One thing most of us find is the
biggest challenge in life, particularly within our families and in our
workplace settings, is the regulation of our emotions.
We each have our buttons, that
when pressed elicit the sort of emotional response we long try to repress.
Anger is the classic example. Another is tears—controlling ourselves in a
public environment. Other people struggle with going to water when faced with a
bully. Rarely do we ever complain about the happy emotions, however.
Each of us has an opportunity to
develop situational mastery of our emotions.
This is about progressing along
the emotional continuum toward maturity.
As we identify our ‘sore spots’,
and those emotional situations that get us in a pickle, we have the opportunity
to work with the Spirit of God in praying for the resources to meet those
situations better next time.
We pray for awareness of those
situations and for the courage to respond better.
We want to be able to express our
emotions, in a positive way, when it is appropriate to be emotional—in genuine
sadness or joy, within myriad other emotion.
We also want to be able to control
our emotions in those situations where an emotional response will do no good,
or even perhaps harm.
Two Halves Make a Whole
As we plot our emotional course
throughout our days and situations, we foresee threats before they arrive. Half
of a better emotional response is in the planning. The other half is in the
execution—deciding to maintain
control in the moment.
Deciding has resolution about it.
In deciding—making the decision—we commit to that decision. And then we see it
out; all the way through to the logical end point.
We want to know ourselves.
Emotional regulation is about
knowing ourselves in our situations.
Knowing ourselves is the key.
Only in knowing God can we
truly know ourselves.
When we approach the place where
we truly know ourselves—and never is there the perfect destination we arrive
at—we are home to truth, and the truth can threaten us no more.
A great indication that we are home
to truth is how well we regulate our emotions; how liberated we are to enjoy
emotional freedom.
Situational mastery of the
emotions is perhaps the greatest gift of God we could develop and, hence, enjoy.
This gift is a gift to others, not only to ourselves. This gift works for us
and for anything within our sphere of influence.
***
We want to know ourselves.
Emotional regulation is about
knowing ourselves in our situations.
Knowing ourselves is the key.
Only in knowing God can we
truly know ourselves.
© 2013 S. J. Wickham.
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