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DogwoodTree
Platinum Member
It's to actually diminish the power of the emotion a bit by being able to categorize it in a specific way. In order to identify where it is, a person usually has to interrupt their own train of (emotional) thought.
Can "diminishing its power a bit" help me stay present to the emotion, rather than dissociating from it? Fear and despair and anxiety, and sometimes anger, are pretty pervasive and tend to flood me. But other emotions tend to disappear like wisps in the wind if I start to experience them, pay attention to them, or whatever. Sometimes I can hold onto an ecstatic, child-like, naive peace and joy, but mostly what that looks like is the "everything is awesome!" sensation, and it isn't well modulated in the big picture of reality. It almost looks like a short-lived and relatively mild manic phase.
In the example you describe, the actual challenge would have been to say, out loud, 'my cheeks are hot'.
Okay, I'm going to practice this.
Maybe this will be helpful. It's an interesting study about where people feel emotions.
I've seen that image before, but hadn't made the connection on what it's showing. That's really interesting, thanks.
I. Accomplishing first off... Self awareness (emotional monitoring, which is half of the whole durn game in emotional monitoring & regulation) for us, general Information & tells for them.
Part of my emotional trauma history is not having privacy with my thoughts, and not being allowed to have my own opinions (unless I could present a very well articulated and logically/biblically supported argument that couldn't be refuted on any level...kinda hard for a kid to accomplish with well-educated parents/adults). It's really hard for me to be willing to let the Ts know what I really feel or think about something (rather than telling them what I think they want to hear). It's also hard to figure out at all what I feel, because I was always told what to feel, first by my parents and family situation, and then by my own inner critic.
So yeah, I guess I can see how this would be a huge part of the project.
II. What kind of answers are they looking for? Truth.
You know, I'm not often aware of purposely lying. I think I have a hard time understanding which layer of truth they're wanting, and being able to put that into words that would make sense for the questions they've asked, and not getting caught up in overly cognitive processing in order to do all of that. To feel, and to talk about what I'm feeling at the same time, is a really, really hard thing to do.
Absolutely no body sensations whatsoever, because the emotions are gone.
Do you ever have emotions that aren't linked to body sensations? Or do the emotions disappear completely when there are no body sensations?
I think I've trained my body over the years to not reveal emotions at all, when possible. Like, complete lock-down. If I'm feeling something, it often exists in a different dimension than where my body is, so that my body doesn't show much of any indication of what's going on inside. My mom and step-dad were both very astute observers and could pick up on the slightest indications of "rebellious" feelings (i.e., feeling anything they didn't want me to feel). To express an emotion now actually takes an act of will...to the point where it doesn't even feel genuine.
Therapists (good ones) looking for body sensations help both us & them in the monitoring and regulation thing.
And then this gets into talking about my body, which is extremely difficult. I feel invaded and objectified and even sexualized just to say something like, "My cheeks feel hot." My mind immediately starts thinking about all the ways to sexualize that statement, because that's exactly what my step-dad would have done. I learned not to talk about my body, so that it would less often be the focus of his jokes and teasing.
sometimes I do feel something but for some reason I feel a bit awkward/embarrassed about it and then I don't want to say/can't articulate it.
Yes, this. For me, it's not just "a bit"...it's pervasive. I have to deeply dissociate in order to have a conversation with my chiropractor or the ob/gyn. To stay in touch with feelings while also talking about how they affect my body...and to say that out loud...this is gonna take a lot of practice. :unsure:
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