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Acknowledge your feelings. It is natural to feel anger, despair, guilt and other powerful emotions when you have psoriasis. Your skin has changed and that is difficult to control. It is okay to allow yourself to have feelings and emotions associated with your psoriasis. |
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Share your feelings with others: another person with psoriasis, a family member, a counselor or staff at the Psoriasis Foundation. Each of us needs someone who will validate what we say and have empathy for what we are going through. |
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If your feelings are out of control or you just can't cope, do not hesitate to seek the guidance of a mental health professional. This is very appropriate and is not a sign of weakness. |
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Take responsibility for treatment choices and don't give up on psoriasis control. It is much easier once deep feelings have been acknowledged and aired. However, your path to coping with psoriasis may not include medical treatments. The decision to treat or not treat is up to you. |
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Educate yourself thoroughly about the nature of psoriasis and learn to talk about it factually. It is important to say that you have psoriasis. It is a medical term. If you call it something else, you unintentionally degrade yourself and the serious impact of your medical condition. You can explain to people that psoriasis is not contagious, that it is chronic and that it can occur at any time. Encourage people to understand—not wonder about - |
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Identify the negative thought and write it down: "No one will ever want to be with me because of my psoriasis." |
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Test the thought: Are you jumping to conclusions? Are you jumping to the worst conclusions possible? Are you making psoriasis the scapegoat for not dating, or do you stay home for fear that someone will turn you down? What proof do you have that no one wants you around? |
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Dispute the thought: Lots of people with psoriasis have good friends and partners. People with other health problems date and make friends. Sometimes you were rejected before you had psoriasis—that happens to everyone. You have a great personality and tickets for a sold- |
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Review possible rebuttals: If the person you ask says, "I'm busy Thursday," you suggest another day. If she doesn't like concerts, suggest a quiet dinner or a movie. If she says, "No, because you have psoriasis," you answer, "Sorry, I thought you would want to know me before you made a superficial judgment." |
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Carry out the action. Ask someone out. |