Eh, I am jumping back in but I do agree that thoughts precede feelings for the most part, in line with cognitive behavioral therapy.
Oh, yeah, you are right and now that I think about it again, I can recall situations where it went the other way around. I think I believe it works both ways.
My biggest concern is if I cut off from my feelings I'll cut off from being able to be creative.
This is true for me. If I am just happy or content, I am not creative at all. Or maybe I should say I don't have the desire to be creative. I can basically paint a painting right now, but it wouldn't be me spontaneously wanting to paint it.
Yep, I understand what you're saying. The thing is not to avoid by pushing it out of your mind but rather acknowledge it and decide if it's worth getting upset over, my feelings are it usually isn't, if someone around me is being offensive I choose to either challenge them or chalk them down as a tool who isn't worth the effort, either way my thoughts and feelings will result in an action and become effective not simmer inside and upset me. It's about what result you want, generally it works like this; you display anger you receive more anger, you display frustration you receive more frustration etc...
For me it goes a little differently. I continue my previous scenario:
- I have been waiting to go to a party tonight to meet some friends I haven't seen for a while
- I go there and it's great until
- Some guy who I don't know very well
- He's so drunk he is talking all night about something he hates
- At this moment I can't have fun anymore
- I think about what could be done
- I can't stop listening to his rambling
- I feel my stress level going up and am getting annoyed
- I check out if there's good reasons to stay there
- If I don't see anything particularly special (like some friend i haven't seen in year or something), I will probably leave
So to me it is more like a calculation of is it worth staying there and sucking it up.
By that I mean I'm happy to reply I just won't try to convince anyone![]()