More threads by David Baxter PhD

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
Acknowledge the reality of other people?s feelings
by Gretchen Rubin, The Happiness Project
May 23, 2008

A reader recommended How to Talk So Kids Will Listen & Listen So Kids Will Talk by Adele Faber and Elaine Mazlish. I couldn?t agree more. I think this is the best parenting book out there.

One of that book?s most important lessons is simple, and just as applicable to adults as to children: acknowledge the reality of other people?s feelings. Don?t deny feelings like anger, irritation, fear, or reluctance; instead, articulate the other person?s point of view.

Sounds easy, right? Wrong. I had no idea how often I contradicted other people?s assertions of their feelings until I tried to quit. ?You always have fun when we go.? ?You should be thrilled, this is great news.? ?It won?t be that much work.?

The other day, I had a chance to put this principle to work. I was in the bedroom when the Big Girl burst in, crying. I knew it was real crying, and not fake crying, because the Big Girl has a very convenient ?tell? when she?s staging her tears. If she balls up her hands and holds them to her eyes, like an actress in a melodrama, she?s faking. This time, her hands were down, so I knew she was really upset.

I pulled her onto my lap, and she sobbed into my shoulder, ?People always pay attention to the Little Girl but nobody ever pays any attention to me.? Now, it isn?t factually true that no one ever pays any attention to the Big Girl, but I managed to restrain my first impulse, which was to argue, ?What about the five games of Uno I played with you last night?? and ?You know everyone loves you just as much as the Little Girl.?

Instead, I said, ?Wow, that hurts your feelings. You feel ignored.? I rocked her for a few minutes without saying anything, then said, ?You feel like people pay more attention to the Little Girl.? We sat in silence for a while. She seemed to be getting calmer. Then I said, ?You?re our most precious, darling girl, and no one would ever forget about you, or think that someone else is more important than you.? Then she got off my lap and skipped off!

Experts say that denying bad feelings intensifies them; acknowledging bad feelings allows good feelings to return. That sure seemed to be what happened.

This principle is just as true for adults. Recently, I undertook a MAJOR household project. Which, I admit, I did with about zero grace ? but I did do it. The Big Man was well aware of my simmering resentment. Just before I was about to start the biggest part of it, he looked around and said, ?Well, this doesn?t look like it will be too tough.? Wrong thing to say! Probably, he thought he was being comforting or encouraging. Instead, he enraged me. It would have been better to have acknowledged my feelings, by saying something like, ?Wow, this looks like a huge job, it?s great that you?re going to do this.? Plus it never hurts to give me some gold stars.

I?ve found, too, that when other people deny or ignore my feelings, I tend to keep repeating myself (i.e., whining), because I don?t feel heard. So, for example, maybe the Big Man doesn?t want to talk about my annoying encounter with the cable guy, and I don?t even particularly feel like talking about it, but until I get my ?Wow, that must have been so annoying,? I can?t let it go.
 

Lana

Member
I only have one thing to add: YES!!! :D

But seriously, that article is so on spot. I think failure to acknowledge and validate feelings is a big key to many issues, peronal and intrerpersonal. I wonder if maybe past resentments of not being acknowledged get in the way: "Well, when I was dealing with <insertissuehere> no one helped me!" or "We all have that problem." or "Stop wallowing." or (personal favorite) "You're blowing things out of proportion" and "You're just too sensitive"...:yuck:Comments like that rarely solve anything, but they do deepen the hurt and resentment.
 

braveheart

Member
This is a principle of most good psychotherapy - and something I find works well for me in my therapy sessions.
Like Jung said, we don't heal by imagining 'streams of light, but by making the darkness conscious'.
If we acknowledge what is in the shadows, see it for the reality that it is, it starts to lose some of it's destructive power over us. It's a relief. Real. Tangible. And can start to make us more whole, as so often the more shadowy feelings have had to be repressed, suppressed and denied for others so called comfort...
 

SoSo

Member
I like this...really! I like the fact that it is okay to voice a feeling and not be rejected or made to feel small. As a child, if I spoke, which I did rarely about feelings, I was told "why talk so stupid?" by both my DNA donors. If I came home from school and I had been bullied or beat up I was asked "well, what did you do wrong?" :confused: so I learned at an early age to hide emotions as well as I could. I like what you said braveheart about "it starts to lose some of it's destructive power over us" and that I think is so true so will acknowledge all of what is in the shadows someday and hopefully, heal.
Feisty:hide:
 
Replying is not possible. This forum is only available as an archive.
Top