Tag: Emotional Intelligence

Did You Know Anxiety is Not an Emotion Either?

Did You Know Anxiety is Not an Emotion Either?

It’s a state. Like stress.  Or depression. Anxiety, stress and depression are usually states that wrap around a cluster of emotions, thoughts or beliefs. So what is anxiety? Anxiety is usually an activating state that comes with being over aroused because there are uncomfortable emotions 

Did You Know That Shame Is Not An Emotion?

Did You Know That Shame Is Not An Emotion?

Shame is not exactly a feeling. Shame is an experience human beings have—like depression or anxiety. It is also often a numbing agent. This is not a conscious process.  You don’t think to yourself: “Oh, I will just feel ashamed in order to numb myself.” 

Disgust: The Emotional System’s Eject Button

Disgust: The Emotional System’s Eject Button

The physical sensation of disgust, like many unpleasant emotions, can distract from the feeling’s true message because it is not enjoyable to experience.  It is, by nature, repellant.

The fact is, disgust can be essential to emotional survival and well being, if we are discerning and open to it.

Before we start, let’s quickly set the stage.

This post is #10 in a series of 10: Ten Basic Emotions and their Messages.

The human emotional system is built as a messaging system.

Each emotion has a general message it wants to convey.  Once that message is delivered (meaning you accept it that it is present and that its presence is OK) the wave of that emotion can be processed.

Sometimes there are multiple waves of the emotion. Sometimes it takes a little time for the emotion to process through the body, sometimes it is relieved right away.  It just depends.

It’s important to remember that there are nuances to the system. Each emotion also has a spectrum of how helpful it can be.

So…Disgust.

The message disgust wants to get across to you is that there is something it wants to remove from your emotional system.

Very much like the physical body’s nausea, disgust is built to remove or drive you away from a threat.

This is the tricky part about disgust is that it has a helpful aspect as well as one that is potentially unhelpful.

Let’s look at the helpful part:

Disgust serves as a signal to avoid a person, place, situation that is not healthy for you.

It is one of the emotions that is most easy to detect physically.  It is often not threatening to report.  People will easily say they are disgusted by someone’s actions or a situation if it is popularly seen as unsavory.  Especially if there is a judgment since judgment it is another form of distancing oneself from something “bad”.

Now, it can be vulnerable if disgust comes up in response to a person or situation you feel you are supposed to love.

This is where it gets interesting to me.

Disgust can actually arise when the emotion you are experiencing is not yours and you are taking it on as your own.  The emotional system wants to purge it because it does not belong to you.

This emotional experience may have been more difficult to detect because it might not have been in your matrix to consider that an emotion you are experiencing may not be yours.

However, if you are someone who tends to take on blame more easily than assigning blame, you may actually have a lot of experience with this subtle form of disgust.  It may have been available to your awareness as anger.  It may have even been self directed anger.  Or it could have been experienced like self loathing or a temptation to self sabotage.

Here’s an example:

You are in a disagreement or unpleasant exchange with someone close to you.  You are being blamed for the problem occurring. This is can often be an unconscious process. Both of you take on the assumption that your “stuff” is the cause of the issue. Of course, there can be more overt blaming where people use direct words as well.

You get a weird rotting feeling in your stomach because it is actually not your stuff causing the problem. In reality, it is actually the other person’s “stuff” or a combination of yours and theirs. The disgust serves to try and push away what is not yours.

Now that disgust is being explained this way, can you remember times when this might have been happening in your emotional system?

Here is the potentially unhelpful part of disgust:

Sometimes you are actually repelled by something that is a part of you.  Usually it is an aspect of yourself that you may have pushed outside of your awareness.  Sometimes it is because someone else in your life displayed this characteristic or behavior and it was hurtful to you. It is being mirrored back to you, tapping on the dislike you may have for that part of yourself.

Let’s look at an example:

I have found myself disgusted when people close to me have not been willing to be straightforward in their communication. There were entire sessions with my own therapist, especially in my 20s, that I spent talking about the fact that I was disgusted by family members’ behavior, specifically around not communicating directly about how they felt. I feel for my therapist having to sit through those sessions!

What was actually true, in hindsight, is that I still had some major growth work to do around communicating my truth to the ones I love. That is a complex skill, but I did not have awareness of that at the time. I just felt wronged. Over time, I was able to see where I, myself, needed to work on this.

That is the tricky part about disgust: there is a time when it is indicating that there is something we are not willing to see or own about ourselves.

So what do you do with it?

ONE: Notice that it is there.

Usually, you will feel it in your stomach, closer to the top of your stomach.  It could also be noticed through a temptation to self sabotage (see above).

TWO: Check in to see if it is helpful or unhelpful disgust.

Here are some questions you can ask yourself:

  •  Is there something potentially threatening going on?

If yes, what do I need to do to protect myself?

  • Am I taking on more blame than is accurate?

