Processing Emotions

Emotions are central to my understanding of the therapeutic process. So much of the work we do together in therapy has to do with noticing, experiencing, and releasing our emotions. I often use the analogy of sitting on the bank of a river and noticing the passing of barges navigating the river.

Ideally, we sit at the bank and notice them coming, we experience them with greater clarity as they approach and move closer to us, and then we see them pass on and disappear. I make the association that the barges are our emotions, and we notice them growing within our physical bodies, we experience them at their peak, and then they normally resolve as we release them with our breath.

However, most of us do not experience our emotions in such idyllic way. Staying with the analogy, we often find ourselves on the bank of the river and see the emotional barge coming in our direction. We get hyper focused on it and try to either change it or avoid it. Due to our increased focus we end up jumping on the barge and are overwhelmed and taken away by our emotions. Only to notice another barge coming down the river, and we jump on it. We keep on doing this, jumping from barge to barge without ever experiencing the resolution and release of our emotions. Consequently feeling (cognitive interpretation of emotions) overwhelmed and stuck, with the emotion(s) in question not getting resolved.

Emotional processing (noticing, experiencing, and releasing) therefore is key for psychological healing and wellness. In order to experience this healing and wellness, we often need to “change emotion with emotion” (Les Greenberg). So how do we do that?

First, we need to emote. We need to sustainably engage with the emotions we might be fighting or avoiding. It usually involves recalling the experiences that shaped our physiological responses leading to such emotion. This often means to reconnect with our body and seek out “core” or emotions underneath emotions. For example, underneath anger we often find fear. Underneath fear we often find hurt and then sadness. You get the point.

Second, we (together) observe the dissonance between what we are feeling and the current state of reality. I might feel a deep sense of fear, but the current state of reality is that I’m safe. We need to experience this dissonance beyond our cognitive logical selves, we need to physiologically experience safety, which often requires a safe environment. It is the role of the therapist here to provide a safe experience for experiencing emotions that have been overwhelming and potentially avoided in the past.

Third, in relational safety we experience a new self. This new experience allows for us to re-imagine ourselves with a sense of freedom from physical and psychological danger. Here we are finally able to experience emotional release.

Forth, we experience a resolution of our physiological emotions. The environmental and internal events that trigger our emotions, and the emotions themselves don’t produce the same level of reactivity (fight/flight) in us. We notice, experience, and release our emotions from the bank of the river.

This is what processing emotions is all about. This is a non-linear process that is messy and complex. I like to think of it as organic, and not mechanical. It requires nurture and openness and it takes time. However, it is possibly one of the most psychologically liberating processes we can experience.

Dr. Ribeiro

P.S. If you or someone you know would like to schedule an appointment with me feel free to use this link. It will take you directly to my schedule. I look forward to hearing from you.

Emotions

As I began sharing with current and former clients that I would be transitioning into private practice, the most consistent question I received was: What list of “emotions” are you going to display at your new office? (Contrasting with the list of emotions we used at Sage Hill). 

So, here is my answer: None. I will not be displaying a list of emotions, because I believe that emotions are not easily accessed through language. Emotions are physiological (neurological and hormonal) in nature. We experience them in our bodies. To illustrate what I’m talking about, I want to show you a picture:

body-map-of-emotions.png

Above is an image developed by Dr. Lauri Nummenmaa and colleagues published a fascinating 2013 study. Each body shows regions in which participants reported activation increased (warm colors) or decreased (cool colors) when feeling each emotion. One of the first things I noticed is that Spider-Man experiences a whole lot of shame. 

All joking aside, emotions are uniquely experienced in our bodies. They are not a cognitive or mental phenomenon. Emotions are bodily experiences that are later interpreted by our cognitions/aware mind and consequently labeled with language. The cognitive interpretation of our physiological emotional experience is what we would call a feeling. 

Going back to the question, am I going to display a list of emotions in my new office? No, but I might display the image above as a reminder that our emotions go much deeper than our cognitive awareness might let us believe. 

Dr. Ribeiro.

P.S. If you interested in reading Dr. Lauri Nummenmaa’s article, here is the link to the article as well as its APA citation:

Nummenmaa, L., Glerean, E., Hari, R., & Hietanen, J. K. (2014). Bodily maps of emotions. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 111(2), 646-651.

Blame

O how sweet it is to blame. Well, at least for a while. There is such an exhilarating freedom in blaming others with naïveté. This blame feeds an internal motivation that drives our efforts. It fuels an anger that energizes our body and focuses our aims. It provides us with a villain to scapegoat and resent.

Yet, at its due time we discover blame isn’t sustainable. Blaming others isolates. We are left alone with all the resentment, anger, and loneliness. Blaming others hurt. It hurts those around us and it hurts us.

Blame blinds us to ourselves. We become blind to the beauty of life. All we see is warped by a toxic lens that pits all into a death struggle for survival. A worldview that the world and those in it are against us and ready to pounce and smother us.

This blinding ultimately dehumanizes those we love. “They” become monsters instead of just messy humans. “They” cease to be “us.” “We-ness” dies and we are left alone.

Connection then is the antidote to blame. When connected we lean into the unknown space of not knowing. A space of co-creating what is real and not just assuming what others think and feel.

Moreover, connection is not something we “do” it’s something we become, that is, we must lean in physically, emotionally, and cognitively toward being connected. This is beautifully complex. Connection is a process, not simple perfection.

In connection we find freedom from blame.