Depression tells you to stay in bed, but staying in bed makes depression worse. Anxiety says to avoid the thing you fear, but avoidance feeds anxiety. Anger urges you to attack, but attacking usually creates more problems. Your emotions give you instructions, but following those instructions often perpetuates the very emotions you’re trying to escape.
Opposite action, a skill from Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), offers a different approach. Instead of following the emotion’s instructions, you do the opposite. This isn’t about suppressing emotions or pretending they don’t exist. It’s about recognizing when your emotion’s action urge is making things worse and consciously choosing a different path.
Understanding Opposite Action
What It Is
Opposite action means:
- Identifying the action urge that comes with an emotion
- Determining whether that action is helpful or harmful
- If harmful, doing the opposite of what the emotion tells you to do
- Doing it fully, not half-heartedly
The Logic Behind It
Emotions come with built-in action tendencies:
- Fear urges avoidance or escape
- Anger urges attack
- Sadness urges withdrawal
- Guilt urges confession and repair
- Shame urges hiding
These tendencies evolved because they were useful in certain situations. But when emotions are unjustified or unhelpful, following their instructions keeps you stuck.
How It Works
Actions affect emotions:
- If you act afraid, you feel more afraid
- If you act confident, you feel more confident
- If you isolate, you feel more depressed
- If you engage, depression often lifts
By changing the action, you change the feedback your brain receives, which can change the emotion.
When to Use Opposite Action
The Key Question
Opposite action is appropriate when:
The emotion doesn’t fit the facts or
Acting on the emotion is not effective
If the emotion fits the facts and acting on it would be effective, follow the emotion’s guidance. But if the emotion is disproportionate, unjustified, or would lead to harmful action, opposite action is indicated.
Examples
Fear that doesn’t fit:
– You fear something that isn’t actually dangerous
– Avoidance would make fear worse
– Opposite action: Approach what you fear
Anger that doesn’t fit:
– The situation doesn’t warrant your level of anger
– Attacking would damage important relationships
– Opposite action: Be gentle, avoid the person, or do something kind
Shame that doesn’t fit:
– You haven’t actually violated your values
– Hiding would reinforce unwarranted shame
– Opposite action: Be public, share what you’re ashamed of
Sadness that doesn’t fit:
– The loss isn’t as significant as your emotion suggests
– Withdrawal is making depression worse
– Opposite action: Get active, engage with people
Guilt that doesn’t fit:
– You didn’t actually do anything wrong
– Apologizing would reinforce inappropriate guilt
– Opposite action: Don’t apologize or make amends
Opposite Actions for Common Emotions
For Fear/Anxiety
Emotion’s urge: Avoid, escape, hide, freeze
Opposite action:
– Approach what you fear
– Do what you’ve been avoiding
– Stay in the situation
– Act confidently (posture, voice, eye contact)
– Repeat approach until fear decreases
Important: This is essentially exposure therapy. Gradual, repeated approach to feared situations reduces fear over time.
For Anger
Emotion’s urge: Attack, confront aggressively, criticize, punish
Opposite action:
– Gently avoid the person (rather than confronting)
– Take a break from the situation
– Be kind or thoughtful toward the person
– Try to understand their perspective
– Relax your face and body
Note: Avoiding isn’t the same as stuffing anger. It’s strategic distance while the emotion is at its peak.
For Sadness/Depression
Emotion’s urge: Withdraw, isolate, be passive, stop activities
Opposite action:
– Get active, even when you don’t feel like it
– Approach others rather than withdrawing
– Engage in activities that usually bring enjoyment
– Pay attention to pleasurable aspects of activities
– Act confident and engaged
Note: This is similar to behavioral activation for depression.
For Shame
Emotion’s urge: Hide, avoid being seen, withdraw, keep secrets
Opposite action:
– Share what you’re ashamed of with safe people
– Be public rather than hiding
– Repeat the behavior if it isn’t actually wrong
– Act as if you’re not ashamed
– Keep your head up
Note: Only use opposite action for shame when you haven’t actually violated your values. If you have, the shame may be appropriate, and making amends may be more helpful.
