Acceptance and commitment therapy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Today, he went through an explanation of how the brain manages anxiety, and of course zeroed in on the amygdala. I was in a state of Baclofen-induced somnolence so I won't represent this comprehensively. The upshot is that he talked about how the goal of ACT is to improve the frontal lobes' ability to regulate the amygdala. He indicated he was glad that I am tapering off a benzodiazepene so that I could learn how to improve the functioning of my frontal lobes in an unfettered way -- acknowledging that I might experience more anxiety during the process. No pain, no gain, I guess. He doesn't know much about Baclofen, and wasn't wanting to terminate my experiment with it. But he did vocalize the concern that ACT is all about developing better coping mechanisms through being able to feel one's feelings fully. This is also intended not only to deal with anxiety, but with resulting issues such as drug and alcohol abuse.
Any thoughts / reactions to this? For anyone who has undergone or is currently undergoing talk therapy, what have your therapists had to say about using Baclofen or one of the other pharmacological approaches?
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