Friend why emotions hurt
April 17th, 2006 at 2:20 pm
Friend
Welcome to another issue of Emotional Times.
Do you ever think about...
Why Emotions Hurt
So much of the time emotions really do seem so painful.
And the pain just goes on and on and on.
"I want to resolve these feelings but for some reason I
never do.
"You say 'feel your emotions' - and I DO! But nothing
seems to happen.
"Why is this happening to me? Why do I still feel so bad?"
Good question. -- The bad feelings keep happening to me
and I don't know why. I don't know how to make them stop.
If you keep feeling the same feelings over and over - and
nothing changes; it won't end - there's a reason why.
It's not chance.
It's not cause you're bad and wrong. It's not because
there's something wrong with you.
It's not because you deserve to suffer. God's not punishing
you.
It's not because of the 'depression germs' or the 'anxiety
germs'.
It's because we've all forgotten how to feel our feelings.
We've been taught, conditioned, threatened and beaten until
we shut off our feelings.
We learned to not feel our emotions because the world
demanded it of us.
You were not allowed to express what you really felt.
Starting at a very young age.
"Don't you cry!"
"Don't you DARE cry!"
"Don't you get mad at me!"
"You want to see what it REALLY feels like?!"
"Shape up! NOW!"
"What are you scared of? Good grief!"
"NOW what's your problem?!"
And on it goes. Maybe you never heard those exact words.
Maybe you heard different ones. But you understand the
point..
Few and far between were the parents wise enough to allow
complete and healthy expression of their child's thoughts
and feelings.
Instead, we learned how to suppress, depress, repress -
press in any number of ways - the natural expression of
what
we were feeling.
Our parents 'helped' us by not letting us express our
emotions just as their parents 'helped' them.
Often it was well-meaning:
"I'm only telling you this for your own good!"
Remember, a child is a sponge. We learned how dangerous
it was to express our emotions - usually before the age of
five. Before our conscious mind had developed.
At that age, we were operating mostly out of the
subconscious mind. The part of us that questions nothing.
It merely implements the instructions it's been given.
Usually by God-like figures called 'our parents'.
Like a good soldier, the subconscious always follows
orders.
(Until it accepts new ones.)
You were given a lot of orders as a child. Orders that
you were UNABLE TO QUESTION.
You simply carried out the orders.
Many of those orders concerned the necessity - the need -
for survival purposes - to NOT feel your emotions.
Your life depended on you not feeling your true feelings.
Or so it seemed.
"No, Mark. You're wrong. I DO feel my emotions. All the
time. And it hurts like hell."
I hear you. I know what you're saying. I used to say it
myself.
But what you're feeling is probably not real emotion.
You know how I know?
Because you can never feel a real emotion for more than a
few minutes. Real emotions never just go on and on and on -
with nothing changing.
It's impossible. You *can't* contain a real emotion for
any length of time without 'tainting' it.
(One apparent exception - grief - is actually a package
of emotions.)
You can't store emotion in the back room and not expect
it to not start smelling bad.
It's gonna stink.
'The stench of fear' - for example - is a very real
metaphor. Fear does have a stench.
Remember that programming you got as a kid - to not feel
your emotions? Well, you can't *really* turn off your
feelings.
But you can manipulate them. You can't stop the flow but
you can muck it up. You can make a mess of your emotions -
a big mess - when you don't feel them and let them go.
See, instead of FEELING our emotions, we manipulate them
instead.
One way is by pressing them down. De-pressing our emotions
can lead where but to depression?
Or, we could blow them through the roof with mania.
Maybe we manipulate them some other way which might lead to
anxiety.
Another way to manipulate our feelings is by trying to
interpret them instead of just feeling them.
"You made me angry!"
So rather than feel the anger and release it, we start
punishing the other person. Instead of feeling - we're
blaming.
My favorite way to not feel my emotions is by analyzing
them instead.
