snowqueen
mysteriously benevolent
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- Today 7:03 PM
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- Mar 28, 2009
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I've been reading through the past threads as there is something I have been thinking about, namely how to develop my emotional intelligence. Some of you may have picked up that I am in my 50s and only recently discovered my INTPness so I have been struggling with all of the INTP issues by myself for a long, long time! Much of this is done in secret - most people have no idea how crazy I really am inside!
Over the years I have managed to develop a lot of coping strategies which have worked reasonably well - actually very well considering so many of us do end up in difficulties of one sort or other. Anyway, I have managed to become successful in a lot of different ways. One that always surprises me is that I am a good mother. But that is probably because I am very thoughtful about parenting! And I have learned how to show my children that I love them, even though I don't have the same sort of maternal feelings that I hear from others. When I worked as an occupational therapist in mental health I was really good with people with 'personality disorders' - a category generally hated by most psychiatric staff (mind you most psychiatric staff hate patients anyway). I have miraculously found and made some very strong friendships, largely to do with my best friend at school, an ENTP, who helped me to come out of my shell through humour (we were the French and Saunders of our day!) while still indulging my need for conversation. We've been friends for 40 years now.
Through learning about group dynamics I am much more able to cope in a group, especially if I am in control - such as a classroom where, paradoxically, I am excellent at enabling others to take control of their learning, not really being a control freak at all! On a one-to-one basis I am able to deal effectively with most of my colleagues (secretly I think universities were invented to keep Ti types away from the rest of society).
But I still have not learned to deal with my emotions very well. Most of the time I am unbothered by emotions but when I'm stressed I become hyper-emotional and due to my childhood experiences with a toxic-to-INTP mother who amongst other things would beat me for crying myself to sleep, I find that once I flip into an intense emotion I have great difficulty self-soothing or calming down and it leaves me drained. I also tend at the same time to go into overdrive in my thinking and it's not always particularly rational as I tend to go over and over events in minute detail but can't reach any conclusions because basically it's about emotions and I don't understand them. I also tend to build on previous emotions so for example, any loss I experience gets added to other losses so I experience them all at the same time.
I came across this theory of emotions by Plutchik and it seems to me it could be a very useful model to work from to try to monitor and gain a little more control over my emotions. I like models! I quite like the idea of taking an intellectual approach to emotions to help me work with them more effectively (a little subversive even, like possessing a map to the enemy camp).
Ok - so each petal is an emotion group with the outer pale segment being the less intense experience and the darker being the more intense (I'm not sure that's exactly how Plutchik described it but it makes sense to my experience) The white petals are the combination of the neighbouring emotions. There is also a richer analysis of these combinations here:
So how could this be useful? Well for example, I currently have a manager who (almost literally) drives me crazy. She is like David Brent from the Office - she simply has not got a clue how to manage people. SHE IS THE MOST ILLOGICAL PERSON ON THE PLANET!!! My strategy has largely been to avoid her because I can't cope with the feelings she raises in me. But looking at the model, I can understand what's going on - I feel annoyance which often spills into anger and occasionally rage - and I veer between feeling aggressive and contemptuous of her. Now I can see that in a diagram, I can see that if I can find a way just to stop at annoyance, and resist the feelings of contempt, I could maybe avoid getting angry and enraged (however justified I think that is) and reacting aggressively (oh I've been so close to opening my mouth and regretting it). I need to be able to deal with her to get her support to carry on my research and so it's important that I deal with this.
The other area of my life which has traditionally been pretty disastrous is my love life which often starts well enough until I encounter a situation which I can't handle emotionally - usually I can understand it in hindsight just about - but it's often because I feel an emotion but process it cognitively and behave inappropriately as a result.
So again, using the model I can see what went wrong with my last boyfriend. I intuited that something wasn't quite right and I started thinking too much about what was wrong (pensive) and so veered towards disapproval which took me into taking an undue interest in his relationship with his ex and then noticing their closeness aggressively which led to anticipating their behaviours and becoming obsessed with them (vigilance) and then flipped over to the red, went through to rage, broke up. Then I went back to pensive, but this time veering towards remorse, so went down into sadness and grief. I've since found a really useful video about how to talk about things that are bothering you and if I had spotted the emotional signs early enough I would maybe have been able to articulate them in a constructive way and stopped myself flipping into rage and avoided the grief (which is experienced as a compound of my father's death and all my lost loves).
