We are always more inclined to believe in what we feel.
When we become suspicious of our feelings and try to trust data and our rational mind, we move beyond biases and prejudice that exist in our feelings and emotions.
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Similar ideas to Our Feelings And Our Beliefs
Biases filter our experiences and affect the way we understand the world, only allowing us to see what we want to see. As we gather information, the brain uses what it knows to interpret it, but the information we receive is rarely entirely accurate, complete, or unbiased.
By stigmatizing uncomfortable feelings, we tend to eliminate the visibility of these emotions in society and people who feel sad or depressed believe they are the only ones who feel this way because they don’t see examples of others living with the same emotions around them.
When you're expressing your feelings, it's better to use words that refer to specific emotions rather than words that are vague and general.
Don't say you feel "good" when words like happy, excited, relieved, or anything else could describe how you feel more precisely.
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