Emotions
Emotion is a
physical
feeling in the
body, something
that can be
sensed and
interpreted in the
mind and then sometimes be
expressed as
happiness,
sadness,
anger,
fear,
love,
epiphanies, and many other types of
feelings. An emotion is a
roller-coaster and a
sanctuary that is
rolled up into one amazing
experience.
Emotion Regulation -
Mood
Swings -
Drama
Emotions are biological states associated with the
nervous system brought
on by neurophysiological changes that are associated with thoughts,
feelings, behavioral responses, and have a degree
of
pleasure
or
displeasure. An emotion
is a brief
conscious experience that is
characterized by intense mental activity. A
feeling that results in
physical and
psychological changes that
influence our
behavior. Emotion is
a natural instinctive state of mind deriving from one's circumstances,
mood, or relationships with others. An instinctive or intuitive feeling as
distinguished from reasoning or knowledge. Emotions
can
cause thoughts that can make you
physically feel something
in your body, and emotions can make your body make you feel something in
your mind by
influencing the thoughts
that you could have. So some of the emotions that we feel can be
self influenced and
self defeating, especially when the information
that creates the emotion is false or
misunderstood.
Intrinsic is situated
within or belonging solely to the
organ or
body part on which it acts.
Hormones.
Extrinsic is something originating from the
outside. Not happening within.
Mind.
Ambivalence is the state of having
mixed feelings and emotions or
contradictory ideas
about something or someone. A state of having simultaneous
conflicting reactions,
beliefs, or feelings towards some object.
Fervent is characterized by intense emotion.
Ardent is characterized by
intense emotion
or strong enthusiasm.
Our Emotional State in a given moment may influence what we see. We do
not passively detect information in the world and then react to it, we
construct perceptions of the world as the architects of our own
experience.
Information Bubble.
"When you
don't practice
self control and
awareness, then emotions can be like having a
split personality."
Reading something that you don't agree with:
Words do not create emotions or cause emotions, people create emotions,
which means that people can
choose not to create emotions. Think and
process information, don't feel it. Expressing emotions says that you are
not thinking or processing the words, you are just
reacting to those words
emotionally. Don't just feel things,
think about things.
You have to learn how to control your feelings, and learn how to think
about things carefully and
analyze information accurately. Emotions are good, not thinking is
bad. There are lots of sayings that try to explain how important it is not
to
overreact, like "Don't let things
get under your skin", "don't let things go to your head", don't jump to
conclusions", and so on and so on.
Two Sides to a Coin.
Study finds older adults less distracted by negative information. The
way our attention is
distracted by emotion differs between younger and older adults. USC
researchers looked at '
emotion-induced blindness,'
which refers to distractions caused by emotionally arousing stimuli. In
four experiments using a quickly presented sequence of images, they
examined how older adults prioritize emotional information. They found
both younger and older adults demonstrated emotion-induced blindness, but
older adults were more distracted by positive information and less
distracted by negative information.
Emotion Induced Blindness is More Sensitive to Changes in Arousal As
Compared to Valence of the Emotional Distractor. Emotional visual scenes
are such powerful attractors of attention that they can disrupt perception
of other stimuli that appear soon afterward, an effect known as
emotion-induced blindness.
Mood in
psychology is an emotional state.
Mood differs from emotions,
feelings, or affects less specific, intense and likely to be triggered by
a particular
stimulus or
event. Moods are typically described as having
either a positive or negative valence. In other words, people usually
speak of being in a good mood or a bad mood.
Feeling bad does not mean that things are bad, and feeling good
does not mean that everything is good. It is an
interpretation of a
feeling. And accurately interpreting that feeling can sometimes be
subjective.
Food and energy levels can effect
our moods, so can
our thoughts, and
not
sleeping enough.
Body and Mind.
Valence in psychology means the intrinsic attractiveness/"good"-ness
(positive valence) or averseness/"bad"-ness (negative valence) of an
event, object, or situation. Emotions popularly referred to as "negative",
such as
anger and
fear,
have negative valence.
Joy has positive
valence.
Positively valenced emotions
are evoked by positively valenced events, objects, or situations. The term
is also used to describe the hedonic tone of
feelings,
affect, certain behaviors (for example, approach and avoidance),
goal attainment or nonattainment, and
conformity with or
violation of norms. Ambivalence can be viewed as conflict between positive
and negative valence-carriers, or having mixed feelings or emotions.
Neurofeedback is a type of biofeedback that uses real-time displays of
brain activity—most commonly
electroencephalography (EEG), to teach self-regulation of brain
function. Typically, sensors are placed on the scalp to measure activity,
with measurements displayed using video displays or sound. (Emotions block
the flow of
electrons).
Magnetic brain stimulation alters negative emotion
perception. Using magnetic stimulation outside the brain, a
technique called
repetitive
transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), researchers at University of
Münster, Germany, show that, despite the use of inhibitory stimulation
currently used to treat depression, excitatory stimulation better reduced
a person's response to fearful images.