I think this could also be very useful to work on ways to connect with the white petals to uncover my motivation because that again could be a warning. Also I guess one could use it to look for ways of enhancing positive feelings. You can download a really good poster and I'm going to print it out and put it on my wall at work and see if it helps!
Over the years I have managed to develop a lot of coping strategies which have worked reasonably well - actually very well considering so many of us do end up in difficulties of one sort or other. Anyway, I have managed to become successful in a lot of different ways. One that always surprises me is that I am a good mother. But that is probably because I am very thoughtful about parenting! And I have learned how to show my children that I love them, even though I don't have the same sort of maternal feelings that I hear from others. When I worked as an occupational therapist in mental health I was really good with people with 'personality disorders' - a category generally hated by most psychiatric staff (mind you most psychiatric staff hate patients anyway). I have miraculously found and made some very strong friendships, largely to do with my best friend at school, an ENTP, who helped me to come out of my shell through humour (we were the French and Saunders of our day!) while still indulging my need for conversation. We've been friends for 40 years now.
Through learning about group dynamics I am much more able to cope in a group, especially if I am in control - such as a classroom where, paradoxically, I am excellent at enabling others to take control of their learning, not really being a control freak at all! On a one-to-one basis I am able to deal effectively with most of my colleagues (secretly I think universities were invented to keep Ti types away from the rest of society).
But I still have not learned to deal with my emotions very well. Most of the time I am unbothered by emotions but when I'm stressed I become hyper-emotional and due to my childhood experiences with a toxic-to-INTP mother who amongst other things would beat me for crying myself to sleep, I find that once I flip into an intense emotion I have great difficulty self-soothing or calming down and it leaves me drained. I also tend at the same time to go into overdrive in my thinking and it's not always particularly rational as I tend to go over and over events in minute detail but can't reach any conclusions because basically it's about emotions and I don't understand them. I also tend to build on previous emotions so for example, any loss I experience gets added to other losses so I experience them all at the same time.
I came across this theory of emotions by Plutchik and it seems to me it could be a very useful model to work from to try to monitor and gain a little more control over my emotions. I like models! I quite like the idea of taking an intellectual approach to emotions to help me work with them more effectively (a little subversive even, like possessing a map to the enemy camp).

Ok - so each petal is an emotion group with the outer pale segment being the less intense experience and the darker being the more intense (I'm not sure that's exactly how Plutchik described it but it makes sense to my experience) The white petals are the combination of the neighbouring emotions. There is also a richer analysis of these combinations here:

So how could this be useful? Well for example, I currently have a manager who (almost literally) drives me crazy. She is like David Brent from the Office - she simply has not got a clue how to manage people. SHE IS THE MOST ILLOGICAL PERSON ON THE PLANET!!! My strategy has largely been to avoid her because I can't cope with the feelings she raises in me. But looking at the model, I can understand what's going on - I feel annoyance which often spills into anger and occasionally rage - and I veer between feeling aggressive and contemptuous of her. Now I can see that in a diagram, I can see that if I can find a way just to stop at annoyance, and resist the feelings of contempt, I could maybe avoid getting angry and enraged (however justified I think that is) and reacting aggressively (oh I've been so close to opening my mouth and regretting it). I need to be able to deal with her to get her support to carry on my research and so it's important that I deal with this.
The other area of my life which has traditionally been pretty disastrous is my love life which often starts well enough until I encounter a situation which I can't handle emotionally - usually I can understand it in hindsight just about - but it's often because I feel an emotion but process it cognitively and behave inappropriately as a result.
So again, using the model I can see what went wrong with my last boyfriend. I intuited that something wasn't quite right and I started thinking too much about what was wrong (pensive) and so veered towards disapproval which took me into taking an undue interest in his relationship with his ex and then noticing their closeness aggressively which led to anticipating their behaviours and becoming obsessed with them (vigilance) and then flipped over to the red, went through to rage, broke up. Then I went back to pensive, but this time veering towards remorse, so went down into sadness and grief. I've since found a really useful video about how to talk about things that are bothering you and if I had spotted the emotional signs early enough I would maybe have been able to articulate them in a constructive way and stopped myself flipping into rage and avoided the grief (which is experienced as a compound of my father's death and all my lost loves).
I think this could also be very useful to work on ways to connect with the white petals to uncover my motivation because that again could be a warning. Also I guess one could use it to look for ways of enhancing positive feelings. You can download a really good poster and I'm going to print it out and put it on my wall at work and see if it helps!