Sometimes a wound will open up when I realize something I'm doing is unnecessary, or otherwise unmerited, and I'll plunge into temporary despair. But then it's *been felt*, and it slowly just stops mattering altogether. When that happens, it's feels like my entire body lightens.
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My Twitter persona, for example, would keep changing - and I realized it was a function of anxiety surrounding certain people I'd talk to here. So I divided them in two: people I'd no longer interact with, and people I'd change my interactions with to something that felt better.
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Stuff like this happens -all the time- now. I'll have feelings that are almost unbearably intense, but then when they are simply felt, they decamp and take entire problem areas with them.
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I'm starting to get the sense that I've had a lot of emotional failure modes that I wasn't aware of. Stuff that would plunge me into anxiety, depression or rage, and leave me stuck there. Now it feels like my entire emotional body is slowly, painfully rewriting itself.
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So my mood *regulation* is awful. I have very little control over how I feel at any given time, because I've lost some ability or will to filter it. But the flip side is my baseline mood keeps improving all the time, on the sly. With ups and downs, of course. It's not glamorous.
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Think that's about it. Feel free to ask about anything I've said, if you feel like it.
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Also, thanks for asking. Felt good to get all that off my chest.
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Replying to @Triquetrea @chagmed
Thanks for sharing that - I'm glad it felt good. Lots of interesting stuff there, that I can relate to. I like your fishing analogy also, makes good sense to me.
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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)....2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @misen__ @Triquetrea and
...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
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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.
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