Thursday, November 7, 2013

REFLECTION

The Art of Attuning Our Emotions

Part of the many challenges of human coexistence is sometimes the difficulty to attune our emotions and moods with one another. Sometimes a great event, and others a chain of a few, very simple, uneventful circumstances can make our day bright. And that day we somehow fail to understand why it is that the person next to us seems unappreciative and unable to produce a smile. That can be highly irritating. Of course, the opposite can also happen. Those times when nothing seems to go right and it’s incomprehensible how people around us seem to be rejoicing in ignorance and smiling for the stupidest thing. That’s irritating too. The truth is that is hard to become attuned to other people’s moods. First, because we are deeply convinced, and rightly so, that our mood, the way I feel at this moment is so uniquely and intrinsically my own prerogative that no one has the right to make me feel otherwise. And second, because moods are very real, and it’s not as easy to change or modify them at will. It’s difficult but not impossible. 

Perhaps one of the attitudes that we all should try to master is empathy. As hard as it is, we all do have the capacity to adapt to the mood of others. We are endowed with the ability to go beyond our own states of mind. Empathy is an attitude by which we let others become, albeit temporarily, our own reference point. Through empathy we allow them to take our emotional space for their own comfort, consolation or rejoicing. Let’s not be mistaken, it’s harder that we can imagine. Imagine that someone is grieving the loss of a loved one. We would do this person no favor if, with the pretext of being empathetic, we started to explain our own experiences of loss. The same would apply, on a more positive note, to somebody that comes to us excited to share the adventures of a recent trip. Of course we want to be part of the conversation in a meaningful way, but we would show no empathy if we start showing off our own travel experiences, perhaps to more exotic countries and riskier adventures. Empathy is letting ourselves be emotionally conquered by the other. And yes, it has to be temporary. It’s not only hard but also very tiring, very consuming. We all need others who are empathetic towards us. We all need to occupy other persons’ spaces; that’s how and why we feel loved and cared for. In a group of people where all give up their spaces to empathy, our own individual and crucial need for understanding, compassion, a friendly voice and a comforting shoulder, is over-abundantly met. It is a very difficult task, the world of human relationships is extremely complex. But the more we work towards this sharing and giving of spaces, this network of empathy, the more we will be living in the Kingdom of Heaven.

A final note. As it happens with crying or laughing, moods are often contagious. The following saying is unfairly dramatic but brings the point right across: “One rotten apple spoils the whole bunch.” It is up to us to turn this uninviting image inside out. Perhaps we could say: “One ready smile, one warm heart, one gentle look, one kind word, an empathetic gesture, may spread and multiply in surprising, unexpected and remarkable ways.”   


Esteban Redolad


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