My wife has her own issues with emotions, but without getting into the details of her past, I can say that interacting with that is often very difficult. When I suddenly started having emotional, I almost want to call them seizures, it did not help much at all.
last week I was talking with @euvieivanova about a closely related point, about how emotions can be so intense that they're on the edge of pleasure and pain (although sometimes it's just like a physical pain, like fire in my belly)....
-
-
...and so you have this first principle to train in openness (for example), and that inevitably makes you intensely aware of the sort of emotional conditioning that you've outlined, but then not getting wrapped up, and subsuming those intense side effects as part of mind training
-
It's curious how different traditions deal with this - some frame it as purification, some go 'beyond pure/impure', some show you how to shred any emotion apart into experiential components (eg: shinzen) etc. I suppose we just have to find what works for us and keep applying it.
End of conversation
New conversation -
-
-
I have a pet theory about why un-repressing emotions can feel like physical pain. Pain is the body's emergency signal. If the brain is not hearing the body's normal signals, it escalates to pain. It's like the body screaming, desperate to be heard.
-
Like
@Triquetrea, I found that once I allow myself to feel, the body feels heard, and the perception of the sensation changes. There is also the process that feels like physical restructuring of the organism, which is like growing pains. - 5 more replies
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.