
“The human mind is a relational and embodied process that regulates the flow of energy and information.” ~Daniel J. Siegel
We are emotional creatures, and we were born to express emotions freely and openly. Somewhere along the way, however, many of us learned to repress emotions, especially those deemed “negative,” in order to fit in, earn love, and be accepted. This was my experience.
I grew up in a home where the motto was “Children are to be seen, not heard.” There was little emotional expression allowed, let alone accepted. No one was there to validate or help us process emotions in a healthy way. Anger was met with anger, fear went unacknowledged, and there was plenty of shame to go around.
My parents didn’t model how to deal with difficult emotions, as they struggled with that themselves. When those emotions showed up, I often felt overwhelmed and inadequate, ashamed of my failure to be a “good girl.”
I learned to bury my pain deep inside, feeling invisible, ashamed, angry, alone, and unable to ask for what I needed. Trying to hide the pain—from others and myself—I built walls, put on masks, and soldiered on. For better or worse.
My pain was buried so deep, I didn’t realize it was there until I had my own children. Motherhood opened up old wounds, the house of cards fell apart, and I began to unravel.
In my thirties, faced with growing angst and creeping depression—and motivated to be the best parent I could be to my children—I began to deal with repressed memories and old emotional residue that has left me suffering from C-PTSD, chronic back pain, sciatica, headaches, and anxiety.
As a child, I hid from the emotional pain by delving into the world of books, music, and academics. As an adult, I realized I was strong enough to face it. I wasn’t a little child anymore; I didn’t have to hide. Now I was more mature and had the resources I needed to finally face the pain that used to overwhelm my young brain—and begin to heal it.
The truth is, we all hide our emotions occasionally. We pretend, avoid, and deny uncomfortable emotions in an effort of self-preservation, as a defense mechanism.
We do this most often with difficult emotions like shame, fear, or anger. When we experience events that emotionally overwhelm us and we’re unable to process what is happening, accept our emotions, and express them through our body and mind, we hide them deep inside us where others can’t see them. And we end up hiding them from ourselves too. Yet, they’re still there.
The unresolved emotions get trapped in our body, where they build and fester, draining our energy, leading to burnout, emotional imbalance, and eventually disease. When we chronically repress emotions, we create toxicity in our body, mind, and heart.
This unprocessed emotional energy is stored in our organs, muscles, and tissues. It leads to inflammation and chronic health problems, and it undermines our overall well-being.
3 Steps to Processing Emotional Energy Stuck in Your Body
The opposite of repression is expression. In order to process our emotional distress and move it through and out of our body so it doesn’t get stuck there, we need to learn to express our emotions in a healthy way, in the body and mind. But first, we need to learn to recognize and accept our feelings as they come and go.
Step 1: Recognize (self-awareness)
The challenge is to recognize the emotion and feel it in your body. This is where mindfulness comes in. The goal is to notice what is happening within our body, accept it, and feel it fully, without judgment.
If you’ve ever come across Tara Brach’s teachings on radical acceptance, the practice of R.A.I.N. should sound familiar. R.A.I.N. stands for recognize, allow, investigate, and nourish (with self-compassion), and it “directly de-conditions the habitual ways in which you resist your moment-to-moment experience,” according to Brach.
Buddhist teachings tell us that human suffering is caused by aversion and resistance to what is happening. Acceptance is liberating, and the practice of R.A.I.N. teaches us to accept our moment-to-moment experience instead of running from it. It teaches us to face any difficulty head-on, with self-compassion and the understanding that it will eventually pass.
We have to feel it to heal it—we have to fully experience the emotion in order to process and integrate it into our experience.
But we must feel it in the body; this is the critical point. As Brach writes, “If the process of including difficult emotions in awareness stops at the level of cognitive understanding without a fully embodied experience, the genuine acceptance, insight, and inner freedom that are the essence of true healing will not be complete.”
Practice mindfulness to get better at recognizing your feelings and observing the bodily sensations connected to those feelings as they come and go throughout the day. Offer yourself self-compassion as you go through more difficult emotions.
