#based on my own experience where i was shallowed by lion dancer
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#based on my own experience where i was shallowed by lion dancer#but no i didnt get a kiss :(#they do that so i can give em ang pao lmao#sometimes its done to kids just for the fun of it#i got a mandarin orange in exchange LOL#gummmyart#doodle#simon ghost riley#john soap mactavish#soapghost#ghostsoap
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How to Deal With Emotional Flooding in the Workplace
If you ever feel like youâre drowning in your emotions, youâre not alone.
It happened again. I was in an online team meeting discussing a project idea Iâd put forward. Although a fairly new team (born through Covid-19), weâd built a good degree of trust between us, and it had been a typical meeting, similar to one weâve had each week for the past two months.Â
However, it was not typical for long. After initially framing up my idea and questions in my open and honest style, my colleagues started offering their own interpretation of the project idea â different applications and perspectives. I felt the conversation had traveled in a different direction and I got lost. I sat back and wondered, What are they talking about? Did they not hear me? Â
With the three of them firing off ideas and questions, it felt like we were speaking different languages. As a highly sensitive person (HSP) â someone whoâs a deep thinker and more aware of subtleties, but also someone whoâs prone to getting easily overwhelmed â it all suddenly collapsed.Â
I had made the mistake of not hiding self-view on Zoom (I usually hide myself), and I could see my face redden and my eyes narrow. Literally. It was strange. My heart was racing, my chest felt heavy, my throat tight, and my eyes watered. Then I went blank.Â
I couldnât figure out what I thought and had absolutely no way of articulating words. My survival brain had taken over and my thinking brain had shut down. When they asked me for my thoughts, I could not respond. I could hardly talk, let alone have anything remotely intelligent to say.Â
I was experiencing emotional flooding â I could literally feel the flood of my emotions drowning me. I was embarrassed, too, which created a ghastly doubling-down effect. Science has shown that emotions hit HSPs harder, but this was new to me.Â
âFight-or-flightâ kicked in next. At least I knew it and hoped that âflightâ would be enough of a circuit breaker. Still drowning in my emotions and unable to speak, I put my hands in the time-out position as though I were playing basketball and needed a moment to catch my breath. The latter was true. I weakly uttered âfive minutes,â left the meeting, and went to the bathroom and cried.Â
Has this ever happened to you, too?
Signs of Emotional Flooding
Even though Iâm a professionally credentialed coach (ICF) with almost two decades of experience working with executive and HSP clients, my flood of emotions was so overwhelming that I began to research the term âemotionally floodedâ more.
Symptoms can include:Â
A flood of stress hormones (adrenaline and cortisol)
A flight/flight/freeze response (we want to run, get aggressive, or we go numb)
Increased heart rate (over 90-100 beats per minute) and rapid or shallow breathing
Chest tightness
Sweating
Flushed face
Narrowing of eyes (tunnel vision, looking for an escape)
Throat constriction
Severely diminished ability to think or speak clearly
Heightened anxiety
Stomach churning
Psychologist John Gottman explains that the difference between flooding and other more manageable emotional reactions, such as an amygdala hijack, is one of magnitude. Itâs overwhelming.
Thatâs how it felt for me, too. I could literally do nothing: I couldnât speak and couldnât think about anything other than getting out. I tried the five-finger exercise â a simple breathing technique where you trace your fingers â to help quell my breathing, but it was hard to move my fingers and challenging to breathe regularly or deeply. As researcher Elizabeth A. Stanley, PhD would say: My âthinking brainâ had shut down and my âsurvival brainâ had taken over.
What Triggers Emotional Flooding and Why It May Affect HSPs More Than Non-HSPs
Daniel Goleman, arguably the kingpin of emotional intelligence, found that the five most typical triggers of an amygdala hijack in the workplace are:
lack of respect
unfair treatment
being unappreciated
not being heard
unrealistic deadlines
In general terms, we feel triggered when we sense that something is threatening. In todayâs world, those threats are often not physical threats, but social threats which impact our âsocial brain.â So, on my Zoom call, you can see how some of these triggers triggered me, like not feeling heard or appreciated.
