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How to Control Your Emotions

Emotional Life

Chances are, you have had a disturbing emotion within the past week, maybe even the past day. You could be a person who experiences emotional discomfort most of the time. Not everyone lives in a state of peace and joy. On the contrary, many people constantly struggle with their emotions and never enter a state of peace.

I frequently ask people about their experience with peace, and they often tell me they don’t know how it feels. Their minds are constantly working on fixing a problem they think exists or trying to prevent a problem that could exist. Disturbing emotions are a significant part of their being instead of peace.

When you are at peace, you are absent from internal and external struggles. There is little expectation placed on life. Discomfort and disappointment do not create struggle. Circumstance does not bring peace to peaceful people. They bring peace to circumstances.

Understanding Emotions

If this notion of peace sounds foreign, understanding emotion is a good start to improving your mental wellness. Emotions have become trendy in wellness concepts like mindfulness, manifesting, and healing trauma. But many people have gaps in their understanding of emotions.

Controlling, processing and managing emotions are different aspects of the emotional realm.

Controlling emotions relies on mental discipline and restraint.

Processing emotions seeks to understand the psychological value of responses.

Managing emotions is the integration of internal and external reactions.

We must master all three aspects to develop inner peace.

Controlling emotions

We learn how to control emotions at an early age. The world will tolerate the baby narcissism of the terrible twos only for so long. By age four, children are much more cooperative and collaborative.

The way children learn to become cooperative influences their adult emotional life. Optimally, children develop control over their emotions through the support of their environment. Caregivers comfort, give nurturing feedback and hold them accountable for their behavior.

Emotions will seep to the lowest level of unconsciousness.

Preschoolers are gently redirected when they exhibit inappropriate emotions, such as laughing at a child who struggles with learning. Displays of appropriate emotional states are validated, such as laughing with a younger sibling while playing.

Children develop into adults with healthy emotional self-regulation when emotions are teachable moments.

Healing Versus Hiding Emotions

The three most harmful emotions caregivers provoke in children to develop discipline are guilt, shame, and fear. Children will avoid vulnerability if these emotions are activated during childhood.

Suppose you struggle with vulnerability, including admitting when you are wrong or apologizing. In that case, chances are you were raised with a heavy dose of guilt and shame. You probably were reprimanded with guilt instead of redirected with compassion, which separated you from your authentic self.

Decades later, the critic in your head maintains discipline and restraint to avoid emotions. You control your feelings by not having them or not showing them. Displaying emotion and vulnerability feels like you did something wrong.

Driving Emotions

Controlling emotion with restraint uses much more brain power than compassionate self-regulation. Think about your mind functioning like a car. Most cars have automatic transmissions now, where gears shift without intervention from the driver.

That wasn’t the case 30 years ago. Buying automatic cars was considerably more expensive than manual transmissions, where the driver must shift between each gear.

The challenge of driving a manual transmission car is learning to get the car moving. Three precise actions must occur for the car to move instead of shutting off. The driver must shift into first gear by pressing the clutch with the left.

Once the gear is positioned, the driver must depress the clutch while simultaneously applying the gas with the right foot. If the clutch is released too fast, the gas is applied too slow, or the gear is not in first, the car will give immediate feedback to the driver. FAILED!!! Then you must restart the car and try again.

Your mind attempts to coordinate efforts with your physiology.

You relate to the analogy if you struggle with emotion regulation. To handle emotions well, you need to get the right amount of sleep and adequate nutrition and avoid triggering events as a coordinated effort.

Outside of executing the precise routine, your emotions send you immediate feedback. You failed! Before you know it, you’re shouting, crying, or numbing out.

Your mind attempts to coordinate efforts with your physiology. You take a few breaths to put yourself in first gear to face the triggering situation. You back off the negatively aroused emotion to stop your heart from racing and apply rational thinking to move on with your day.

You are moving along, but you must constantly shift gears. Your emotions are dictated by the road and traffic patterns of the day.

For example, your child speaks to you disrespectfully, and you shift into low gear. Your boss compliments you on a project, and you shift into high gear. You were reminded of your breakup when you saw the cute couple holding hands. So you shift gears again.

You are mentally exhausted because your mind works harder than people with healthy emotional self-regulation. Self-regulating emotions minimize the effort to get through each day, just as an automatic transmission leaves the driver undisturbed by hills, traffic jams, or sharp curves.

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Processing Emotions

Processing emotions puts them under a microscope to see the finer details. The microscope can be formal, such as therapy, or informal such as writing poetry, but it must be intentional. The objective is to look within to understand your vulnerability better.

Confusing the processing of emotions with venting is common. People vent in their journals, in poetry, and with therapists and friends. The difference between processing and venting is plain to state but challenging to do. The mind uses venting to protect itself from discomfort rather than understanding.

When venting, the conversation is about what was done to you. You talk about the other person’s actions and how they made you feel. You judge their character.

When processing emotions, you seek a deeper understanding of yourself. Why did the situation trigger you? You investigate yourself without judgment, blame, or shame.

