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Glossary›Distress Tolerance

Glossary

Distress Tolerance

The capacity to endure psychological distress without engaging in impulsive, destructive behaviors or attempting to escape uncomfortable emotions.

What is Distress Tolerance?

Distress tolerance is the psychological capacity to withstand negative emotional states without resorting to avoidance, escape, or maladaptive coping behaviors. It represents a person’s perceived or actual ability to manage aversive internal experiences—including painful emotions, intrusive thoughts, and physiological discomfort—while maintaining goal-directed behavior and functioning. Unlike emotional regulation strategies that aim to modify or reduce distress, distress tolerance specifically addresses the ability to endure suffering when it cannot be immediately changed.

The construct encompasses both the capacity to tolerate distress and the willingness to do so. An individual may possess the capability to endure difficult emotions but lack the willingness, or vice versa. This distinction has important implications for therapeutic intervention and spiritual practice.

Origins & Lineage

Distress tolerance emerged as a formal psychological construct in the late 20th century, though its philosophical and contemplative roots extend much deeper. The term gained clinical prominence through Marsha Linehan’s development of Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) in the 1980s and early 1990s. Linehan, drawing from both Western behavioral psychology and Zen Buddhist practices she encountered through Willigis Jäger and other teachers, formalized distress tolerance as one of DBT’s four core skill modules.

The psychological study of distress tolerance as a measurable trait began in earnest in the 1990s, with researchers developing various assessment tools including behavioral measures (such as breath-holding tasks and cold pressor tests) and self-report instruments like the Distress Tolerance Scale. However, the underlying philosophy of sitting with discomfort without reactivity appears in Buddhist teachings on dukkha (suffering) dating back 2,500 years, Stoic philosophy’s emphasis on enduring hardship with equanimity, and contemplative Christian traditions of bearing trials with patience.

How It’s Practiced

In clinical settings, distress tolerance skills are taught through structured exercises that gradually expose individuals to uncomfortable sensations while practicing non-reactive awareness. DBT distress tolerance techniques include crisis survival skills such as the TIPP method (Temperature, Intense exercise, Paced breathing, Paired muscle relaxation), radical acceptance practices, and self-soothing through the five senses.

Contemplative practices that build distress tolerance include vipassana meditation, where practitioners observe physical pain and mental discomfort without shifting position or seeking relief; loving-kindness meditation during difficult emotional states; and mindfulness-based approaches that cultivate non-judgmental awareness of present-moment experience regardless of its pleasantness. Somatic practices such as cold exposure, breathwork that induces temporary discomfort, and certain yoga asanas held past the point of ease also develop this capacity.

The practice distinguishes itself from mere endurance through its emphasis on conscious, willing acceptance rather than gritted-teeth suppression. A practitioner might notice anxiety arising, acknowledge the chest tightness and racing thoughts, and continue with their intended activity without attempting to fix, avoid, or intensify the experience.

Distress Tolerance Today

Contemporary seekers encounter distress tolerance training in multiple contexts. Clinical populations receive formal instruction through DBT programs, typically delivered in group skills training sessions over 24 weeks. Mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) and mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCBT) courses incorporate distress tolerance principles within broader curricula.

In spiritual and wellness spaces, distress tolerance appears in intensive meditation retreats, particularly those in the Theravada and Zen traditions where participants sit with physical and psychological discomfort for extended periods. Breathwork facilitators, cold plunge practitioners, and somatic experiencing therapists often frame their work partially around developing greater capacity for difficult sensations. The concept has also entered mainstream wellness discourse, though often diluted or confused with related but distinct practices.

Common Misconceptions

Distress tolerance is not the same as emotional suppression or stoic denial. Suppression involves actively pushing down or ignoring emotions, which typically increases psychological distress over time. Distress tolerance, by contrast, requires full acknowledgment and conscious experiencing of difficult states.

It is also not passive resignation or learned helplessness. The practice involves active choice and agency—deliberately choosing to remain present with discomfort in service of longer-term values and goals. Nor does high distress tolerance mean becoming numb or indifferent to suffering; individuals with developed distress tolerance skills often report feeling emotions more fully while being less controlled by them.

Distress tolerance training is not appropriate for all situations. When distress signals genuine danger, harm, or violation of boundaries, the adaptive response may be to change the situation rather than increase tolerance. Clinical applications emphasize discernment between pain that must be endured and circumstances that require action.

How to Begin

For those approaching distress tolerance from a clinical perspective, Marsha Linehan’s “DBT Skills Training Handouts and Worksheets” provides the foundational curriculum, though working with a trained DBT therapist or skills group offers the most structured entry point. The book “Don’t Let Your Emotions Run Your Life” by Scott Spradlin offers a more accessible self-help approach to these same skills.

Contemplative practitioners may begin with introductory mindfulness meditation courses that emphasize present-moment awareness without judgment. Jon Kabat-Zinn’s MBSR courses, widely available in community health centers and online, provide an eight-week structured introduction. For those drawn to traditional contemplative lineages, beginner vipassana retreats through centers like Spirit Rock or Insight Meditation Society offer immersive environments for developing this capacity.

Small daily practices offer immediate entry: sitting with mild physical discomfort for one additional minute before adjusting position, noticing an urge to check one’s phone and choosing to wait, or remaining present with disappointment rather than immediately distracting oneself. The key is starting with manageable levels of distress and building capacity gradually.

Related terms

dialectical behavior therapyradical acceptancemindfulness meditationvipassanaemotional regulationequanimity
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