Winter Garden Magazine February 2016 - Justin & Holli Trisler | Page 40

A Good Way of Dealing with Bad Feelings How Emotional Sanity makes for Healthy Relationships  Sooner or later it happens in the best of relationships: some little thing catches us off guard and rubs us the wrong way. Before we know it, we find ourselves flooded with  inappropriate and, moreover, extremely unpleasant emotional tides. These moments are dangerous, because frequently these emotional states of emergency lead us to say or do things we regret soon after. More often than not, we only realize it when we can’t take them back. In real life, words spoken or deeds done can not be retracted with a simple ctrl-Z command. Of course, we can apologize, but in most cases, this move will only work the first or maximum the second time around. Yet how can we deal appropriately with these challenging emotional tides? And where do they come from? The Emotional Backpack We all carry a certain amount of emotional baggage around with us. I like to call this our “emotional backpack”. That’s where we store experiences which were emotionally overwhelming for us at the time. These can be experiences which were traumatic. They can, however, also be experiences which wouldn’t really have been a problem for anyone else — yet for us they were. When an experience is emotionally overwhelming, we need the support of other people to cope with it. As children, we instinctively looked for this support: we fled into mommy’s arm or hide in daddy’s lap when the other kids were being mean, our pet died or some other terrible thing had happened. If things went well, this was a place where we could have a good cry or let off some steam and soon enough everything was back in place. When their caretakers are available to them in this way, kids are able to  process challenging experiences. They are still painful and might still be sad when they think back on them later on, yet they are no longer emotionally overwhelming. When this kind of loving attention is missing, the experience goes into our emotional backpack, where it then waits for an opportunity to discharge. In theory, this is a good thing because if we carry emotional baggage around