Friday, February 17, 2017

Emotions: the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly...

Emotions. Some of us are all in tune with our emotions while others avoid emotions like the plague. Sometimes in therapy we focus on them while other times we focus on other things. When we think about emotions, we know there are lots of them...




Lots of times one of the things people want when they go to therapy is to stop feeling certain emotions. Frequently clients tell me they don't want to feel sad, anxious, depressed, angry, lonely, or scared. But is it a good goal to want to eradicate these feelings from our lives?

Most of the time, emotions serve a useful purpose (note I didn't say a pleasant purpose). Negative emotions alert us that there is something in our environment we need to attend to. Anxiety tells us there is something we need to attend to, to fix. If we are anxious about money, we need to take steps to improve our financial situations. When we are frustrated, perhaps we need to work something out with our spouse, co-workers, or friends, to alleviate the frustration. Fear lets us respond to keep ourselves safe. Sadness is a normal response to loss in our lives.

There are certainly times that emotions are too extreme. People may experience anxiety that is bad enough that it actually prevents them from responding. Depression may be so crippling that it is almost impossible to function. When emotions are this extreme, it is certainly reasonable to want them to go away, because in these cases they aren't being helpful.

None of us likes to feel bad, but emotions - the good, the bad, and the ugly - normally do serve a purpose. Therapy can help us reduce the extreme emotions, and it can help us learn to cope with emotions so that we can work through them. As nice as it might be to never experience the negative stuff, they are important and we need to learn from them and react in appropriate ways. When we actively address them, we can learn and grow, and that's a pretty great goal.

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