Why Awareness Matters: The First Step in Changing Skin Picking

Vedrana Mirkovic
May 3rd, 2026

Online test

Find out the severity of your symptoms with this free online test

Share

Awareness Training is often the very first step in Habit Reversal Training (HRT), a well-established and effective approach for treating skin picking. Rather than focusing on “just stopping,” this step gently helps you begin noticing when, where, and how picking happens, often in moments that previously felt automatic or outside your control.

HRT has been shown to be one of the most effective treatments for reducing skin picking behaviours, offering practical tools and a hopeful path toward change, one small, manageable step at a time.

But why is Awareness Training so important? And what do clients gain from it?

What Does Awareness Training Look Like?

When it comes to treating skin picking, one of the most effective evidence-based approaches is Habit Reversal Training (HRT). This method consists of several structured steps, and the first step is awareness training.

At first glance, awareness training might sound simple. In practice, however, it is often one of the most challenging parts of the process. It asks individuals to turn toward something they already struggle with, something they may feel ashamed of, frustrated by, or desperate to stop. Yet this is where meaningful change begins.

What Does Awareness Training Look Like in Practice?

At the beginning of the process, clients are asked to consistently track their skin picking behaviour. This includes recording each episode and noting the context in which it occurs. Many programmes support this with tools such as a Self-Monitoring Tool, which allows for structured and accurate tracking.

Awareness training goes beyond simply recording behaviour. Its purpose is to help clients understand the internal experiences that drive the behaviour. Clients are encouraged to observe and record:

  • Situations in which skin picking occurs
  • Emotions experienced before, during, and after
  • Thoughts that accompany the urge
  • Physical sensations such as tension, itchiness, or restlessness

Over time, this information becomes valuable. When tracked consistently, patterns begin to emerge. For example, picking may occur more often during stress, boredom, or emotional discomfort. Some individuals notice that specific physical sensations, such as tingling or unevenness, consistently precede the urge.

The more detailed the tracking, the clearer these patterns become.

How Long Does Awareness Training Last?

Typically, awareness training begins with about one week of consistent tracking. In practice, this phase is often extended. Each person’s patterns are unique, and it can take time for them to become clear.

As new insights emerge, the process can be adjusted and refined. Awareness training is not a one-time exercise. It evolves alongside your understanding.

Why Is Awareness So Important?

At a basic level, the answer is simple. Without awareness, it is difficult to fully understand the behaviour. Without understanding, meaningful change becomes much harder.

A common question many clients ask is:
 “Why would I focus more on something I don’t even want to be doing?”

This is a valid concern.

It is natural to want distance from behaviours that feel frustrating or upsetting. However, in therapy, moving toward the behaviour, rather than away from it, is what allows change to happen.

As awareness increases, people often begin to see how frequently the behaviour occurs, how strong the urges are, and how specific triggers influence it. This can feel uncomfortable at first.

That discomfort is part of the process.

For many, this growing awareness becomes a source of motivation. When the patterns are clearer, the desire to change becomes more grounded and more realistic.

What Comes After Awareness Training?

Once awareness has been established, the next steps can begin. At this stage, both the client and therapist have a clearer understanding of when the behaviour happens and what maintains it.

This allows for more targeted intervention.

Clients begin learning alternative ways to respond to urges. These strategies are tailored to their specific patterns and triggers. Over time, new responses replace old habits, reducing the frequency and intensity of skin picking.

Awareness provides the foundation for this work. Without it, change would rely on guesswork. With it, the process becomes structured and more effective.

More Than Behaviour Change

While awareness training helps reduce skin picking, its benefits often extend further.

Clients develop a better understanding of their emotional states, the connection between thoughts and behaviours, and how their bodies respond to stress. This increased awareness can support emotional regulation and decision-making in other areas of life.

Awareness is not just the first step in therapy. It is also the beginning of deeper self-understanding.

You Don’t Have to Do This Alone

Change takes time, effort, and patience. At times, it can feel overwhelming.

Support can make a meaningful difference.

Working with a trained therapist provides structure, guidance, and encouragement. It helps make the process more manageable and less isolating.

You do not have to navigate this on your own.

References

  1. Hamid, N., Bordbar, M., & Marashi, S. A. (2021). Effectiveness of Habit Reversal Training (HRT) on anxiety and trichotillomania (TTM). https://www.sid.ir/paper/1013813/en 
  2. Lochner, C., Roos, A., & Stein, D. J. (2017). Excoriation (skin-picking) disorder: a systematic review of treatment options. Neuropsychiatric disease and treatment, 1867-1872.
Vedrana Mirkovic

Vedrana is a clinical psychologist and psychotherapist. She graduated from University of Novi Sad, Department of Psychology and is trained in Transactional-assimilative approach to psychotherapy and Sociopsychodrama. She is most interested in identity development and identity integration and qualitative research in psychology. She has experience in working with adolescents and their parents, especially concerning themes like sexual orientation and gender identity. In her clinical practice, she is dominantly working with personality disorder and suicidality, as well as with non-suicidal self-harming behaviors. She believes that psychotherapy is based on relationship between client and therapist, and that every challenge and problem client have, is a result of an adaptation to one’s developmental context. Therefore, understanding one’s life story and engaging in understanding and recreating developmental history, is a path to learning new coping strategies and making new, healthier, decisions

Online test

Find out the severity of your symptoms with this free online test

Share

Start your journey with SkinPick

Take control of your life and find freedom from skin picking through professional therapy and evidence-based behavioral techniques.

Start Now