Emotions are like background programs running on your mental computer—when acknowledged, they free up resources, but when ignored, they demand more attention and drain your capacity to focus.
• Understanding the five universal emotions identified by psychologist Paul Ekman: joy, fear, sadness, anger, and disgust
• Each emotion serves an evolutionary purpose: fear protects from harm, joy indicates safety, sadness shows something matters, anger responds to threats, disgust warns of potential poison
• Naming your feelings without judgment helps process emotional data and organize it effectively
• Emotions are a mix of bodily sensations and thoughts that can calm down once acknowledged
• Personal example of how naming feelings of irritation, sadness and fear brought mental lightness despite unchanged circumstances
• The paradox: focusing on feelings temporarily allows us to eventually focus better on other tasks
• Watch "Inside Out" for a family-friendly introduction to universal emotions
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Opening Music by Jeremiah Alves from Pixabay
Closing Music by Aleksandr Karabanov from Pixabay
Thank you for listening,
much metta,
Dr G