Differential Activation Patterns in the Same Brain Region Led to Opposite
Emotional States.
Q-Radio: Emotion
Recognition using Wireless Signals.
Biofeedback is a process that enables an individual to learn how to
change physiological activity for the purposes of improving health and
performance. Precise instruments measure physiological activity such as
brainwaves, heart function, breathing, muscle activity, and skin
temperature. These instruments rapidly and accurately 'feed back'
information to the user. The presentation of this information—often in
conjunction with changes in thinking, emotions, and behavior—supports
desired physiological changes.
Over time, these
changes can endure without continued use of an instrument.
Biofeedback is the process of gaining greater awareness of many
physiological functions primarily using instruments that provide
information on the activity of those same systems, with a goal of being
able to manipulate them at will. Some of the processes that can be
controlled include brainwaves, muscle tone, skin conductance, heart rate
and pain perception.
Learning to Turn Down Your Amygdala Can Modify Your Emotions.
Amygdala
primary role in the processing of
memory,
decision-making,
and emotional reactions, the amygdalae are considered part of the limbic
system.
Fear.
Limbic System supports a variety of functions including emotion,
behavior, motivation,
long-term memory, and olfaction.
Emotional life is largely housed in the limbic system, and it has a great
deal to do with the formation of memories. Limbic system is a set of
brain structures located on both sides of the thalamus, immediately
underneath the cerebrum.
Children Full of
Life - Important Documentary.. Very. (youtube) - video gives them lessons
on teamwork, community, the importance of openness, how to cope, and the
harm caused by
bullying.
Empathy Quotient is the ability to feel an appropriate
emotion in
response to another's emotion and
the ability to understand the others' emotion.
People Smart.
Self Regulation - Controlling Emotions
Emotional Self-Regulation or
regulation of
emotion is the
ability to
respond to the ongoing demands of experience with the range of emotions in
a manner that is socially tolerable and sufficiently flexible to permit
spontaneous reactions as well as the ability to
delay spontaneous
reactions as needed. It can also be defined as extrinsic and intrinsic
processes responsible for
monitoring,
evaluating, and modifying emotional reactions. Emotion
self-regulation
belongs to the broader set of emotion-regulation processes, which includes
the regulation of one's own feelings and the regulation of other people's
feelings. Emotional regulation is a complex process that involves
initiating, inhibiting, or modulating one's state or
behavior in a given
situation – for example the subjective experience (feelings), cognitive
responses (thoughts), emotion-related physiological responses (for example
heart rate or hormonal activity), and emotion-related behavior (
bodily
actions or expressions). Functionally, emotional regulation can also
refer to processes such as the tendency to focus one's attention to a task
and the ability to suppress inappropriate behavior under instruction.
Emotional regulation is a highly significant function in human life. Every
day, people are continually exposed to a wide variety of potentially
arousing
stimuli.. Inappropriate,
extreme or unchecked emotional reactions to such stimuli could impede
functional fit within society; therefore, people must engage in some form
of emotion regulation almost all of the time. Generally speaking,
emotional dysregulation has been defined as difficulties in controlling
the influence of emotional arousal on the organization and
quality of thoughts, actions, and
interactions. Individuals who are emotionally
dysregulated exhibit
patterns of responding in which there is a mismatch between their goals,
responses, and/or modes of expression, and the demands of the
social environment. For
example, there is a significant association between emotion dysregulation
and symptoms of depression, anxiety, eating pathology, and substance
abuse. Higher levels of emotion regulation are likely to be related to
both high levels of social competence and the expression of socially
appropriate emotions.
Being able to control your own emotions,
cognition and behaviors is an important predictor of school readiness and
early school achievement.
Emotions are
negotiable, as long as you know how to negotiate and know who you're
negotiating with.
Emotions should not
control your thinking, your
thinking should
control your emotions.
Emotions
are feelings, and
feelings are not an accurate measurement of
what is good, bad, right or wrong, because feelings are emotions, and emotions are not one of the
human senses, so they are not a tool that can be used to
determine
reality. Thinking is the most accurate method humans
have to determine reality. This is why you must not let your
emotions control your thinking. You must ask yourself, are my
emotions
controlling my thoughts or are my thoughts controlling
my emotions? Remember, physical
changes in the human body can
cause certain emotions, but only thinking can determine if those
physical changes are a danger or just a non-threatening
reaction. Don't confuse emotions with
premonitions or other forms of
awareness.
Emotional Competence
refers to one's ability to express or release one's inner feelings
(emotions). It implies an ease around others and determines one's ability
to effectively and successfully lead and express. It is described as the
essential social skills to recognize, interpret, and respond
constructively to emotions in yourself and others.
Emotional Competency.
Emotional Intelligence is the capacity of individuals to
recognize their own, and other people's emotions, to discriminate between
different feelings and label them appropriately, and to use emotional
information to guide thinking and behavior.
