I recently had a conversation with a client who’s spent a great deal of time running from her feelings. Not in a “let me drown them in booze/Ben & Jerry’s/boyfriends" kinda way.
She’s smart.
Too smart, in fact.
So smart, that she can outsmart herself.
“Amita, I just don’t have time to eat well. I’m too busy with my kids, career, being amazing.” (Yes, I edited in that last part, but it went something like that anyway)
After a long list of seemingly sensible excuses. I said:
“Wow! It sounds like you’re super busy. Maybe you’re just too busy to be human.”
Client: “Well, why would I want to be human when I can be better than a human? If I don’t do all those things and I just sat around and ‘felt things’ nothing would get done.”
Me: “If you think emotions are a poor use of your time. I have 2 things to tell you:
1) Your time management skills suck.
2) We need to teach you how to feel things gently.”
(I should note that I’m usually not this blunt with clients. But as Blogs require brevity, I’m paraphrasing.)
Many of us have developed intricate coping mechanisms. Ones that might not cause devastation, but keep us stagnant, nonetheless. Often the fear that we will collapse under the weight of an emotion keeps us “busy” with other things. Don’t get me wrong, I love a good distraction. I just checked my phone twice while writing this post. But let’s do a short-term/long-term cost-benefit analysis of not feeling emotions:
The good news is that you don’t have to stay in bed for a week and cry. You can feel things gently.
Here’s How:
Feeling our feelings isn’t something we’re taught in school. It makes sense that we suck at it.
We've emphasized learning skills that are “marketable,” and ignored the ones that make us happy.
Isn't it time we changed that?
MY ADVICE?
BE GENTLE. BE BRAVE. BE COMPASSIONATE.