Crying About Your Experience: Crying is a normal
releasing function for each human being. We
are born with this ability because through crying we release pain, hurt, and
associated stress. Please begin to
cry about whatever hurts you.
Crying or writing
and crying about what has happened to you can help you sort out your experience
and understand it. And
understanding is crucial for many people. If
you have had a very painful experience, write one sentence and sit with this
sentence and cry. Then write
another sentence and sit and cry. In
time this process will relieve some of the sensitive pain around your experience
and eventually make it endurable. With
time, the pain around the situation will lesson, as long as you allow yourself
to feel it.
- Writing About Your Emotions: We can play all sorts of games with our minds, denying reality is something we all do. However, it’s much harder to do that when we write things down. You don’t have to show your list to anyone, but for complete emotional health you have to fully accept your emotions. This acceptance will be accelerated if you write your list and share this list of emotions with one other human being. But be very careful and choose someone who will guarantee you confidentiality. I highly recommend a counselor, minister, priest, psychiatrist or someone trained in this type of work and who guarantees confidentiality. A professional can often help you put a healthy perspective on these emotions. Writing this list is important.
- Friends/ Counselor/ Minister/ Therapist: You might want to consider seeking the assistance of a counselor, therapist, or minister. They can help you to see things in a more balanced fashion, and help you understand more fully what you are observing in yourself. It can be difficult at times to be objective about yourself.
We need friends who love us and care about us,
especially when we are hurting. And
usually this is not the time when you could say we are at our best.
Tell your friends about what hurts you.
Feel their comfort and love. Make
sure they understand you may not want advice on how to resolve your issues.
What we all need is a loving ear to listen to us with their heart.
We need loving friends in our lives.
Many people pay for a therapist to listen to them because they cannot
tell their friends about their experiences.
Take the risk and share these happenings and your feelings with close
friends whom you can trust.
· How To Release Emotions
Don’t be afraid of your
emotions. Don’t fight them, run
away from them, blocking them out.
Welcome them, be with them, regardless of what they are.
We were born with all emotions. They
are neither good or bad, they just are. Emotions
dissipate and slowly disappear if you feel them, and are present with them.
Just close your eyes and feel them as deeply as you can.
- Deciding How To Respond To Your Emotions: Once you have identified a certain emotion you will at times need to decide how to proceed in dealing with it. There are many options that need to be considered carefully. Certain approaches can have very serious effects. You could lose your job, or you could lose your marriage. It’s very important to consider your options carefully before saying or doing something that cannot be taken back.
The following are a few questions you can ask yourself when deciding what response would suit a particular situation best – and each emotion, each situation is different. *Am I reacting to this situation or is this reaction partially a reaction to a past situation as well? *Am I able to discuss the issues with the person without venting anger? *Will I be able to talk about how I feel to the person? *Is a direct approach the best way to proceed? *What are the consequences of dealing directly with the person/ situation? *What do I expect from this discussion? *Are my expectations realistic? *Should I discuss this with someone before doing anything?
By asking these questions you will be deciding whether a direct approach is the best approach, and if so if you are ready do this at the present time. If your anger is at a “rage” stage, you need to release some of this anger before proceeding to discuss this with anyone.
- The Physical Part of Releasing Your Emotions: There are a number of ways you can begin to release your emotions, especially those relating to anger and hurt.
1)
Go into an empty room, or go for a drive alone, and scream, scream as
loudly as you can. Scream the words
“I hate” or whatever it is you are feeling.
So many people have never screamed out their hurt, their rage. Continue
to do this as long as it feels right inside.
Cry, allow yourself to cry your feeling.
2)
If you cannot scream aloud, imagine you are screaming your rage,
hurt, and pain. Imagine it and
imagine it. See it, and hear it,
and especially, feel it as deeply as you can.
3)
If you are a physical person, take a pillow and keep hitting a chair,
your bed, something, feeling your hurt every time you hit that object with the
pillow. Every time you hit that
pillow say the words “I hate” or “I am frustrated” or whatever it is
that you are feeling.
4)
Get yourself a punching bag and hang it in your basement. Then
take time to keep hitting that punching bag, releasing your rage.
