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#184 What if we actually felt the feelings? An honest conversation about trauma, hoarding, and allowing yourself to feel

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Content provided by That Hoarder. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by That Hoarder or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

This week, I talk about what happens when I actually let myself feel the tough emotions instead of shutting them down - a pattern that's shaped my life and my struggles with hoarding, self-harm, and eating disorders. After a thought-provoking conversation with Anna Sale on Death, Sex & Money last year, I started questioning whether avoiding feelings has helped or hurt me in the long run and have been trying to process that ever since! I share what it’s like to sit with big emotions, experiment with messy ways to cope, and why feeling the feelings might just be a way forward.

  • Avoiding Feelings
  • Realisation that I tend to do anything rather than feel difficult emotions.
  • Recent personal reflection and processing feelings over the past few months.
  • Impact of mental health and a PTSD flare-up on my ability to manage feelings.
  • Connecting Coping Mechanisms to Avoidance
  • Experience with PTSD, self-harm, anorexia, and bulimia as different forms of not feeling or avoiding emotions.
  • Insights from an interview with Anna Sale on Death, Sex & Money that linked these coping together as forms of avoidance.
  • Acknowledgment that these strategies were more than just avoidance - also punitive, protective, and multifaceted.
  • The Cost and Pattern of Emotional Avoidance
  • Compartmentalising as a lifelong coping skill and its negative long-term consequences.
  • Difficulty breaking the habit of not feeling and the impact on my sense of identity.
  • Recognition that suppressing feelings can be as damaging as (or more damaging than) the feelings themselves.
  • Actively Facing and Processing Feelings
  • Engaging in therapy, journaling (both resentful and creative/collage style), and reading poetry to access emotions.
  • Talking more openly with friends as a supportive measure.
  • Forcing myself to do enjoyable activities (like getting outside), which helps counteract avoidance.
  • Community, Connection, and Support
  • Impact of Trauma and Suppression on Daily Life
  • How PTSD and unprocessed sadness began affecting sleep, revealing that suppressing feelings is no longer effective.
  • Discusses the challenge of letting oneself feel emotions, both by choice and when overcome involuntarily.
  • The risks of being overwhelmed and the delicate balance between feeling and avoidance.
  • Learning and Conversations About Emotional Acceptance
  • Revisiting lessons from previous podcast guests about the counterproductivity of suppressing or over-intellectualising feelings.
  • The concept that suppressed emotions may “come out sideways” through other behaviours, like self-harm or hoarding.
  • Nuanced view of coping mechanisms - not labeling them as purely negative since they served protective purposes.
  • Vulnerability, Shame, and Deepening Relationships
  • Gradual willingness to share deeper, more distressing moments with friends.
  • Examining the reasons behind the instinct to hide intense distress.
  • How vulnerability leads to stronger, more meaningful connections.
  • Positive Effects of Feeling the Hard Stuff
  • Discovering that feeling hard emotions increases the capacity to feel positive emotions more deeply.
  • Finding deeper love, joy, and beauty in everyday experiences.
  • Recognising the importance of support systems when exploring difficult emotions.
  • Reflection and Encouragement for Listeners
  • Encourages listeners to be curious about their own patterns of avoidance and coping.
  • Cautions that intentionally feeling emotions is difficult and requires support.
  • The hopeful observation that allowing feelings can be cathartic, gratifying, and healing—even if it’s uncomfortable.

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  continue reading

196 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 480195375 series 2903216
Content provided by That Hoarder. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by That Hoarder or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

This week, I talk about what happens when I actually let myself feel the tough emotions instead of shutting them down - a pattern that's shaped my life and my struggles with hoarding, self-harm, and eating disorders. After a thought-provoking conversation with Anna Sale on Death, Sex & Money last year, I started questioning whether avoiding feelings has helped or hurt me in the long run and have been trying to process that ever since! I share what it’s like to sit with big emotions, experiment with messy ways to cope, and why feeling the feelings might just be a way forward.

  • Avoiding Feelings
  • Realisation that I tend to do anything rather than feel difficult emotions.
  • Recent personal reflection and processing feelings over the past few months.
  • Impact of mental health and a PTSD flare-up on my ability to manage feelings.
  • Connecting Coping Mechanisms to Avoidance
  • Experience with PTSD, self-harm, anorexia, and bulimia as different forms of not feeling or avoiding emotions.
  • Insights from an interview with Anna Sale on Death, Sex & Money that linked these coping together as forms of avoidance.
  • Acknowledgment that these strategies were more than just avoidance - also punitive, protective, and multifaceted.
  • The Cost and Pattern of Emotional Avoidance
  • Compartmentalising as a lifelong coping skill and its negative long-term consequences.
  • Difficulty breaking the habit of not feeling and the impact on my sense of identity.
  • Recognition that suppressing feelings can be as damaging as (or more damaging than) the feelings themselves.
  • Actively Facing and Processing Feelings
  • Engaging in therapy, journaling (both resentful and creative/collage style), and reading poetry to access emotions.
  • Talking more openly with friends as a supportive measure.
  • Forcing myself to do enjoyable activities (like getting outside), which helps counteract avoidance.
  • Community, Connection, and Support
  • Impact of Trauma and Suppression on Daily Life
  • How PTSD and unprocessed sadness began affecting sleep, revealing that suppressing feelings is no longer effective.
  • Discusses the challenge of letting oneself feel emotions, both by choice and when overcome involuntarily.
  • The risks of being overwhelmed and the delicate balance between feeling and avoidance.
  • Learning and Conversations About Emotional Acceptance
  • Revisiting lessons from previous podcast guests about the counterproductivity of suppressing or over-intellectualising feelings.
  • The concept that suppressed emotions may “come out sideways” through other behaviours, like self-harm or hoarding.
  • Nuanced view of coping mechanisms - not labeling them as purely negative since they served protective purposes.
  • Vulnerability, Shame, and Deepening Relationships
  • Gradual willingness to share deeper, more distressing moments with friends.
  • Examining the reasons behind the instinct to hide intense distress.
  • How vulnerability leads to stronger, more meaningful connections.
  • Positive Effects of Feeling the Hard Stuff
  • Discovering that feeling hard emotions increases the capacity to feel positive emotions more deeply.
  • Finding deeper love, joy, and beauty in everyday experiences.
  • Recognising the importance of support systems when exploring difficult emotions.
  • Reflection and Encouragement for Listeners
  • Encourages listeners to be curious about their own patterns of avoidance and coping.
  • Cautions that intentionally feeling emotions is difficult and requires support.
  • The hopeful observation that allowing feelings can be cathartic, gratifying, and healing—even if it’s uncomfortable.

Links

  continue reading

196 episodes

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