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MANAGING NEGATIVE FEELINGS Emotional regulation: A Key to Self Care for You, Parents, Teachers, Child CareWorkers, Aides and Adolescents

Adol Emotional Regulation

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A training for professionals, parents, teens dealing with emotional fitness

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Page 1: Adol Emotional Regulation

MANAGING NEGATIVE FEELINGS

Emotional regulation:A Key to Self Care for You,

Parents, Teachers, Child CareWorkers, Aides and Adolescents

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Without exception, men and women of all ages, of all cultures, of all levels of education, and of all walks of economic life have emotions, are mindful of the emotions of others, cultivate pastimes that manipulate their emotions, and govern their lives in no small part by the pursuit of one emotion, happiness, and the avoidance of unpleasant emotions.

Antonio Damasio

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By the end of today’s session you will:

• Know the importance of emotional regulation

• Be able to define: emotion, feelings, emotional regulation.

• Know eight feeling facts• Experience a Gotcha War • Practice twelve exercises designed to

improve self care• Identify three tools for coaxing self and

others to improve emotional regulation

OBJECTIVES

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You, yourself, as much as anybody in the entire universe, deserve your love and affection.

Buddha

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WHAT IS EMOTIONAL REGULATION?

Emotional regulation refers to the ability to control one’s emotions. We can control our emotions or our emotions can control us.

When our emotions control us, we feel, act and only then think. We act like FAT Heads and when we finally think, we wish we had acted

differently.

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HOW IMPORTANT IS EMOTIONAL REGULATION?

The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy notes: “No aspect of our mental life is more important to the quality and meaning of our existence than emotions. They are what make life worth living, or sometimes ending.”

Our training as clinicians stresses the need to be in touch with our emotions, with the emotions of those we work with and with good reason. Emotional regulation is important.

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HOW IMPORTANT IS EMOTIONAL REGULATION?

Emotional regulation abilities are four times more important than IQ in determining who becomes successful and who does not (Sternberg, 1996).

One study of 450 boys found that those who succeeded were able to handle frustration, control emotions, and get along with other people (Goleman, 1986). Two-thirds of these boys grew up in welfare families, and one-third had IQ’s below 90.

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WHAT IS MEANT BY EMOTION? Emotion is complex, and the term has no

single universally accepted definition. The word derives from the Old French word esmovoir meaning to excite and from the Latin ex meaning out and movēre meaning move.

Theorist Antonio Damasio sees emotions as complicated collections of chemical and neural responses designed to assist each person’s ability to stay alive. Another theorist Jerome Kagan sees emotion as the relations among external events, thoughts, and changes in internal feelings.

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AN EMOTION OR A FEELING?

Emotions are both what is felt by the body (not necessarily by the mind) and what is displayed to others. Feelings are the subjective aspect of emotion—how the mind responds or does not respond to the arousals.

The word feeling derives from the Middle English felen—and was used to refer to sensory and tactile experiences as well as a range of emotional and affective responses, both pleasurable and painful.

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EMOTION OR FEELING? SO WHAT?

Think of waking in the middle of the night. You hear someone walking around. If you didn’t wake, you might be in danger.

However, unless you remember a cousin is visiting, your arousal will be named fear. You might get a gun and kill the “intruder”. If you remember the cousin is visiting you might name the feeling annoyance at being disturbed. If you care deeply for the cousin, you might name the feeling pleasure that the cousin is visiting. How arousals are named is important.

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EMOTION OR FEELING? SO WHAT?

Kagan believes until the arousal is noticed and named, a feeling does not exist. Until the person notices the arousal, no thought occurs about what is happening, or what should happen.

Even when the arousal is not noticed the emotion often continues to drive the behavior. Freud’s interest in what we don’t know is important. So are those who emphasize feelings in talk therapy. Important but not everything.

