Recently Sloane (not her real name) arrived late. Before our session she had an appointment with a realtor, who got a flat tire and was over thirty minutes late - which in turn made her late for the session.
“I’m so, so sorry,” she apologized. “I wouldn’t blame you if you were upset. It’s so rude and disrespectful for me to be this late.”
I wondered if she was upset at the
realtor who kept her waiting.
“Not at all,” she shrugged. “It’s
not his fault that he had a flat tire. I don’t have the right to be upset. I
can’t be mad if there’s a good reason for what happened.”
Although she expected me to be
upset that she was late, also for circumstances outside her control, she could
not give herself the same right.
“You know what really upsets me?
The bagel I ate for breakfast. Disgusting!” She went on to criticize her weight, her lack
of control and various other perceived deficiencies.
Sloane did not give herself the
right to be angry that she’d been kept waiting, whatever the circumstances, and
instead expressed that anger and frustration by finding fault with her body and
life choices.
She denied her anger, and then took it out
on herself.
Feelings are not
rational. Emotions are outside the
purview of logic. If you deny and
dismiss your feelings towards other people, it’s likely that you will turn on
yourself in one of the following ways:
·
Eating to express
the feelings via the action of eating (ie, expressing anger by eating something
crunchy like chips, an apple, pretzels).
·
Using food for
comfort (ie, eating ice cream, cookies, soothing food).
·
Redirecting your feelings
by attacking your body (as in the example above).
Here are some other ways
people dismiss or deny their feelings:
· “I’m mad at the situation, not the person”
· “I shouldn’t feel that way. “
· “It’s wrong to be angry” or “It’s not nice to
be upset”
· “I don’t want to be an angry
(depressed/anxious/) person.”
· “So what if that bothered me? Other people have it a lot worse!”
Do any of these
statements sound familiar? If so, give
yourself the right to feel what you feel.
Feelings aren’t a
reflection of your character or personality.
They are reactions to situations.
Your feelings need your attention, not your condemnation!
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