PRACTICE:
Sit still for a few minutes with your eyes closed. Listen to your body and become curious.
What does your body feel like right now? Is there any pressure or tingling? Where? Do you feel heavy, hot, contracted, warm, or cold? What is the texture, weight, and shape of the sensations you notice in your body? What emotions are those sensations connected to? Can you breathe into the parts that call your attention? What do those parts of your body want to tell you? What do they want?
Step 2: Respond (self-expression)
Emotions need to be expressed to be processed. The goal is to move the energy of emotion through and out the body so we can let it go.
This self-expression must be authentic and embodied. Remember, true healing occurs when body and mind integrate, so express the emotion on the bodily level first and foremost.
Still sitting, ask yourself: What does this emotion you just connected with need from you? What feels right in this moment? What do you need?
Maybe you feel the need to cry, scream into a pillow, go for a swim, walk or run, dance it out, hit a punching bag, do some gardening, tapping, yoga or TRE, paint your feelings out, or simply breathe deeply while facing the sun—whatever feels cathartic in that moment, do it.
You will free the poisonous emotion that you carried within yourself and free yourself from its shackles.
Follow this step with one of the best forms of emotional healing—journaling. Writing can be a very therapeutic experience of self-discovery, reconnecting with our true self, and processing our deepest feelings and emotions.
When we write, we give our internal world a voice. We process and make sense of what is happening within us and around us. And we gain perspective; by writing about our fears and hurts, we can look at them from a distance, detach from their grip, and eventually let them go. That release can be truly healing.
Practice journaling every day to get better at expressing and processing your feelings. Don’t censor or judge yourself; let it all out, completely unfiltered. Over time, your journal will become a safe space for you to free yourself, get unstuck, and move forward.
We often don’t have the time and space to process emotions in the moment, so make sure you allow yourself the space to feel the emotions you’ve had through the day and journal about it at the end of each day.
WRITING PROMPT
What is happening in your life right now that you wish you could change? What is the biggest source of frustration? As you write, notice the sensations in your body. Tune into the parts that are numb, in pain, or frozen. What are they trying to tell you? What needs healing, attention, or change?
Step 3: Reset (self-care)
If we’ve habitually neglected our bodies and ignored our emotions, we have to re-dedicate ourselves to body-mind self-care and indulge in healing habits that will bring in the feeling of well-being.
The goal is to realign back with your authentic self, reset back to a relaxed and open state, and come back into wellness and balance.
Take time to slow down and be alone, get out into nature, make art, listen to music while you cook your favorite dinner, meditate to cleanse your mind and relax your body, or take a bubble bath or a nap to restore. Take good care of yourself to awaken to life’s joy and simple pleasures that will nourish your body, mind, and soul.
My Own Healing Journey
When I decided to take charge of my own healing, I had no idea where to start. A lifelong bookworm, I quickly discovered writing to be therapeutic. It became my refuge, a place where I could connect with my inner world in an authentic way. Writing became my most trusted way of processing emotions I didn’t even know I harbored inside since childhood. I discovered shame, anger, fear, grief, and eventually, self-compassion.
With mindfulness, I learned to allow my pain to surface, if only for a brief time, then surround it with tender love and care. My pain was a part of me, and I was done running from it; it was time I faced it.
I learned to sense into my body, little by little, as the anxiety of reconnecting with my physical sensations was very powerful. But I realized the only way out was through—through the body—so in order to move the stuck emotions that had a tight grip over me for decades, I had to allow and accept them; I had to feel the anger, the shame, the grief.
Slowly, I learned to give my inner child the support she never received. I listened to and validated her pain—and helped her let go of it. I learned to love and accept her. And I finally learned to love and accept myself.
Healing is a taxing process. Remember to give yourself all the care and compassion you would give to a friend doing this hard work. Offer yourself understanding, love, and care. This is hard work, and you are doing the best you can with what you’ve got.
Trapped emotions get in our way. They sabotage our efforts to create the life we want and make us miserable along the way. Freeing this emotional energy stuck in our bodies can shift our lives in a positive way. It’s healing and liberating. And you are worth it!
