Are Emotions a Choice? …. How You Feel Is Up To You …. CoVid-19 is not going to stop you …..part 114
Do you sometimes feel like your emotions come out of nowhere? Or do you get stuck in a mood and have trouble getting out of it?
Put “the power of emotional choice†to work for you. Learn to take responsibility for your emotions, enhance your awareness of feelings, and manage anger, anxiety, depression, guilt and stress.
You can turn your feelings from liabilities (“I'm a victimâ€) into assets (“I can manage!â€). You can decide how you want to feel!
How You Feel Is Up To You .
Every emotion has a powerful aftereffect. ... We don't always want to let go of an emotion. They stick around sometimes to communicate something important, either to ourselves or to others. But if your emotion isn't helping you and you want and need to move on, you can make choices that impact how you feel.
Is love a feeling or a choice?
There is a difference between feeling love for someone (caring about a person) and loving someone (choosing to love that person). You may have love for someone forever. ... The choice to love is not a feeling; it is an action. That is why it's so difficult.
I used to believe that love was like a light switch: Something flicks on. You get an overwhelming sensation. It hits you like a bag of bricks—or a strong arrow. It's when you know that you've found the one, right?
Love, in reality, is a series of choices. The first choice is based on many factors, including chemistry, principles, logic, humor, intelligence, body type, where we are in our lives, what we want or need, etc.
Based on these factors, we either choose to begin the process to love or not. If we decide to enter this process, the action of loving can bring “light switch†moments: The way he looks at you. How hard she makes you laugh. The notes he hides in your purse. The way she makes you feel when you don’t feel anything.
Disclaimer: The information on this POST is not intended or implied to be a substitute for professional advice. The opinions expressed within this article are the personal opinions of the author. All content, including text, graphics, images and information, contained on or available through this article is for general information purposes / educational purposes only, and to ensure discussion or debate.
Thank you …But like an airplane flight, there is turbulence. Fights. Disagreements. The little things that bother you: His socks, her shopping.
You start wondering if you’ve made the right choice. And once you are in doubt, you have to make another choice: to continue to fly with this person or parachute out of the plane.
This choice is based on a many other factors, but again depend on the individual and where they are in their journey. If you decide to jump, the scary free fall will either make you stronger (grow) or miserable (depressed).
Yet sooner or later you find yourself back at the airport waiting to board another plane. And then you hit turbulence again—or maybe, this time, there is no turbulence. Or maybe you’ve changed your mind about the destination. Either way, you have to make another choice: Jump, or continue to fly?
When it comes to emotions, we often we tell ourselves stories, half-truths or fiction about our emotional experience. One of the most common fictions is that we have little or no choice in how we feel.
You Can't Choose Your Emotions, But You Can Choose What to Do With Them. Feeling jealous, angry, or sad is as natural as breathing. ... Wanting to control your feelings at all times is a lost battle no matter how hard you try. However, you should be careful about what you do and say when you are feeling certain emotions.
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That doesn’t mean that we can choose to never feel painful emotions. Anger, shame, guilt, fear, sadness and other painful emotions play an important role in our lives and even in our survival. And they are a part of life, whether we like it or not.
These emotions are triggered by events that happen in our lives. Physical pain, the loss of a job, feeling that important beliefs are threatened, a traumatic event or losing someone important to you are the types of life events that happen to most people at some point or another in life that can cause painful feelings.
But, that initial experience of emotion that occurs nearly immediately after something happens is more short lived than you might think. An emotion’s life-span is a matter of minutes or even seconds, not hours or days.
So how is it that we can be stuck in painful emotions for long periods of time?
Every emotion has a powerful aftereffect. After we experience anger, for example, our attention narrows, typically causing us to overlook aspects of a situation that are fair, just or otherwise not related to feeling anger.
Instead, after anger our focus contracts to those parts of our experience that make us angry. We may ruminate about other situations that have made us angry in the past, imagine future situations that will make us angry or get stuck thinking about the current situation, to the exclusion of all else.
