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Psychotherapy

Taking Responsibility for Our Emotions

The Harsh Truth

One of the most transformative realisations I’ve had from years of studying many schools of therapy is that our emotional responses are solely our own responsibility. No matter what someone else says or does, we alone are responsible for how we internalise their words or deeds, and react, emotionally.

This is a difficult pill to swallow, as we’re conditioned from a young age to blame others for “making” us feel certain ways*. If a co-worker is rude or our boss lays into us, it’s easy to mentally check out and go numb – as a self-defense mechanism – feeling angry at them for causing us distress. But the reality is, no one can make us feel any particular way without our permission.

The Source of Our Emotions

Our emotional responses are fuelled by our thought patterns, beliefs, prior experiences, and state of mind in that moment. Someone’s unskillful behaviour can act as a trigger, but we alone control whether we react with anxiety, defensiveness, anger, or remain grounded. This is where the work comes in.

So few people realise this responsibility is theirs, let alone take it to heart. It’s much easier to play the victim and blame others. But true emotional maturity comes from internalising that our emotions originate from within us, not from other people..

Empowerment at Work

In a workplace context, this philosophy is incredibly empowering. If we have a chronically negative or harsh manager or colleague, we get to decide whether their behaviour sends us into an emotional tailspin or if we react with non-judgement and detachment. Not getting hung up on the emotions of the moment allows us to respond skilfully in misunderstandings and avoid escalations.

A co-worker’s words and actions are about them, not about us. Our colleagues’ unconscious behaviours don’t have to dictate our experience. We get to consciously choose our mindset and emotional state in any situation.

The Greatest Gift

This paradigm shift takes practice, but it’s one of the greatest gifts we can give ourselves. No longer feeling like helpless victims to others’ emotional outputs. Owning our emotional adulthood and self-accountability. True inner freedom.

It’s available to anyone, but so few people live it. We can choose to do the work to take radical responsibility for our emotions, no matter what others do. We’ll be rewarded with choice and peace in the face of conflict, instead of being unconscious reactors.


*One root of the Myth of Redemptive Violence

Cop

A Saner Humanity

“The condition of alienation, of being asleep, of being unconscious, of being out of one’s mind, is the condition of the normal man. Society highly values its normal man. It educates children to lose themselves and to become absurd, and thus to be normal. Normal men have killed perhaps 100,000,000 of their fellow normal men in the last fifty years”

wrote psychiatrist R.D. Laing* back in 1967. His words cut to the core of modern society. We have normalised insanity – numbing ourselves to the absurdity around us and within us.

And what is this absurdity? It is the mindset that allows us to go about our days oblivious to the harm we inflict on ourselves, on others and on the planet. That lets corporations prioritise profits over people and presidents sanction wars in distant lands. It is the tendency of “normal” folks to follow orders and not question what’s going on.

The result? Suffering on a colossal scale. Over 100 million lives lost in wars over the last century. Millions more struggling with poverty, oppression or mental anguish. And now, climate catastrophe looming, seemingly unheeded.

Healing this insanity in humanity starts with awareness. Once we wake up from the slumber of conformity and see our society’s sickness clearly, our priorities begin to shift.

The next step is fixing our broken systems. Our companies, governments and institutions shape society’s norms – and are shaped by them. Transforming them is key to creating positive change. Employee-owned businesses focus on worker dignity and joy over profits. Progressive groups across the world are anchoring policy in ethics, not ideology. Reform movements centered on wisdom and compassion are gaining momentum.

At the individual level too, we can choose to nurture sanity by cultivating presence of mind. Turning our attention inwards, taming our egoistic tendencies and consciously spreading goodwill. Spiritual practices like meditation help us become less reactive and more response-able.

The challenges today seem daunting. But together, we can build a world where care, justice and sustainability are the new normal. As we each walk the path towards inner freedom from fear and delusion, our collective consciousness grows saner. May more of us wake up from this absurd nightmare so we can co-create the beautiful dream.

Will you join me?

* R.D. Laing (1927-1989) was an unconventional Scottish psychiatrist who radically challenged the medical model of psychiatry in the 1960s-70s. Deeply critical of diagnosis and medication, Laing viewed madness as an existential crisis rather than illness. He founded communal centers applying alternative therapies for healing over labeling. Articulated in books like The Divided Self, his controversial ideas on mental distress as an introspective process rather than biological disease created lasting impact. Laing catalysed more humanistic attitudes in mental healthcare.

Further Reading

Laing, R.D. (1967). The politics of experience and the bird of paradise. Penguin.