenisProduction.com
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There is a moment most people know well. Something stressful happens, the panic rises fast, and suddenly a decision gets made not because it is the right one but because it offers the quickest exit from the discomfort. That split second between feeling and action is exactly where distress tolerance lives.

Rooted in Dialectical Behavior Therapy, commonly known as DBT, distress tolerance is the ability to move through painful or overwhelming emotions without immediately acting on them. The goal is not to erase the feeling or logic your way out of it. It is to lower the intensity just enough to get through the moment without making things worse.

DBT itself is built on four core components which are mindfulness, emotion regulation, interpersonal effectiveness, and distress tolerance. While the others tend to focus on longer-term patterns, distress tolerance functions more like an emergency toolkit. It is what you reach for when the crisis is already in motion and you need relief right now.

Why the brain makes this so difficult

When stress hits hard, the part of the brain responsible for reasoning and impulse control essentially goes offline. The amygdala, which governs fear and emotional arousal, takes over. That is not a personal failing. It is biology.

Distress tolerance strategies work by interrupting that process, helping the nervous system regulate itself so that clearer thinking can return. Without that ability, people tend to reach for whatever brings the fastest relief, which often means choices they later regret. Substance use, self-sabotage, and avoidance are all common examples of what happens when distress tolerance skills are absent.

This is also why these skills are not reserved for people in crisis. Difficult emotions are a universal experience. What differs is how prepared someone is to handle them when they arrive.

The ACCEPTS approach

One of the foundational distress tolerance tools is built around the acronym ACCEPTS, which stands for Activities, Contributing, Comparisons, Emotions, Pushing Away, Thoughts, and Sensations.

The Activities piece is often the most accessible entry point. When emotions feel too big to process, shifting focus to something absorbing like a walk, a puzzle, or music creates enough space for the intensity to ease before a response is needed.

The Sensations piece works differently by using physical input to redirect the mind. One popular method is the 5-4-3-2-1 grounding technique, which involves identifying five things you can see, four you can feel, three you can hear, two you can smell, and one you can taste. Other options include holding something cold or wrapping up in a weighted blanket. The remaining letters in ACCEPTS offer additional tools such as helping someone else in a small way, reminding yourself of past challenges you survived, intentionally triggering a different emotion through film or music, mentally setting the situation aside, or using a simple mental distraction like counting to redirect spiraling thoughts.

The distress tolerance TIPP and STOP skills

For moments when the nervous system feels completely activated, the TIPP skill offers a more physical intervention. It involves Temperature, such as splashing cold water on the face; Intense Exercise like a short sprint or jumping jacks; Paced Breathing using a slow rhythmic pattern; and Progressive Muscle Relaxation, which means tensing and releasing muscle groups from head to toe.

These techniques use strong sensory input to interrupt the body’s stress response quickly. They are most useful during acute moments of overwhelm and should be avoided if a medical condition makes sudden temperature shifts or intense movement unsafe.

The STOP skill offers a more behavioral approach. It asks you to simply freeze before reacting, then take a breath or physically step away, observe what is happening internally and externally, and finally move forward in a way that is intentional rather than reactive.

A related technique called urge surfing follows a similar logic. Rather than acting on an impulse, you simply notice it. Emotional urges tend to peak and then fade within minutes if they are not reinforced. Even a short pause between feeling and action can be enough to change the outcome entirely.

Distress tolerance works best before you need it

The consistent thread across all of these skills is that they require practice before the moment of crisis arrives. When emotions are already overwhelming, there is less mental bandwidth available to recall and apply a new technique. Building familiarity with these tools during calmer periods makes them far more accessible when the intensity is real.

The ability to sit with discomfort without immediately escaping it is not an innate personality trait. It is a learnable skill, and according to the research behind DBT, it is one of the most impactful tools available for anyone trying to respond to life with more steadiness.

anxiety coping DBT skills distress tolerance emotional regulation emotional resilience mental health mindfulness nervous system stress management therapy techniques
Shekari Philemon

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