Frequently asked questions about thinking, epistemology, and cognitive tools. 6402 answers
Sometimes emotions accurately reflect reality and sometimes they reflect distorted perception.
The same emotion means different things in different contexts.
Sometimes your emotional system fires when there is no real threat — evaluate before acting.
Sometimes you do not feel what you should — numbness is also data.
A single emotional event is less informative than patterns across many events.
Include emotional data as one input among many rather than the sole determinant.
Sharing what you feel and why provides valuable information to people you trust.
When emotions are information rather than commands they become useful rather than overwhelming.
Emotional regulation means modulating intensity not eliminating the emotion.
Sometimes you need to increase emotional intensity and sometimes decrease it.
You function best within a range of emotional activation — too high or too low impairs function.
Controlled breathing directly affects your nervous system in seconds.
A double inhale followed by a long exhale rapidly reduces stress activation.
Physical movement processes emotional energy that the body is holding.
Changing how you interpret a situation changes the emotion it produces.
Asking how you will feel about this in a year reduces immediate emotional intensity.
The act of naming an emotion engages the prefrontal cortex which modulates the amygdala.
Changing your physical environment can shift your emotional state.
Being with calm trusted people helps regulate your own emotional state.
Build a personal toolkit of regulation strategies for different situations.
Managing emotional inputs prevents overwhelming states better than managing them after they occur.
Sleep deprivation dramatically impairs emotional regulation capacity.
Your ability to regulate emotions improves with practice like any other skill.
Chronic emotional flatness may indicate you are regulating too aggressively.