The power of your
emotions
Babies are bundles of emotion, experiencing intense
emotions of fear, anger, sadness, and joy within their
first eight weeks of life. As an infant, your emotions
connected you to your primary caregiver in what was the
first relationship of your life. Throughout life,
emotions continue to serve this same purpose: connecting
us to others.
Without emotions and an awareness and understanding
of them, it’s impossible to build or maintain strong,
healthy relationships. The feelings of others will
escape you unless you’re familiar with your own
emotions. The more aware you are of your own emotions,
the easier it will be for you to pick up on what others
are feeling and accurately read their wants and needs.
Your emotions help you:
- understand yourself, including your deeply-felt
needs
- understand and empathize with others
- communicate clearly and effectively
- make decisions based on the things that are most
important to you
- get motivated and take action to meet goals
- build strong, healthy relationships
Emotional awareness and
communication
Whether you’re having an argument with your spouse or
dealing with colleagues at work, your emotions influence
the communication process. Over 95% of communication is
nonverbal and emotionally driven, so the stakes in
learning to harness your emotions are high. Say the
wrong thing, or miss an emotional cue, and it can do a
lot of damage.
How emotions and feelings affect communication and
relationships
Consider the emotional responses of Bernie, Rhonda,
and Jim and how they affect their home and work
relationships:
Bernie
is a kind, steady, and dependable man whose
emotional flatness inspired the nickname “Mr.
Robot.” In his love relationship with his wife,
Bernie remains emotionally uninvolved. His mood is
always low key—nothing is too exciting, nothing is
worth arguing about. It blindsides him when his wife
files for divorce; he never saw it coming. Bernie
likes his job, but his flatness has hurt his ability
to advance. His bosses can’t imagine him motivating
others.
Rhonda
works hard at her marriage. Attractive,
caring, and hard-working, she takes everything
seriously and seldom complains or criticizes. But
her lack of spontaneity, humor, and playfulness is
taking its toll, as her husband contemplates
romantic involvements with other women. Rhonda’s
seriousness also limits her popularity at work. Her
coworkers tend to forget that she is there.
Jim
is admired for his kindness and generosity.
Only his family knows of his extremely short fuse.
After an unprovoked verbal outburst, Jim is
predictably apologetic. When people tell Jim’s wife
how lucky she is to have such a wonderful husband,
she bites her lip, aware of how she and their
children suffer in their relationship with him. His
temper also keeps him from working well with others
and has limited his choice of jobs.
Like misfiring pistons, Bernie, Rhonda and Jim are
incapable of connecting with their strong emotions—the
tools they need to communicate with themselves and
others. They do not experience the full range of core
emotions, or gut feelings.
Evaluating your emotional
awareness
Although emotional awareness is the basis of
emotional health, good communication, and solid
relationships, many people remain relatively
unacquainted with their core emotional experience. It is
surprising how few people can easily answer the
question: “What are you experiencing emotionally?”
Emotional awareness involves two basic abilities:
- The ability to recognize your
moment-to-moment emotional experience
- The ability to manage all of your feelings
appropriately
What is my level of emotional awareness?
Ask yourself the following questions. If you can
answer “yes” to most of the questions,
congratulations! If not, you may want to work on
raising your emotional awareness:
- Can you tolerate strong feelings, including
anger, sadness, fear, disgust, and joy?
- Do you feel your emotions in your body? If
you are sad or mad, do you experience physical
sensations in places like your stomach and
chest?
- Are you comfortable with all of your
emotions? No one chooses to be angry, sad or
frightened, but if you are, is it OK?
- Do you pay attention to your emotions and
use them to guide your decisions?
- Are you comfortable talking about your
emotions? Do you communicate your feelings
honestly?
- Do your emotions capture the attention of
others? Do others know what you feel? Are you
comfortable with their knowing?
- Are you sensitive to the emotions of others?
Unhealthy ways of dealing
with emotions and feelings
We are all born with a capacity to freely experience
the full range of human emotions—including joy, anger,
sadness, and fear. Yet many people are disconnected from
some or all of their feelings. By trying to avoid pain
and discomfort, their emotions have become distorted,
displaced, and stifled. You lose touch with your
emotions when you attempt to control them,
rather than experience them.
Ways of avoiding strong emotions and feelings
- Distracting yourself with
obsessive thoughts, escapist fantasies, mindless
entertainment, and addictive behaviors in order to
avoid emotions you fear or dislike. Watching
television for hours, playing computer games, and
surfing the Internet are common ways of avoiding
dealing with feelings.
- Sticking with one emotional response
that you feel comfortable with, no matter what the
situation calls for. For example: constantly joking
around to cover up insecurities or getting angry all
the time to avoid feeling frightened and sad.
