ACT in Practice
ACT in Practice
Commitment Therapy
-a mindfulness-based, values-directed behavioural therapy
Muhammad Munib-Ur-Rehman
Clinical Psychologist/ Lecturer
Department of Psychology
GC University, Lahore
CBT
(Cognitive Behavioral Therapies)
DOMINANCE OF PAST
AND FUTURE
STUCK/
INFLEXIBLE
FUSION INACTION,
WITH IMPULSIVITY, OR
THOUGHTS AVOIDANCE
ATTACHMENT TO
CONCEPTUALIZED SELF
Functional Contextualism
• Any action or event cannot be separated from its historical and
current context
• Workability
• Relational Frame Theory
• Role of human language and cognition in suffering
Relational Frame Theory
• RFT says that human language is based on relating things to each
other, not just associating them like Pavlov’s dogs.
• This relational ability is learned and becomes arbitrarily applicable,
meaning it works even when there’s no physical similarity between
things.
Relational Frame Theory
1. Relational Framing
• We learn to relate things in all sorts of ways — same as, opposite of, bigger than, better than, etc.
• Examples:
• "A dog is bigger than a cat."
• "My trauma is worse than yours."
• "Success means being rich."
• These are mental constructs, not objective truths, but our brain treats them as real.
2. Arbitrary Relations
• The relations don’t have to be logical or physically true.
• If a child learns "coin = money = power = safety", then losing money might trigger a fear of
annihilation.
• Even if nothing’s actually threatening them.
Relational Frame Theory
3. Mutual Entailment
If A = B, then B = A.
“Car = Vehicle” → You know “Vehicle = Car”.
4. Combinatorial Entailment
If A = B and B = C, then A = C.
You learn webs of meaning that aren’t directly taught.
5. Transformation of Function
• Once things are linked, the emotional or behavioral impact of one transfers to
the other.
• If “snake” is scary, and you link “snake = betrayal = men,” then suddenly men
feel dangerous, even if they’ve done nothing.
Relational Frame Theory & ACT
• RFT shows how language messes us up:
• We don’t just experience pain — we think about it, judge it, avoid it, and amplify it.
• Words and thoughts take on emotional power they were never meant to have.
• ACT tries to loosen the grip of these rigid relational frames through:
• Cognitive defusion (unhooking from thoughts),
• Mindfulness (observing without judging),
• Values work (choosing what matters beyond the mental noise).
• eXAMPLE
You think: “I’m a failure.”
Through RFT, “failure = worthless = unlovable = doomed.”
Now, you’re not just sad — you’re in an existential crisis spiral.
ACT helps you notice that chain, step back from it, and act anyway.
Creative Hopelessness
• It’s the point in therapy where the client realizes:
• "Everything I’ve done to avoid, control, or fix my inner pain has
actually made things worse."
• This realization opens the door to trying something radically
different — like acceptance, mindfulness, and values-based action.
Hence, the "creative" part.
• You're not hopeless about life, you're hopeless about the illusion of
control over internal experiences (thoughts, feelings, memories). And
that hopelessness becomes fertile ground for change.
Creative Hopelessness
Therapists guide clients to examine:
• What have you been trying to do with your emotional pain?
• Has it worked? Really?
• What has it cost you?
Through that, clients often discover:
• Avoidance strategies = short-term relief, long-term damage.
• Control = illusion.
• Real change might mean making room for pain, not running from it.
Acceptance VS Experiential Avoidance
• Experiential Avoidance
“I am afraid/ ashamed of my feelings”
Rigid rule-following
Feels stuck
• The person we want to be, things we want to do, what we want to stand for in
this life
• A direction that guides ongoing action; not a goal
• A sense of meaning, abundance, vitality
Values
• Take action and make decisions that are in line with our values, even when
life is challenging
ACT: What It Is, What It Isn’t
• Experiential > Didactic
• Use of experiential exercise and metaphors
• Not a specific set of coping skills, techniques, or protocols
• May work on one or more core process, in any order
• Number of sessions: 1- 20+
• Therapeutic relationship, case conceptualization (e.g., life and
problem context, goals, treatment plan), and practice ARE
important
• It is not passive