Feeling Bad About Feeling Bad Can Make You Feel Worse (berkeley.edu) 102
An anonymous reader writes: Pressure to feel upbeat can make you feel downbeat, while embracing your darker moods can actually make you feel better in the long run, according to new UC Berkeley research. "We found that people who habitually accept their negative emotions experience fewer negative emotions, which adds up to better psychological health," said study senior author Iris Mauss, an associate professor of psychology at UC Berkeley. At this point, researchers can only speculate on why accepting your joyless emotions can defuse them, like dark clouds passing swiftly in front of the sun and out of sight. "Maybe if you have an accepting attitude toward negative emotions, you're not giving them as much attention," Mauss said. "And perhaps, if you're constantly judging your emotions, the negativity can pile up."
Metafeelings (Score:4, Funny)
You all know my answer... (Score:1, Offtopic)
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Who are you?
You must be new around here.
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With that ID number, you must be as well.
You must need reading glasses [amzn.to]. My user id number has six digits. Newer user id numbers have eight digits.
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Maybe you need some glasses for yourself? No uid on /. has 8 digits, none.
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Good one AC!
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You have to expect trolls when you talk about yourself constantly.
I could talk about the weather and a troll would still complain about my fat cock.
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What is with all the cremier hate I have been seeing on this site lately? What has he done? Apparently he's a friend of some friend of mine on this site so I'd expect I would be seeing his posts filtered up for me frequently but I have no friggin' clue who he even is, just that I keep seeing posts like this hating on him. What's the deal?
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What's the deal?
Successful fat people make Slashdot trolls feel stupid.
Check out my Slashdot page, "There are 10 types of people on Slashdot..." [bit.ly], and my past blog postings [bit.ly].
Guilt adds to the burden (Score:2)
If you should be a happy camper, and you're not and your boss / friends / family are expecting you to be a happy camper, of course you are going to feel worse than if you are allowed to be honest about how you are feeling.
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It's not about honesty, it's about indirection.
Or maybe it can be about pardon. Pardoning yourself for the negative feelings has a healing power.
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I'm having a hard time understanding how anyone can feel good about feeling bad. But that seems to be the recommendation based on TFA.
Insane people feel better?
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If I get dark and cynical enough, it goes from gloomy to deep to absurd to funny, and I end up laughing at myself. I have no idea if it works for anyone else.
From a mindfulness perspective, sometimes just recognizing what you're really feeling (as opposed to denying or fighting it) might also help it clarify, and then pass.
And then there's the Slashdot headline, which says the opposite of what the summary says. What's up with that?
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The headline is saying that if you "feel bad about" feeling bad in the sense of rejecting it and fighting it, it can make you feel worse than if you accept it and let it pass, which is also what the summary says.
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Yeah, my brain broke down somewhere while trying to translate the triple negative. No other explanation.
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Not so much feeling good about feeling bad. But accepting that your moods change and sometimes you are going to feel down. It's normal and you'll get over it.
Re: Guilt adds to the burden (Score:2)
Not feeling good with feeling bad, but rather accepting that sometimes you will feel bad, it's normal, and it will pass. So rather than feeling good about feeling bad, you're /equanimous/ about feeling bad. The Buddha figured this out 2500 years ago...
Shit... (Score:2)
this has been obvious for decades. Centuries, even. Keep a stiff upper lip and soldier on instead of emoting.
Thanks, 1970s, for fucking something else up!
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this has been obvious for decades. Centuries, even. Keep a stiff upper lip and soldier on instead of emoting.
This research suggests the opposite. Instead of trying to ignore (or cancel out) the emotions, recovery to a better state is quicker if individuals accept their emotional state.
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"I'm sad, I'm angry, on the inside. But I soldier on anyway."
Feeling Annoyed, Bored, etc. (Score:2)
impossible expectations (Score:5, Insightful)
Recursive Headline FTW (Score:2)
Headline of the fucking year, folks (Score:2)
Vicious cycle (Score:2)
Yeah, but what about... (Score:2)
Too Much Cringe (Score:2)
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No, it means that, if you're feeling down, just accepting that you're down and keeping going is better than trying to find reasons why you're down. Getting over it is not required.
As far as applicability, lots of geeks suffer from depression.
Feeling Bad About Feeling Bad... (Score:2)
Feeling Bad About Feeling Bad Can Make You Feel Worse
Am I the only one who read that sentence and let fly a clearly audible: DUUUUUHHHHH!!!! ???
Ric Romero and Capitain Obvious agree (Score:2)
In a Joint Statement today, the Ric Romero Institute and Capitain Obvious indicated that they agree wholeheartedly with the results from UC Berkley about feeling bad about feeling bad makes you feeling worse.
The institute will dedicate more funds to research the subject, searching for a Joint study with Berkley, while Capitain Obvious will use his public opinion powers to raise awarenes about the subject, specialy amongst people who suffer from depression (yours truly included), who know nothing abut this s
They be singin' the blues (Score:2)
There is an entire genre of music devoted to "feeling bad". Western music also has a mode for this kind of thing--it's called the minor key. Country-western has lots of "My Woman Ran Off with my Best Friend's Truck" songs, too. These guys need to get out more.
I'm going to ignroe politics... (Score:4, Insightful)
and answer from the heart.
I've had a lot of personal horror in my life. Here's what I've found works for me:
I PRETEND to be happy and upbeat when I don't feel that way. And you know what? The act of my smiling and speaking a certain way actually *DOES* improve my overall mood. Hell -- just SMILING changes my mood -- even when there's nothing for me to smile about.
Just because there's a lot of crap in my life I wouldn't wish upon anyone doesn't mean I need to let it slip in to my interactions with a world that for the most part wouldn't give a rip -- or would care too much an attempt a level of intimacy I don't want from strangers or casual acquaintances or co-workers.
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Also helps by improving the mood of people you interact with. Make people you are around happy, and the reverse becomes a bit more true
You should have posted under your name. Quite insightful.
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Good for you. It doesn't usually work that way for people with real depression.
Depression is not about any crap that happened to you. It just is. Faking feeling better isn't going to do any good. Faking feeling better to get out and dealing with people or accomplishing something may be worthwhile, but just pretending you're happy does not work.
No shit. (Score:2)
Recent findings brought to you by the Captain Obvious Research Institute.
Thanks UC Berkeley... (Score:2)
Now I feel bad about feeling bad about feeling bad!
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Isn't this what "Inside Out" was about? (Score:2)
I'm wondering if the study started before or after the movie Inside Out was released. SPOILER: The main child character, Riley, was about to run away, but when her emotions (Joy and Sadness) allowed Sadness to express herself, then she cried and was able to express herself.
Very good movie, much better than "Herman's Head" was.
Count your blessings (Score:2)
When someone is depressed, don't tell them to count their blessings or focus on the good things. "See? You have so much to be happy about."
The reaction this elicits is: "You're right. These are all good things... so why am I not happy?"
Akin (Score:2)
"Slicing into a cut made by a knife that's bleeding, with a knife, can make the cut bleed more."
Now, where can I get my multi-million-dollar funding to get a research project done to prove that?
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I'll support you. I'd like to see proof of a knife that's bleeding.
Mindfulness (Score:2)
If you study mindfulness, you learn that resisting negative feelings is like forcing your will against them, but they do exist so you can not just will them away. It's tempting because you don't like the situation, and want to eliminate it, or let it never happen again to us. But adding negativity to negativity is throwing fuel on the fire, resisting reality doesn't make the reality go away.
Accepting it allows you to move on. Bad things do happen unfortunately. If we can learn to make the best of it, or at
inside out (Score:2)