this post was submitted on 22 Jul 2025
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ADHD
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had this during exams and such.
take a step back, check if the intensity of the emotion is warranted and let it wash over you, extreme emotions tend to be short lived.
i was not about to die, even if my brain suggested that, and it had to relent after me being still alive after 5 minutes sitting right there before my tasks.
my problems started when i would 'feed' those emotions by fantasizing about the impending catastrophe or giving in and acting on them, by fleeing the class room for example.
i guess this would be harder in a social encounter, but the first step is allways realizing that an emotion is to intense, once that's done its easier to return to reason and not instinct.
tl;dr :
took me a lot of therapy to start at step 1 and not going from step 2 to "do a stupid thing you'll regret in 5 minutes"
Great advice. There’s a book called The Practice of Embodying Emotions with tons of science backing up the basic advice of: let emotions take up as much of your body as you can, which helps them process and release faster.
researching CBT, cognitive-behavioral-therapy, don't make this weird!, will yield tons of material, but that's a journey best undertaken with someone you trust.