In addition to the five factors listed above, triggers may also include things like rejection, not feeling seen, and feeling of lesser status. And, as an HSP, all this means that Iâm likely more susceptible to heightened emotions and overwhelm than non-HSPs.Â
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What You Can Do to Support Yourself When You Feel Emotionally Flooded
When you feel emotionally flooded as an HSP, there are many practical tools you can draw on to support yourself, both in the moment and afterwards.
In the moment:
Notice itâs happening. This seems so simple, but itâs difficult to be fully aware of when your emotions are high.Â
Give yourself permission to exit; if you canât talk, use a time-out hand signal like i did. Then, walk away and give yourself a break.
If you canât leave the situation, give yourself permission to be still and quiet. Tell yourself: Itâs OK. I know it feels embarrassing, but the surprising reality is that other people are usually not thinking as badly of us as we imagine (and they probably arenât as uncomfortable as we imagine).Â
Immediately afterwards:
Take a deep breath, which will calm your parasympathetic nervous system. Breathing is the only thing we can do to physically tell our bodies that we arenât literally under threat. There is no lion chasing us â everything is alright.
Sometimes itâs hard to breathe; if thatâs true for you, consider using a grounding exercise, such as the MMFTÂŽ Contact Points Exercise, Mindfulness-based Mind Fitness Training, which aims to increase psychological resilience or âmental armor.â It does so by strengthening mindfulness through exercises like focused attention on the breath and mindful movement.
About 20-30 minutes later:
Once you have calmed down a bit, if you can, go back to the people youâd been in the meeting with and let them know you are OK. You can do this by talking to them directly or via email to explain what happened so they donât make any assumptions.Â
For example, you can say something as simple as: I felt overwhelming emotions earlier, but itâs a great learning opportunity for me personally, and perhaps for our relationship professionally, and I would very much appreciate exploring this with you in the next couple of days.Â
Until then, you can try some of the introspective ideas below.
Over the following few days:
You then have a few days to analyze your emotions, and here are a few tactics that worked for me after my Zoom experience.
Journaling is a great self-care exercise for HSPs, so Iâd recommend writing about your experience. Externalizing your thoughts like this is an excellent way to vent frustrations, release energy, and clarify thoughts.Â
Talk to someone you trust and feel safe with, whether that means picking up the phone or joining a Facebook group.
Build your skills in self-compassion and mindfulness. These two skills alone are like super powers, Iâm not kidding. Mindfulness apps some of my clients appreciate include: Headspace, Smiling Mind, Calm, and Insight Timer.
Take a âBalcony View,â which is a metaphor for taking an observerâs perspective on yourself and your life. Imagine your life as a dance floor. You are a dancer, moving with the music, with others around you. One day, you notice a stairwell and walk up the stairs and out onto a balcony that overlooks the dance floor and you can see yourself on it. Play with using this perspective when you are journaling and discussing with others. Theyâll probably be impressed! This is a powerful tool for self and team development.
Just keep in mind that growth requires the willingness to face uncomfortable situations. It takes courage to be honest and vulnerable and discuss the situation that happened, but itâs worth it. You are worth it.
How My âFloodingâ Experience Worked Out
As embarrassing and uncomfortable as it was at the time, my âfloodingâ experience turned out positively â I did many of the ideas above and was able to make more sense of things. My colleagues and I even had a âBalcony Sessionâ and Iâm happy to say itâs made us a stronger and even more purpose-driven team.
Iâm also recognizing that itâs been a big year for many of us (actually, a tiring few years for me). Iâm reaffirming my work and whatâs important while also dialing back the self-pressure just a notch.
Just know that when youâre feeling emotionally flooded, at work or otherwise, itâs OK to take a time-out and just do you. Afterwards, youâll come back more cognizant and refreshed, which will not only benefit you, but those around you.Â
If this article helped you, you might like the authorâs website â and the coaching services she offers specifically for highly sensitive people. Learn more at Joanne Ostler Coaching.
You might like:
Why Highly Sensitive People Get Mentally and Emotionally âFloodedâ
Science Confirms That Emotions Hit Highly Sensitive People Harder
21 Signs Youâre a Highly Sensitive Person
The post How to Deal With Emotional Flooding in the Workplace appeared first on Highly Sensitive Refuge.
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