In  DBT, there are four categories of Distress Tolerance strategies. These  are:
Distracting
Self-Soothing
Improving the  Moment
Focusing on the Pros  and Cons
These  are strategies that short circuit or help you to cope with overwhelming negative  emotions or intolerable situations. They take a lot of practice, but as you get  the hang of using some of these techniques, you will see your relationship to  the negative emotions and intolerable feelings change. (This was the most  amazing thing about DBT for me, that things I though could never change or that  I could never learn to deal with did become better.) It takes time and  practice, and so I urge you to give the techniques plenty of practice. You will  find some things work better than others for you. And you will find that some  things don't work at first, but over time and practice you will see some  results.
Self-Soothing  Techniques
Some  of us may recognize these techniques as things that we already use. But many of  us have never learned how to self-soothe, how to do those often simple things  that makes us feel better. These are mostly very physical techniques, that use  different body senses. Some of us have never had the feeling that we could do  things to make ourselves feel better, calmer, feel relaxation or pleasure. I  urge you to experiment with these techniques until you find some that are  comfortable and helpful for you. And when you find these, practice them. Use  them when you are feeling distressed, when emotions feel overwhelming, when  situations feel like you can't stand them any more. Instead of doing something  that hurts you, try something that gives you pleasure and  comfort,SELF-SOOTHING has to do with comforting, nurturing and being  kind to yourself. One way to think of this is to think of ways of soothing each  of your five senses:
Vision
Hearing
Smell
Taste
Touch
VISION:Walk  in a pretty part of town. Look at the nature around you. Go to a museum with  beautiful art. Buy a flower and put it where you can see it. Sit in a garden.  Watch the snowflakes decorate the trees during a snowfall. Light a candle and  watch the flame. Look at a book with beautiful scenery or beautiful art. Watch a  travel movie or video.HEARING:Listen to beautiful or soothing  music, or to tapes of the ocean or other sounds of nature.  Listen to a baby  gurgling or a small animal. Sit by a waterfall. Listen to someone chopping  wood.  When you are listening, be mindful, letting the sounds come and  go.SMELL:Smell breakfast being cooked at home or in a  restaurant. Notice all the different smells around you. Walk in a garden or in  the woods, maybe just after a rain, and breathe in the smells of nature. Light a  scented candle or incense. Bake some bread or a cake, and take in all the  smells.TASTE:Have a special treat, and eat it slowly,  savoring each bite. Cook a favorite meal. Drink a soothing drink like herbal tea  or hot chocolate. Let the taste run over your tongue and slowly down your  throat. Go to a potluck, and eat a little bit of each dish, mindfully tasting  each new thing.TOUCH:Take a bubble bath. Pet your dog or cat  or cuddle a baby. Put on a silk shirt shirt or blouse, and feel its softness and  smoothness. Sink into a really comfortable bed.  Float or swim in a pool, and  feel the water caress your body.
Discussion
Many  of us may feel like we don't deserve these comforts, and may find it hard to  give pleasure to ourselves in this way. Do you have these  feelings?Some of may also expect this soothing to come from other  people, or not wantto do it for ourselves. Have you experienced this  feeling?You may feel guilty about pleasuring yourself in this way.  It may take some practice to allow yourself to experience these pleasures. These  are really simple human pleasures that everyone has a right to, and that will  give us some good tools to use when we are feeling bad.
Exercises
Try  at least one of these self-soothing exercises this week. You may want to choose  a whole group of things, say all the visual things, or you may want to choose a  single thing to try. As you do what you have chosen, do it mindfully.  Breathe  gently, and try to be fully in the experience, whether it is walking in the  woods or watching a flower or taking a bubble bath or smelling some fresh-baked  bread.As you begin to overcome your feelings that perhaps you do not  deserve this, or guilt, and start to enjoy one or more of these activities, you  will be learning very useful tools to help you deal with negative feelings and  difficult situations.
 
