The Wisdom of Feelings

“I really don‘t like feeling this way.”

This is a comment that therapists hear fairly often.  You may have said this to yourself.  Anger, anxiety, pain, depression, despair, sadness—these feelings can indeed be very difficult and at times can seem acutely unbearable.  Moreover, the statement “I don’t like feeling this way” often signals that you may have a particular relationship with those feelings, a relationship that is built upon deeply held unconscious beliefs about those feelings.  In my experience, those beliefs are embedded in the questions clients ask me when they are having strong uncomfortable feelings:  “Is there a pill I can take for this?”  Or “can’t you do something to help me feel better?”  Many people believe that aversive feelings should be pushed away or resolved as quickly as possible. 

Of course, the therapist can help.  And the process will take time.

 “I really don’t like feeling this way” may signal that there is a story related to the feelings.  The story can often be distilled:  “feelings are bad and are to be gotten rid of as soon as possible.”  Too often, the story about feelings becomes the problem.  If this is what you tell yourself, you may be responding more to the story than the actual situation that gave rise to the feeling.  If the story is negative (which it usually is), attention may be misdirected:  you focus on the story about the feelings and are unable to clearly see the conditions that gave rise to them.  You try to create an ending to the story, but may miss resolving the actual problem. 

Trying to push your feelings away complicates the situation.  When you react to your feelings by pushing them away, those feelings are likely to grow in strength.  While you may temporarily feel better,  you're more likely to end up prolonging and intensifying the pain.  Moreover, the negative story you tell yourself about your feelings will inevitably feed and strengthen the aversion.  You can start to feel overwhelmed, and the impulse to flee or otherwise escape starts to take hold.  There are many escape routes: some people turn to alcohol or pills to feel better while others seek escape in compulsive work, sex or eating.

As counter-intuitive as it seems, it is usually better to lean into your feelings, to accept them as signals that something unsettling has happened.  There is wisdom to be found in your feelings, and strong feelings lead to the deepest insights—when you are able to tolerate and learn from feelings.  And learning from them may mean letting go of the stories you tell yourself about them. 

Instead of impulsively pushing feelings away, it is better to notice that they’ve simply arisen in response to a situation.  And instead of telling yourself a story about your feelings, it is better to ask yourself a few questions: 

·         What is the feeling?  Does the feeling seem to be out of proportion to the situation which gave rise to it?  Sometimes when feelings are especially intense, the intensity may be a signal that the situation is triggering an unconscious memory of an event similar to what you're experiencing now.  Feelings that are out-of-proportion often contain elements of displaced feelings and stories that belong to the past.   

·         What thoughts are associated with the feeling? Paying attention to the thoughts that arise with the feelings may give you a clue about how your beliefs may be contributing to the story.

·         Where in your body do you experience the feeling?  Is there a story about those body sensations?  Memories of old, unhealed traumas are often “stored” in the body.  Those stories must be attended to and processed so that healing can occur. Trauma is best addressed in psychotherapy.

·         What do you believe about your feelings?  Strong, aversive feelings are often associated with negative beliefs:  “I can’t handle this,” “I’m helpless,”  “I’m flawed”  are commonly held beliefs.  Negative beliefs about yourself and your feelings are likely to cloud your perceptions and intensify the impulse to escape.  Negative beliefs may impede effective problem-solving.

Accepting that painful feelings will occasionally arise is a good first step to better managing them.  No one is exempt from emotional discomfort.  However, it is also important to recognize that uncomfortable feelings rise and ebb over time.  This is actually an important point:  Feelings are not permanent.  Although the intensity of your feelings may evoke an unconscious belief that you will have the feeling forever, the reality is that feelings change over time--even from moment to moment.  This is good news.  Knowing that feelings rise and fall can provide the basis for changing your relationship with your feelings and strengthening your ability to cope.

Just noticing your feelings without telling yourself a story about them is not so simple.  Mindfulness and deep self-awareness takes practice.  Becoming aware of the stories you tell yourself takes practice.  Psychotherapy is a very effective process by which to develop awareness and practice those skills. 

A skilled therapist will also help you get to the roots of your suffering in such a way as to help you differentiate past from present and evaluate what is actually happening in the present moment.  A skilled therapist will help you move away from trauma or the negative beliefs about yourself so that you have power to constructively manage your vulnerabilities.  Again, the process takes time. 

Ultimately, psychotherapy will help you change your relationship with your feelings.  In addition to helping you develop strategies for managing your feelings, therapy helps you develop the ability to become aware of the origins of your feelings and the stories you tell yourself about those feelings.  Therapy can help you better evaluate the situations that elicit strong feelings, develop greater clarity about them, and make better choices in response to the situations that evoke intense feelings. 