Emotional Intelligence Skills (PDF) -
Self
Smart -
Empathy -
Breathing
-
Mindful -
Coping
Emotional Reasoning is a cognitive process by which a person concludes
that his/her emotional reaction proves something is true, regardless of
the observed evidence.
Bias
-
Cognitive Reframing
-
Body Mind Connections.
Regulation
of Emotion describes ways that people attempt to regulate their
emotions, for instance by denying, intensifying, weakening, curtailing,
masking, or completely hiding them. Emotion regulation can also be
described as the process in which people modify their emotional
reactions—the coping processes that increase or decrease the intensity of
the moment.
Emotional Literacy is made up of ‘the ability to understand
your emotions, the ability to
listen to others and
empathize with their
emotions, and the ability to express emotions productively. To be
emotionally literate is to be able to handle emotions in a way that
improves your personal power and improves the quality of life around you.
Emotional literacy improves relationships, creates loving possibilities
between people, makes co-operative work possible, and facilitates the
feeling of community.
The meaning of emotions may differ around the world. Scientists found
that emotions have different meanings across 2,474 spoken languages, but
that there are universal sources of structure.
Self-Regulation Theory is a system of conscious personal
management that involves the process of
guiding one's own thoughts,
behaviors, and feelings to reach goals.
Self-regulation consists of
several stages, and individuals must function as contributors to their own
motivation, behavior, and development within a network of reciprocally interacting influences.
Interpersonal Emotion Regulation refers to the deliberate influence of
others' feelings. Examples include trying to cheer up a friend who is
upset, trying to make your partner feel guilty for neglecting you, or
trying to calm a stressed coworker. These examples illustrate that
interpersonal emotion regulation may be used to make others feel better or
worse, although making others feel better appears to be far more common.
Interpersonal emotion regulation refers to the process of trying to
influence the way
another person or persons
feel. It is sometimes termed extrinsic emotion regulation or interpersonal
emotion management.
Fear.
Cathartic is
emotionally purging or an act
of removing by cleansing and ridding of undesired elements or impurities.
Make
pure or free from sin or guilt.
Cathartic can also mean a strong laxative that stimulates evacuation of
the bowels.
Lethargic
(fatigue)
Catharsis is the purification and
purgation of emotions—particularly
pity and fear—through art or any extreme change in emotion that results in
renewal and restoration. Not the same as
apathy.
Emotional
Exhaustion is a chronic state of physical and
emotional depletion that results from excessive job, personal
demands, and/or continuous stress. It describes a feeling of being
emotionally overextended and exhausted by one's work. It is manifested by
both physical fatigue and a sense of feeling psychologically and
emotionally "
drained".
Compassion Fatigue.
Not allowing Emotions to
interfere with Reasoning or Awareness can be a positive behavior
which allows a person to react calmly to highly emotional circumstances/
individuals.
Emotional detachment in this sense is a decision to avoid engaging
emotional connections, rather than an inability or difficulty in doing so,
typically for personal, social, or other reasons. In this sense it can
allow people to maintain boundaries, psychic integrity and avoid undesired
impact by or upon others, related to emotional demands. As such it is a
deliberate mental attitude which avoids engaging the emotions of others.
This detachment does not necessarily mean avoiding
empathy; rather it allows the
person space needed to rationally choose whether or not to be overwhelmed
or manipulated by such feelings. Examples where this is used in a positive
sense might include emotional boundary management, where a person avoids
emotional levels of engagement related to people who are in some way
emotionally overly demanding, such as difficult co-workers or relatives,
or is adopted to aid the person in helping others such as a person who
trains himself to ignore the "pleading" food requests of a dieting spouse,
or indifference by parents towards a child's begging.
You Don't Suppress your Feelings, you just
stop causing certain feelings from happening and interfering with reality. And this is done when you
recognized that
those particular feelings are
false
signals, and that those feelings are created by you
subconsciously. But you have to
be
aware of those feelings and make those
changes manually, because recognizing those types of false signals is not
an
automatic function
of the mind. So you need to correct them yourself, because they will not
correct themselves on their own.
Adaptation
is not an automatic function, if it were, then nothing would go extinct
because everything would just adapt, and then what? So you see, it's you,
you are the most important thing in life. That is why you must understand
learning. Learning is like a
never
ending power supply. But you have to
feed it
with knowledge and information. Life is about input and output, and
humans are not exempt from the
responsibility of
maintaining our
existence. We have been doing this from the beginning. And that is why
every single person is alive today. Because we
Learn. So it has worked so
far so good, but not far enough and not good enough. But we are getting there.
