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The School of Life, How to Process Your Emotions

How to Process Your Emotions

It is a quirk of our minds that not every emotion we carry is fully acknowledged, understood

or even truly felt. There are feelings that exist in an ‘unprocessed' form within

us. A great many worries may, for example, remain disavowed and uninterpreted and manifest

themselves as powerful directionless anxiety. Under their sway, we may feel a compulsive

need to remain busy, fear spending any time on our own or cling to activities that ensure

we don't meet what scares us head on (these might include internet pornography, tracking

the news or exercising compulsively). A similar kind of disavowal can go on around hurt. Someone

may have abused our trust, made us doubt their kindness or violated our self-esteem but we

are driven to flee a frank recognition of an appalling degree of exposure and vulnerability.

The hurt is somewhere inside, but on the surface, we adopt a brittle good cheer (jolliness being

sadness that doesn't know itself), we numb ourselves chemically or else adopt a carefully

non-specific tone of cynicism, which masks the specific wound that has been inflicted

on us. We pay dearly for our failure to ‘process' our feelings. Our minds grow unoriginal from

a background apprehension as to their contents. We grow depressed about everything because

we cannot be sad about something. We can no longer sleep, insomnia being the revenge of

all the many thoughts we have omitted to process in the day. We need compassion for ourselves.

We avoid processing emotions because what we feel is so contrary to our self-image,

so threatening to our society's ideas of normality and so at odds with who we would

like to be. An atmosphere conducive to processing would be one in which the difficulties of

being human were warmly recognised and charitably accepted. We fail to know ourselves not out

of laziness or casual neglect; it simply hurts a lot. Processing emotions requires good friends,

deft therapists and ritual moments like Philosophical Meditation, in which our normal defences can

safely be put aside and unfamiliar material ring fenced for investigation. The outcome

of processing our emotions is always an alleviation in our overall mood. But first we must pay

for our self-awareness with a period of mourning in which we gradually acknowledge that, in

some area or other, life is simply a lot sadder than we would want it to be

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