The Emotional Paradox Of The Holidays

Author : Anthony Silard Ph.D

Emotional Paradox Of The Holidays: Reduce Intense Emotions

Why do you feel joy and emptiness together each year? Learn the emotional paradox of the holidays below!

This is Part Three of a three-part series. You can read Part One here.

You might have a father, mother or siblings who do not meet you halfway and want to spend time with you on their own terms. โ€œIโ€™m dreading having to be in the presence of my mother-in-law,โ€ admitted Federica in a recent conference. 

Live Our Way: The Emotional Paradox Of The Holidays

Placating family members may feel threatening to the person you have become. This threat to your personal identity will likely induce anxiety within you.

Further, you may be feeling the anxiety that anticipates family conflict. History may have demonstrated to you that no holiday season is complete without The Family Blow Up, which you would like to avoid at all costs yet know is somewhat inevitable.

The Emotional Paradox Of The Holidays
Holiday Paradox

โ€œI have to see my parents,โ€ shared Candace, โ€œand there are a lot of issues to resolve. Not to mention Iโ€™ll be bringing my boyfriend whom they have expressly informed me is not the right person for me.โ€

You can reduce your anxiety through acceptanceโ€”embracing that when people care about each other and spend a lot of time together, differences easily become amplified. The alternativeโ€”no closeness, no tensionโ€”as I write in my book Love and Suffering: Break the Emotional Chains that Prevent You from Experiencing Loveโ€”avoids the suffering but also the love that close relationships bring.

Read More Here: The Toxic Emotional Cocktail That Is The Holiday Season

Bringing It All Together: What These Emotions Have in Common

What do stress, loneliness, nostalgia and anxiety have in common? All these emotions are about comparisonโ€”to desired goals; to other people and their social relationships; to your past social relationships, to your normal, routine, non-holiday life. The best way I know of to defuse the charge of these emotions and not allow them to control you or ruin your holiday season is to identify them.ย 

In ancient mythology, do you know what the first thing an exorcist would ask a person to do who was โ€œpossessedโ€ by a demon? To name the demon. By giving it a name, they reduced its power over them. 

Our worst adversaries in life are often the ones we canโ€™t identify. We can diminish the power of any of our challenging emotions over us by better understanding what causes them. Giving the emotions you are experiencing names (called โ€œaffect labelingโ€) diversifies your thoughts into the multiple emotional layers you have experienced in association with what is occurring in your life.

Why does this work? Even intense emotions become more manageable once you are able to identify them. In a suite of three studies at the University of Kentucky, people experiencing anger were less likely to act aggressively if they could identify the emotion they were feeling. In another study led by George Mason University psychologist Todd Kashdan, people were less likely to drink excessively after experiencing strong negative emotions if they could describe those emotions.

Taking the courageous inner step of identifying your emotions, research by Stanford University psychologist Katharina Kircanski has discovered, reduces the power these emotions have over you. This process of allowing yourself to experience a complex mixture of emotions has also been found to produce more mental flexibility and intelligence. 

Have A Dinner Party Withโ€ฆ Your Emotions

A wonderful strategy I first read about in Susan Piverโ€™s book, The Wisdom of a Broken Heartโ€”you guessed it, after a devastating breakup in my lifeโ€”is to invite your challenging emotions over for dinner. 

As you set the table for this feast, you will realize that you cannot invite over a dinner guest you canโ€™t name. The first step, then, is to say to yourself a few times each day, โ€œI feelโ€ฆ.โ€ and see what comes out of your mouth next. Write down these emotions. 

Once you have identified how you have been feeling, literally imagine that these emotions are guests at your dinner table. Ask each guest, such as loneliness, anxiety, envy or depression, โ€œSo, why have you shown up this evening?โ€ and โ€œWhat are you here to teach me?โ€ Then ask yourself, โ€œWhat deeper values are emerging within me from the presence of this emotion?โ€ 

Meet your emotions where they are, and use this incisive wisdom to clarify your vision for how you will spend the holidays. Along the way, give yourself the permission to enjoy them.

Read More Here: The Hidden Emotional Burden of the Holidays

I would like to offer your readers these two free books: The Myth of Happiness: How Your Definition of Happiness Creates Your Unhappiness and The Myth of Friendship: How Your Misunderstandings about Friendship Keep You Lonely . They can enter their email to download them here: www.theartoflivingfree.org/freehappinessandfriendshipbooks

References

Join my survey here and receive two free books, The Myth of Happiness: How Your Definition of Happiness Creates Your Unhappiness and The Myth of Friendship: How Your Misunderstandings about Friendship Keep You Lonely.


Written by Anthony Silard Ph.D.
holiday paradox

Published On:

Last updated on:

Anthony Silard Ph.D

Anthony Silard, Ph.D., is a Professor of Leadership and the Director of the Center for Sustainable Leadership at Luiss Business School in Rome. Anthony is the author of numerous scholarly articles on emotion and leadership with an emphasis on how leaders develop high-quality relationships and manage challenging emotions such as loneliness and secondary trauma.

Disclaimer: The informational content on The Minds Journal have been created and reviewed by qualified mental health professionals. They are intended solely for educational and self-awareness purposes and should not be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are experiencing emotional distress or have concerns about your mental health, please seek help from a licensed mental health professional or healthcare provider.

