By PLAVEB

Posts Tagged ‘overcome fear’

Emotional Intelligence 3: Understanding Emotion

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

Further from my last blog yesterday on the skills needed to be able to use emotions, the next factor of emotional intelligence is the ability to be able to understand emotions. Our emotions convey a lot of information about ourselves, others and the situations we find ourselves in. The ability and skill with which we can think about and decode the messages our emotions convey are vital in our day-to-day lives.

Understanding emotions require a 6 core attributes:

  1. Emotional Literacy - having the ability to be able to decode, think and talk about our emotions,
  2. Understand how emotions can combine to form other internal outcomes,
  3. Know how our emotions can progress from one emotion to another,
  4. Understand how both yourself and others are behaving due to emotional reactions,
  5. Predict how people are likely to feel and act in different situations,
  6. The ability to be able analyse emotions and their causes both in ourselves and others.

As you can see these are quite a complex series of abilities. Emotional resilience and the ability to overcome fear often relies on these skills, particularly the ability to be able to predict and decode our emotions.

Ha Ha Bonk: Laughing your way to emotional resilience.

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

What goes ha ha bonk? - Someone laughing their head off. (or should that be ‘lol bonk’ these days?)

Two aerials meet on a roof, fall in love get married. The ceremony wasn’t much but the reception was brilliant.

In 1979 Norman Cousins, a journalist published a book called Anatomy of an Illness as Perceived by the Patient. In it Cousins describes how he suffered from inflammatory arthritis, a painful and debilitating illness. He also describes how with the aid of Marx brothers films he was able to reduce the pain and the inflammation, eventually returning to work.

So can humour or humor if you are American (you missed out the most important part of humor - u!)  really increase our emotional resilience?

Does laughing help us overcome fear and reduce pain? In the next few articles (in http://www.fearcourse.com/articles-and-notes.html) and blogs I will review the evidence and have a few chuckles along the way.

Knock, Knock

Who’s there?

Interupting cow

Interupti..

MOO!

So thank moo for reading this blog - more soon. Lol, he he and ha ha.



You are here: Home Blog overcome fear