About Joanna Ciolek
Joanna Ciolek is a self-taught artist, recovering self-critic, and the author of mindfulness-based prompt journals, The Art of Homecoming and The Art of Untangling. To learn mindfulness, reconnect with yourself, and begin your healing journey, join her Free Course at The Mindfulness Journal. Follow Joanna on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.
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Though I run this site, it is not mine. It's ours. It's not about me. It's about us. Your stories and your wisdom are just as meaningful as mine.
Thank you for this article. It has given me a new perspective and made me feel that I am not alone in this. I am seeking happiness and trying to find my authentic self, I feel her sometimes but over the years have had to block her away to feel validated by others and behave the way they wanted me to. I am stuck in this feeling of inherent sadness and want to come out of it. I need something more to heal.. don’t know what that is yet.
Thank you for sharing your experiences with us!! Oh my goodness, we could have been sisters from another mister. 😉 I grew up with the saying “Children are to be seen and not heard.” and I wore the “Good Girl” badge like nobody’s business. Stuffing my emotions became my jam. One of my saving graces was starting coach training school in the early 2000s. That is when my healing truly began and I learned to deal with the emotions I had buried for so long. As a matter of fact, my own mentor coach suggested I read, “Feelings Buried Alive Never Die.” To this day that book still sits proudly on my bookshelf. But the biggest component of my healing has been writing. I journal every day. I blog. I just write. As a matter of fact, I have what I call a “Sh*t Journal” which is where I let go of anything that I feel is negative. I literally dump on the pages of that journal and I NEVER re-read it, but instead when the pages of that journal are full it gets tossed in the garbage! Thank you again for sharing, Joanna…keep making a difference!!
This post resonates with me a lot. Healing oneself takes a lot of positive mindset and determination.
Joanna, thank you so much for sharing. I love how you describe taking care of the hurting little girl inside of you. I had to learn to do that, too. It was hard to acknowledge how mean I was being to her, but once I did I could finally treat her with love so I could heal. I am sure many other readers could relate and found a sense of solace in your personal story.
Thank you for your kind words and appreciation. Unexamined, we most often speak to ourselves the way adults have spoken to us as children. Criticism, harshness, judgment – they’re all learned behaviors and reflect the environment many of us have grown up in. This is why self-compassion is so instrumental in healing. Through it, we learn to offer ourselves gentle support instead of harsh criticism, care and understanding instead of judgement or neglect. We get to redo our relationship with our inner self, rebuild self-trust, and strengthen our inner power. XOXO
I appreciate you saying that. And I like your idea of getting rid of negativity – first by dumping it on paper, then by dumping the paper itself. Good riddance!
Wonderful article. It’s a shame so many people can’t let themselves be vulnerable enough to let these emotions go;; they’d rather keep them pent up until that last piece of straw breaks their backs.
I think now, more than ever, thanks to the Internet there are more resources than ever for people to use in order to discover/articulate how they feel. We can’t practice self-care without self-awareness, and I believe this is something that online communities, such as TinyBuddha, and other sites, foster among their users.
I still go on OKClarity, which is a Jewish wellness blog, when I need help finding the right words to grasp how I feel, or just when I’m so overwhelmed by my anxiety that I need someone, anyone, to listen. It can be difficult to display these vulnerabilities to your friends and family, but online it’s different.
Thanks to online communities we are given a second chance to learn from those who’ve come before us and to follow in their footsteps. Pain may be felt individually but it isn’t unique: and that doesn’t undermine our emotions, it just means that there will always be someone we can turn to with our problems. No matter how big or small.
OKClarity helped me realize that in the same way your article does, so thank you for sharing these life lessons with so many others.
It really does make a world of difference
Dear Joanna and tinnybuddha, thanks a lot for the article! I’ve been practicing mindfulness for a not long time yet, maybe 2 months only and have much work ahead, especially with finding emotions in the body. But I’ve tried it already! I breathed into my heart during anxiety and it seemed that method was working!
