The Use Of Emotional Body
Language
Our human bodies are programmed to have emotions, to signal -
both internally and externally - when something wonderful happens
and when something awful happens. A love relationship will almost
certainly include both of these extremes of feeling.
It's relatively easy to spot when either you or your partner is
overwhelmed with emotion, particularly the 'classic six' emotions
that have the same body language all over the world, from Japan to
Argentina: happiness, sadness, anger, disgust, surprise and
fear.
You'll signal happiness to each other through your smiles;
sadness through your tears; anger through your raised voices or
strong gestures. (However, you may never see real fear in each
other unless you're involved in a traumatic incident together.)
Where real body language skill emerges, however, is not in
spotting these obvious signs of emotion, but in noticing the much
more subtle manifestations of feeling that everyone experiences
every day.
Satisfaction, regret, irritation, distaste, confusion and
anxiety are the toned-down versions of the full-blown feelings. If
you are able to spot the signs of these in yourself and your
partner early on, you'll be well equipped to cope with them in you
both.
The first sign of an emotion you may well notice in yourself
will be some kind of internal rush of energy. This is because
emotions were originally designed as a way of resourcing you to
cope with an outside threat, as well as signaling to others in your
'tribe' that you needed help with whatever was affecting you.
Emotions are real physical events, just like hunger or thirst,
with your entire autonomic nervous system moving into action. On
the inside, adrenalin pours into your bloodstream, your heartbeat
and blood pressure soar, your breathing rate rises, your nervous
system is flooded with sugar to give you energy, your digestive
system slows down so as not to waste that energy and your
coagulation rate rises in case there's blood spilled.
Parallel to this, each particular emotion will have its own
specific effect within your body. Anxiety might make itself felt by
a churning in your stomach that is so common that it has a special
word in English - 'butterflies.' You may also get tightness down
the center line of, your body, a faster heartbeat, a dry mouth, a
slightly cold sensation and perhaps a sudden need to go to the
toilet.
If you are experiencing regret, you'll feel your eyes prickle, a
vague precursor of tears; your nose or throat may feel slightly
blocked, and there'll typically be a heavy feeling down your center
line.
The earliest sign of irritation may be a sudden tingling, a
movement in your stomach, a rushing in your head or hands, a sudden
clenching of your jaw.
Be aware of your emotions as you feel them day by day. That way,
not only do you gain more communication with your own body,
literally encouraging it to 'tell' you when it thinks there is
something to be wary of or angry about, but you also have more
chance of responding to your emotions, which is a skill useful not
only in love relationships but also throughout your life.
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