|
FEELINGS
More
than any other sense, feelings define reality; how we feel about other
people and events helps categorize them, influencing our perceptions and
telling us what to expect in similar situations.
Feelings
are the river of life. They flow from a faucet that you can choose to
turn on or off. If you turn it on you must be willing to accept whatever
comes out. Although this may create some vulnerability, it's important
to remember that vulnerability is as much a part of being human as strength.
In fact, vulnerability prevents strength from becoming hard, brittle ore
self-serving.
If
you turn the faucet off to avoid painful feelings, you lose good feelings
like happiness, love, excitement, or creativity. Trying to avoid painful
feelings only prolongs suffering; you wind up feeling a little unhappy
most of the time instead of feeling very unhappy for a brief time.
Emotions
add power, energy and intensity to life. To understand your feelings is
to understand the world around you. The more aware you are of your feelings,
the
More control you have over your life and destiny.
Yet
some people have difficulty identifying their feelings, much less expressing
them. They are afraid of being vulnerable, of being overwhelmed by a flood
of feelings, of "looking bad". So they develop various ways
of trying to protect themselves:
· They may discuss and explain their feelings in an attempt to
avoid experiencing them.
· They may deny or repress them, hoping that if they say they don't
feel angry or upset or scared it will be so.
· They may blame others for how they feel, trying to avoid taking
responsibility for their feelings.
People
who are afraid of their feelings often hold them in until they come bursting
out. This always happens unexpectedly, so you aren't in charge of how,
when or where they're expressed. This creates the very unpleasantness
you sought to avoid. It's not the feelings that are a problem, but the
way they are expressed. If you accept your feelings, whatever they may
be, you'll be in command of when, where and how you express them.
THERAPY
- HOW DO YOU FEEL?
Social
learning determines which feelings we express and which we stifle. Many
people report being sent to their rooms as kids "to put on a happy
face", a clear message that it's okay to show pleasant feelings,
but not negative ones. In other families, everyone expresses their angry
or indignant feelings loudly and freely but anyone who shows hurt, fear
or shyness is called a "sissy" or a "wimp".
We
become conditioned about how to express or repress feelings; this childhood
learning becomes part of our adult style of communication and expression.
Many
people mistakenly believe that if they ignore unpleasant feelings, they'll
go away. But repressed feelings don't' go away, they just come out indirectly.
People who were taught not to be "negative" may express their
anger by "forgetting" to do promised favors or through"
joking" criticism. People who couldn't show vulnerability as children
may convert their emotional distress to physical pain, because they can't
be blamed for being ill.
Some
people repress feelings of sadness or hurt because they fear being overwhelmed
by them: they say, "If I start crying, I won't be able to stop".
Others don't know how to show anger, so they hold it in until they explode,
producing the very problems they sought to avoid by repressing the anger!
Professional counseling can help you recognize and express your feelings.
WHAT
DOES YOUR FACE REVEAL?
Our
faces don't reflect our emotions as clearly as we may think. Our culture
teaches us to inhibit emotional reactions, so we may not realize how much
of our feelings we mask.
Discrepancies
between facial expression and the feelings they're meant to convey affect
all kinds of interactions. You scowl at your husband for leaving the milk
out, but he does it again later. Wasn't it obvious from the look on your
face how much it annoys you?
Two
Dartmouth psychologists videotaped students who were watching funny film
clips. Students who thought they had guffawed were described by the researchers
as just chuckling. When they saw the tapes of their reactions, the participating
students agreed; two-thirds were surprised at how inexpressive their faces
had been during the film.
Hostile
people have particular difficulty reading facial expressions. In a recent
study, hostile people were asked to identify emotions depicted in a series
of slides. They accurately identified anger, but mislabeled disgust as
anger and misread happy faces as neutral.
This
interesting data from behavioral scientists emphasizes the importance
of putting your feelings into words. You can't rely on facial expression,
tone of voice and body language to accurately convey your feelings. Good
communication is multi-faceted and requires verbal as well as non-verbal
signals to get your message across.
Sex
Roles
MEN,
WOMEN AND FEELINGS
Men
and women have been taught to handle feelings differently because of sex
roles. In the past our society artificially divided the spectrum of human
feelings according to gender, creating sex role stereotypes. Some feelings
were considered "masculine" and others "feminine"
and both men and women were censored for stepping outside their assigned
roles. Each gender could claim only half its humanity.