"Hmmm… I'm getting angry right now. Why is that? Am I
really angry at Mom instead? Or is this coming from my
subconscious mind or something? Cause I'm not an angry
person. I wonder why they're intentionally trying to make
me mad? They must have some agenda…"
I can easily get lost in the trap of trying to think my way
out of feeling.
And by the way - talking about feelings is not the same as
feeling them.
The bottom line to all this manipulation - we have a secret
agenda that we're not admitting.
At the very least, we have the agenda of not being
responsible for what we're feeling.
Or maybe it's the hidden agenda of punishing and blaming
another.
Either way, we end up with a twisted and distorted version
of real emotion.
Rather than drinking from the pure wellspring of raw virgin
emotional energy - and gaining the benefit from it -
instead
I'm perverting it into something that is now choking me.
I've polluted the waters and now I don't know what to do.
It doesn't smell too good. I know that.
I've made a mess of things because of my subconscious
programming that I don't even know is there.
I manipulate my emotions now because I grew up
manipulating my emotions. It's all I've ever known - or
it's all I remember. Now I'm sitting in a mess.
As a small child, I naturally felt ALL my feeling. I had
to learn how to stop feeling and start manipulating them
instead.
It wasn't easy. I had to fight my natural instincts. I
WANTED to feel my feelings. All the time.
They had to really work hard to get me to change. But once
I did, I never looked back.
I forgot the power that comes from feeling and releasing my
emotions. I forgot how strong they made me. Instead, I
began to focus on making the best of a bad situation.
"I can still use my feelings to punish them. I'll get 'em
back. I'll use my emotions to hurt them."
That's when it starts to smell bad.
You've been INTENSELY programmed to not feel your feelings.
The positive intensity of emotion has been replaced by the
intense desire to NOT feel.
But the feelings keep coming. You can't stop them.
You can, however, separate yourself from them. You can
create a wall. You can create a gap.
You're over here, and the feelings are over there.
So often, we're not even aware of that gap; that wall.
If there's a gap and/or a wall between you and your
feelings - then they will just go on and on and never
resolve themselves.
You can't get a handle on them. All you can do is watch
helplessly as they seem to run your life. The wider the
gap - the stronger the wall - the more helpless you feel.
What you're feeling is no longer real emotion. It's become
a twisted version of emotion. A false emotion, you could
call it.
Most of what I used to feel was false emotion. A distorted
version of pure emotion. Because I'd forgotten how to
truly feel.
It sucked. No wonder I didn't want to feel it! And so the
separation grew.
I fought off my tainted version of emotions because they
were too painful to deal with. It seemed like the more I
fought them, the stronger they got.
So I had to fight harder.
It's a no-win battle and the only way to resolve it is to
stop fighting. To stop manipulating and start feeling.
It's not going to happen overnight, but it can be done.
It's like relearning how to breath, or relearning how to
blink your eyes. It's hard to explain exactly how to do it.
It starts with understanding the problem:
1. You've been programmed - intensely programmed - to not
feel your emotions.
2. The pure raw emotional energy keeps coming and coming.
It cannot be stopped.
3. You must do something with those feelings.
4. Doing ANYTHING other than expressing - feeling and
releasing - your emotions, creates problems.
5. Emotions are your source of power. The more you deny
them, the more powerless you become.
6. Separating yourself from your feelings starts a painful
downward spiral.
7. Separating yourself from your feelings makes them seem
more powerful than you, and makes them much harder to deal
with.
It can almost seem hopeless, but it's not. Just being
aware of the problem can help to resolve it.
***
http://www.emotional-times.com/blog.html
(For a list of emotions.)
http://www.forgive-yourself.com
(To forgive yourself.)
http://www.join-the-fun.com/bookletter.html
(How To Create Your Own Reality.)
all the best,
Mark
brought to you by
Mark Ivar Myhre
The Emotional Healing Wizard
fiercely slaying your emotional dragons!