5)
Take your fists and keep pounding a table saying, “I hate” and
just keep doing it.
6)
If you like to write, write about your anger; write about your hate;
write about how hurt you are; write about how afraid you really are.
Journal about what happened and how it is affecting you today.
Write about what you have lost, or what you have never had that has hurt
you so deeply. Feel the feeling!
Don’t be afraid of it!
Under all the anger, rage,
hate, and hurt is one emotion – FEAR!
It’s essential to whatever method you choose to realize that you are hating, that you are full of rage and anger, and that this is a safe way to begin to accept your anger, your hate, and to own your anger and hate as your own. So often we are too afraid to lose control or just afraid of the intensity of our rage, that we run away from it and ignore it. The more you ignore it, the bigger it gets.One of the most important things about releasing an emotion is to concentrate on the emotion rather than what caused the emotion. Forget who did what that caused the emotion, forget about the person who did something to you, concentrate on the “I hate” or “I am angry” or “I am so hurt”. It’s the emotion you need to release. Don’t be afraid to feel your feelings. Feeling them means owning them.
- Speaking Your Truth – To release emotions you need to tell one human being one time only about the situation that caused the feeling buried within you. You need to explain in detail what happened, your feelings around this experience, and how this experience is affecting your life today. So often we hide situations and life’s happenings because we are ashamed and somehow feel things happen to us because we are “bad people”. It’s important to tell your complete story in detail to one person. This will help you to gain a healthier perspective on the situation. However, if you keep repeating the story to different people, talking about it repeatedly, thinking about it over and over again, this becomes a resentment (a recurring negative thought). The resentment then becomes another problem rather than part of the solution.
Secrets are shame-based and incidents kept secret or feelings hidden from others will make these feelings deeper and longer lasting. Emotional secrets lead to emotional and mental illness.
- Transmuting Emotions: Sit in a comfortable chair, close your eyes, put your head back, and relax as best you can. Do the following exercise for 10 deep breaths. Concentrating on your breathing, inhale on the count of six, hold this breath to the count of six, exhale to the count of six, and rest to the count of six, then begin again. If the count of six is too difficult try the count of four or five. Concentrate fully on your process of breathing only. Keep doing this exercise until you feel more relaxed and your head noises have gone away.
Once you have found your emotion,
and described it to yourself, stay with it, hold it, be with it.
Do not try to do anything to it – VERY IMPORTANT - just be with it.
By being with it you begin to integrate this emotion into your very
consciousness and this is the next step in releasing your emotion.
As you go back to visit your buried emotion week after week you will find
the shape getting smaller and smaller, until eventually it just disappears.
It takes many months to transmute an emotion in this way, but it is a
powerful manner to release emotions. This is what is meant by “transmuting
emotions”.
- Releasing Resentments: A resentment is a recurring anger where, on a recurring basis, we keep thinking about something someone has done to us, reliving all the particulars around this situation, with ongoing anger, hate, hurt, or whatever the emotion might be.
Pray for the person you are
resenting. Wish for this person
every wonderful thing you would want to have in your most perfect life.
Wish them blessing and good fortune in all things.
In time, this type of a prayer will release you from your resentment.
This is difficult.
You can also write about this
person. Write all the negative
qualities you see in this person. Then
write about all the positive qualities you see in this person.
Eventually, by writing about the different qualities, a shift will occur
within you, bringing you peace of mind.
You can write about the situation, what the person
did to you and how it affected you, how it made you feel.
Write about how you reacted to this situation, what you said and what you
did. When we accept responsibility
for our own behavior, the resentment often disappears.
- The Power of Prayer: Certain emotions just hang on, regardless what you do. When human effort fails to produce the desired change, then it’s time to hand this over to God. Ask in prayer, that the emotion be lifted from you. My own personal experience has proved to me that this works, when all human effort has failed.
There is one thing that I have included in my prayers for many years, asking for a grateful heart. In my late 20s, I was in deep emotional pain and did not believe life was worth living. I was taught to look for things in my life that I could be grateful for, regardless of the difficulty. It was hard to do this when I was in such emotional pain, but it was essential to my healing. This prayer for a grateful heart has stayed with me for the past 30 years. And today I do have a grateful heart. Being very human, it disappears at times, but it returns when my energy goes there.
