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* Something you never knew about your Emotions. Brian Lynch If we go through life not thinking much about our emotions, which is the ax I a...
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“I’m going to have a nervous breakdown.” Brian Lynch I remember when I was thinking about going into medicine I wondered what a ...
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Death and Pain and the Failure of the War on Drugs The ethical vice of Moral Injury This article is not aimed at physicians. Speaking about...
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Looking For Joy " Melt the clouds of sin and sadness Drive the dark of doubt away Giver of immortal gladness Fill us with the light of...
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Mirroring People Brian Lynch We have all been with people who are affable and agreeable. They make us feel at ease. We will now and then ge...
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This is not my usual essay. I take the liberty to announce the publication of my new book The Murals of the Mezquitán Cemetery, Guadalaj...
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* Who Says We Are Not Aware of Shame and Humiliation? "The basis of shame is not some personal mistake of ours, but that this humiliat...
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* "On Stuttering" This is written as a suggestion for those that stutter or for those helping others overcome it. On stuttering o...
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"You Just Might Get What You Need" … . “It is interest… which is primary.[Interest] supports both what ...
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Something I have been wanting to say. Brian Lynch [This piece will be confusing to some. I hope only at first. It refers mainly to the AA m...
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About Me
Featured Pohttps://emotionalmed.blogspot.com/2023/06/is-introduction-to-my-pamphlet-entitled.htmlst
This is the introduction to my pamphlet entitled Doing -Thinking -Feeling- In the World and serves as an introduction to this blog. You migh...
Sunday, May 9, 2010
“ Interest is the impediment to ongoing shame.”
" Everything and Nothing"
"Everything and Nothing"
Sweet dreams are made of this
Travel the world and the seven seas
Everybody's looking for something
Some of them want to use you
Some of them want to get used by you
Some of them want to abuse you
Some of them want to be abused
The Eurythmics
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
"School Violence"
AFFECT AND ADOLESCENCE
ON THE TRAGEDY IN LITTLETON and other shootings.
Revised
I am a family doc, and I am supposed to know everything, so if someone asks me about the school shooting in Littleton, Colorado, or other shootings, I am supposed to have an answer.
Several years ago, I would not have had a very good answer. I do now. I wrote this originally sometime near the time of the Columbine shooting now 25 years ago. Things are not better. The cause is the same and as shootings have gone far beyond schools we need to understand that the same dynamic applies.
So the piece is based on the simplest of concepts. It is not more security, it is not having armed teachers and it is not mostly everything that is being repeated. It is about not hurting people. But we must start at the right place. It is about not hurting our children so they do not hurt others.
I now modify the above by saying that we are in such trouble that addressing the problem through education about hurting others, while essential, is not going to stem the tide by itself. We must stem the tide of guns. Since Columbine, the number of guns has increased by some 100 million in the united states. More than one per citizen.
But I am writing about the core issue of processing hurt. At the time of Columbine, I had just learned of a concept that I will call a "a compass of hurt." When we are hurt, we either withdraw, attack others, attack ourselves, or try and avoid the situation; these four ways, in the main, only cover up the hurt; they do not address the hurt.
That said there is a fifth way, and that is to examine the hurt. To come and appreciate it and its roots. To deal with it, to take the hit and then ask the question, why did this or that hurt me so much that I would attack another or berate myself or use drugs? The hurt we feel can come from an idea, a thought, or a memory.
The hurt comes because we are interested in life, and things get in our way. We are interested in having loving parents, but we don't. We are interested in having loving siblings but don't. We are interested in having loving classmates but don't. The teenage years are some of the most vulnerable to feeling hurt. It is that time of great definition in our life. What is important is, I firmly believe, not the influence of radio, TV, or movies but the influence of those people that we have great interest in. If we are attentive parents, teachers, and friends, we will not produce people that will take murderers as our example.
To be sure, this is not a simple journey. I do not accuse, as we, who expound this psychology, also believe that, unfortunately, life can be and is quite capricious. Single instances of intense emotion seem to be able to dramatically affect one's actions and outlook on life. Thus we know that a child can be easily damaged.
The trick is not to point the finger at the parents but at all of us; parents, teachers, doctors, friends, and neighbors need to care about each other's hurt. We must ask and make it clear that it is OK to show emotion. It seems, in the main, that the "trench coat Mafia", the group of the Columbine pair was part of what was seen simply as esoteric.
We do not want to expunge individuality, but we believe that it is imperative to become sensitive to such isolation at this age, or truly at any age, and ask ourselves are withdrawing due to hurt and might that withdrawal revert, at any time, to attack. To quote Dr. Donald Nathanson, the attack comes when "if there is nothing we can do by our own hand or mind to raise our self-esteem, we tend to reduce the self-esteem of anybody available."
When you woke up this morning there was mostly likely another mass shooting last night or going on right now.
"Heart attack"
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
"Self Esteem"
"Self-Esteem"
At first blush, it would seem that no one could argue the worth of someone enhancing his or her self-esteem.
This has led to many, many good and not-so-good innovations. Many places have de-emphasized competition. Probably the best outward sign of this is in athletics where, especially in the younger years, everyone leaves the “competition” with a trophy or ribbon. On the other hand, for the most part, there has been lip service to these ideas. Competition is more than alive and well.
But what of “self-esteem?” The downside has been a curious unintended consequence of children in effect, and putting it in plain language, “thinking too much of themselves.” The emphasis switches to “I” should feel well or have a right to feel well at all costs or I “deserve” to feel good and any pain and suffering is now a new defeat.
It is a vicious circle as the whole point of “self-esteem” programs is to make you feel good about yourself but if this threshold is crossed and I get the screwy idea that I am now entitled to no problems, well, as someone said, “When desire outruns reality shame ensues.” When we want too much, care too much, reach too high we fall on our faces. “Self-esteem” in short is a weak concept. It is important, but falling on your face is inevitable too.
I see it as a need to teach young people from the earliest ages to be aware of emotional problem-solving. This simply translates to “problem-solving” in general. The core of this teaching is that one is always going to feel the pangs of defeat and that the way to feel good about oneself is to “Solve the problem!” We then learn to combine our suffering with “self-esteem.” I get interested in the problem and thus do “work.” Get interested in the pain and it will go away. Interest plus work = JOY! “I” did something. “I” participated. I either succeeded or I did not, but put the emphasis on trying, nothing better than “A” for effort if we are going to have such judgments. “Self-esteem” is one of those many slights of hand that we have come up with to make us think there is a “Royal Road”, an easy way, to “Happiness.”
A central part in teaching “doing it right” is to emphasize not only interest in self but also in how others feel. Feeling good is a joint enterprise. We want to have “mutual interests.”
Again “self-esteem” can be a very dangerous concept that can lead me to believe that I should always end up “smelling like a rose.” Then, on the other hand, I am not telling anyone to tell anyone to “toughen up.” I would rather not use the concept at all. I think the whole thing is solved by understanding that we all need our interests, our “joys” and hopefully we will have our interests that we will have with others. These will be tasks that we can complete with others and this will lead to moments of pride and joy. We may fail, but we will have been taught that that is part of the process, part of the learning process.