If yes, talk with an objective friend or do some writing to sort out what is your responsibility in the situation. And what is not.  You may chose to talk this through with the other person in the interaction, but it is certainly not necessary.

If no to both of the above:

  • Might there be something the other person is doing that I am actually capable of as well? Could there be a blind spot?

If you think the disgust could be an arrow to something you might not have wanted to see about yourself, talk to a trusted friend, a therapist or do some writing to explore this.

Let it be an opportunity for you to develop some compassion or forgiveness for the other person in the situation by realizing you are also capable of such things.

Or, let it be a chance for you to own something about yourself and use it for an opportunity to grow.

Joy?  Who Has Time For That?  Here’s One Reason to Pay Attention to it.

Joy? Who Has Time For That? Here’s One Reason to Pay Attention to it.

Joy.  Yes, that feeling you want, that everybody wants, but you never want to have to think about it. Let me be honest.  When I read headlines that mention happiness or joy, I’m like “sure, but I have really important things to do like help 

Why Mislabeling Frustration is Probably Slowing You Down

Why Mislabeling Frustration is Probably Slowing You Down

Frustration is like anger’s more socially acceptable cousin. You don’t want to be a jerk so you say “I’m not mad, I’m frustrated”. I like that you are trying to be nice.  That’s sweet. But it’s really not helping you. By labeling your anger “frustration”, 

What if Jealousy is a Sheep in Wolf’s Clothing?

What if Jealousy is a Sheep in Wolf’s Clothing?

You read that correctly.  A sheep in wolf’s clothing.

Jealousy gets villainized.   It is regarded as unbecoming.  And, I get that.  But let’s not throw the baby out with the bathwater…

This post is #8 in a series of 10: Ten Basic Emotions and their Messages.

Before we start, let’s quickly set the stage.

The human emotional system is built as a messaging system.

Each emotion has a general message it wants to convey.  Once that message is delivered (meaning you accept it that it is present and that its presence is OK) the emotion or the wave of that emotion can be processed.

Sometimes there are multiple waves of the emotion. Sometimes it takes a little time for the emotion to process through the body, sometimes it is relieved right away.  It just depends.

It’s important to remember that there are nuances to the system. Each emotion also has a spectrum of how helpful it can be.

Now… how could jealousy be a sheep???

What is the message jealousy wants to bring to your awareness?

Jealousy is an arrow pointing to what you desire and do not yet have.

The hard part about jealousy is that it is shrouded in this cloak of distaste, which is what masks the desire.

That distaste is likely a sweet little move by your psyche trying to protect your ego.

For some reason, the thing you are jealous of has traveled through your unconscious mind and an inspector on the production line flagged it as threatening for you to let yourself want it.

Maybe you have gotten messages in your upbringing, your social circle or society that say “you shouldn’t want that”.

Maybe wanting something someone else has makes you feel like you are “less than” in some way.

But, desire is desire no matter what way you slice it.

Furthermore, desire can be a crucial emotional experience.  Shutting it down could mean shutting off a source of motivation or excitement in your life.  Maybe even the key to a direction or life purpose.

How to Detect Jealousy

ONE: Jealousy can look like judgement.

If you find yourself giving the evil eye to someone you would otherwise or usually like, that is a clue.  Or, if you find yourself gossiping or making snarky comments about someone, that could be a tip off.

TWO: You dislike someone most other people around you like.

This is different that your spidey senses going off.  If you feel like something is up with someone, like they are covering up their true feelings or motives, that is not usually jealousy.

What to do about your jealous feelings

ONE:  Realize it is OK.

You are human.  Natural defense mechanisms are built to protect you.  You didn’t design them.  So no need to judge yourself or make the defenses wrong.

Once you accept it is OK, you have more access to that desire because you disarmed the defenses.  Basically, you successfully hacked your emotions.  Bravo.

TWO:  Go on a treasure hunt.

Let yourself wonder about what it is that you might be desiring that is behind your snarky comments or judgey thoughts.

If you need to vent your way through the jealousy and say super judgmental things to your best friend until the gold of your desire shows up, so be it.

Let it surprise you.  You might be finding out something new about yourself.

THREE:  Dismantle the bomb.

If you are thinking you might want to actually go for what it is you want, you might need to figure out why you weren’t letting yourself want it in the first place.

Otherwise, you might hit some roadblocks in creating what you want.  Believe me, if those defenses showed up once, they will show up again.  Especially if you raise the stakes (meaning you get closer to the thing you “shouldn’t want”).

Is a belief you hold in the way?  Is it something your family told you?

What if having an amicable relationship with jealousy means you have more of what you really want in your life?

I’m signing up for that.

Healthy Guilt Can Show You What Kind of Person You Are

Healthy Guilt Can Show You What Kind of Person You Are

No one enjoys feeling guilty. It might be hard to believe there could be anything helpful about it.  There is.  It tells you something about the kind of person you are. There is even actually something helpful about shame, which seems like a relative of 

Do You Get Irritated A Lot?  You Are Not a Monster.