Individuals regulate their emotions in a wide variety of ways. In
the present review it has been addressed the issue of whether some forms
of emotion regulation are healthier than others by focusing on two
commonly used emotion regulation strategies: cognitive reappraisal
(changing the way one thinks about potentially emotion-eliciting events)
and expressive suppression (changing the way one behaviorally responds to
emotion-eliciting events). In the first section, experimental findings
showing that cognitive reappraisal has a healthier profile of short-term
affective, cognitive, and social consequences than expressive suppression
are briefly reported. In the second section, individual-difference
findings are reviewed showing that using cognitive reappraisal to regulate
emotions is associated with healthier patterns of affect, social
functioning, and well-being than is using expressive suppression. Finally,
brain structural basis and functional activation linked to the habitual
usage of cognitive reappraisal and expressive suppression are discussed in
detail.
Cognitive
Appraisal is the subjective interpretation made by an individual to
stimuli in the environment. Cognitive appraisal is defined as the way in
which an individual responds to and interprets stressors in life.
Expressive
Suppression is a response-focused emotion regulation strategy involves
an individual voluntarily suppressing their outward emotional expressions.
Expressive suppression involves reducing facial expression and
controlling positive and negative feelings of emotion. This type of
emotion regulation strategy can have negative emotional and psychological
effects on individuals. Emotional suppression reduces expressive behavior
significantly. As many researchers have concluded, though emotional
suppression decreases outward expressive emotions, it does not decrease
our negative feelings and emotional arousal (Niedenthal 2006). Different
forms of emotion regulation affect our response trajectory of emotions. We
target situations for regulation by the process of selecting the
situations we are exposed to or by modifying the situation we are in.
Emotion suppression relates to the behavioral component of emotion.
Expressive suppression has physiological influences such as decreasing
heart rate, increasing blood pressure, and increasing sympathetic
activation (Dan-Glauser & Gross, 2011).
Expressive suppression requires
self-control. We use self-control when handling our emotion-based
expressions in public.
Emotional Thought Method develops a group of activities that
can be used in a personal or group-oriented way for developing Emotional Intelligence.
Emotional Freedom Techniques is a form of counseling intervention that
draws on various theories of alternative medicine including acupuncture,
neuro-linguistic programming,
energy medicine, and Thought Field Therapy (TFT).
Thought Field Therapy is specialized "
tapping"
with the fingers at meridian points on the upper body and hands.
Arousal
is the physiological and psychological state of being awake.
Reticular Formation includes neurons located in diverse parts of the
brain that play a crucial role in maintaining behavioral arousal and consciousness.
Physiology is how organisms, organ systems, organs, cells, and
biomolecules carry out the chemical or physical functions that exist in a
living system, A sub-discipline of biology, its focus is in is the
scientific study of the normal function in living systems.
Psychology is the study of
behavior and mind, embracing all aspects of
conscious and unconscious
experience as well as thought.
Where do Emotions
come from? You create them (youtube)
James-Lange
Theory refers to a hypothesis on the origin and nature of emotions and
is one of the earliest theories of emotion within modern psychology. It
was developed independently by two 19th-century scholars, William James
and Carl Lange. The basic premise of the theory is that physiological
arousal instigates the experience of emotion. Instead of feeling an
emotion and subsequent physiological (bodily) response, the theory
proposes that the physiological change is primary, and emotion is then
experienced when the brain reacts to the information received via the
body's nervous system. It proposes that each specific emotion is attached
to a unique and different pattern of physiological arousal and emotional
behavior in reaction due to an exciting stimulus. The theory has been
criticised and modified over the course of time, as one of several
competing theories of emotion. Modern theorists have built on its ideas by
proposing that the experience of emotion is modulated by both
physiological feedback and other information, rather than consisting
solely of bodily changes, as James suggested. Psychologist Tim Dalgleish
states that most modern affective neuroscientists would support such a
viewpoint. In 2002, a research paper on the autonomic nervous system
stated that the theory has been "hard to disprove". Emotions are often
assumed to be judgments about a situation that cause feelings and
physiological changes. In 1884, psychologist and philosopher William James
proposed that physiological changes actually precede emotions, which are
equivalent to our subjective experience of physiological changes, and are
experienced as feelings. In his words, "our feeling of the same changes as
they occur is the emotion." James argued:If we fancy some strong emotion,
and then try to abstract from our consciousness of it all the feelings of
its characteristic bodily symptoms, we find we have nothing left behind,
no "mind-stuff" out of which the emotion can be constituted, and that a
cold and neutral state of intellectual perception is all that remains. …
What kind of an emotion of fear would be left, if the feelings neither of
quickened heart-beats nor of shallow breathing, neither of trembling lips
nor of weakened limbs, neither of goose-flesh nor of visceral stirrings,
were present, it is quite impossible to think. Can one fancy the state of
rage and picture no ebullition of it in the chest, no flushing of the
face, no dilatation of the nostrils, no clenching of the teeth, no impulse
to vigorous action, but in their stead limp muscles, calm breathing, and a
placid face? The present writer, for one, certainly cannot. The rage is as
completely evaporated as the sensation of its so-called manifestations.