Joanna, I’m co-editor and volunteer translator of Russian Hug Elephant blog where we make 1 post a day with quotes about mindfulness in parenting. This blog is free from advertising and has several channels of distribution: Facebook, Vk (Russian social network), Telegram and WordPress blog – about 9k readers in total.
One of the project goals is to spread high-quality content translated from English to Russian. Translations are made by volunteer readers for free.
I think that your article could bring inspiration to Russian speaking readers too. What do you think if it is possible to use it this way with a link to original text and information about you as the author?
I’ll send you the link when the translation will be done and published.
I can relate to much of this. My parents weren’t allowed to share difficult emotions with their parents and growing up, that cycle continued. I struggle with allowing myself to feel anger without immediately shutting it down. I’ve been experimenting with using mindfulness and radical acceptance in particular to soften the harsh feeling it creates. I’ve found therapy helpful here–Internal Family Systems modality in particular. I figured I’d share in case it was helpful. I’ll likely be writing a post about this in the near future on my own site. http://www.littlemisslionheart.com
Hey Joanna
Thank you for your post. I found it while searching for ways to digest / process these emotions that are stuck and that physically bring uncomfortable pain in my body. Journaling has always been part of my life and I know it helps a lot to understand the world and my emotions but in the situation I’m in now it’s no helping. I do yoga, I try meditation, I’ve done thousands of different therapies, which have all helped me to come one step further and I’ve come a long long way since I’ve realised I was repressing all of my emotions about 10 years ago. Now, I’m in a phase where I can feel my emotions way better than before and they circulate way better than before and it’s so nice to be able to “live” one’s emotions… but still this pain in my back, exactly at the same place, which lately just seems to sit there. And I know it’s pure emotion, which is stuck but I just don’t know how to get rid of it!!!
So anyway… I guess there’s something I’m holding on… I will take your suggestions and try these three steps your are describing !
It’s nice to hear that I’m not “imagining” all of this, but that others have the same experience as me.
xoxo
C.
This is what I needed to read this morning. I was a “people pleaser”, saying yes when I didn’t want to, letting people walk all over me instead of speaking up for myself, etc. I would journal a lot and when I read old entries, it struck me that I was writing the same frustrations over and over. I needed to change something. I could definitely recognize triggers and in my mind, could see what I should do. The actually carrying out of what I should do was very scary but once you allow yourself to feel through the emotions…I hated that feeling of vulnerability. It took a long time to get to where I am now, but allowing yourself to be treated with self-compassion is the most important. Thank you for sharing your experiences.
I am new here to this site yet this article was fantastic in helping me personally – and Pam your input just added to that helping in book suggestion as well as the same journaling suggestion – thank you.
Irene, you’re so welcome! I’m so glad you found my comment helpful. 🙂 Take great care!!
This was me, to a T!! Everything! I mean, like wow, I could’ve written it myself. I’ve been in therapy for almost 2 years and have learned tons about what our trapped emotions can do to us. Recently, we’ve discovered about trapped emotions and the emotion code, heart walls, and how to rid of them. Look it up! It’s working on me!!! And so many others!
Thank you for your wisdom. I have been dealing with a lot lately, and my boyfriend keeps telling me, I don’t show my negative emotions. I don’t know how. As a child my therapist told me to just lock them up, and that’s what I’ve been doing my whole life. Now I’m 21 and I don’t know how to be angry at my parents for disrespecting my boyfriend. Any time I’m in my parents house it seems they rule my emotions. I can never get out what’s in my head. I know I need help. I just don’t know what to do. I need to stand up against my parents. Have any suggestions?
Thank you for your wisdom. I have been dealing with a lot lately, and my boyfriend keeps telling me, I don’t show my negative emotions. I don’t know how. As a child my therapist told me to just lock them up, and that’s what I’ve been doing my whole life. Now I’m 21 and I don’t know how to be angry at my parents for disrespecting my boyfriend. Any time I’m in my parents house it seems they rule my emotions. I can never get out what’s in my head. I know I need help. I just don’t know what to do.
I had quite a difficult childhood and have a lot of anger towards my mother. Following your advice helped me recognise it but I don’t know how to let it go. I don’t want to confront her ’cause now we get along fine and now she is older and weaker and I don’t want to cause her distress. But this anger seems to have caused a blockage inside me. How do I overcome it?
