[Neurons] 2024 Neurons #14 WHEN EMOTIONS TAKE OVER
Michael Hall
meta at acsol.net
Sun Mar 24 18:31:40 EDT 2024
From: L. Michael Hall
2024 Neurons #14
March 25, 2024
Emotional Intelligence Series #14
The article I planned is in my laptop
which is in Houston, I'll send it next
week if I get it back. : In the meantime- )
WHEN EMOTIONS TAKE OVER
A week ago in Mexico city I conducted one of the basic trainings that we
have in Neuro-Semantics, Emotional Mastery. It had been before the Pandemic
that I last led that training, now some five years ago. The good news is
that having delivered it and updated the manual, there are several
Neuro-Semantic trainers in Latin America who will now be delivering that
training. That's important. Given the way the world is these days, there's
just not enough emotional intelligence and emotional mastery. We need more
of that.
If a person doesn't have a robust sense of emotional mastery, it is far, far
too easy for emotions to take over. And when they take over, quality
thinking can suffer, good decision making can go on the fritz, one's
well-being and health can take a turn for the worse, the quality of
relationships can go south-all sorts of unpleasant and harmful things can
happen. That's because emotions are wonderful servants and terrible
masters.
As servants your emotions, and mine, provide us energy and motivation for
getting things done and for being effective and productive. As servants,
emotions can inspire our best work, our most creative ideas, and move us to
stretch out of our comfort zones to become all we can become. Emotions help
us connect to each other, support each other, and create a loving context
for each other.
But when emotions take over and dominate, when they become your master
rather than your servant, then things get turned up-side-down.
How is it that sometimes emotions can have you, rather than you
having them?
Under what conditions or in what situations do our emotions
become dominant so you have less emotional mastery?
I was reminded of the answer to these questions in the Emotional Mastery
manual when we hit the section on the ten myths about emotions. Actually,
because I had forgotten about that section of the manual, it was a good
reminder about many of the common mis-understandings, mis-beliefs, and myths
that are commonly held about emotions. To the extent that you believe any
of these, your emotions are more likely to take control over you.
1) You are your emotions; what you feel defines who you are.
2) You can trust your emotions to tell you the truth and what is real.
3) Because emotions are danger, avoid them and repress them (Freud).
4) Emotions are primary, to be obeyed; they are commands about what to do.
5) If you don't express your emotions, they build up inside and you'll
explode.
6) You can't control or manage emotions; they work spontaneously.
7) If you control your emotions, you'll be a hypocrite and not authentic.
8) By reversing the clockwise or counter-clockwise motion, you
gain control.
9) Aim for emotional comfort, any and all stress is always bad.
10) If you cry or feel vulnerable, you're having an emotional breakdown.
Now for the truth about emotions to counter-act those myths:
1) You create all of your emotions by how you think and construct meaning;
emotions therefore can be distorted in many ways. Every cognitive
distortion distorts them.
2) Emotions give you information about the relationship of your thinking
(map) and experiencing (territory). They are relative to your expectations
and contexts.
3) Emotions are just emotions; to be welcomed, accepted, and understood.
4) Emotions are secondary; to be evaluated by your values.
5) Emotions are functions of thinking: representing, believing,
understanding, deciding, etc.; they do not operate like steam in a steam
engine (Freud).
6) As lower level brain functions, emotions can be managed using the higher
executive functions of the brain-intentionality, decisions, reflection,
reflexivity, etc.
7) To act on any and every emotion is "caveman" authenticity, not the
authenticity of a person who lives by his or her integrity.
8) The motion of emotions moves out (hence, Latin, ex-motion), not
clockwise, that's an unuseful hallucination invented by some in NLP.
9) Stress lies on a continuum from death to stress threshold where the
fight/flight syndrome kicks-in, in-between is eu-stress (good stress) or
excitement (Hans Selye).
10) Tears and vulnerability are indications of being human, it is not
breaking down, it is owning our heritage as fallible and mortal beings.
In thinking about how emotions can take over, I am reminded of the very
first book that I wrote. I had entered into the field of Christian
Counseling and using biblical stories and reference, I wrote, EMOTIONS:
Sometimes I Have Them/ Sometimes They Have Me (1985). (It is not on The Shop
and is free.)
May your emotions be excellent servants to your highest dreams and inside of
your best performances.
SEE OUR NEW PAGE ON THE WEBSITE!
http://www.neurosemantics.com/thinking-for-humans/
THERE'S A NEW BOOK!
Have you seen the brand New Book from Neuro-Semantics Publications---
Thinking for Humans (2024)? It is now available!
If you want to learn how to become an excellent thinker --- to think
clearly, precisely, creatively, critically, and lovingly, this is the book
for you.
We have a special deal on the book right now - write me at meta at acsol.net
for that deal. This book would make a great gift!
For International mailing: If 3 of you order together, you can reduce the
international postal cost to $13. Write to me if you're interested,
meta at acsol.net
L. Michael Hall, PH.D.
International Society of Neuro-Semantics (ISNS)
Executive Director
738 Beaver Lodge
Grand Junction CO. 81505
(970) 523-7877
www.neurosemantics.com
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