管家婆免费开奖大全

Don't brood or wallow when feeling bad, 管家婆免费开奖大全 study says

Stressed hands in a Flickr photo
Feeling bad about your thoughts and judging your emotions can make you feel worse, 管家婆免费开奖大全's Brett Ford says in a recently published paper (photo by Matt Harris via Flickr)

Don鈥檛 bury your feelings, but don't dwell on them, either.

That鈥檚 the key message of a new study from researchers at the 管家婆免费开奖大全 and UC Berkeley on the psychological health benefits of accepting negative emotions.

Brett Ford, the lead author and an assistant professor of psychology at 管家婆免费开奖大全 Scarborough, says her research shows that people feel better when they treat bad feelings like 鈥減assing clouds.鈥  

鈥淲hen times are tough, and you鈥檙e feeling angry, worried, sad and so forth 鈥 try to simply let your feelings happen,鈥 she said.

Here are four takeaways from the study, in :

  1. Acceptance helps over the long-term: Researchers measured participants level of acceptance, then asked them to complete daily diaries, and measured their psychological health again after six months. Those who 鈥渉abitually accepted mental experiences tended to report greater psychological health.鈥 Researchers controlled for such factors as gender and ethnicity.
     
  2. Accepting negative emotions doesn鈥檛 cause 鈥渃ollateral damage鈥 with positive emotions: The researchers subjected 156 female undergrads to a lab stressor, asking them to sell themselves for an on-the-spot and unexpected fake job interview. The students reported both negative and positive emotions, including feeling excited and energetic. However, acceptance of the negative emotions 鈥 measured with a mindfulness questionnaire 鈥 didn鈥檛 lessen their positive feelings. 鈥淭his is important, given that accepting mental experiences could theoretically have the downside of attenuating positive emotion experiences in addition to negative emotion experiences,鈥 the paper says.
     
  3. Engaging with your emotions doesn鈥檛 mean wallowing in them: In fact, it鈥檚 the opposite 鈥 accepting your emotions tends to be correlated with 鈥渓ower rumination鈥 or brooding. 鈥淭his may be because an important part of brooding/wallowing is the act of judging and evaluating one鈥檚 emotions,鈥 Ford said in an email. 鈥淎cceptance helps alleviate this judgment.鈥 
     
  4. Accepting your emotions isn't the same as accepting a situation: One motto of Alcoholics Anonymous is to 鈥渁ccept things we cannot change.鈥 That鈥檚 not the kind of acceptance measured in Ford鈥檚 study, which focused on thoughts and feelings. The acceptance of situations is a 鈥渄ouble-edged sword,鈥 she said. It can be helpful to stop struggling against circumstances outside your control, but it can also lead to 鈥減assive resignation.鈥 
    鈥淲hen individuals accept their emotions and thoughts, it is actually an active process that involves non-judgmentally acknowledging and even embracing one鈥檚 feelings,鈥 she said.

The research was supported by National Institutes of Health grants awarded to Iris B. Mauss.

The Bulletin Brief logo

Subscribe to The Bulletin Brief

UTC