- Shifting Your Perspective: Life brings injustice, abuse, bad luck, and emotions of hurt, anger, self-pity, and depression. It’s quite easy to look at what others have done that you consider to be wrong, and these wrongs are very real. It’s not as easy to look at your response to the real wrong or injustice done to you. Someone might have demeaned you and degraded you. Did you punish them in some manner for their behavior? Was your response to the situation a healthy and loving response? Emotions around injustice of any kind are complex. Once we accept personal responsibility for our responses, the emotions around a given situation tend to lose their hold over us. It’s important to honor that an injustice has occurred. But it’s equally important to be ready to release that from your life, which involves looking at your own behavior, and accepting responsibility for your own actions.
·
Detach Yourself: When
your emotions are running high and you are having difficult reducing the
intensity, try to detach yourself from the situation and the emotion.
Try to imagine the same situation happening to someone else.
Try to see if the behavior would be the same if someone else were in your
situation. If the answer is yes
then you can begin to see that the experience is not necessarily being focused
at you. The other person is
probably acting unconsciously, and you just happen to be the individual “in
their way”. Detaching yourself in
this manner can help you move through very difficult situations without taking
the abuse personally. You might
need to terminate the situation causing
the emotions, but your detachment allows you to look at things more rationally
and quietly.
- Knowing Your Fears: What are the fears underlying your emotions? You will need to know and understand your fears. To do this you will have to swallow some pride and admit and accept that you have many fears that are affecting what you do each day. These fears are often not at the conscious level. Are you afraid of being alone; abandonment; the unknown; adventure; losing face; ridicule; not having enough money; loneliness; death; suffering; losing prestige; not being honored for your work and effort; losing your wife or husband – the list is endless?
Fears are tricky things.
There are some that you need to ignore and just act as if you were not
afraid. For example, if you’re
afraid to say no, your fear will leave as you begin to say no when you need to
say no. At times it’s like
exercising a muscle. The more you
use it the easier it gets. Other
fears are a healthy warning that something is very wrong.
For example, a person might be afraid of another person.
This fear might be the signal to avoid that person, to leave the
relationship.
As you become aware of your fears
and own them to be truly yours, a day will come when you will notice that one of
them has somehow disappeared. That’s
the way it is with fear. As you
live a life in tune with your emotions, a life focused on coming from that place
of love, you will find that many of
your fears will just disappear.
·
Accepting Responsibility For Your Emotions:
Taking care of ourselves is the greatest way we can love ourselves in a
wholesome and healthy manner. And
this means accepting responsibility for our emotions.
Remember, emotions are not good or bad.
They just are. But be
careful and don’t punish yourself or be too hard on yourself.
Balance is the key work. Each
human being is very human, and that means each one of us is born with a full
range of emotions.
· Conclusion
·
Living In Peace: Once
you have completed the looking, the understanding, the releasing of your buried
emotions, you may find you have become accustomed to being in a more intense
emotional state. The exercises
above will heighten your overall emotionality.
If you are relatively certain you have done what can be done, make a
decision to live in peace, at peace with yourself, and at peace with others.
You can decide this. Avoid
those situations that you know will create conflict and upsets.
You cannot change others, you can only change yourself.
There are times where it’s important to stand and fight.
It takes a lot of wisdom to “accept the things you cannot change, and
change the things you can”. Wisdom
to know the difference brings peace of mind.
Contact Information: Mary Kurus is a
Canadian Vibrational Consultant who conducts detailed Vibrational Assessments
that identify the physical, energetic and emotional areas that are affecting
your health today. Mary also makes vibrational medicines called Choming
Vibrational Essences and Choming Herbal Tinctures that can change your energy so
that you feel vital and healthy again. Mary has written many articles about
vibrational healing which can be found on her Website at www.mkprojects.com . You can contact Mary for a Vibrational
Assessment at (613) 733-2856 or e-mail her at mkurus@istar.ca.

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