Do You Get Irritated A Lot? You Are Not a Monster.

I know.  It feels like you are.  You feel guilty about it. But, really, the fact that you feel guilty about getting annoyed a lot reveals that is not your true nature.  You see, guilt is an indication that you have travelled outside the range 

This Will Help You Appreciate Disappointment For the First Time

This Will Help You Appreciate Disappointment For the First Time

There doesn’t seem to be anything redeeming about disappointment.

It’s not exactly a feeling one appreciates.  But there actually IS a gift inherent in disappointment.

This post is #4 in a series of 10: Ten Basic Emotions and their Messages.

The central point is:  The human emotional system is built as a messaging system.

Each emotion has a general message it wants to convey.  Once that message is delivered, the emotion or the wave of that emotion can be processed.

Sometimes there are multiple waves of the emotion. Sometimes it takes a little time for the emotion to process through the body, sometimes it is relieved right away.

It’s important to remember that there are nuances to the system. Each emotion also has a spectrum of how helpful it is.

Let’s start with the basic message disappointment wants to bring to your awareness.

The message of disappointment is about alignment.

Disappointment reveals a gap between our expectations, beliefs or assumptions and reality.

Expectations, beliefs and assumptions are largely invisible until there is something that is not a match to them.

You know how people say “I have no expectations”?  Well, it’s probably not true.  Sure, you can try not to have expectations, but they exist.  Why?  Because one of the chief endeavors of the mind is to predict.  In the minds’ predictions are embedded expectations.

So, when disappointment appears, it is an opportunity to come into alignment with reality.

Ultimately, living in alignment with reality creates more harmony, ease and productivity.  It means you are working with the flow rather than against it.

The initial revelation of an undesirable truth is sometimes difficult.  But being with the truth is much easier in the long run.  That way your efforts, energy and attention can be directed to the right places.

How to Deal with Disappointment:

ONE: Look for the truth that wants to come forward.

If you try to resist the truth that is here now, that is where time and energy are wasted. If you look at the situation and look to accept it as it is, you will get through the unpleasantness of disappointment faster.

Spend your effort looking at reality.

TWO: Let the disappointment metabolize.

That means: let the disappointment be there.  It sucks, but it is OK.  Let it run through your body.  In your head or out loud, declare your intention to be with it if that helps.  Just breathe and pay attention to the sensations in your body as it processes.  Most feelings take about 90 seconds to run through.  If you can pause and let that happen without resistance, you will get through it faster.

According to Jill Bolte Taylor’s book, A Brain Scientist’s Personal Journey: “When a person has a reaction to something in their environment, there’s a 90 second chemical process that happens in the body; after that, any remaining emotional response is just the person choosing to stay in that emotional loop”.

THREE: Adjust your expectations.

Now that your silent expectations were revealed, bring your expectations into alignment with reality.

If you need to say the new expectation out loud or write it down to help solidify the gift of the disappointment, do that.

FOUR: Take your attention elsewhere.

Maybe that means you need to take action as a result of the disappointment.  Or maybe that means you just turn your brain onto something else: work, a new conversation topic, social media.  Whatever you need to move your attention on.  Otherwise, it is tempting to dwell on the disappointment.

Let’s look at an example so you can see how to move through the steps:

A child client of mine was recently expressing disappointment because she didn’t get to play a game during our session.  Sometimes we do that to help get into the session as a transition or to “close up” the work we have done.

ONE: Look for the truth that wants to come forward.

The reality for my client was that she spent the majority of her time on her artwork. She wanted to get her project “perfect” and that took up a lot of time.  Difficulty with being flexible is one of her treatment goals.  Seeing the consequence of being somewhat inflexible was an important reality to help motivate my client to work on this treatment goal.  I stopped all the action and we talked about this reality.

TWO: Let the disappointment metabolize.

In response, my client stated her disappointment again.  I know she didn’t care much about the reality, but it was important for me to continue to show her the realities of difficulties being flexible.

I mirrored it back to her: “it is disappointing”.  We sat there looking at each other for about 20 seconds.  I could see her metabolizing the feeling.

THREE: Adjust your expectations.

We talked for a moment about what we would do next time to help align expectations with reality.

FOUR: Take your attention elsewhere.

My client was ready to end session and got up to leave.

Sometimes the problem processing feelings is just that we don’t know HOW.

Is there a disappointment you’ve experienced that you can process using these steps so you can finally move forward?

Why Your Sadness is All Good

Why Your Sadness is All Good

I know, being sad is a bummer. Most people don’t want to sign up for experiencing sadness.  It’s not exactly pleasant. However, sadness is actually an important part of the human experience. Just like it is important that our cells die off and replace themselves.