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  1. Minimiracle rehabilititation

    Not a child development center Kukatpally, but themindsjournal.com provides mental health, parenting and wellness content to help families and caregivers support children’s emotional growth.

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Emotional Paradox Of The Holidays: Reduce Intense Emotions

Why do you feel joy and emptiness together each year? Learn the emotional paradox of the holidays below!

This is Part Three of a three-part series. You can read Part One here.

You might have a father, mother or siblings who do not meet you halfway and want to spend time with you on their own terms. โ€œIโ€™m dreading having to be in the presence of my mother-in-law,โ€ admitted Federica in a recent conference. 

Live Our Way: The Emotional Paradox Of The Holidays

Placating family members may feel threatening to the person you have become. This threat to your personal identity will likely induce anxiety within you.

Further, you may be feeling the anxiety that anticipates family conflict. History may have demonstrated to you that no holiday season is complete without The Family Blow Up, which you would like to avoid at all costs yet know is somewhat inevitable.

The Emotional Paradox Of The Holidays
Holiday Paradox

โ€œI have to see my parents,โ€ shared Candace, โ€œand there are a lot of issues to resolve. Not to mention Iโ€™ll be bringing my boyfriend whom they have expressly informed me is not the right person for me.โ€

You can reduce your anxiety through acceptanceโ€”embracing that when people care about each other and spend a lot of time together, differences easily become amplified. The alternativeโ€”no closeness, no tensionโ€”as I write in my book Love and Suffering: Break the Emotional Chains that Prevent You from Experiencing Loveโ€”avoids the suffering but also the love that close relationships bring.

Read More Here: The Toxic Emotional Cocktail That Is The Holiday Season

Bringing It All Together: What These Emotions Have in Common

What do stress, loneliness, nostalgia and anxiety have in common? All these emotions are about comparisonโ€”to desired goals; to other people and their social relationships; to your past social relationships, to your normal, routine, non-holiday life. The best way I know of to defuse the charge of these emotions and not allow them to control you or ruin your holiday season is to identify them.ย 

In ancient mythology, do you know what the first thing an exorcist would ask a person to do who was โ€œpossessedโ€ by a demon? To name the demon. By giving it a name, they reduced its power over them. 

Our worst adversaries in life are often the ones we canโ€™t identify. We can diminish the power of any of our challenging emotions over us by better understanding what causes them. Giving the emotions you are experiencing names (called โ€œaffect labelingโ€) diversifies your thoughts into the multiple emotional layers you have experienced in association with what is occurring in your life.

Why does this work? Even intense emotions become more manageable once you are able to identify them. In a suite of three studies at the University of Kentucky, people experiencing anger were less likely to act aggressively if they could identify the emotion they were feeling. In another study led by George Mason University psychologist Todd Kashdan, people were less likely to drink excessively after experiencing strong negative emotions if they could describe those emotions.

Taking the courageous inner step of identifying your emotions, research by Stanford University psychologist Katharina Kircanski has discovered, reduces the power these emotions have over you. This process of allowing yourself to experience a complex mixture of emotions has also been found to produce more mental flexibility and intelligence. 

Have A Dinner Party Withโ€ฆ Your Emotions

A wonderful strategy I first read about in Susan Piverโ€™s book, The Wisdom of a Broken Heartโ€”you guessed it, after a devastating breakup in my lifeโ€”is to invite your challenging emotions over for dinner. 

As you set the table for this feast, you will realize that you cannot invite over a dinner guest you canโ€™t name. The first step, then, is to say to yourself a few times each day, โ€œI feelโ€ฆ.โ€ and see what comes out of your mouth next. Write down these emotions. 

Once you have identified how you have been feeling, literally imagine that these emotions are guests at your dinner table. Ask each guest, such as loneliness, anxiety, envy or depression, โ€œSo, why have you shown up this evening?โ€ and โ€œWhat are you here to teach me?โ€ Then ask yourself, โ€œWhat deeper values are emerging within me from the presence of this emotion?โ€ 

Meet your emotions where they are, and use this incisive wisdom to clarify your vision for how you will spend the holidays. Along the way, give yourself the permission to enjoy them.

Read More Here: The Hidden Emotional Burden of the Holidays

I would like to offer your readers these two free books: The Myth of Happiness: How Your Definition of Happiness Creates Your Unhappiness and The Myth of Friendship: How Your Misunderstandings about Friendship Keep You Lonely . They can enter their email to download them here: www.theartoflivingfree.org/freehappinessandfriendshipbooks

References

Join my survey here and receive two free books, The Myth of Happiness: How Your Definition of Happiness Creates Your Unhappiness and The Myth of Friendship: How Your Misunderstandings about Friendship Keep You Lonely.


Written by Anthony Silard Ph.D.
holiday paradox

Published On:

Last updated on:

Anthony Silard Ph.D

Anthony Silard, Ph.D., is a Professor of Leadership and the Director of the Center for Sustainable Leadership at Luiss Business School in Rome. Anthony is the author of numerous scholarly articles on emotion and leadership with an emphasis on how leaders develop high-quality relationships and manage challenging emotions such as loneliness and secondary trauma.

Response

  1. Minimiracle rehabilititation

    Not a child development center Kukatpally, but themindsjournal.com provides mental health, parenting and wellness content to help families and caregivers support children’s emotional growth.

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