Message 3161 of 14086

from The Daily OM

Owning Your Emotions

Name It and Claim It

Our feelings can sometimes present a very challenging aspect of our lives. We experience intense emotions without understanding precisely why and consequently find it difficult to identify the solutions that will soothe our distressed minds and hearts. Yet it is only when we are capable of naming our feelings that we can tame them by finding an appropriate resolution. We retake control of our personal power by becoming courageous enough to articulate, out loud and concisely, the essence of our emotions. Our assuming ownership of the challenges before us in this way empowers us to shift from one emotional state to another—we can let go of pain and upset because we have defined it, examined the effect it had on our lives, and then exerted our authority over it by making it our own. By naming our feelings, we claim the right to divest ourselves of them at will.
As you prepare to acknowledge your feelings aloud, gently remind yourself that being specific is an important part of exercising control. Whatever the nature of your feelings, carefully define the reaction taking place within you. If you are afraid of a situation or intimidated by an individual, try not to mince words while giving voice to your anxiety. The precision with which you express yourself is indicative of your overall willingness to stare your feelings in the face without flinching. Naming and claiming cannot always work in the vacuum of the soul. There may be times in which you will find the release you desire only by admitting your feelings before others. When this is the case, your ability to outline your feelings explicitly can help you ask for the support, aid, or guidance you need without becoming mired in the feelings that led you to make such an admission in the first place.
When you have moved past the apprehension associated with expressing your distressing feelings out loud, you may be surprised to discover that you feel liberated and lightened. This is because the act of making a clear connection between your circumstances and your feelings unravels the mystery that previously kept you from being in complete control of your emotional state. To give voice to your feelings, you must necessarily let them go. In the process, you naturally relax and rediscover your emotional equilibrium.
Wisewolf's profile
Thanks for the post.

A turbulant mind
needs a voice and a place and a person to release in safety.
MalteseColleen's profile

over 2 years ago
I just finished reading a book about emotions............."The Emotion Handbook: For the Recovery and Management of Feelings" by Valerie Kack-Brice. It's a handbook taking us through the emotions and teaching how to manage them with exercises. "This quick reference guide is intended for use in recognizing one's emotions and for practicing appropriate emotional behavior." I found it interesting. I read it through and will go back later to do the exercises.
Bluedahlia77's profile

over 2 years ago
Naming your emotions is very important; regardless what we may call them, it helps us to get a handle on what it is. I used to call my pain “tramainya.” which is a word, in my youth, that I just made up. It meant nothing to anyone else but me, and I had a grasp of it when it visited me.

The Tibetan Book of the Dead states that when we die our emotions leave our physical body with us and surround us. They become apparitions and take on form; horrible emotions appearing as demons and pleasant emotions appearing as angels. The demons attack us while the angels caress us and lift us higher. Of course this is but one perception; that we are all possessed by our emotions.

Having studied psychology for many years I came to know the difference between cognitive interventions and affective interventions; a person’s affect deals with their emotions, and often I would hear therapist talk about a person with a “flat affect.” This meant that they were emotional-less, or lacking emotions. And then there are those who are emotionally confused and don’t know how they feel.

Psychotherapists often use terms like “escalate” and “de-escalate” when they talk about a person’s emotions; as if the person was on and elevator or roller coaster ride, and it is our emotions which fuel our journey thru life. Passion is and emotion, and so is depression. When a person becomes emotionally stuck it is often said that they are “frozen,” and then there are those who swing from one emotional extreme to the other; often called “bipolar.”

A lot of people do have a hard time reaching emotional maturity, or finding emotional balance; they may develop their intellect to the Ph.D. level but emotionally remain in kindergarten. In my opinion emotional intelligence in many ways is more important than mental intelligence. Still I view all of the components which make up the human state of being as various different vibrations of that same One Thing. As all things inter-relate.
EZ2's profile

over 2 years ago

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