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YES/AND THINKING

For the most part theorists take an “either/or” approach. The behaviorists had, and for the most part continue to have, no interest in feelings or emotions. Rogerian theorists were invested in being with the client’s feelings. Analytic theorists focused on the unconscious.

“Yes/and” thinking is coming into favor. Such thinking believes who we are is determined by biology, our environment, our beliefs, as well as how our behavior is rewarded. Emotions are intermingled with biology, environment, beliefs and behavior.

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FEELING FACTS

The following facts help you better understand emotion and how emotions and feelings influence behavior.

FACT ONE: Feelings begin with a physical arousal.

FACT TWO: Think of feelings as signals. The physical arousal that alerts you to a feeling’s presence says “Pay attention, something is happening.”

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FEELING FACTS

FACT THREE : Arousals are not always noticed.

The arousal might be detected by another person, but it only becomes a feeling when it is noticed and named by the person being aroused. Affect is the name for arousal a clinician notices.

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FEELING FACTS

FACT FOUR: Controlling an emotion or arousal that does not reach your consciousness is difficult.

Some people are more attuned to feelings than others. Some are attuned to only one feeling. Someone may be attuned to anger, but not to the hurt or fear or other emotions that underlie the anger.

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FEELING FACTS

FACT FIVE: Feelings motivate. Feelings want us to do something. Afraid? Your fear says run away and hide. Guilty? Your guilt says stop doing wrong. Angry? Your anger tells you to fight.

FACT SIX: What feelings tell you to do is not always the wisest way to act. Even in emergencies, taking a few minutes to think works best. Emotional regulation is about managing feelings.

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FEELING FACTS

FACT SEVEN: Some feelings shut you down instead of energizing you. Depression is a way a feeling shut you down. Shutting down can keep you alive in some situations, but isn’t helpful in other situations.

The stronger the feeling, the greater the danger the feeling will take over. When a feeling takes over the brain is hijacked, and taken over.

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FEELING FACTS

FACT EIGHT Knowing when a feeling is visiting you, knowing how to keep it from taking over your brain, properly naming arousals, and thinking before acting are key to emotional regulation.

You are emotionally fit when you stay in control of your actions no matter what your feelings suggest doing.

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You cannot make yourself feel something you do not feel, but you can make yourself do right in spite of your feelings.

Pearl Buck

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Gotcha War Exercise• Purpose: to demonstrate letting emotions

rule us.

• Need to volunteers. A strong Yankee fan and a strong Mets fan.

• Face each other and short of physically hurting each other try to convince the other person their team is inferior to yours.

• Audience observe what happens.

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Gotcha War debriefing

A Gotcha War is an argument that leaves you feeling like a fool or acting like a crazed animal when you are more right than the person arguing with you. Gotcha Wars are common to many relationships, adolescents, control freaks, and addicts are particularly adept at winning such wars. You win, when you keep your emotions from controlling you.

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How You Win a Gotcha War

1. Recognize when you are in one.2. Stop trying to use reason to convince the other

person you are right.3. Use minimal and neutral responses—”Huh-

huh,” “Hmmmm,” “ I hear you.”4. If forced to answer a question say only “Yes” or

“No.”5. Suggest a time out, and if necessary, insist on

a time out,YOU CANNOT WIN A GOTCHA WAR IF YOU ARE

NOT IN CONTROL OF YOUR FEELINGS

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STAYING IN CONTROL OF EMOTIONS

1. Strengthen feeling awareness skills2. Learn and use self-soothing skills3. Practice a Daily Emotional Fitness

Exercise Program4. Develop a support system5. Develop a philosophy of acceptance.