The end result is that we continue to feel angry for a long period of time, rather than for the seconds or minutes that it takes to experience an emotion.
So where is the choice?
After we experience an emotion, whether we continue to feel it or whether it passes and we experience other emotions depends on the focus of our attention.
When you recognize that you have experienced a painful emotion that will have powerful affects on your memory, thoughts and functioning, you can make choices about where to focus your attention.
We don’t always want to let go of an emotion. They stick around sometimes to communicate something important, either to ourselves or to others.
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But if your emotion isn’t helping you and you want and need to move on, you can make choices that impact how you feel.
There are many different ways to let go of negative emotions. Below are 2 strategies to try when your stuck in the narrowed focus that often comes after an emotional experience:
1. Be Mindful of Your Emotion. Begin by observing your emotion. You might allow yourself to experience it as a wave, say by concentrating on the physical parts of the emotion and noticing how physical experiences such as nervousness, a beating heart or a heaviness in the pit of your stomach ebb and flow like a wave.
Now remind yourself that you are not your emotion. Don’t try to push it away or hold it close. You may think of your emotion as a messenger, telling you something about your experience. Welcome it, allow yourself to experience it and then let it go on its way.
2. Focus on Positive Experiences. Painful emotions can narrow your attention so that you are aware of only those experiences that continue to trigger the painful emotion. Consciously refocus on positive events and positive aspects of your life. To do this, you must notice when your mind has wandered back into remembering painful times or imagining more difficulties. Bring your attention back to positive thoughts and experiences over and over, until the after effects of the emotion no longer cause you to return to it.
Both of these strategies require practice. They can be difficult at first, but with time and repetition, they become easier and more effective.
Taking the time and making choices will allow you to get distance from painful emotions, which is essential to figuring out what message they send. Experiencing your emotion as it occurs, without acting on it, reduces the intensity of the emotion. Feelings that were scary or seemed catastrophic will no longer feel so overwhelming.
We experience emotions all the time. Sometimes they cause us to change a situation or even to change our lives. But often, we simply experience them and then move on. It is when you are stuck and not moving on that you most need to make a choice about how you want to feel.
One caveat: If you are stuck in a major depression or are suffer from an anxiety disorder, these strategies can still be helpful, although seeking the help of a professional and considering medication may also be necessary and a recommended course of action.
Love is making a choice every day, either to love or not to love. That’s it. You either continue the process or you don't. We fall in and out of love. Even in relationships—especially in relationships. This doesn’t mean we don’t love the person; it means we are left with a choice.
Managing Director at DAYALIZE
4 年Thank you all for your kind reactions to my articles of interest to so many of my followers. When you’re emotionally sensitive, you experience emotions more intensely than others. Your feelings of love, joy, happiness, anger, sorrow, and fear are stronger than average. If you aren’t able to manage your emotions, you struggle every day to cope. You sometimes don’t trust yourself because you can’t predict how you’ll react in different situations. Too often, your emotions get the best of you, and you act on them in ways that aren’t helpful in making your life better—sometimes adding more anguish and trouble to your life. As always, I appreciate your company. Thank you.
Sr Quality Specialist II @ Northern RNA Inc. | Quality Management, Compliance, Continuous Improvement, Change Management
4 å¹´Sometimes emotions and thoughts do overlap and unable to put them in words!! Still working hard to manage this!
Managing Director at DAYALIZE
4 年This is a common problem for many people: just how are we supposed to deal with negative emotions that keep coming up when we're stressed or hurt? Should we stuff our anger and frustration away and pretend it doesn't exist, so we can minimize the fallout from these emotions? Or should we risk making things worse by saying or doing the wrong thing? As it turns out, "stuffing emotions"?is definitely not the healthiest option and there are easy techniques that anyone can use. Ignoring feelings (like "stuffing your anger") is not the healthiest way to deal with them.?Generally speaking, that does not make them go away but can cause them to come out in different ways. Feeling angry or frustrated can be a signal that something needs to change. If you don’t change the situations or thought patterns that are causing these uncomfortable emotions, you will continue to be triggered by them.