For Guilt
Emotion’s urge: Apologize, confess, make reparations, punish yourself
Opposite action:
– Don’t apologize (if guilt is unjustified)
– Don’t confess to things you didn’t do wrong
– Don’t make reparations beyond what’s appropriate
– Stop self-punishment
Note: If you actually did something wrong, following guilt’s guidance (apologizing, making amends) is appropriate.
For Love (When Unhelpful)
Emotion’s urge: Approach, stay close, give, sacrifice
Opposite action:
– Avoid contact
– Distract yourself from thoughts of the person
– Stop giving if it’s not reciprocated or healthy
– Remind yourself of reasons the relationship isn’t working
Note: This applies when love is directed toward someone unavailable, harmful, or when the relationship needs to end.
How to Practice Opposite Action
Step 1: Identify the Emotion
What are you feeling? Name it specifically.
Step 2: Identify the Action Urge
What is the emotion telling you to do? What’s your instinct?
Step 3: Check the Facts
Does the emotion fit the situation? Consider:
- Is the threat real (for fear)?
- Was there actual wrongdoing (for guilt)?
- Is the loss significant (for sadness)?
- Is your response proportionate?
Step 4: Determine Effectiveness
If you follow the urge, will it:
- Make things better or worse?
- Help you achieve your goals?
- Align with your values?
Step 5: If Indicated, Do the Opposite
Choose the opposite action and do it fully:
- Commit completely
- Don’t do it half-heartedly
- Change your body, face, and posture to match
- Repeat as needed
Step 6: Notice the Result
How do you feel after opposite action? Often, the emotion decreases over time.
Keys to Effective Opposite Action
Go All In
Half-measures don’t work:
- Approach fear tentatively = staying fearful
- Be partially kind when angry = still angry
- Half-engage when depressed = still depressed
Opposite action requires full commitment.
Change Your Body
Your body affects your emotions:
- Relax your face and shoulders
- Stand or sit confidently
- Use an even, calm tone of voice
- Make appropriate eye contact
Acting opposite includes acting opposite with your body.
Repeat
One instance of opposite action may not be enough:
- Fear requires repeated exposure
- Depression may need sustained activation
- Shame needs ongoing willingness to be seen
Make opposite action a practice, not a one-time event.
Start with What’s Manageable
You don’t have to tackle your biggest fear immediately:
- Build up gradually
- Start with smaller opposite actions
- Build confidence and skill
When Not to Use Opposite Action
When Emotions Fit the Facts
If your emotion is justified and acting on it would be helpful:
- Fear in actual danger: escape
- Anger at genuine mistreatment: assertive action
- Guilt for real wrongdoing: repair
- Sadness from significant loss: allow grieving
When Safety Is Concerned
Don’t use opposite action in ways that endanger you:
- Approaching genuinely dangerous situations
- Staying in abusive relationships
- Ignoring valid warning signals
Common Challenges
“I Don’t Feel Like It”
That’s precisely the point. Emotions tell you to do one thing; you choose another. The feeling follows the action, not the other way around.
“It Feels Fake”
Initially, opposite action may feel inauthentic. That’s normal. With repetition, actions become more natural and emotions genuinely shift.
“It’s Too Hard”
Start smaller. Break opposite action into manageable steps. Build up gradually.
“It Doesn’t Work”
Make sure you’re:
- Going all in, not half-heartedly
- Repeating enough times
- Changing your body along with your behavior
- Using it when the emotion actually doesn’t fit
Moving Forward
Opposite action is one of the most powerful tools in the DBT toolkit. It recognizes that we’re not helpless against our emotions. While we can’t always control what we feel, we can control what we do. And what we do shapes what we feel.
When emotions push you toward actions that keep you stuck, you have a choice. You can follow the emotion’s instructions and stay where you are. Or you can do the opposite and create the possibility of change.
It’s not easy. Every instinct may scream to follow the emotion. But those instincts aren’t always right. Sometimes the path to feeling better is doing the opposite of what you feel like doing.
This article is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional mental health treatment. If you’re struggling, please reach out to a qualified mental health provider. Arise Counseling Services offers compassionate, professional support for individuals and families throughout Pennsylvania.
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