In
the male stereotype, emotion was considered a sign of weakness. Inexpressiveness
was mistaken for strength and the "strong, silent" man became
a cultural icon whose emotional spectrum ranged from A to B. Anger was
the one feeling that was considered "manly", so it became the
way that some men expressed any feeling; whether they felt hurt, scared,
uncertain, or sad they acted angry. And, of course, when they were angry,
they acted angry! Although they felt other feelings, their fear of criticism
kept them from expressing or even recognizing them and they became strangers
to themselves.
While
the female sex role made it more acceptable for women to show their feelings,
they were limited in a different way. Expressing tender, nurturing feelings
was "feminine", but anger was "unfeminine". Women
who expressed hurt or sadness received sympathy, but if they showed anger,
they were often labeled
An unflattering 5-letter word starting with "B" and ending with
"H"!
Traditional
roles have changed greatly in the last two decades. The current generation
of young men women are working hard to become complete human beings, but
old habits die-hard and remnants of the old roles still survive, making
it hard for men to be tender and vulnerable and difficult for women to
be strong and assertive.
KIDS
AND FEELINGS
Kids
are experts on feelings. They don't censor what they feel, and they express
their feelings freely.
Parents
help children learn to identify their feelings and give them a vocabulary
for their emotional life so that they can communicate their feelings to
others. Through their own behavior, parents teach children the social
conventions about how to express feelings - what is "polite"
and what is unacceptable.
For
many parents, anger is the hardest feeling to deal with. Children's angry
behavior can cause a lot of conflict. Temper tantrums may catch parents
off-guard and pull them into responding angrily, while indirect expressions
of anger (like refusing to kiss Mom or Dad good-night) triggers hurt feelings.
Parents'
behavior teaches children how to view anger. If they respond to their
children's anger, hurt or guilt, children learn that anger is bad. If
they accept the kids' angry feelings calmly, and express their acceptance
and love, children learn that anger is just another feeling.
The
two most important things for children to learn about anger is that:
· Feeling angry is perfectly okay, but some angry behaviors are
not
· You still love them even when they're angry
Children
who don't learn to accept their anger and deal with it constructively
grow up fearing their anger and feeling guilty about it. They often believe
that anger threatens the stability of relationships and can even destroy
them.
MAKING
FRIENDS WITH YOUR FEELINGS
Feelings
are neither "good" nor "bad"; they are simply feedback
from your senses. When you censor your feelings in an attempt to make
them match some ideal standard, you are cheating yourself of valuable
information.
Although
it's natural to want to avoid unhappiness, even painful feelings serve
an important purpose:
· Anger warns that you believe you are being threatened; you think
your rights have been infringed upon or you sense a potential loss.
· Depression is a signal that you're denying your anger - turning
it inward where it becomes hopelessness and helplessness.
· Sadness means that you have lost something - a person, a relationship,
a role - that is important enough to grieve for.
· Fear signals impending danger and energizes you to take action
to avoid it.
· Anxiety nudges you to return to the present. (Anxiety is about
something that might happen, so it is always future-focused.)
No
one can "make you feel" anything unless you give them the power
to do so. If you find yourself using this phrase, realize that you are
making that other person very important and that you can choose to take
back the power you're giving them over your feelings.
You
have a choice about how you feel. Choose your feelings by choosing your
thoughts: Is the glass half-empty or half-full? The reality will remain
the same regardless of how you choose to look at it, but one perception
creates optimism that fosters pleasure, and the other results in pessimism
that causes dissatisfaction.
Research
shows that writing about your feelings in a journal can help lower stress
and improve your health. It can also help you focus your thoughts and
see creative ways to handle your feelings. Some people find that describing
your experiences in a story format with a beginning, middle and end helps
them come to a resolution about difficult situations.
WHAT'S
YOUR BODY SAYING?
Our
bodies reflect how we're feeling in a variety of ways:
· While blood doesn't actually boil, people's hands do become warmer
when they are angry.
· Hands don't really freeze, but they are cooler when you're scared.
· Your heart will beat faster when you're angry or fearful than
when you're disgusted.
· Psychological stress suppresses immune system functioning, increasing
vulnerability to infections and disease and exacerbating existing physical
conditions such as infertility, heart disease, and HIV/AIDS.
FEELINGS
IN THE WORKPLACE
Expressing
feelings at work can be tricky. Feelings are as much a part of the work
environment as they are of your personal life, but the more formal workplace
structure dictates that feelings be expressed in a more restrained way.
|