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Emotions can range from 1 (despair) to 10 (ecstasy). Many people narrow their emotional range in order not to feel pain, generally staying between 4 to 6. These “4 to 6'ers” are emotionally surviving and suffer from numbness and boredom. Expanding your emotional range can be intimidating, but ultimately leads to a richer, more passionate life.
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Imagine if all the human emotions were on a scale from 1 to 10, with 1 being the darkest feelings, such as despair and helplessness, and 10 being the brightest feelings, such as ecstasy and deep joy. All the other feelings are spread out between these two extremes: 3 could be worry, for instance, and 6 could be satisfaction or anticipation.
Most children are naturally born with the full 1 to 10. They begin with free, unadulterated access to the whole emotional range. They feel all the emotions in a strong, visceral way. Children can fluctuate from crying to laughing to crying again in seconds.
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Then over time, we internalize messages and judgments about certain feelings: “Boys don’t cry,” “You have nothing to cry about,” “We don’t yell in this house,” “Stop dancing around,” “Sit down and be quiet,” and more. Societal, gender, and family of origin influences slowly trickle down, and as young adults, we begin to narrow our emotional range. Consequentially, many end up living in the four to six range. They are the “4 to 6’ers.” They live in that middle ground: not too sad or happy, not too in pain, but not too passionate.
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The “4 to 6ers” are emotional survivors: They are fully functional, regulated, and plow through life. They don’t collapse or fall. They get jobs, marry, and have kids, but something is missing. They usually don’t know what it is. Psychologists meet them several years later, in therapy, when they finally confront this narrowness after a crisis, illness, affair, or threats of divorce .
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There are some gains for this narrow emotional range.
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Several losses are inescapable in this emotional approach.
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4 to 6 is just surviving. 1 to 10 is truly living.
Why? Because feelings are what make us human. Living a 1 to 10 life means feeling the full range of what it is to be alive. And part of living to our fullest means feeling the highs and lows of life, which can be exhilarating as well as scary. When we allow ourselves the full range, our internal experiences become more sophisticated, life becomes richer and exciting again, and we gain better regulation and choice over our moods. Every day becomes brighter, thicker, and more meaningful.
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7 to 10: If you want to strengthen your 7 to 10 range, then practice joy. Joy is a verb. See here: https://youtu.be/Bp7B8hs-7YA
1 to 3: If you find it hard to access the darker feelings, then exploring them could actually allow you to feel more joy because, after all, the key to your joy is in your pain. But: exploring these gloomier moods should be done in baby steps with someone you trust, who will not immediately be activated to cheer you up. You will need to do something counterintuitive: you will need to teach yourself to feel comfortable in your pain.
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CURATOR'S NOTE
What’s your emotional range? Have you chosen it? Are you happy with it? Expanding your emotional range can be intimidating, but ultimately leads to a richer, more passionate life.
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