- Shutting down or shutting out intense
emotions. If you feel overwhelmed by your
emotions, you may cope by numbing yourself. You may
feel completely disconnected from your emotions,
like you no longer have feelings at all.
The consequences of avoiding emotions and feelings
- You lose the good, along with the bad.
You either feel your emotions or you don’t. When you
shut down negative feeling like anger, fear, or
sadness, you also shut down your ability to
experience positive feelings such as joy, love, and
happiness.
- It’s exhausting. You can
distort and numb emotions, but you can’t eliminate
them entirely. It takes a lot of energy to avoid
having an authentic emotional experience and keep
your feelings suppressed. The effort leaves you
stressed and drained.
- It damages your relationships.
The more you distance yourself from your feelings,
the more distant you become from others, as well as
yourself. You lose the ability to build strong
relationships and communicate effectively, both of
which depend on being in touch with your emotions.
You can’t manage emotions until
you know how to manage stress
The ability to manage stress is a prerequisite for
emotional awareness. Raising your emotional awareness
and emotional intelligence begins with the question:
"What kinds of sensory input instantly make me feel
relaxed, safe, calm, and focused?" Knowing the answer is
especially important for people who have had
overwhelming emotional experiences as a child. Once you
have a safety net in place and know how to make yourself
feel good quickly and dependably, you can begin to
explore the emotions that seem disagreeable or
frightening. The key to coping with strong emotions is
knowing that you control of them–not the other way
around.
The ability to quickly reduce stress allows you to
safely face strong emotions, secure in your ability to
regulate your feelings and behave appropriately. When
you know how to maintain a relaxed, energized state of
awareness—even when something upsetting happens—you can
remain emotionally available and engaged.
Learning
how to manage stress
You can face strong and even frightening emotions
with comfort when you know how to manage
stress. If you need help learning to stay calm and
focused when faced with intense emotions, see
How to Manage Stress: Tips to Quickly Relieve Stress
in the Moment.
Getting back in touch with
your emotions and feelings
The process of raising
emotional awareness involves reconnecting with all of
the core emotions, including anger, sadness, fear,
disgust, surprise, and joy. As you start this process,
keep the following facts about emotions and emotional
awareness in mind.
Emotions quickly come and go, if you let them
You may be worried that once you reconnect to the
emotions you’ve been avoiding, you’ll be stuck with them
forever, but that’s not so. When we don’t stoke our
emotions with thoughts about them, even the most painful
and difficult feelings subside and lose their power to
control our attention.
Unrestricted, the core emotions of anger, sadness,
fear, and joy quickly come and go. Throughout the day,
you’ll see, read, or hear something that momentarily
triggers a strong feeling of some sort. If you don’t
focus on the feeling, it won’t last, and a different
emotion will soon take its place.
Your body can clue you in to your emotions
Our emotions are closely aligned to physical
sensations in our bodies. When you experience a strong
emotion, you should also feel it somewhere in your body.
By paying attention to these physical sensations, you
can understand your emotions better. For example, if
your stomach tightens up every time you spend time with
a particular person, you can surmise that you feel
unsafe in their presence. That doesn’t necessarily mean
that you are unsafe, only that you feel that way.
You don’t have to choose between thinking and
feeling
Once you have confidence in your ability to safely
experience any of your emotions, you can think, plan,
and engage in a wide range of intellectual activities
without completely loosing touch with the physical
sensations in your body that signal your emotional
state.
Emotional awareness can be a background condition
that functions like instinct. When it’s strongly
developed, you’ll know what you are feeling without
having to think about it. When your emotional signals
become strong enough, you realize that something
important is going on and shift your focus accordingly.
How to raise your emotional awareness
The key to raising emotional awareness is
practice. Like building muscles in a gym, the more
you flex your emotions, the more “emotional muscle”
you’ll build. You wouldn’t expect to be a
bodybuilder after just five minutes. The more
consistently you practice, the greater the change
you’ll experience in what you feel, think, and do.
To develop your self-awareness and connection to
others and incorporate it into your life, you need
to retrain yourself through hands-on exercises and
real-world practice.
How will you know when you have practiced enough?
In general you should feel more energy, experience
more positive feelings (as well as other feelings),
and have a greater ability to concentrate your
attention. You should feel more alive!
Emotional awareness is one of the
five key skills of emotional intelligence
The ability to recognize and manage your emotions is
the second of five essential emotional intelligence
skills. Together, the five skills of emotional
intelligence help you build strong relationships,
overcome challenges, and succeed at work and in life.
The third key skill of emotional intelligence is the
ability to communicate nonverbally. Nonverbal
communication is a powerful tool that helps you connect
with others, express what you really mean, navigate
challenging situations, and build better relationships
at home and work.