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One of our deepest longings – deeper than we even perhaps recognise day to to day – is
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that other people should acknowledge certain of our feelings. We want that – at key moments
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– our sufferings should be understood, our anxieties noticed and our sadness lent legitimacy.
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We don't want others necessarily to agree with all our feelings, but what we crave is
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that they at least validate them. When we are furious, we want another person to say:
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I can see that you've been driven to distraction. It must feel very chaotic for you inside right
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now for you. When we are sad, we want someone to say: I know you're unusually down and
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I understand the reasons why. And when we can't take it all any more, we want someone
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gently to say: It's been too much for you; I recognise that so well; of course it has.
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It sounds desperately simple, and in a way it is. And yet how little of this emotional
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nectar of acknowledgement we ever in fact receive or gift to one another. The habit
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of not having one's feelings properly acknowledged begins in childhood. Parents, even the most
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loving ones, frequently stumble in this domain. It's not that they don't theoretically
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care intensely for their children, it's that they don't appreciate that true care
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involves regularly reflecting a child's moods back to him or herself – rather than
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subtly pushing the moods away or denying that they exist. Here are some typical unacknowledging
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parent-child exchanges:Child: I'm feeling sad. Parent: Don't be silly, you can't
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be, it's the holidays.Child: I'm really worried. Parent: Darling, now that's that's
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ridiculous, there's just nothing to be scared of here.Child: I wish there wasn't any school
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ever ever. Parent: Don't be so silly. You know we have to leave the house by eight.How
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different things might go, and what a different sort of adult the child would have a chance
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to grow into, if such dialogues were only slightly tweaked: if, for example, the parent
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could say: 'It's weird isn't it how it's possible to be sad at the oddest of
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times, even on a beach holiday…' Or: 'I can see you're scared: that wind is really
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fierce out there…' Or: 'It must be horrible having double maths all morning, especially
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after such a nice weekend…' There is one reason why we don't acknowledge as we might:
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fear. The feelings we push away are all, in some shape or other, emotionally inconvenient,
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or troubling or upsetting: we love our child so much, we don't want to imagine that they
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might be sad or worried, lost or having a terribly difficult time at school. Furthermore,
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we may operate with a background view that acknowledging a difficult feeling will make
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it far worse than it is. It will mean fostering it unduly or giving way to it entirely. We
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fear that if we give a bit of unbiased mirroring to our child, we might be encouraging them
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to grow cataclysmically depressive, unfeasibly timid or manically resistant to authority.
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What we're missing is that most of us, once we've been heard, become far less – rather
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than far more – inclined to insist on the feelings we're beset by. The angry person
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gets less rather than more enraged once the depth of their frustration has been recognised;
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the rebellious child grows more, not less inclined, to buckle down and do their homework
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once their feelings that they want to burn the school down, break the headmaster's
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glasses and abscond to a desert island have been listened to and identified with for fifty-five
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seconds. Feelings get less strong, not more tyrannous, as soon as they've been given
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an airing. We become bullies when no one's listened, never because they listened too
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much. The problem of unacknowledged feelings doesn't – sadly – end with childhood.
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Couples routinely put each other through the same mill. For example:Partner 1: Sometimes
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I feel that you don't listen… Partner 2: That has to be rubbish; I put so much work
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into this relationship.Partner 1: I'm worried I might be fired Partner 2: That's not possible,
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you work so hard.All the way to the divorce courts – or an affair.The good news is that
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an enormous uplift in mood is available right now, with very little effort, if we simply
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learn to change the way we typically respond to the I-statements of those who matter to
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us. We only need to play their feelings back to them, even the potentially awkward feelings,
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for a few moments using certain magical phrases: I can hear that you must… You must be feeling
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so… I can understand completely that… Such phrases can change the course of lives.
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Crucially, we don't
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need to be listened to by everyone. We can bear an awful lot of unacknowledged feelings
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when just a few people, some of them in our childhood, and ideally one of them in our
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bedroom and in our friendship circle every now and then plays us back to us. The ranter,
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the person animated by a rigid desire that everyone should listen to them, hasn't (of
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course) been overindulged: they are just playing out the frightening consequences of never
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having been heard when it mattered. There is almost no end to what we may be ready to
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do for those who pay us that immense, psychologically-redemptive honour of once in a while acknowledging what
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we're actually feeling, however odd, melancholy or inconvenient it might be.
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Our Emotional First Aid kit provides a set of useful salves to some of life's most challenging psychological situations. Including friendship, love, sex, work and self.