Tag Archives: brain

Stressed out from throwing your arms in the air?

For far too many people, the world is a place full of boulders. Every day, they bump into these boulders, feel frustrated and then perhaps defeated and then stressed out. What would it be like if they could actually experience the world as a place of opportunity instead of obstacles? Wouldn’t that provide much more opportunity for a life that would be happier and calmer?

Let’s take a closer look at what often happens when life’s little challenges are seen as major problems. Imagine that you buy a new bicycle and discover after riding it for a week or so that some of the nuts need tightening. You go to your toolbox and grab your wrenches. None of them fit properly on the nuts, and perhaps you feel tension rising inside you. After all, you’ve had these wrenches for years and they were used successfully by your father before you. Frustrated, you call the store where you bought the bike and demand to know what is going on. Perhaps you are silently steaming at all the time that you are wasting on this. Finally, someone explains that the bike uses metric fasteners, and your tried and tested Imperial measurement wrenches will not fit properly. At this point, some people will feel so upset they might try to return the bike to the store, demanding one that is made using fasteners that their wrenches can fit. They might be verbally abusive with the clerks, and vent loudly to all who will listen, perhaps even waving their arms about in the air.

What’s really going on here? Is this reaction appropriate to the situation? Is the store to blame for the type of fasteners used on the bike? Would someone be justified in feeling all upset and angry over this situation? Is there some sort of crazy conspiracy to annoy them? Or is something else going on, beneath the surface?

As some of you may have guessed by now, trying to return a bike because your wrenches don’t work is an overly intense reaction for the situation. However, when someone is in this state of mind, with emotions being felt intensely, there is no point in trying to reason with them. After all, their body has already shifted much of its resources to the survival part of the brain and body core, and little logical thinking is possible (or happening) at this moment.

Why would someone get so upset over the fact that metric fasteners were used? The answer lies in their stored emotions and memories. Because their emotional kettle is almost full to the brim with emotional responses to situations in the past when they also felt similarly, it does not take much fresh frustration for the kettle to boil over. We humans constantly access our stored data banks to evaluate each new situation. We look in the data bank, which holds visual, verbal and emotional memory components, to see if we’ve seen this sort of situation before. If we have, we then tend to automatically respond in the same fashion as previously, without thinking.

If we have a very pleasant memory of feeling good when someone gave us a gift of flowers or chocolate, for example, we”ll access those stored memories and emotions in a flash when we see these same things again. This can be very useful and enjoyable when what we access is pleasant or heartwarming. On the flip side, it can be rather disheartening if what we recall are unpleasant or painful stored feelings and memories.

So, when you are confronted with a situation which appears in some way to be similar to a prior negative one (and even more so if there are numerous prior ones), it is normal to have the same feelings arise, and for your kettle to boil over. This boiling over can be expressed in anger, frustration, sadness, pain, guilt, etc. And, until such time as you empty that particular kettle, you are going to keep adding to it with each fresh situation.

Empty the kettle

Releasing stored negative or unpleasant feelings is the only way to experience fresh negative situations without them becoming overwhelming. People often try to suppress these built-up feelings as a coping mechanism for when they get too strong, but that is a stop-gap measure, and it does not work. Those feelings lie just beneath the surface, waiting to be triggered and to join in with the recent ones, overflowing from the kettle.

Releasing these stored feelings, or emptying the kettle, if you will, is actually not that hard. However, given our well documented human tendency to avoid unpleasant feelings, the process of emptying the kettle is not so intuitive. To empty a kettle of stored pain, for example, requires that one not only acknowledges the existence of the stored feelings, but that one remains present to the discomfort they bring long enough for them to dissipate. There are techniques such as AER which are designed to accelerate this dissipation process, but they are not so widely known yet. Most people keep stuffing down the unpleasant feelings, hoping they will go away on heir own and then suffering when they don’t.

Just buy or borrow a metric wrench already!

For those who are not emotionally engaged in the situation, it is easy to suggest logical and rational solutions, such as buying some new wrenches. However, these suggestions are falling on ears which are only tuned into fight, flight  or freeze type responses – people who  are in an emotionally intense situation are not going to even hear what the other is saying, let alone be able to think about it or act upon it.  Don Ferguson, a therapist who works with couples, remarked at a Smart Marriages conference in 2008 that talk therapy does not help those suffering from trauma, as it addresses the prefrontal cortex while the intense  emotions and memories are mainly stored elsewhere in the brain. When dealing with stored emotions and feelings, talk therapy usually has little effect, offering a sort of  drive-by relief at best. In fact, constant surface level recalling of traumatic incidents by talking about them can re-inforce those brain circuits, keeping the stored emotions well energized.

