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Thoughts, feelings and clear communication

John R. Ballew, M.S., L.P.C.

Little boys are raised differently from little girls.  It’s not just a matter of some children being given toy trucks on their birthdays while others are given Barbie and Ken.  If a little girl comes into the house crying, an adult is much more likely to talk with her about what happened and what she’s feeling.  A little boy in a similar situation is likely to be asked what’s wrong and given advice on what to do differently next time. 

Girls and women are taught a language of emotion that is often not provided to boys and men.  Girls are expected to feel and express emotions.  Boys are taught control emotions.  Get back in the game!  Feelings and emotions are typically seen as a feminine realm, while males are taught to take action. 

Certain feelings are “masculine,” and OK for boys or men to experience.  Anger is one; it’s perfectly acceptable for a man to feel pissed off.  Horny is fine, too.  Any man can admit to these feelings without loss of face. 

Other feelings are much more difficult – fear, for instance.  Anything that implies susceptibility of one sort or another puts men on shaky ground.  Everyone feels these things from time to time, unless they live in a perpetually numb state.  But feeling anxious or sad or helpless can be so threatening to many men that they are unable to put their identify the feeling at all. 

This puts men at a serious disadvantage later in life.  Something happens to them, and they have an internal experience…but they can’t exactly tell you what it is.  They are aware of being uncomfortable with the sensation, but can’t quite put their finger on it.  They feel awkward or embarrassed. 

This is especially problematic in relationships.  Heterosexual couples have an advantage over male-male duos in one respect:  one of the partners is much more likely to have the sort of emotional vocabulary that facilitates communication between the couple.  Gay male relationships may be more likely to feel stuck, or to have less range of emotional expression.  The result may be that uncomfortable topics get avoided, and conflict remains below the surface.  When that happens, relationships suffer. 

Many of us get confused about the distinction between thoughts and feelings.  “I feel like going to a movie tonight” is a thought, not a feeling.  Thoughts are ideas, considerations, or reasons.  Emotions or feelings are a sensation rather than a thought, and may be experienced in the body:  the chest, shoulders, stomach.  Most emotions can be reduced to one or more of the primary emotions, often described as sad, mad, glad and scared

In intimate relationships, what we feel is often at least as important as what we are thinking.  That’s because loving relationships are not intellectual encounters, but connections of one heart to another.  Learning to speak the language of the heart – that is, to become more comfortable and familiar with feelings and emotions – enriches our capacity for communicating with our beloved, and that deepens our relationships.  It also allows us to get more of what we most deeply want, because we have the language for making our requests and needs known. 

John R. Ballew, M.S., is a licensed professional counselor in private practice in Atlanta. He specializes in issues related to coming out, sexuality and relationships.  He can be reached at (404) 874-8536 or via the web at www.bodymindsoul.org.

  

                           

© Copyright 2008  John R. Ballew, M.S.  All rights reserved.  Click here to email me or call (404) 874-8536 for more information.