
Author: Sephira

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Reblogging in honor of the last day of Social Work Month. These arent ranked in any particular order so check them all out. If I missed you just let me know!
yo I’m reblogging this because it can seriously help folks out, definitely a list worth keeping.
Making an “Alternatives” Jar
For anybody with issues with binge eating, purging, and/or self-harm (or any other type of urge), an “alternatives” jar is a good project! It is a jar filled with popsicle sticks that have things written on them that you can do when your urge hits, as an alternative to the urge.
You need:
- A glass jar (I used a small 8 oz old jar that I had left from a jar of jam- you can get these for $1 in some places with the jam)
- Popsicle sticks (I used 70 regular-sized ones from a pack of 1,000 craft sticks that I bought for $5)
- Markers (I used Bic Mark-It Permanent Markers, but any other marker should work, even dollar-store markers)
- Paints, as many colors as you want (I used Apple Barrel brand acrylic paints, which run for $0.50-$0.57 per 2 oz container at Wal Mart).
- Paint brushes to use for the paints (I used Plaid brand sponge brushes, which I got for $1 for 4, and a pack of 24 different brushes which were $5 each)
- Ribbons and washi (decorative/paper) tape ($0.50-$3.50 per roll, however you want)
Items 4-6 are optional! You can use as much or as little paint as you want. You should only need one bottle if you are doing one color; however, you may want more!
Instructions:
- Gather your materials 🙂 (not too hard!)
- Decide how many sticks your jar will hold. Mine held 70 craft sticks; some can hold more!
- Decide how many colors you want to use, and if you want the colors to mean anything.
- Paint the craft sticks!! Do this on a surface easily cleaned, thrown away, or that you don’t mind getting messy! I used a lid from a plastic tote. You can either put the paints on a palette (if you have one), or dab it onto the sponge brushes and then paint.
- Let your painted sticks dry.
- While you are letting them dry, you can decorate your jar. Some permanent markers work on glass; others don’t. You can try them though! Acrylic paints don’t always work on glass, also. I used washi tape and ribbons, using a hot glue gun to attach the ribbons to the jar. The tape and ribbons can be removed from the jar if I so choose (so that way I can re-use the jar or re-decorate if I want to)
- Once the sticks dry, write on them!!
Ideas for how to use color:
You can see that I used 7 colors, each with 10 sticks. Colors can be used to denote:
- Type of urge (especially useful if you have multiple types)
- Type of emotion behind the urge or activity (feeling sad, guilty, angry, lonely, wanting sensation, etc)
- Amount of time the activity takes (5 min, 10 min, 15 min, 30 min, 1 hr, over 1 hr)
- Amount of money you’d have to invest (ie, totally free things, things you can spend $1 on, things you’d have to spend $5 on, etc)
How to use:
- When your urge hits, pick a color or colors to represent what you need. For example: red for me are things to get anger out, so if I’m wanting to purge because I am angry, I will choose the red sticks.
- Pick one stick of that color. Do that activity, and put the stick to the side. If, after you’re done with the activity, the urge is still there, pick another stick.
- Keep choosing sticks until the urge is gone (or you have other things you have to do)
- If the urge hasn’t gone away, but you are done with your sticks: choose another color and keep going.
Ideas for what to write on your sticks
- 101 things to do besides binge
- More binge alternatives
- Alternatives to binge eating/purging
- Alternatives to self-harm
- More alternatives to self-harm
Idea based off of: Coping Bank and Binge Jar
I want to let people know about this app, especially for those people who suffer from social anxiety where telephone communications might be triggering or uncomfortable.
It’s called “TalkTo” and is available for iOs devices for FREE here and is also available in Google Play for Android devices! Essentially, it allows you to ask businesses questions by sending a text message instead of calling. For businesses that aren’t set up to answer a text message or an email (it will try to send it either way) a TalkTo agent will make the call FOR you, and then will text you back with the company’s response.
I have used this app to make reservations, check for stock, check store hours, and more. Certain businesses will have a higher response time than others but if you ask ahead of time then you won’t have a problem. I sent a restaurant a question this afternoon (see picture) and i had a response within 15 minutes.
Give it a try!
OH MY FUCKING GOD THIS IS MEANT FOR ME
WHAT!!! WHAT
You should not
have to rip yourself
into pieces to keep
others whole.
All credit goes to the masterpost…posters. Because they’re great people.Cheer up and Relax
- Sad?
- Ugh, Feelings
- Calming Noises
- Feeling Okay?
- Websites for when you want to…
- Cute games
- Coping Skills and Distractions
- A happy things Masterpost
- Feeling stressed, sweetie?
Fun Stuff
- Hobbies Masterpost
- somethingpointy’s Masterpost of Bullshit Time Wasting!!
- For when boredom Strikes
- Good psychological games masterpost
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Self Harm
- Momma’s Alternatives to Self Harm
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Films
- The Big LGBTQA* Film Masterpost
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- What do you mean I’m not 10 anymore?
General Self HelpEverything
- One Big Masterpost
- Everything Masterpost
- Nicoisbroken’s Master list
- Literally Rad’s Resource Masterpost
In Case Of EmergencyOthers
Optimism in the dark places
Sometimes, people who want to see themselves as optimistic say things like this to suffering people they encounter:
- “Look on the bright side!”
- “Cheer up!”
- “It can’t be that bad!”
- “It’s ok.”
- “Smile, you’ll feel better!”
- “You have so much to be grateful for.”
Sometimes people who say this kind of thing mean well, but it’s still degrading. It’s degrading because:
- Sometimes things really are that bad
- Refusing to acknowledge that doesn’t help anything
- And when you try to insist to someone who is going through something awful that it can’t be as bad as they think, what you’re really doing is refusing to listen to them
- Telling someone to shut up is neither kind nor optimistic
This is particularly the case if you’re talking to someone in a bad situation that is unlikely to get better, or which is at least unlikely to get better in the near future eg:
- Someone who has a terminal illness
- People who are facing systemic oppression of a kind that isn’t going to go away in their lifetime
- Someone who is trapped in an abusive relationship they see no way out of
I think that there’s another kind of optimism that is much more helpful:
- Acknowledge that things really are that bad
- Don’t try to smooth them over
- Identify things that make life worth living
- Work on building and recognizing love (including, love people enough to acknowledge how bad things are without pressuring them to sanitize them for you)
Go deeper …
Past thoughts into silence.
Past silence into stillness.
Past stillness into the heart.
Let Love consume all that is left of you.
I don’t talk about my illness so that you will feel sorry for me. I talk about it so you will know what I’m going through, why I am the way I am. I don’t want your pity. I want your understanding.
And sometimes, I talk about it because I had a bad day and just like you, talking about the bad thing makes me feel better. It just so happens I have a lot of bad days and my illness is usually at the core of it.


