No one likes feeling aversive feelings.  But your relationship with your feelings need not be averse.  

Why Be Perfect When You Can Be Good Enough?

I recently read a fascinating book on creativity:  Imagination in Action, by Shaun McNiff (Shambhala Publications, 2015).  While the book has much to offer in the way of developing one’s creativity and therapeutic value of making art, McNiff noted that perfectionism is often one of the blocks to fulfilling creative potential.  He then went on to offer an insight that resonated with me:  pessimism is "a close cousin" to perfectionism (p.191).  Although it’s not a new idea, the relationship between perfectionism and pessimism is a fascinating and important one. 

Perfectionism manifests in many ways:  reaching for the perfect body, the perfect relationship, having the perfect career, completing job tasks perfectly, acing the test, creating the "perfect life".  The fantasy of perfection includes notions about a carefree life of ease which will last forever.  Of course, such ease is fleeting, and when life intervenes and things change, you're back to pursuing a new goal that will be more perfect than the last.  Reaching for perfection usually creates stress, especially when success is equated with perfection and you cannot be satisfied with any other outcome.  It can be exhausting--just ask any perfectionist.  

However, perfectionism doesn’t have to be bad.  Some psychologists differentiate between adaptive perfectionists—those people who can accept small flaws or mistakes while continuing to see their overall efforts as successful—and maladaptive perfectionists—those people who are overly critical when they make mistakes, are excessively concerned with the expectations and achievements of others, and are critical of the overall quality of their efforts.  As you might expect, the line between adaptive and maladaptive perfectionism is usually blurry.

Significantly, perfectionism is a often strategy of avoidance:  the perfectionist constantly strives for what ‘could be’ while often dismissing what is.  Ironically, perfectionists demands total commitment, total engagement in order to achieve a very specific, but usually elusive, ill-defined and sometimes irrational goal.  Moreover, the standards of “perfection” are ever-evolving, which, on another level, underscores the truth that perfection is socially constructed and doesn’t exist outside the human mind.  

Perfectionism is ultimately driven by fear:  fear of making a mistake; fear of failure; fear of being humiliated.

Many clients I see talk about their struggles with perfectionism, the belief that “I must be perfect in order to feel good about myself, to be accepted, to belong, to be loved.”  And often at the core of perfectionism is the painful belief that “I am inadequate; I am flawed.”  Striving to be perfect, then, protects you from that negative belief:  “if I’m perfect, no one will see how flawed I really am.”  The trouble is this: failure to achieve that elusive standard of perfection—and being seen as flawed—is catastrophic in the mind of the perfectionist, leading to self-denigrating thoughts,  withdrawal and hopelessness—a sure recipe for depression.

So, the very heart of perfectionism is pessimistic:  “Reality is not good enough, I’m not good enough.”  And because perfection is impossible and accepted notions of perfection change, pursuing perfection cab eventually lead to becomes to another pessimistic thought: “why bother? I’ll just fail again.”  

Having aspirations to grow and achieve is healthy.  Striving to achieve perfection—holding yourself to impossibly high expectations while being highly self-critical and unforgiving—is not. 

As a recovering perfectionist myself, I’ve learned to embrace being ‘good enough’:  you do your best, acknowledge when your efforts miss the mark, and try to improve the next time.  It’s also helpful to let go of trying to control for a very specific outcome.  Similarly, it’s helpful to distinguish between having aspirations and striving for perfection.  In short, be gentle with yourself. 

When you’re good enough, you give your best effort and are mindful of several thoughts:

·       Perfect according to who?  Whose voice speaks when you tell yourself you MUST be perfect?  Chances are you’ve learned about being perfect from someone.  No one is born with ideas about being perfect. 

·       Perfect does not exist.  Perfection is an idea, not a reality. 

·       Everyone makes mistakes.  It is part of being human.  When you accept your mistakes, you accept your humanity.  Learn to forgive your mistakes and move on.

·       When you make a mistake, look at it as an opportunity to learn and improve. In 12-step meetings, you often hear the slogan “progress, not perfection.”  Wise people remember and practice this.

·       What would you say to a friend who berates herself about her failures?  Practice using the same language on yourself.

·       Keep the bigger picture in mind.  Perfection tends to narrow your focus.  Broadening your perspective can help you discern the line between having aspirations and being perfect.

·       When you meet a high standard of achievement, celebrate it. And then move on.

Be patient with yourself.  It took time to develop the maladaptive perfectionist mindset, and it will take time to learn a more adaptive one.  Therapy can help.