Feeling better after we feel bad.
“What do you do when you feel sad?” people often ask me. (Some even ask, “Do you ever get sad?”)
Yes, OF COURSE I feel sadness, anger, anxiety—sometimes, downright misery—just like everyone else.
Leading a joyful life does NOT mean always trying to be happy.
At the same time, I’m not really one for rumination. Meaning: In our family, we feel our feelings—often deeply—and then, if the feelings are negative, we try to move on. If the feelings are positive, we try to savor them, to hang onto them.
When people hear that I encourage my kids (and my coaching clients, for that matter) to move on from unpleasant feelings, many of them worry. “Well, make sure you aren’t denying their negative emotions,” I’ve been warned, “or sending the message that bad feelings are bad and should be avoided.”
Rest assured: My kids do know that all feelings, good or bad, are okay. They know that I see emotions like sadness, frustration, anxiety, and jealousy as windows into their world and that I love to hear about everything that’s happening with them, whether positive or negative. I do not encourage them to buck up or stuff it down; I do not say things to them like, “You’re fine.” Similarly, I accept the difficult emotions that I experience myself with self-compassion.
But I do encourage people to move on from bad feelings, because rumination is bad for us. As psychologist Sonja Lyubomirsky explains in her great book The How of Happiness:
“Overthinking ushers in a host of adverse consequences: It sustains or worsens sadness, fosters negatively biased thinking, impairs a person’s ability to solve problems, saps motivation, and interferes with concentration and initiative. Moreover, although people have a strong sense that they are gaining insight into themselves and their problems during their ruminations, this is rarely the case. What they do gain is a distorted, pessimistic perspective on their lives.”
Suffice it to say, in my household, when something negative happens, we practice the skills that we need to be able to let go of a grudge and not ruminate.
Here’s how:
1. ACCEPT difficult feelings
The key is not to deny what we are feeling, but rather to lean into our feelings, even if they are painful. Take a moment to be mindful and narrate: I’m feeling anxious right now, or this situation is making me tense. Hang in there with unpleasant feelings at least long enough to acknowledge them.
See if you can objectify your feelings a little bit: Where in your body to you feel them? Do they have a color? A texture? A shape?
We can also guide kids (or friends!) through this process. This is the gist of emotion coaching kids: We help them label what they are feeling, and we validate that their feelings are okay. With younger kids, the challenge is to help them understand that while bad feelings are always alright, bad behavior never is. Be crystal clear about this. For example, it is totally okay that your child is feeling jealous and hateful toward her sister. At the same time, it is never okay to hit her.
2. PROBLEM SOLVE
What did you learn from that embarrassing situation? What can you do to improve a difficult situation tomorrow? Who else can help? Who do you need to forgive before you’ll feel better? Put a plan into place.
3. LET GO. MOVE ON. TRY TO FEEL BETTER
This means that we make a genuine effort to cultivate happiness, gratitude, hope, or any other positive emotion; researchers call this “deep acting.”
Faking a smile or other pleasantries to cover our negative emotions (what researchers call “surface acting”) without actually trying to change our underlying negative emotions will often make us feel worse rather than better. But when we genuinely try to feel more positive—when we do try to change our underlying feelings—we usually end up feeling fewer negative emotions and more positive emotions.
Most often, moving on means distracting ourselves or our children from the situation. We need to leave the scene of the crime, so to speak. In my next post, I’m going to give you a nice long list of techniques that my kids and I use to keep ourselves from overthinking difficult situations and to move on when we want to feel better.
What negative situations do you find yourself overthinking?
Best known for her weekly Happiness Tips, Christine Carter, Ph.D., draws on psychology, sociology, and neuroscience, and uses her own real-world adventures to demonstrate happiness dos and don’ts in action. Dr. Carter is a sociologist at UC Berkeley’s Greater Good Science Center, and the author of RAISING HAPPINESS: 10 Simple Steps for More Joyful Kids and Happier Parents. She teaches happiness classes online throughout the year to a global audience on her website www.christinecarter.com.
*Photo Credit: Spookygonk via Flicker.