Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1....

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Interpersonal Topics Emotion

Transcript of Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1....

Page 1: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

Interpersonal Topics Emotion

Page 2: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

I. Emotion Characteristics• A. Physiological changes.

–1. Proprioceptive stimuli

• B. Nonverbal reactions.• C. Cognitive interpretations.• D. Types• E. Intensity

Page 3: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

II. Influences on emotional expression

• A. Culture & Social Conventions• B. Inability to recognize emotions• C. Fear of self-disclosure• D. Power• E. Emotional Contagion

Page 4: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

III. Expressing Emotions

• A. Recognize your feelings• B. Choose the best language

–1. Through single words–2. Describe what is happening to

you–3. Describing what you’d like to do

Page 5: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

C. Shared mixed emotions

Page 6: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

• D. Recognize the difference between feeling and acting

• E. Choose the best time to express your feelings

• F. Express your feelings clearly

Page 7: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

IV. Managing difficult emotions

• A. Facilitative–Contribute to effective functioning–Balanced amount of emotion–Balanced duration of the emotion

Page 8: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

• B. Debilitative-Keep us from feeling and relating

effectively–Unhealthy extremes of intensity

(splitting)–Extreme duration–Caused by irrational thinking

Page 9: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

• C. Debilitative emotions caused by irrational thinking a.k.a. Fallacies of. . .–1. Perfection–2. Approval–3. Shoulds / Oughts–4. Overgeneralization

• a. base a belief on limited evidence• b. exaggerate shortcomings

Page 10: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

• 5. Helplessness• 6. Catastrophic expectations• 7. Causation

– a. Thinking our behavior causes emotions in others prevents us from honesty

– b. Thinking that others’ behavior causes our emotions.

Page 11: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

Stimulus (gap) Response

Event (thoughts) Emotions(person, words, circumstances)

How it works. . .

Page 12: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

• Vicktor Frankl “Nobody can take away my freedom to choose how things will affect me. We have the power to choose our response.”

• Eleanor Roosevelt “No one can hurt you without your consent”

• Gandhi “They cannot take away our self-respect if we do not give it them”

Page 13: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

From Blaise Pascal, Physicist

• “God has created a God-shaped vacuum in the heart of every person that only God fills through his son Jesus Christ.”

Page 14: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

Managing Emotions

Event, Circumstance, Words, Person, etc

My thoughts about it / them

An emotion that fits the thoughts An emotion that fits the thoughts An emotion that fits the thoughts

Express if:1. I need to for my health2. Someone else needs to know it3. Someone cares about me4. Failure to express it will have worse results than expressing it would

Express if:1. I need to for my health2. Someone else needs to know it3. Someone cares about me4. Failure to express it will have worse results than expressing it would

Express if:1. I need to for my health2. Someone else needs to know it3. Someone cares about me4. Failure to express it will have worse results than expressing it would

The part I do control & can challenge & Correct. Thoughts caused by:Family of origin influences, rational Thoughts or irrational thinking fallacies,My self-concept, my core beliefs & values,Attitudes, & worldview.

I will control whatI can, but I can’t Control all circumstancesAnd I can’t control others(although I will try to positively influence by my ownReactions, and even loving, direct challenges to theirOwn thinking. But I cannot con them & they areUltimately responsible for their own happiness & reactions just as I am for my own ).

Martinson 2003

Page 15: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

Counterfeit feeling expressions

• I feel that you are angry at me• Why are being so mean to me?• You make me furious• I feel you are acting hateful to me

Page 16: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

Consequences of unexpressed emotion

What happens when we don’t express our

emotions?

Page 17: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

When we fail to express emotions accurately, it leads to

A. Inauthentic (shadow) relationships

Page 18: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

When we fail to express emotions accurately, it leads to

B. Misunderstood perceptionsC. Unresolved issues / lack of catharsisD. Hindrance for others

– Lack of truth– Lack of fullness– Living with incompleteness (knowing or not)– Denying growth / possible repeating mistakes

E. Leaking or exploding of emotions through other means

Page 19: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

Which ones do we express / withhold?

-Ephesians 4:15 “Speaking the truth in Love”-Balancing truth & love-Aristotle’s Golden Mean

Not a middle-of-the-Road, but a maximizing of both

-Rich’s expression: Mean what you say, say what you mean, but don’t say it mean.

Page 20: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

Emotion Exercise!

Page 21: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

I. Poor listening behaviors• 1. Pseudo-listening• 2. Stage-hogging• 3. Selective listening• 4. Insulated listening• 5. Defensive listening• 6. Ambushing• 7. Insensitive listening

Page 22: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

II. Reasons we don’t listen

• 1. Message overload

• 2. Preoccupation• 3. Rapid thought• 4. Effort• 5. External noise

• 6. Hearing problems• 7. Faulty

assumptions• 8. Lack of apparent

advantages• 9. Lack of training

Page 23: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

III. Tips for informational listening!

• 1. Talk less.• 2. Get rid of distractions• 3. Don’t judge prematurely• 4. Look for key ideas• 5. Ask questions• 6. Paraphrase (but not parrott)

– Restate what you thought they meant, request clarification.

Page 24: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

Interpersonal Topics

Listening

Page 25: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

I. Poor listening behaviors• 1. Pseudo-listening• 2. Stage-hogging• 3. Selective or insulated

listening• 4. Defensive listening• 5. Ambushing• 6. Insensitive listening

Page 26: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

II. Reasons we don’t listen

• 1. Message overload

• 2. Preoccupation• 3. Rapid thought• 4. Effort• 5. External noise

• 6. Hearing problems• 7. Faulty

assumptions• 8. Lack of apparent

advantages• 9. Lack of training

Page 27: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

III. Tips for informational listening!

• 1. Talk less.• 2. Get rid of distractions• 3. Don’t judge prematurely• 4. Look for key ideas• 5. Ask questions• 6. Paraphrase (but not parrott)

– Restate what you thought they meant, request clarification.

Page 28: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

Listening Exercise!

Page 29: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

Interpersonal Topics

Conflict Management

Page 30: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

I. Stages of Conflict• A. Latent conflict• B. Perceived conflict• C. Felt conflict• D. Manifest conflict• E. Conflict aftermath

Page 31: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

II. Personal Conflict Styles

A. Nonassertion–Avoidance–Accommodation

B. Direct AggressionC. Passive Aggression (discussed

in Week #2)

Page 32: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

II. Personal Conflict Styles (continued)

D. Indirect CommunicationE. Assertion

Page 33: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

V. Methods of Conflict Management

• A. Win-lose (competition)• B. Lose-Win

(accommodation)• C. Lose-lose (sabbotage)• D. Compromise• E. Win-win (collaboration)

Page 34: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

Win-Win steps. . .• 1) Identify problem & needs for yourself• 2) Find an appropriate time to talk• 3) Describe the problem & needs to the

other• 4) Listen to the other’s point of view• 5) Negotiate a win-win that attempts to

meet needs (not wants) of both. Selfishness kills any hope for win-win.

• 6) Follow up on the solution

Page 35: Interpersonal Topics Emotion. I. Emotion Characteristics A. Physiological changes. – 1. Proprioceptive stimuli B. Nonverbal reactions. C. Cognitive interpretations.

Win-win exercise