Tag Archives: frustration

Nice is overrated

I wonder why we hold “nice” is such high regard.  ”Nice” is defined in my handy online dictionary as, “pleasing, agreeable, delightful.”  Pleasing, agreeable, delightful all sound appealing.  Who doesn’t want to be nice, right?

The problem is that some people  trade on pleasing and agreeable.  Somewhere along the path, they have decided that “nice” is the way to get through this world.  It’s almost  as if the broad range of human emotion and human interaction is reduced to “nice and agreeable.”   When presented with a challenging situation or difficult person, nice is the only resources they have on hand.

When the difficult or challenging event occurs, most humans feel many emotions and may react in different ways.  Anger, frustration, sadness, fear, etc., are normal responses, and each might be appropriate and healthy for in our imaginary difficult situation.  The person who only deals in niceties may feel all these feelings too.  But the feelings  are often perceived as “bad” or “wrong” or “uncontrollable” so they are pushed down deep inside and what is given to the world is “nice”.

This pushing down of real feelings and responses is often learned in early childhood.  In an effort to get children to conform to some imaginary set of social rules, we tell them to be “nice.”  Imagine two chidden fighting over a toy, the adult tells them, “Be nice,” which really means, “Stop asking for what you want and be quiet or else you’re gonna get it.”

Sometimes the mandate to be nice is overt and more often the message is sent in a thousand subtle but unmistakable ways.  Whatever the method, the child learns the lesson well.

Emotions help us understand ourselves and the world around us.  Our emotional, feeling self akin to one of those indoor-outdoor thermometers.  Emotions give us the temperature inside ourselves, and how that temperature relates to the outside world at that moment.

Cynthia McKenna helps adults learn to understand themselves and others

Pushing down our emotions doesn’t make them go away, but we can bury them so deeply that they become more difficult to identify and use in daily living.  It’s almost crippling to react to this complex world of people and events with “nice” as your only acceptable response.

There is hope.  Most people can reconnect to the world of their emotions and develop understanding, flexibility, and confidence  using the emotional gauges we’re born with.  It takes effort, and it’s often frightening to consider letting those feelings out, and dealing with the consequences.  The reward comes from greater self-knowledge, increased understanding, and more fulfilling relationships with others.

I’m so mad

I was so upset, or maybe I was just PMS-ing

I hear this phrase, or something very similar, from many women.  There are, of course, women who suffer with PMS, or PMDD, who are really tormented by their hormonal changes.  But more often, “I’m hormonal” or “It’s PMS” is a way to show how uncomfortable we are with our anger.

Good girls aren’t supposed to get angry; remember we’re nice.  And we have nice, and happy, and caring, and loving down pat.  Other times,  we feel annoyed, irritated, or angry.   And if we have a personal rule that says we aren’t supposed to be angry, we tend to push those feelings aside, or bury them deep inside us.

The thing is, the angry feelings don’t really go away, but instead they accumulate.  They build up pressure.  And like a beach ball at the pool, the feelings are not going to stay down forever; they will pop up with a surge of energy.  The anger will come out.

And when actually get angry, we can be so uncomfortable with the feelings that we cry instead of talk, or we yell, or we eat too much, or don’t eat at all.

How does this relate to hormones?  I read once that the ebb and flow of hormones can change our ability to hide our feelings.  So, in your 20’s, maybe you were able to keep all those feelings pushed down, because you thought you were supposed to.  As you get into your 30’s and 40’s, your tolerance for keeping them all inside is reduced because you are more comfortable with having feelings, and simultaneously, your ability to hide them is diminishing.  Your hormones may actually be helping you say what needs to be said.

Healthy people, men and women, experience a wide range of emotions including anger.  The healthiest way to handle anger is to talk about what’s bothering us.  Sometimes we’ll do it easily, other times it will be more difficult.  But practicing asking for what you want and need, or expressing feelings of sadness and pain will make your emotional “muscles” stronger and more flexible.  You actually get better at handling your emotions by expressing them and getting feedback from that expression.

It’s okay to be angry.  The issue at hand is to figure out what’s making you angry and what you can do about the situation.  Let’s set ourselves free from hiding behind our hormones.