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Owning Emotions: The Compulsion to Comfort

Anonymous's picture

cry

Who doesn’t love a good cry?

Turns out a lot of people don’t. Of course, there are safe spaces where we can own our tears … workshops, retreats, support groups, the Pink Posse. But there is still much of the world where the sight of someone crying will send an entire room into a silent panic.



You’ve been there. You’re sitting at a meeting table at work, or standing in line at a store, or hanging out at home. You are fatigued, frustrated, moved, or overwhelmed. You surrender to your emotions. Tears begin to flow.

Suddenly, everyone else in the room stops breathing. They look away. Talk amongst themselves. Pretend it’s not happening. Or worse yet …

They tell you to stop.

“Don’t cry,” they say, out of a desire to comfort and support you. And as loving as the gesture may be, it is not about you feeling better … it’s about them feeling better. Your tears make them uncomfortable. Stop. They say. Don’t cry.

Why? What is it about crying that freaks people out? Where in our evolution did it stop being okay to have our feelings? These of course are rhetorical questions, age-old and contemplated and theorized to death. And really, the “why” isn’t important. What is important is to own our feelings, and make it okay for others to own theirs.

Aliveness ≠ joy

One of the biggest lessons I’ve learned over the past year is that being fully alive doesn’t mean being happy all the time. To be human is to have the full gambit of experiences and emotions. Kind of like the seasons, cycling through times that are more challenging to get to the bright spots makes life richer and, dare I say, a bit more fun.

Plus, the only way past any experience is through it – not around it. If we stifle tears, rage, grief, sorrow, or even joy – it’s going to lurk, distract us, even make us sick – until we acknowledge and HAVE the emotion. If we grew up this way (many of us did), there is so much stored in our bodies and psyches, affecting us in ways of which we’re not even aware. How much easier would this be if we simply gave ourselves and others permission to let out whatever’s going to come anyway?

Holding space

As part of our commitment to seeing each other with magical eyes, next time you’re in the company of someone who’s having some emotion – no matter where or when or how “appropriate” or not it is – I invite you to simply hold space for them. Don’t try to comfort them, tell them it will be okay, suggest that they stop crying, or even pass them a tissue. But don’t turn away or pretend like it’s not happening, either. Simply be there. Depending on who it is, a hug might be welcome, or a held hand. Let your intuition tell you what is needed.

How does that feel, Pinkies, to know that it’s actually not your responsibility to make anyone feel “better?” That being the kind and loving spirit you already are is enough – more than enough? How much more space might you hold, knowing that you don’t have to manically run around inside that space trying to make everything okay?

Letting you do your thing (and loving you all the more for it),
Joy

Comments

tuhina's picture

the most beautiful thing i

the most beautiful thing i have read so far and so comforting.

i hate it so much when during a bad time people try to make small of your sorrow and try to comfort you by saying - its, nothing, it will pass, you have been through worse, others go through worse and blah blah blah.

well, maybe. but at THAT time, that is not what we want to hear. at that time , that particular hurt is hurting and being allowed to acknowledge it with a few tears in peace means so much and helps you to move ahead. but how many understand that?

my sorrow may be small and seem so to me too the next day, but at that time please let me cry my small tears and heal. help me if you can or else give me the space.

thank you so much once again.

Dana Theus's picture

LOVE LOVE LOVE

LOVE LOVE LOVE this: "Aliveness ≠ joy One of the biggest lessons I’ve learned over the past year is that being fully alive doesn’t mean being happy all the time."

I went through a really tough time around my first divorce (quite some time ago) and what was probably my most amazing realization was how alive I felt when I was miserable and in pain. I felt alive in a new way for the first time, aware that I was LIVING my life and that it was MY life and MY choices and the pain was MINE and part of my life experience. I've never forgotten those lessons. I'm not so miserable these days as a rule (thank GOD), but the lesson is never far from my heart.

Thank you for acknowledging this wonderful fact of living and for describing it so beautifully for us all to learn from.

YOU, my dear, are a JOY. (Hee)_

Love, Light and a few tears now and then ~Dana

Joy's picture

Aw, Lilith, I'm so glad.

Aw, Lilith, I'm so glad. Sending another hug directly to your heart. The Pinkies love you too - more than you can imagine. xoxoxo

lilith gwener's picture

oh joy! reading that felt

oh joy! reading that felt like a great big hug. <3 just what i needed to hear. i love the pinkies sooooooooo much!

Joy's picture

Yes, totally. Thanks you

Yes, totally. Thanks you guys. I recently learned the meaning of a beautiful term: "equanimity." It basically speaks to the idea of letting others have their own experience while you have yours. Doesn't mean you can't be compassionate or even empathetic, but it definitely makes for a much richer and more empowered existence when we realize that our energies are best spent on our own stuff. Another teacher of mine made up a smashing acronym for this concept: LOPHTOT. Let Other People Have Their Own Trips.

amy's picture

Thanks for putting this out

Thanks for putting this out there, Joy. So true!

I just led a workshops of Moms, where one especially touched Mama cried alot. Not one woman in the room tried to change it...they all simply sat, and held space, and nodded, and appreciated that her depth of emotion was adding to the rich discussion underway. I was blown away by their calm and loving presence.

I agree with Kat, it's empowering when we realize that it's not our job to fix anything for anyone else. We grow our own spirit in simply witnessing and holding space for someone else, and they benefit enormously from the love and respect beamed in their direction.

Big Pink love, Amy

Kat's picture

So often we feel the need to

So often we feel the need to fix everything, for others and for ourselves. It seems kind of oxymoronic but how empowering it is when we finally realize we can not.

Joy's picture

Thanks Suze. Good point with

Thanks Suze. Good point with the baby especially. I didn't even think of that ... how often do we tell KIDS not to cry? "Shhhh ... " Wow. There's a can of worms for another post. =)

Another good point about remembering to hold space for ourselves. We only compound a negative feeling by being ashamed to feel it.

Thank you as always for adding another dimension to how I think about stuff. You are such a gift. Love you babe. xooxox

Suzanne's picture

GREAT post -thank you for

GREAT post -thank you for this! So often what we need is to experience the emotion and to have someone we love acknowledge the legitimacy of the feeling first and THEN try to help us through it, so that we don't end up feeling like they're trying to change us. I try to remember this, whether it's with my family, my friends, my newborn, or even with myself!

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