Lisa
Feldman Barrett focuses on the study of emotion. Why is it that people
are able to quickly and effortlessly perceive anger, sadness, fear in
themselves and in others, yet scientists have been unable to specify a set
of clear criteria for empirically identifying these emotional events?
Theory of Constructed Emotion is a scientific theory to explain the
experience and perception of emotion. The emotion paradox is as follows.
People have vivid and intense experiences of emotion in day-to-day life:
they report seeing emotions like "anger", "sadness", and "happiness" in
others, and they report experiencing "anger", "sadness" and so on
themselves. Nevertheless, psychophysiological and neuroscientific evidence
has failed to yield consistent support for the existence of such discrete
categories of experience. Instead, the empirical evidence suggests that
what exists in the brain and body is affect, and emotions are constructed
by multiple brain networks working in tandem. Despite this evidence, most
other theories of emotion assume that emotions are genetically endowed,
not learned, and are produced by dedicated circuits in the brain: an anger
circuit, a fear circuit, and so on. This point of view is very much in
line with common-sense conceptions of emotion. The theory of constructed
emotion calls this assumption into question. It suggests that these
emotions (often called "basic emotions") are not biologically hardwired,
but instead are phenomena that emerge in consciousness "in the moment"
from more fundamental ingredients. "In every waking moment, your brain
uses past experience, organized as concepts, to guide your actions and
give your sensations meaning. When the concepts involved are emotion
concepts, your brain constructs instances of emotion." In greater detail,
instances of emotion are constructed throughout the entire brain by
multiple brain networks in collaboration. Ingredients going into this
construction include interoception, concepts, and social reality.
Interoceptive predictions provide information about the state of the body
and ultimately produce basic, affective feelings of pleasure, displeasure,
arousal, and calmness. Concepts are embodied knowledge (from your
culture), including emotion concepts. Social reality provides the
collective agreement and language that make the perception of emotion
possible among people who share a culture.
Associating a memory with an
emotion helps to
remember that experience, knowledge or information.
You have to
learn how to
accurately interpret the information signals that are being
generated from
your body, if not, then you will manipulated by your feelings, and have little control over your thoughts, or
your actions.
Learning to
Separate your Emotions from your
thoughts and
memories helps you to understand the information
more clearly.
This way you can either move past this information
or learn more from that experience by asking more questions. But
just learning to separate your emotions from your thoughts does
not mean that those memories will stop triggering emotional
responses completely, it just means that you will be more aware of the
emotional response to that information and realize it is no
longer necessary in order to understand those particular
thoughts, so eventually it will become mostly information. You
have the power to control your thoughts and the emotional
attachment to those thoughts and you can do this without drugs
like
Propranolol.
We know that people can remember a lot of information
without having any emotional response to that information, so it
seems that emotions are not even necessary for memory or
learning. Emotions are nice to have when remembering happy
moments, so I wouldn't want to separate all my emotions from all
my memories, especially when there is a lot to learn from our
experiences.
Emotional Intelligence Consists of Four Attributes:
1: Self-Awareness – You recognize your own
emotions and how they affect your thoughts and
behavior, know your
strengths and weaknesses, and have
self-confidence. The ability to quickly
reduce
stress in the moment in a variety of settings.
2: Self-Management – You’re able to
control impulsive feelings and
behaviors, manage your emotions in healthy ways, take initiative,
follow
through on commitments, and
adapt to changing
circumstances. The ability to recognize your emotions and keep them
from overwhelming you.
3:
Social
Awareness – You can understand the emotions, needs, and
concerns of other
people, pick up on emotional cues, feel comfortable socially, and
recognize the
power dynamics in a group or organization. The ability to
connect emotionally with others by using
nonverbal communication.
4: Relationship
Management – You know how
to develop and
maintain good
relationships,
communicate
clearly, inspire and influence others, work well in a team, and
manage conflict. The ability to
use humor and play to stay connected
in challenging situations. The ability to
resolve conflicts positively and with confidence.
Intrapersonal Intelligence (Self Smart)
-
Interpersonal intelligence (People Smart)
-
Social Learning -
Social Emotional Learning
-
Meditation.
Principle of Constancy is the general
principle that psychic forces and energies tend to remain in a steady or
balanced state or tend to seek a return to a state of balance or of
decreased energy. The principle of psychic functioning that seeks to
maintain the quantity of excitation contained in the apparatus at a low or
constant level. This is accomplished through a discharge of the energy
present in the apparatus or by avoiding its augmentation.
How the brain balances emotion and reason. Navigating through life
requires balancing emotion and reason, a feat accomplished by the brain
region 'area 32' of the anterior cingulate cortex. The area maintains
emotional equilibrium by relaying information between cognitive and
emotional brain regions, according to new research. Using bidirectional
neuron tracers to visualize the connections between the DLPFC, area 25,
and area 32, a potential middleman, in rhesus monkeys. The DLPFC connects
to the deepest layers of area 32, where the strongest inhibitory neurons
reside. Area 32 connects to every layer of area 25, positioning it as a
powerful regulator of area 25 activity. In healthy brains, the DLPFC
signals to area 32 to balance area 25 activity, allowing emotional
equilibrium. But in depression, silence from the DLPFC results in too much
area 25 activity and out-of-control emotional processing.
