This week, we have been talking about the emotional infiltrator of FREQUENCY. Sometimes, when your emotions are being amplified or dulled by past trauma, you know it because the emotion shows up too often or not often enough.
We will look at a thinky method and a feely method for dealing with this.
Brain-based Idea
One of the big problems with the frequency of traumatized emotions is that they show up when we want to sleep. Sleep is a very important aspect of our health, but if we find ourselves lying in bed at night worrying about the future (“Future tripping”) or listing all our past regrets, the hours tick by and sleep eludes us.
One way to deal with this is to…drum roll…SCHEDULE your WORRY TIME!
Yes, you read that right!
“Umm…schedule my worry time? What does that mean?”
Great question.
When the distractions and stresses of the day dissipate and we are left alone with our thoughts at night, that is a prime time for ruminations to come to the forefront! It can be very difficult to shut them off because this is often our brain’s way of keeping problems before us so we’ll not forget to solve them. That is why they are so obnoxious!
However, if you develop a method that helps you remember and address your problems, the brain will start to let up on screaming them at you. Enter “Scheduling your worry time.” Here is how it works (feel free to adjust as makes sense for you):
Before bed each night, look at your schedule for the next day and determine what time you can worry and for how long. 30-minutes max is usually a good number to start. If you need more than that, be sure to build in breaks.
Keep a large notepad on your bedside table and a smaller one within reach all throughout the day. Whenever a worry or regret comes into your brain and you determine it’s a keeper (in other words, something you actually need to think about/plan for), write it on the tablet and then go back to whatever it was you were doing…working, playing, resting, or sleeping.
When your “worry time” arrives each day, pull out the notepads. Develop a shorthand that helps you keep track of what you have finished worrying about, still need to worry about, and what can come off the list.
In the beginning, you won’t notice much reduction in your nighttime chatter. However, as you build trust with yourself in this process, the noise will die down. Give a try for at least twenty days in a row before judging its effectiveness (if you skip a day, the twenty days starts over). For those of you who don’t seem to have any worries or emotions (but you think you should), this method will force you to sit daily and look at your life. Where ought there be some emotion? If you struggle, talk to someone else who knows you and ask them what emotions they think you would have at various times to get an idea to start.
Body-based Idea
What is your “go-to,” problematic emotion these days? Sadness? Anger? Fear? Something related? Since emotions are in the body, the first thing we want to do to regulate them is identify them. Try taking a peek at an emotion wheel to find some words to consider. Which ones resonate with how you are feeling right now?
Once you have a name for the particular bothersome emotion popping up too often, for no apparent reason, or not often enough, then you can learn how to “Turn pokes into cues!”
This means, instead of taking your emotion to be a signal to do, say, or think something specific, or stuff it and have it come out somewhere else in your body, you can actually learn to use it as a cue to choose something else. Let’s look at an example.
Shaylen feels sad quite often lately. She has realized that being neurodivergent has gotten in her way more often than she has previously thought. After recently being sued for a bill she wanted to pay but because of some misunderstandings she didn’t pay, she has been feeling down. Since the court case, she has stopped calling her friends, nearly ghosted her boyfriend, and is contemplating dropping out of school at the end of the quarter.
Now…Sadness at a revelation of loss is an absolutely appropriate and healthy emotional reaction. It is fine to have a day or three of depression – that is, after all, part of grief.
However, if the frequency of strong emotion hinders your ability to live in well-being over time, it is alright to address it and to change course a bit.
In other words, modulating and regulating emotions is not the same thing as stuffing them.
When life issues hit us and strong emotions take over, we are often not even aware of it. This is the value of “Turning the poke into a cue.” Let’s see how we might use this skill.
Let’s see how Shaylen does this.
The alarm goes off. It is a new morning. Shaylen awakens with fog in her brain and what feels like a thirty-pound weighted blanket on her chest. She does not want to move. Noticing the sensations in her body, Shaylen picks up a “Truth Focus” prompt card (Something she made for herself) on her bedside table. The card says, “Feelings are not facts. You can choose what you do. You are a gift.” She reads the card and listens to a favorite song for a few minutes, focusing away from the “stay in bed” thoughts conjured by the emotions. Taking a deep breath and feeling a bit more upbeat, she gets up and starts her day.
Give this a try and keep returning for more ideas.
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