Emotions hit them like a tidal wave—sudden, overwhelming, uncontrollable. They go from fine to devastated in seconds. Small things trigger big reactions. They feel everything too much, or struggle to feel anything at all.
This is what it’s like when emotional regulation is difficult—and it’s more common than you might think.
What Is Emotional Regulation?
The Simple Explanation
Emotional regulation is the ability to manage and respond to emotional experiences in flexible, appropriate ways. It doesn’t mean suppressing emotions or never feeling upset—it means being able to experience emotions without being completely overwhelmed or controlled by them.
Think of it like this: Imagine emotions as waves in the ocean. Good emotional regulation is like being a skilled surfer—you can ride the waves without being pulled under. Poor emotional regulation is like being tossed around by every wave, never knowing which one might drown you. The waves will come regardless; the difference is your relationship with them.
What It Involves
Emotional regulation includes:
– Recognizing your emotions
– Understanding what triggered them
– Experiencing them without being overwhelmed
– Expressing them appropriately
– Managing intensity
– Returning to baseline after distress
What It Looks Like
Good Emotional Regulation
Signs of healthy regulation:
– Can feel upset without falling apart
– Recovers from emotional distress
– Expresses emotions appropriately
– Doesn’t avoid emotions completely
– Can tolerate discomfort
– Makes decisions despite feelings
– Relationships stay relatively stable
Difficulty with Regulation
Signs of difficulty:
– Emotions feel overwhelming
– Small triggers cause big reactions
– Difficulty calming down
– Emotions last longer than expected
– Impulsive reactions
– Avoidance of all emotional situations
– Relationships are turbulent
– Using substances to manage feelings
Why Some People Struggle
Temperament
Biological factors:
– Some people feel more intensely
– Sensitivity varies naturally
– Nervous system differences
– Some are “emotional sponges”
Childhood Experiences
Developmental factors:
– Learned from caregivers
– Emotional neglect
– Trauma
– Invalidating environments
– Chaotic households
– Inconsistent responses to emotions
The Invalidating Environment
What it looks like:
– “You’re overreacting”
– “Stop crying or I’ll give you something to cry about”
– “You shouldn’t feel that way”
– “Big boys/girls don’t cry”
– “You’re being dramatic”
– Emotions ignored or punished
What Happens
The result:
– Never learned to manage emotions
– Learned emotions are bad/dangerous
– Developed extreme responses
– Swing between suppression and explosion
– Don’t trust own feelings
Emotional Regulation and Mental Health
Associated Conditions
Difficulty regulating emotions appears in:
– Borderline Personality Disorder
– PTSD
– Depression
– Anxiety disorders
– ADHD
– Bipolar Disorder
– Eating disorders
– Substance use disorders
The Relationship
How they connect:
– Poor regulation can cause mental health issues
– Mental health issues can impair regulation
– Often reinforcing cycles
– Treatment for one helps the other
Building Emotional Regulation Skills
The Foundation: Awareness
Step one—notice:
– What am I feeling?
– Where do I feel it in my body?
– What triggered this?
– What thoughts are present?
– How intense is this (1-10)?
Understanding Your Emotions
Learn that:
– All emotions are valid
– Emotions give information
– Feelings aren’t facts
– Emotions pass
– You don’t have to act on every feeling
Key Skills
STOP Skill
When overwhelmed:
– Stop: Don’t react immediately
– Take a step back
– Observe: What’s happening?
– Proceed mindfully
Distress Tolerance
Surviving crisis without making it worse:
– Distraction techniques
– Self-soothing (5 senses)
– TIPP (Temperature, Intense exercise, Paced breathing, Paired muscle relaxation)
– Radical acceptance
The TIPP Skills
For high emotional arousal:
– Temperature: Cold water on face
– Intense exercise: Brief burst of activity
– Paced breathing: Slow, deep breaths
– Paired muscle relaxation: Tense and release
Opposite Action
When emotion doesn’t fit:
– Identify the action urge
– Do the opposite
– Fear urges avoidance → approach
– Anger urges attack → step back gently
– Sadness urges withdrawal → get active
Check the Facts
Before reacting:
– What happened (facts only)?
– What am I assuming?
– What’s another explanation?
– Does my emotion fit the facts?
– How intense should this be?
Self-Soothing
Using Your Senses
Vision:
– Look at beautiful things
– Nature, art, candles
Hearing:
– Calming music
– Nature sounds
– Guided meditation
Smell:
– Comforting scents
– Fresh air
– Aromatherapy
Taste:
– Soothing tea
– Comfort food (mindfully)
– Mint or lemon
Touch:
– Soft blanket
– Pet an animal
– Warm bath
Prevention
Reducing Vulnerability
Take care of basics:
– Adequate sleep
– Regular meals
– Limit substances
– Exercise
– Treat physical illness
– Build mastery experiences
– Do pleasurable activities
Building Positive Experiences
Increase positive emotions:
– Schedule pleasant activities
– Build toward long-term goals
– Be mindful of positive moments
– Don’t destroy positives
When Skills Aren’t Enough
Seeking Professional Help
Consider therapy if:
– Emotions regularly overwhelm you
– Relationships suffer
– You use harmful coping
– Daily functioning affected
– Skills alone don’t help
– Trauma underlies difficulty
Treatment Options
Effective approaches:
– Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)—gold standard
– Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
– Emotion-Focused Therapy
– EMDR for trauma
– Skills groups
What DBT Offers
Core modules:
– Mindfulness
– Distress tolerance
– Emotion regulation
– Interpersonal effectiveness
For Parents
Teaching Children
How to help kids regulate:
– Model regulation yourself
– Validate their emotions
– Name feelings together
– Stay calm during their storms
– Teach coping strategies
– Don’t shame emotional expression
What Validation Sounds Like
Examples:
– “It makes sense you’re upset”
– “That must be really frustrating”
– “It’s okay to feel angry”
– “I can see how sad you are”
– “Big feelings are hard”
For Loved Ones
Supporting Someone Who Struggles
How to help:
– Stay calm (don’t match their intensity)
– Validate before problem-solving
– Don’t tell them how to feel
– Set your own boundaries
– Encourage professional help
– Don’t take everything personally
What NOT to Do
Avoid:
– “Calm down” (rarely helps)
– “You’re overreacting”
– Dismissing their feelings
– Trying to logic them out of emotion
– Getting angry at their anger
– Abandoning them during emotions
Moving Forward
Emotional regulation isn’t about becoming a robot or never feeling upset. It’s about having a working relationship with your emotions—experiencing them fully without being destroyed, expressing them appropriately, and returning to balance.
If you struggle with emotional regulation, please know: this is a skill that can be learned. It doesn’t matter if no one taught you as a child or if you’ve struggled for years. The brain remains capable of learning new patterns throughout life. With practice, patience, and often professional support, people develop regulation skills they never thought possible.
Your emotions aren’t the enemy. They’re messengers, information, part of being human. The goal isn’t to make them go away—it’s to learn to surf the waves instead of drowning in them.
This article is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional evaluation or treatment. If you struggle with emotional regulation, reaching out for support can help. Arise Counseling Services offers compassionate support for individuals and families throughout Pennsylvania.
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