Try Feeling It Before You Name It
Here is a small experiment. The next time a complicated emotion rises, do not name it immediately. Do not call it anger, grief, anxiety, jealousy, relief, or love. Just notice what is actually there. Maybe there is pressure behind your ribs. Heat in your face. A hollow feeling in your stomach. An urge to leave and an urge to stay happening at the same time. Stay with those sensations for a moment before reaching for a word. It is surprisingly difficult. The mind wants a label because labels create the feeling of control. Once we call something anger , we think we know what it is. Once we call it fear , an entire story arrives with the word—what caused it, what it means, and what we should do next. But the name is not the thing. The word grief is only five letters. It cannot contain the strange mixture of love, absence, gratitude, resentment, memory, and physical ache that may be moving through a person. The label makes the experience easier to discuss, but it can also make it smaller....