Emotional Problems - Mood Swings
Alexithymia
inability to identify and describe emotions in the self.
Bipolar.
Emotional Contagion
is the phenomenon of having one person's emotions and related behaviors
directly
trigger similar emotions and behaviors in other people.
Emotional Detachment
refers to an
inability to connect with others emotionally, as well as a
means of dealing with
anxiety by preventing certain situations that
trigger it; it is often described as "emotional numbing", "emotional
blunting", or dissociation, depersonalization or in its chronic form
depersonalization disorder. In the second sense, it is a decision to avoid
engaging emotional connections, rather than an inability to do so,
typically for personal, social, or other reasons. In this sense, it can
allow people to maintain boundaries, psychic integrity, and avoid
undesired impact by or upon others related to emotional demands.
Dissociation in psychology is a mild detachment from immediate surroundings
to more severe detachment from physical and emotional experience, as well
as detachment from reality.
Introvert?
Psychosis refers
to an
abnormal condition of the mind described
as involving a loss of contact with
Reality.
Neurosis is a class of functional
mental disorders involving
distress but neither
delusions nor
hallucinations.
Illusion is a distortion of the
senses,
revealing how the brain normally organizes and interprets sensory
stimulation. An
illusion involves distorted or misinterpreted real
perception; imagery, which does not mimic real perception and is under
voluntary control.
Spatial Intelligence..
Pseudohallucination is an involuntary sensory experience vivid enough
to be regarded as a hallucination, but recognised by the patient not to be
the result of external stimuli. Unlike normal hallucination, which occurs
when one sees, hears, smells, tastes or feels something that is not there,
with a compelling feeling or thought that it is real, pseudohallucinations
are recognised by the person as unreal.
Delusion is a
belief that is
held with strong conviction despite superior evidence to the contrary. As
a pathology, it is distinct from a belief based on
false or incomplete
information,
confabulation, dogma,
illusion, or other effects of
Perception.
Compartmentalization is an
unconscious psychological
defense
mechanism used to avoid
cognitive dissonance, or the mental discomfort and
anxiety caused by a person's having
conflicting values, cognitions,
emotions, beliefs, etc. within themselves. Compartmentalization allows
these conflicting ideas to co-exist by inhibiting direct or explicit
acknowledgement and interaction between separate compartmentalized self
states.
Promoting Alternative Thinking Strategies -
Paths Training
Emotional Healing (meditation) -
ControlsStress
-
Anger -
Profanity
-
Happiness
-
Depression -
Trauma
Anxieties -
Fear -
Avoiding Fear can help with Focus and Control
Be aware of ignorant corporations are more focused on money then
they are providing a quality service to people in need.
Some
corporations exploit parents who are desperate to help their children's
through difficulties has always been a problem with healthcare services.
Brain Balance are after-school learning centers that offers a program
of brain training, exercise, simple physical exercises, skills training,
and dietary advice that it says helps children with developmental and
learning disabilities. As of 2018 there was no good evidence that the
company's program helps children. In the scientific and medical community,
Brain Balance has been criticized for the lack of scientific evidence for
its marketing, as well as its claims about neuroplasticity and other
aspects of brain development. That assessment is consistent with a 2015
determination by the Wisconsin Department of Health Services that there
was insufficient evidence of effectiveness for the company's claims. The
results of a June 2018 year-long investigation by National Public Radio
cast further doubt on the veracity of claims by the company.
PTSD (stress)
Emotional Range and Value Orientation: Toward a Cognitive view
of Emotionality
Emotional Biochemistry
Experts in Emotion 2.3 -- Iris Mauss on Measuring Emotion (youtube)
Human
Emotion 1.2: Introduction (youtube)
Facial
Expressions (body language)
How Sensitivity to Emotions changes across the Lifespan. Why do some
people become more positive as they grow older?
Answer: They have learned some of life's important lessons. Why are
adolescents so sensitive to negative social cues?
Answer: They have not yet learned enough.
Insular Cortex is involved in consciousness and play a role in diverse
functions usually linked to
emotion or the
regulation of the
body's
Homeostasis. These functions include perception, motor control,
self-awareness, cognitive functioning, and interpersonal experience. In
relation to these, it is involved in psychopathology.
Emoji 27 States of Emotion
"A feeling is an interpretation of information."
These are more then just emotions on the above
chart, these words represent behaviors that have a lot of
information and knowledge associated with them. There are
explanations on why these feelings exist, when they do. Most
come from being exposed to particular information under
particular circumstances, which vary based on your particular
experiences and your particular
education. So again emotions are very ineffective for processing
information, and ineffective
when your trying to understand the facts about your situation.