I just love this post …… Man it is truly what I needed to read or go through right now can’t thanku enough for it
I love this article and just what I needed right now. While growing up I always have buried my emotions and never said anything, I am currently trying to revise myself to a better person and dealing with emotions. I recently had something festering inside of me about my brother’s family, ask him my question, and he was caught off guard. He did not like what I asked and has distance himself from me. I was seen not heard in my family, shy, and introverted growing up and still have those traits today. I journal but still ponder when you should speak your mind instead of negative emotions fester inside.
I’d write a letter to her pouring all feelings into it, aner and all. Then create a ritual around it where you burn it, rip it into pieces, or release it otherwise, with the intention of letting it go. It might help. Talking to others about it might be helpful as well.
What do you do when the emotions are based on certain core beliefs that you have about yourself or other people? Isn’t it pointless to just let the emotions be there and accept them because these emotions will keep resurfacing as long as the generating belief isn’t dealt with? Posts like this can create a lot of frustration for people whose ‘negative’ emotions are driven by core beliefs because accepting these emotions just isn’t enough to be freed from them. You need to challenge the core beliefs first and see why the emotions are being generated. Only when a core belief is understood and dismantled you can release the emotion without it returning.
As I’m reading this, I have my journal next to me. Part of the challenges of my healing process is feeling lonenly, isolated and as if nobody else understands what I’m going through. It is very encouraging to find people like you, who share their experiences and let people like me know that we aren’t alone and that it is possible to overcome our struggle through hard work. I want to thank you for writing this… I feel like a stone has been lifted off my shoulders.
FANTASTIC article. Exactly what I needed, thank you 🙂
There are minutes and moments and seconds when I am happy, but then I am drawn back to my comfortable self. I am self reflecting and trying to be self aware. Can someone help me find a solution to happiness in an environment where everyday is a battle? I can see myself being happy but see it has a burden to myself and to others around me.
Thank you for this article. i found this while doing research on a course i’m offering and found that this vibes so close with what we’re doing! It feels great to be validated. I went through a similar experience and, as an entrepreneur, want to help other women gain self-awareness to shed anxiety, fear, and self-doubt on the path to starting a business. Thanks again!
I’ve been angry, ashamed and just upset with others since kindergarten. I could never understand why my older sister would act the way she did, arguing, fighting and being so stubborn at home, but then when I had to go to school and see all of the “difficult ” kids misbehaving, it really got to me.
It’s been that way my while life.
People know the law, the rules of human behavior but choose to do wrong anyway. I try not to do wrong things, but do drive too fast.
Burt after the election of 2016, my stress level went up about 100x normal. Then, things kept getting worse. People were flat out lying and no one cared anymore. It’s getting worse instead of better.
I have been sick to my stomach, dizzy, weak and tired for months.
for it,
This article was so profound. Than you for sharing this with is. For the past few days I have been plagued by jealousy and fear for another person’s success. My mind is trying to rationalize saying that the other person is not deserving as he is not a good person and doesn’t deserve as much success. I have tried the process of surrender but at some point the emotions are too intense. Can you please suggest the best way to deal with it?
I’m really frustrated because I learnt to ‘ride’ and embrace my emotions
a few years ago. I have been doing this ever since. To a certain extent
I find it a much more helpful approach than how I was ‘dealing with
them’ before but unfortunately, I don’t find that it lessens or softens
the pain over time. I have the same intense and overwhelming anxiety as
always and the same strong feeling of being disconnected etc. To the
extent that I can’t do anything else but to sit with those feeling for
hours on end. It can be boring. I feel like giving up on this and going
back to mindless distraction and comfort eating because at least that
allows me to get on with my life. …?
Beautifully written and so on point. Thank you.
I am going through something like this where , I have a lot of issues in my life. Most nights I cry thinking about them and later sometime it felt that emotion is taking me deep inside where it is hard for me to get out, its as if I’m sucked into that pain, being there was worst feeling that I got. Could you help me with this?