Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
What is this?
Less
More

Owned by Max

Luminous

2 members • Free

A safe space to heal grow & learn to regain control of your life

Memberships

The Mental Health Collective

43 members • Free

Focused Founders™

616 members • $27/year

The Grown Girls’ Table

84 members • Free

Neurodivergent Entrepreneurs

517 members • Free

Build Your Online Business

1.5k members • $9/month

Managing Mental Health

226 members • Free

Impact Coach Collective

501 members • Free

The Woman's Trust Hub

12 members • Free

Animated Story Academy

142 members • Free

1 contribution to The Mental Health Collective
🌿 Wellness Wednesday – Week 20: Letting Feelings Pass
Many of us have been taught that uncomfortable emotions are problems to solve, avoid, suppress, or immediately change. When sadness, anxiety, anger, disappointment, or fear show up, our first instinct is often to get rid of them as quickly as possible. Emotions are not permanent states. They are experiences that move through us. The more we resist them, the more they often persist. The more we allow them, the more space they have to naturally rise, peak, and pass. 🧠 The Nature of Emotions Emotions are temporary physiological and psychological experiences. Like waves, emotions: - Rise - Reach a peak - Gradually decrease However, when we: - Fight them - Judge them - Fear them - Suppress them We often unintentionally extend their intensity. Research in emotional regulation suggests that emotional acceptance is associated with: - Lower emotional reactivity - Reduced anxiety - Greater psychological flexibility - Improved resilience Acceptance is not agreement. Acceptance is acknowledgment. 🔍 Why We Try to Fix Feelings Many people learned early in life that uncomfortable emotions were unacceptable. Common messages include: - “Don’t cry.” - “Calm down.” - “Be strong.” - “Stop worrying.” - “Just get over it.” As a result, many adults become skilled at avoiding emotions but struggle to experience them safely. ⚖️ Feeling vs. Becoming the Feeling One of the most powerful emotional regulation skills is learning the difference between: “I am anxious.” and “I am experiencing anxiety.” The first statement becomes identity. The second creates space. You are not your emotions. You are the observer of your emotions. 🌊 Emotional Waves Imagine standing on the shore watching waves. You don't stop the ocean. You don't argue with the waves. You observe them. Emotions work similarly. Instead of: - Resisting - Fixing - Fighting Try: - Noticing - Naming - Allowing 💬 Weekly Affirmation "Emotions rise and fall." Repeat this affirmation whenever you feel tempted to rush, suppress, or judge your emotional experience.
🌿 Wellness Wednesday – Week 20: Letting Feelings Pass
1 like • 17d
Through out my life i have learned to supress my emotions as the saying goes children should be seen & not heard I am now nearly 51 & for 13 years i have been healing from past trauma & i still struggle to regulate my emotions when they arise but it as made me a lot stronger & quicker at recognising when they surface 🙂
0 likes • 17d
@Regina Speights exactly implementing strong boundries is so essential for empaths. We are like sponges absorbing energies & its a skill in its self to shield & protect everyday which can be draining in its self
1-1 of 1
Max Zaman
1
4points to level up
@maxine-garforth-2383
Founder of Orphan annie narcissistic abuse survivors centre

Active 12d ago
Joined Jun 19, 2026