Emotions are like old friends, you love them, but you just don't
want them around all the time. You need time to relax, time to
think, time to recoup and time to do other things. No offence,
non taken, of course.
Torrid is characterized by intense emotion. Emotionally charged and
vigorously energetic, or just happy and focused.
"It's amazing how there are
things that unwillingly control our moods, it's really weird.
And it only takes a moment of distraction for a particular
behavior to start
activating processes. Now your mind is
processing information under a new set of parameters, and unless
your aware of the change, you will not know when to change your
thinking and the thoughts that are running under a particular
set of rules that were created some how by you?
Control is not a skill
that can be easily maintained, or easily defined. Everyone
should fully understand all the things that we have learned
about
self-control. The benefits are numerous."
Why do we Feel our Emotions?
Emotions release certain
hormones and chemicals in our body. So
we sometimes
feel emotions in our stomachs, like a gut-wrenching
feeling, a knot in the stomach, or feeling sick or nauseated, or
feeling something nerve-wracking or a
gut feeling. We can also
feel
shaking or tremors, sweating,
dry mouth and headaches. We also feel emotions in our chest,
like chest pain, a fast heart rate, fast breathing, a thumping heart
or palpitations. Love doesn't hurt,
losing love hurts.
Broken Heart
is an intense emotional and sometimes physical
stress or
pain one feels at
experiencing great
longing.
Grieving -
Compassion -
Human Senses
Psychological
Pain is an unpleasant feeling (a suffering) of a psychological,
non-physical, origin.
Psychogenic Pain
is physical pain that is caused, increased, or prolonged by mental,
emotional, or behavioral factors.
Negative Feedback.
TThe
Science of Heartbreak (youtube)
Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy
is a type of non-ischemic
cardiomyopathy in which there is a sudden
temporary weakening of the muscular portion of the
heart. This weakening
can be triggered by emotional stress, such as the
death of a loved one, a break-up, or constant
Anxiety.
Vagal-Parasympathetic Activation interfaces with
parasympathetic control of the heart, lungs and digestive tract. The vagus
nerves are paired; however, they are normally referred to in the singular.
It is the longest nerve of the
autonomic nervous system in the human body.
Cranial Nerves are the nerves that emerge directly from the brain
(including the brainstem), in contrast to spinal nerves (which emerge from
segments of the spinal cord). Cranial nerves relay information between the
brain and parts of the body, primarily to and from regions of the head and
neck.
Autonomic Nervous System is a division of the peripheral
nervous
system that
influences the function of internal organs.
The autonomic nervous system is a control system that acts largely
unconsciously and regulates bodily functions such as the heart rate,
digestion, respiratory rate, pupillary response, urination, and
sexual arousal. This system is
the primary mechanism in control of the
fight-or-flight response and the freeze-and-dissociate response.
Sympathetic Nervous System
is one of the two main divisions of the autonomic
nervous system, the
other being the
parasympathetic nervous system. The autonomic nervous system functions
to regulate the body's unconscious actions.
Central Nervous System is the part of the
nervous system consisting of
the brain and spinal cord.
Endocrine System
the collection of glands of an organism that secrete
hormones directly
into the circulatory system to be carried towards distant target organs.
Hypothalamus
is a portion of the brain that contains a number of small nuclei with a
variety of functions. One of the most important functions of the
hypothalamus is to link the nervous system to the endocrine system via the
pituitary gland (hypophysis).
Anterior Cingulate Cortex
wide variety of autonomic functions, such as regulating blood pressure and
heart rate, also involved in certain higher-level functions, such as
reward anticipation,
decision-making, impulse control, and emotion.
Adrenal
Cortex mediates the
stress response through the production
of mineralocorticoids and glucocorticoids, such as aldosterone and
cortisol, respectively.
Mineralocorticoids are a class of steroid
hormones, which
help control metabolism,
inflammation, immune functions, salt and water
balance, development of sexual characteristics, and the ability to
withstand
illness and injury.
Adrenal
Gland are endocrine glands that produce a variety of
hormones including adrenaline and the steroids aldosterone and cortisol.
They are found above the
kidneys.
Neurochemistry examines how neurochemicals influence the
network of neural operation by studying of neurochemicals, including
neurotransmitters and other molecules (such as psychopharmaceuticals,
neuropeptides, or gastrotransmitters) that influence the function of
neurons.
Neurochemical is an organic molecule, such as serotonin,
dopamine, or nerve growth factor, that participates in neural activity.
Brain -
Pain
You can choose to feel emotions, but
sometimes you don't always have a choice. mostly because people
have not yet learned to fully understand the mind and body, so
they have a hard time controlling their emotions. Everyone has
control, but not everyone knows how to operate these controls
effectively. It's a combination of awareness, knowledge,
learning and practice. It's not part of our education, but it
should be.
Visceral is information obtained through
intuition rather than from
reasoning or
observation. Relating to deep inward feelings rather than to the
intellect.
Body not the Mind.
