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Emotions: Feeling, thinking, and communicating

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EMOTIONS: FEELING, THINKING, AND COMMUNICATING CHAPTER TOPICS What are Emotions? Influences on Emotional Expression Guidelines for Expressing Emotions – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Emotions: Feeling, thinking, and communicating


1
EmotionsFeeling, thinking, and communicating
  • Chapter topics
  • What are Emotions?
  • Influences on Emotional Expression
  • Guidelines for Expressing Emotions
  • Managing Difficult Emotions

2
What Are Emotions?
  • Physiological Factors
  • Strong emotions are coupled with strong
    physiological factors
  • Physical components of fear
  • Increased heart rate
  • Rise in blood pressure
  • Increase in adrenaline secretions
  • Elevated blood sugar
  • A slowing of the digestive system

3
What are Emotions?
  • Nonverbal Reactions
  • Feelings are often apparent by observable
    reactions
  • Appearance Changes
  • Blushing, sweating, etc
  • Behavioral Changes
  • Facial expression
  • Posture
  • Gestures
  • Different vocal tone or rate

4
What are Emotions?
  • Cognitive Interpretations
  • The mind plays an important role in determining
    emotional states
  • The symptoms of fear discussed earlier are
    similar to those of excitement, joy and other
    emotions
  • If you were to monitor someone having a strong
    emotional reaction, you would have a hard time
    ascertaining which emotion the person was
    experiencing

5
What are Emotions?
  • Verbal Expression
  • Words can be required to discover the depth or
    intensity of the emotion
  • At times we cant rely on perceptiveness to be
    sure a message is communicated
  • Is a new acquaintance mistaking your
    friendlessness as a come-on?
  • Is a lovers unenthusiastic response a sign of
    boredom with you, or something less personal?

6
Influences on Emotional Expression
  • Personality
  • There is a clear relationship between personality
    and the way we experience and express emotions
  • Extroverts tend to report more positive emotions
  • Neurotic individuals tend to report more negative
    emotions
  • Personality doesnt have to govern your
    communication satisfaction

7
Influences on Emotional Expression
  • Culture
  • A significant factor that influences emotional
    expression in different cultures is whether that
    culture is
  • Individualistic (United States and Canada)
  • These cultures feel comfortable revealing their
    emotions to people with whom they are close
  • Collectivistic (Japan and India)
  • These cultures prize harmony and discourage
    expressions of negative emotions which may upset
    relationships

8
Influences on Emotional Expression
  • Gender
  • Biological sex is the best predictor of the
    ability to detect/interpret emotional expression
  • Research suggests that there is some truth to the
    unexpressive male
  • In one study, females were 10-15 more accurate
    in remembering emotional images
  • People in close relationships are likely to
    experience/express more emotions than those who
    are not

9
Influences on Emotional Expression
  • Social Conventions
  • The unwritten rules of communication discourage
    the direct expression of emotion
  • How many genuine emotional expressions do you or
    we see in daily life?
  • Social rules even discourage too much expression
    of positive feelings
  • Emotion Labor
  • Managing or even suppressing emotions is both
    appropriate and necessary

10
Influences on Emotional Expression
  • Fear of Self-Disclosure
  • In a society that discourages the expression of
    emotions, revealing them can seem risky
  • Emotional Contagion
  • The process by which emotions are transferred
    from one person to another
  • Is it possible to catch someones mood?
  • Emotions become more infectious with prolonged
    contact

11
Guidelines for Expressing Emotion
  • There is not a universal rule for expression of
    emotion
  • Personality, culture, gender, play a part
  • The key is to express emotion constructively
  • Think about a time when you expressed your
    emotion clearly, then wish you hadnt.
  • Those who control their feelings and deny
    distress are more likely to get a host of
    ailments, including cancer and heart disease

12
Guidelines for Expressing Emotion
  • Recognize Your Feelings
  • Beyond being aware, also try to identify
  • Recognize the difference between feeling, talking
    and acting
  • Expand your emotional vocabulary
  • Share multiple feelings
  • You might often express anger but overlook
    confusion, disappointment or frustration

13
Guidelines for Expressing Emotion
  • Consider When and Where to Express Your Feelings
  • Give yourself time to discover the gravity of the
    emotion before full expression
  • Accept responsibility for your feelings
  • Instead of saying
  • Youre making me angry! try Im getting
    angry.
  • You hurt my feelings, say I feel hurt when you
    do that.

14
Guidelines for Expressing Emotion
  • Be Mindful of the Communication Channel
  • Mediated Channels
  • Email
  • Instant Message
  • SMS Message
  • Is it appropriate to end a relationship via
    voicemail?
  • What is the result of using CAPITAL LETTERS in an
    instant message or email?

15
Managing Difficult Emotions
  • Facilitative and Debilitative Emotions
  • Facilitative Emotions
  • Are emotions which contribute to effective
    functioning
  • Debilitative Emotions
  • Are emotions which detract from effective
    functioning
  • Intensity
  • Anger or irritation may be beneficial
  • Rage usually makes matters worse

16
Managing Difficult Emotions
  • Sources of Debilitative Emotions
  • Our genetic makeup
  • Emotional memory
  • Harmless events can trigger debilitative feelings
  • Self-talk

17
Managing Difficult Emotions
  • Self-Talk
  • Interpretations people make of an event, during
    the process of self-talk that determine their
    feelings
  • Event Thought Feeling
  • Being called names Ive done something
    wrong. hurt, upset
  • Being called names My friend must be
    sick. concern, sympathy

18
Managing Difficult Emotions
  • Irrational Thinking
  • The Fallacies
  • The Fallacy of Perfection
  • The belief that a worthwhile communication should
    be able to handle every situation
  • The Fallacy of Approval
  • That it is vital to gain the approval of
    virtually every person

19
Managing Difficult Emotions
  • Irrational Thinking
  • The Fallacy of Shoulds
  • The inability to distinguish between what is and
    what should be
  • The Fallacy of Overgeneralization
  • Basing a decision on limited information
  • When we exaggerate shortcomings
  • The Fallacy of Causation
  • The irrational belief that emotions are caused by
    others rather than by ones own self-talk

20
Managing Difficult Emotions
  • Irrational Thinking
  • The Fallacy of Helplessness
  • Satisfaction in life is determined by forces
    beyond your control
  • The Fallacy of Catastrophic Expectations
  • The assumption that if something bad can happen,
    then it is going to happen

21
Managing Difficult Emotions
  • Minimizing Debilitative Emotions
  • Monitor your emotional reactions
  • Note the activating event
  • Record your self-talk
  • Reappraise your irrational beliefs
  • Replace self-defeating self-talk with more
    constructive thinking

22
Chapter Review
  • What are Emotions?
  • Influences on Emotional Expression
  • Guidelines for Expressing Emotions
  • Managing Difficult Emotions
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