Control what you can and let go of what you cannot control

6. Live a meaningful life

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SELF SOOTHING SKILLS

CALMING BREATH

1. Breathe in slowly

2. Hold your breath.

3. Slowly count to four

4. Breathe out slowly

5. Say “Ahhhhh”

6. Smile

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SELF SOOTHING SKILLS

HOW TO CENTER

1. Take a calming breath.

2. Breathe normally for four breaths. Notice what it feels like just to breathe in and out.

3. Take another Calming Breath.

4. Repeat.

5. Go on.

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THINK OF A SAFE PLACE WHILE CENTERING

1. Review your good memory file for places that you experienced as calming and safe.

2. Pick the best of these and recreate it in as much detail as possible.

3. Try combining several safe place4. People your safe place with those who

care or cared for you5. Add anything that comforts and calms.

Use all the senses including taste, movement and massage.

ENHANCING CENTERING

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A teen described his safe place as lying on a large soft cloud floating gently in an otherwise clear sky. His dog is with him. It is sunset and the sky is an ever-changing palate of gold and purple and pink. The only sound is the soft tinkling of some wind chimes. The air smells of fresh cut grass.

EXAMPLE OF A SAFE PLACE

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USE CALMING SELF TALK When you breathe out while centering, say or sing something calming. Some people pray. Some sing. Others find repeating a short slogan helps. Sample slogans?

Now is not forever.Life goes on.Doing our best.I have been given what I need.It is all all right.I forgive and am forgiven.

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For every pass I caught in a game, I caught a thousand in practice.

 

Don Hutson, Football star

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A DAILY EMOTIONAL FITNESS PROGRAM

1. Be grateful for all you have been given

2. Remember another’s caring acts

3. Remember your mission

4. Move your body

5. Practice kindness

6. Be with beauty

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A DAILY EMOTIONAL FITNESS PROGRAM

7. Laugh

8. Indulge in a healthy pleasure

9. Create something

10. Forgive another

11. Forgive yourself

12. Be grateful yet again

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OTHER WAYS TO REGULATENEGATIVE EMOTIONS

Plan Ahead as Much as Possible A few minutes spent organizing and planning often eliminates stress completely.

Exercise as Much Choice as Possible Not every thing is in our control, but a great deal is, the more we choose our behavior, the stronger we grow.

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OTHER WAYS TO REGULATENEGATIVE EMOTIONS

Find A Complaint Partner Sharing fears and doubts and hurts helps keep negative emotions under control. Try to find one friend who will listen when you need to complain.

Make that person someone who will not over-react, who will not criticize or tell you what to do, and who will affirm your strength, That person has the right to complain to you when he or she needs to vent.

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OTHER WAYS TO REGULATENEGATIVE EMOTIONS

Find a Support Group The right support group strengthens all its members.

Look for a group that does more than just get together to complain. A good support group affirms strengths, help members stay in touch with all that is good and allows time to deal with releasing frustration. The emphasis should be on sharing solutions to common problems as well as finding support for what cannot be changed.

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COAXING OTHERS

Model: Take care of you. Use Calming Breath, take time to center when dealing with difficult moments. Say: “I need to think, to get calm for a minute.”

Educate: Post an Emotional Fitness Poster where you and others will see it. Post quotes, cartoons.

Normalize to de-stigmatize: Everyone needs coaching and coaxing to stay on track when it comes to self care skills.

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COAXING OTHERS

Set SMART goals: S for specific M for measurable A for acceptable to you (A can also stand for

agreed upon, attainable, achievable, or action-oriented achievable)

R for realistic and finally, T for timed (three to six weeks seems to work

well for many; some need one week goals)

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If a goal is not met,the wrong goal was set.

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Life is difficult. Frustration, worry, anger and stress frequent visitors. Managing negative feelings is an everyday process and relapse is likely. Adolescents need support and coaching to take control of feelings.

FINAL WORDS

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When feelings lead to dangerous, destructive behaviors including suicidal gestures, tissue damage to self or others, cruelty to animals, inability to stay in school or with family, lack of friends are all signs therapy and or medication are probably needed.

FINAL WORDS

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A man can do only what he can do. But if he does that each day he can sleep at night and do it again the next day.

Albert Schweitzer

FINAL WORDS