Intuition is
instinctive knowing (without the use of rational processes). An
impression that something might be the case.
Awareness (beyond normal
senses)
The mind can cause us to feel physical symptoms from our
emotions, but our emotions are not always accurate in determining reality.
And there could also be crossover effects, meaning a signal from chemicals
and hormones might be misunderstood and misdiagnosed.
Autoimmunity is the system of
immune responses
of an
organism against its own healthy cells and tissues.
Placebos
Anxiety -
Disorders (sanity)
Inner Monologue
(talking to yourself)
Crossover Effects
occurs when two or more expressions in a text refer to the same person or
thing.
Crossover Distortion
is caused by switching between devices driving a load, "crossing over" of
the signal between devices.
Audio
Crossover are a class of electronic
filter used in
audio applications.
"If you
can question your feelings more often, then you can better
understand them correctly. If you can learn how to weed out
false alarms, and learn how to
control impulses from your
sub-conscious mind, that don't benefit you, then your actions
will eventually be more logical and you will make better decisions."
"If you can
control and
understand your feelings, then you
can do what you know, instead of doing something based on how you feel."
Feelings
Feelings are a
physical sensation that you
experience, like the
sensation produced by
pressure receptors in the skin.
Feelings can also be an
awareness of emotional or
moral
sensitivity, especially in relation to personal principles or dignity.
The experiencing of affective and emotional states. The general atmosphere
of a place or situation and the effect that it has on people. An
intuitive
understanding of something.
A
vague idea in which some
confidence is placed.
Feelings - Morris
Albert - Live (youtube) - Feelings, nothing more than feelings, Trying
to forget my feelings of love.
More than A Feeling
- Boston (youtube) - It's more than a feeling, When I hear that old
song they used to play, And I begin dreaming, Till I see Marianne walk
away.
I've
Got A Feeling - The Beatles (youtube) - 30 January 1969 during the
Beatles' rooftop concert.
I've Got a Feeling was from the Beatles 1970 album Let It Be.
Feel is to undergo an emotional sensation or be in a particular state
of mind. Come to believe on the basis of emotion,
intuitions, or
indefinite grounds. Perceive by a
physical sensation, e.g., coming from
the skin or muscles. Be conscious of a physical, mental, or emotional
state. Have a feeling or
perception about oneself in reaction to
someone's behavior or attitude. Undergo passive experience of. Be
felt or perceived in a certain way. Grope or feel in search of
something. A property perceived by touch.
Examine by touch. Examine (a body part) by palpation. Find by
testing or
cautious exploration. Produce a certain impression. An
intuitive awareness. The general atmosphere of a place or situation and
the effect that it has on people.
Gut Feeling
-
Intuition
Body Mind Connections
Sometimes I don't feel like I'm doing enough, but that was just a
feeling, and feelings do not fully explain reality. So what am I
really doing? I'm doing this. Though sometimes it does not feel like I'm
doing this, but this is what I am doing. Of course it can be
perceived differently, but that does
not change the facts. In order to change the facts, you must learn and you
must communicate. There is no such thing as perceived facts.
Emotions that Depend on very Particular Circumstances:
Relative
Desbundar (Portuguese) – to shed one’s
inhibitions
in having fun.
Tarab (Arabic) – a
musically induced state of ecstasy or enchantment.
Shinrin-yoku
(Japanese) – the relaxation gained from
bathing in the forest,
figuratively or literally.
Gigil (Tagalog) – the irresistible urge to
pinch or squeeze someone because they are loved or cherished.
Yuan bei
(Chinese) – a sense of complete and perfect
accomplishment.
Iktsuarpok (Inuit) – the anticipation one feels
when waiting for someone, whereby one keeps going outside to check if they
have arrived.
Natsukashii (Japanese) – a nostalgic longing for the
past, with happiness for the fond memory, yet sadness that it is no
longer.
Saudade (Portuguese) – a melancholic longing or nostalgia for a
person, place or thing that is far away either spatially or in time – a
vague, dreaming wistfulness for phenomena that may not even exist.
Wabi-sabi (Japanese) – a “dark, desolate sublimity” centred on transience
and imperfection in beauty.
Sehnsucht (German) – literally
“life-longings”, an intense desire for alternative states and realisations
of life, even if they are unattainable.
Dadirri (Australian aboriginal)
term – a deep, spiritual act of reflective and respectful listening.
Pihentagyú (Hungarian) – literally meaning “with a relaxed brain”, it
describes quick-witted people who can come up with sophisticated jokes or
solutions.
Desenrascanço (Portuguese) – to artfully disentangle oneself
from a troublesome situation.
Sukha (Sanskrit) – genuine lasting
happiness independent of circumstances.
Orenda (Huron) – the power of
the human will to change the world in the face of powerful forces such as
fate.
"Parents learn to understand the moods of their children more then
they learn to understand their own moods, why? Emotions are a form of
communication, but we have not yet learned how to listen."