While we might not feel much pity for people who engage in dramatic expressions of their discontent when the world does not go the way they want, we can at least try to see that they are being pushed in a certain direction by their stored emotions. Yes, like everyone else, they need to take responsibility for their actions and empty that kettle so their over-reactions become more moderate and appropriate responses. Their reaction to what life serves up each day, which looks to them like a stream of constant problems which are almost insurmountable, is a result of unresolved past issues. There is no need to analyse these responses – they feel anger about something, for example, and that is the kettle to be released, before it boils over again.

There is also little to be gained in trying to figure out why someone feels a certain way while that feeling is present. The feeling puts them into an intense emotional state and at that point, they are literally incapable of rational thought. Empty the emotional kettle and the possibility of analysis of the situation arises. For many people, though, as soon as you drain the emotions from a kettle, there is little interest which remains in the situation and what was a hugely important situation a few minutes earlier. Without a lot of emotional content, the situation becomes benign or even banal.

Learning how to release stored emotions, emptying those kettles, is not hard. Using this approach to situations in which you feel frustrated means you stop finding yourself stressed out over what are really minor situations, but which appear larger when that kettle is full. You’ll also be less likely to wave your arms about, mad at the world, and getting all stressed out.

Copyright 2009 Robert S. Vibert, all rights reserved.

Stressing over what might be…

Have you ever noticed how easy it is for some people to get all concerned about something that might happen? It does not seem to matter if the probability of this “something” actually happening is incredibly low. In fact, there does not seem to be any mathematical relationship between the degree of probability and the intensity of the stressing.

Just so we’re all clear on this concept, let’s dissect it for a moment, as if we were in high-school biology class. Don’t worry, we’re not going to be touching all those “icky” bits.

Stop for a moment and notice if you started to … <drum roll> … actually stress just a little over the thought of what we are about to talk about being as “icky” as you might have found the dissecting of innocent critters in some biology lab. Oh, that wasn’t you, right?  OK, on with the show then. But I’m watching your stress-o-meter, so beware.

Here’s what we’ve got, basically :

– a person

– the present moment

– a possible future

– a thought or two about that possible future

– reactions to those thoughts about this possible future.

Put all these ingredients together, shake well and bake for 20 minutes on medium and depending on the reactions, you could have stress present. This stress arises because we humans react to these thoughts with emotions and feelings and when these reactions include fear, anxiety, worry, etc., we get stressed.

There are some philosophies which say that if you stop having those thoughts, you stop having reactions to them.  I like that idea, except… turning off your thoughts or changing them around can take a lot of willpower and effort. Here’s where I make a confession – I’m lazy. So lazy, in fact, that I don’t want to spend all that time stressing myself about making those thoughts go away. I am a big fan of meditation, but for most people it seems to take a long time to reach that point where you are able to watch your thoughts all the time. Most of the rest of us seem stuck with having some delay between the thought arising, reacting and then entering observer mode. I keep working at it, but maybe there are other options available for the here and now.

There are what I call mental systems such as NLP (Neuro Linguistic Programming) in which thoughts that can trigger emotional responses are constantly “re-framed” into something benign, basically by changing your perspective on them. This approach works some of the time, but often I suspect it requires another fairly hefty investment of energy, as one has to figure out a better way to look at things while emotions are flaring up.

The fact remains that our feelings can pop up quickly after we have a thought and once those feelings are engaged, it becomes harder to think straight. That is because when we get emotionally excited, particularly by thoughts that trigger a fear/anxiety response, our bodies switch over to fight or flight response circuits and blood is diverted from the rational part of our brain to the more survival oriented parts. In other words, your logic circuits are being starved of blood just when you want them to figure out a better way to perceive the thoughts that are running around getting you all worked up.

I’ve come up with a Plan B – drain the energy out of the exaggerated emotional responses and then one can think clearer.  OK, I snuck in the concept of exaggeration with regard to the emotional response. It really is a topic for another article, but many times we over-react to thoughts and situations because we have a whole warehouse of unresolved situations stored inside us. Until we resolve them, these situations and their associated thoughts and feelings keep popping up asking for our attention. So, until they get resolved, they bring their energy to the party when we start to speculate about a possible future. The worry we feel is often not just the normal worry about potential future situation X. It is also the accumulated unresolved worry from past situations that we have yet to release.

Given this, we really could benefit from draining those lingering feelings when they arise. That is where releasing techniques such as AER (Awareness Expression Resolution) come in handy.

In Plan B, when we have a thought about the future and some reaction occurs, we notice it and use AER to drain the energy out of it. Voila, this potential future is now visible in a much more realistic manner. And, the potential to get stressed over what might be is greatly reduced.

I wish you well on your journey.

Copyright 2009 Robert S. Vibert

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