Failing to Process

First, you must separate your feelings from your reaction. You may react angrily, but your feeling may be shame. Responding with anger protects your vulnerability.

Another example is when you respond with advice to someone expressing emotional pain. Your mind tells you this is the way to be helpful even though the person doesn’t want your advice. They want your compassion. Because you don’t offer it, conflict occurs, and you think your friend is being too sensitive.

If you process your emotions, you could find pain similar to your friend’s hidden inside you. You want your friend to stop talking about their pain so that you can keep your pain hidden. The conflict leads you to vent about your friend instead of processing.

Emotional Defense

Sigmund Freud, the notorious psychologist, identified how people avoid processing painful emotions. He collectively termed the responses “ego defense mechanisms.” Everyone uses them for managing emotions. But the overuse of them separates us from our authentic selves.

Self-observation is an essential step toward processing emotions. The first assignment I give to my empowerment clients is to observe their use of defense mechanisms after they learn about them: Introjection, projection, displacement, denial, reaction formation, sublimation, and regression.

Introjection

Introjection is taking on the emotions of the environment instead of revealing your feelings. No matter how happy you are, you collectively grieve when you are at the funeral of the 94-year-old uncle who died in his sleep. You don’t dare focus on being glad you just got a promotion. You take on the emotions of the environment.

Projection

Projection is seeing in someone else what is too uncomfortable for you to see in yourself. For example, rather than address suspicion that your partner is having an affair, you suggest to your friend that their spouse may be cheating.

Displacement

Displacement involves expressing your feelings toward the wrong person — presumably a safer person. The stressed parent yells at the children after a hard day at the office. The coach yells at the referee when losing the game. Emotions will seep to the lowest level of unconsciousness.

Denial

Denial has different angles. You can deny that a circumstance exists altogether, or you can deny the consequences. If a doctor diagnoses you with high blood pressure and prescribes medication, you may express denial.

You can reject the diagnosis by believing your pressure was temporarily elevated due to your previous argument with your co-worker. Or, you accept the diagnosis but refuse to take medication because no one in your family has heart disease.

Your underlying reason for the denial is your fear that the medicine will cause weight gain, and you take pride in your figure.

Reaction formation

Have you ever laughed to stop yourself from crying? Reaction formation defense is acting the opposite of your genuine emotion. A typical scenario is smiling and laughing all through dinner with the in-laws while counting the seconds until they leave your house.

At the end of sports competitions, when the winners shake the losers’ hands, reaction formation occurs. The winners contain their pride for humility, and the losers hold their disappointment.

Sublimation

Sublimation finds an appropriate expression of desire that differs from the real desire. Retired people often find a less demanding job that still allows them to use their talent.

Second marriages fail more often than first marriages because couples sublimate. “If you can’t be with the one you love, love the one you’re with” is a song about sublimation.

Regression

Regression is returning to a previous stage of development to deal with uncomfortable emotions. Every time you get angry and say mean things, you are regressing.

Adults develop practical communication skills. Just because your communication doesn’t get you what you want doesn’t mean you should go back to throwing emotional tantrums.

When jilted lovers return to a life of promiscuity, they are regressing to deal with their feelings of abandonment.

Managing Emotions

You manage emotions when defense mechanisms are a conscious part of your empowerment toolbox. The unconscious use of defenses allows them to manage you. Managing emotions results from healthy processing combined with mental discipline and control. The result is self-regulation.

Managing emotions considers internal and external stimuli to filter emotions. Self-regulation does a background check to prevent strong feelings from carrying you away. Consider the example.

You are upset with your spouse because you are not spending enough time together. Your ex texts you to see how you are doing since you married six months ago. They offer to take you to lunch. You get emotionally aroused because your ex used to give you plenty of attention.

Self-regulation will do a background check for emotional defenses. Hmm, sublimation alert. You want to settle for attention from the ex because the spouse is unavailable.

Regression, you start flirting since your romantic needs aren’t met. You hadn’t flirted with anyone since you met your husband.

Denial, you tell yourself it’s just lunch.

The background check tunes into your most authentic self and red flags your arousal. Emotional processing curbs your arousal. You use mental discipline to decline the invitation and bypass the thump in your heart. Self-regulation keeps you faithfully married.

Self-regulation

All defense mechanisms should be used sparingly and consciously. But, most people are unaware that they use them at all. Their defenses have become their personality.

Where abuse, neglect, or grief has occurred, you must come out of survival mode to manage emotions. Managing emotions, as opposed to defense mechanisms, requires you to be your authentic self.

If you hide your authentic self due to shame, pain, or fear, you are in survival mode. You must process those original emotions that linger deep within you before you can let go of ego defenses.

From here, I leave you to grapple with your ego defenses that may insist that there is nothing you must change about yourself. You are justified to be exactly who you are. Continue to look for people who will accept you without wanting you to be different.

The only question you need to ask your ego is, do you live with peace and joy? If the answer is no, or I don’t know what that feels like, it’s time to dive into the emotional work.

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