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Selena Gomez, once the most followed star on Instagram and now an artiste who uses her voice to raise awareness about mental health, is a month shy of turning 29. Recently, in a conversation with Vogue Australia, the singer opened up about her mental health journey and shared that she has studied Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT). “I’ve studied DBT. I’ve been to four treatment centres. I think in mental health, I never understood the stigma until I went to my first treatment centre, because that was years ago,” she was quoted as saying.
What is DBT?
He added, “There are some studies that establish its effectiveness in OCD, eating disorders and non-specific anxiety disorders. Another area of interest where DBT could be useful is PTSD.”
“In DBT, the client is taught how to enhance their adaptive skills, connecting to the moment with appropriate reasoning to help them see and accept alternative patterns of behaviour; all of which revolves around the basic concept of validation. This makes the client accept the change and adapt to them with the least cognitive dissonance,” he said, highlighting the importance.
Agreeing, Dr Minansa Singh Tanvar, clinical psychologist department of mental health and behavioural sciences Fortis Healthcare, said often called the third wave of CBT, “it started with patients with self-harm and who might find it hard to handle stress. It uses mindfulness as the core aspect of DBT and helps patients develop a sense of awareness and observe things and deal with things better. It is very important for those who need to understand how to tolerate distress and overwhelming emotion”.
In the interview, the singer went on to talk about her faith in medication and what advice she will give others. “I never want to be a person that’s like: ‘I got medication, it’s fine now.’ I do believe in medication, obviously, therapy – all of these things I’ve done to try and make myself better. But my advice isn’t going to be: ‘Oh, you’re going to get over it.’ It’s actually an everyday practice,” she said.
“And like I said, I also go to therapy. You can find ways to live in it. But once you understand it, the fear of you admitting that you have something goes away.”