Tuesday, April 21, 2015

emotional health and power

It's been a long time since I posted anything here.

Not because I haven't thought of things to write about -- because I have thought of a million things! I've read so many words that resonated and so much has happened! But... I was lazy.

I actually deeply regret that I didn't write about those million things, because it seems my thoughts, feelings, and insights, when left unrecorded or unprocessed through writing, seem to fade into faint recollections much faster and more irretrievably than I previously realized.

:(

Today I decided I want to try and leave (cold-turkey!) that lazy fog that's hung around me the last few months. It helps that I have something extra intimate and heavy with personal vulnerability to work through, and this is my best venue. ;)

I've written in the past about feelings and my own struggles to understand my emotional life, and how to push it and myself towards deeper maturation. It's been an ongoing quest. Fortunately, I've had good friends to talk to, spiritual resources that lend insight, and a wealth of experiences in the last few years that have brought a lot of emotional growth via new comprehension and appreciation for the times when I feel all the feels.


One particular resource that, in combination with a few different experience that I will relate momentarily, really had a profound impact was an article from the NY Times entitled "Medicating Women's Feelings" that berated modern society for conditioning women to think that having feelings or being "moody" is undesirable and disabling -- and should be medicated away so that we can achieve the "new normal" of a life that is completely even-keeled. 
"...we are under constant pressure to restrain our emotional lives. We have been taught to apologize for our tears, to suppress our anger and to fear being called hysterical."
Reading the author's argument for the natural and real place in our lives for emotion was liberating and empowering. The idea of embracing emotions which are so often termed as negative as just part of having a whole and complete emotional life i.e. "a healthy, adaptive part of our biology" resonated deeply with me, as did this compelling line that: "Women’s emotionality is a sign of health, not disease; it is a source of power."

After reading the article, I could't stop thinking about it, especially these parts: 
"In the days leading up to menstruation, when emotional sensitivity is heightened, women may feel less insulated, more irritable or dissatisfied. I tell my patients that the thoughts and feelings that come up during this phase are genuine, and perhaps it’s best to re-evaluate what they put up with the rest of the month, when their hormone and neurotransmitter levels are more likely programmed to prompt them to be accommodating to others’ demands and needs."
and
"Crying isn’t just about sadness. When we are scared, or frustrated, when we see injustice, when we are deeply touched by the poignancy of humanity, we cry. And some women cry more easily than others. It doesn’t mean we’re weak or out of control. At higher doses, S.S.R.I.s [medications] make it difficult to cry. They can also promote apathy and indifference. Change comes from the discomfort and awareness that something is wrong; we know what’s right only when we feel it. If medicated means complacent, it helps no one."

The way that I understand this is that while biologically our hormones/emotions often lead us to focus on others' needs most of the time, when those levels shift (due to natural conditions such as PMS) and we are more sensitive, it becomes an opportunity to focus on oneself and learn where we can make changes to improve our overall emotional life. 

For example, it is like how most of the time you don't mind a passive-agressive friend, except when you're sensitive because of circumstance X and then they really get to you. So, you revaluate your friendship with that person -- and perhaps make changes. When we are normally exposed to condition X (an environment, a person, even a TV show) we deal with it, but when we're especially sensitive and it finally gets to to us, it is an opportunity to say: "enough is enough." It's the push to stop exposing ourselves to that subtle wear and tear.

When we feel deep emotions in these sensitive times, it is because we have a special awareness and responsiveness that can serve as a tool for recognizing meaningful experiences, new insight, and opportunities for change and growth. 

This is something I had begun to subtly understand in my own life, but since reading this article has burst open and given me a whole new perspective on my emotional self. For many years, as a teenager and in my early college years, I thought that something was wrong with me. I felt I would go from fine and normal to violently sensitive and without any control of my feelings. I finally identified it as being PMS (and then later as PMDD) and from there was able to begin telling/reminding myself that these mood shifts were the result of hormones and not that something in me was broken and needed fixing. 

This resulted in a lot of emotional development and great degree of stability and peace in my life. However, the monthly experience was still primarily negative until I began noticing that if I controlled what I was exposed to during this time it was significantly less negative. If I watched a good sad movie I could FEEL and CRY and get it all out, and not actually feel "bad." I could purposefully expose myself to touching media and wallow around it all the feelings (often sentimentality) it evoked versus being set-off by unexpected emotional punches. I could have some control!



This is about when I read the above article and finally realized it wasn't just about trying to control how I was going to feel those feels every month. The truth was, those few terrible/wonderful days every month were an opportunity to choose how and what I would feel more deeply than everyday life typically entailed, and glean new insight about those feelings and myself. 

It wasn't just about trying to avoid what could cause downward spiral but learning to identify things in my life that were having a stronger effect on me (even if most of the month I handled them fine) and making adjustments. It wasn't just about avoiding the influence of condition X a few days of the month but recognizing and then managing the influence every day of the month.

I finally realized the experience of my emotions is more than just feels -- and what was once a monthly terror became a regular opportunity to better understand my fears, frustrations, passions, and dreams.

It has also become a chance to choose to take advantage of how deeply and comprehensively I feel things during those days -- and expose myself to conditions and experiences where drinking deeply of those emotions breaks my heart open in new and beautiful ways. As corny as it sounds, for me this means listening to touching and inspiring music, reading poignant and illuminating stories, writing letters to family and friends telling them how much I love them, etc. etc. -- and really thoroughly FEELING all of that. I watch commercials with babies and puppies and I cry. I look at photos from the day I married my husband and I cry. I write blog posts, sorting through insights about my self, and my life and I cry. I cry and it isn't about sadness. 

And while I still experience times when I painfully feel TOO MUCH and it spirals out of control, I do eventually come back to myself and I look back with a newfound ability to learn from those difficult heart-wrenching swings. It helps that as more time passes the balance continues to shift and those times are less and less frequent.

But whatever comes, I get to choose to embrace what I feel and learn knowing that my "emotionality is a sign of health, not disease; it is a source of power."






1 comment:

  1. I'm glad I read this. Not even a day ago I was thinking about how in spite of the fact I'm proud of the healthy relationship I have with my own emotions - I find myself hiding or changing them because I'm worried about what others will think. Especially men.
    I know my strong emotions can be unattractive - so I try to curtail them.
    Oh the tyranny of patriarchy!
    I wonder what it would be like if I had grown up with the message that men were attracted to women because of their strong emotionality.

    Probably what has helped me develop the healthy relationship with my emotions that I have has been my consciously reprioritising my relationship with God and my own dreams and ambitions over being attractive.

    ReplyDelete