Feelings Education: Getting Beyond Sad, Mad and Glad

Those simple single syllable emotion words are the first and easiest for young children to learn. Then, as they grow, it is time for parents, educators and caregivers to help them move beyond sad, mad and glad…

A Different Curriculum

When kids come home with A’s and B’s in reading writing and math, parents feel a sense of security that their children are building the skills that will help them succeed in life. Then there is a whole set of different and important skills, which help our kids get smarter about the variety of emotions they feel and encounter on a daily basis.

Understanding one’s own emotions can make the difference between a physical fight and a deep breath. Understanding in- the-moment emotions of others is an invaluable social skill. For children and adults with Asperger Syndrome and Autism, navigating the territory of emotions is a particularly puzzling challenge.

Here are a few solid reasons to create your own emotional intelligence curriculum.

  • Children learn to feel comfortable with expressing fears, guilt or feelings of isolation, when it is natural to discuss emotions with their trusted adults. Many kids keep quiet about toxic feelings that build up and need to be expressed to those adults.
  • When we teach our challenging loved ones to appropriately handle an emotional experience, for example anger, they are equipped with positive options to replace the knee jerk impulses that lead to negativity and confrontation. An emotionally tuned in child can say “I feel like I am going to burst into a rage, but I know there are people I can go talk to right away.”
  • Self-confidence builds and helps to pave the way for kids to use their talents and stretch their abilities when they have a sense of control about being able to handle an emotional situation.

Take Action: Build a Feelings Vocabulary

Following are six fun ways for parents, caregivers and educators to weave an informal curriculum of emotional education into the daily routine:

1. Spend time with your kids, exploring emotions found in the everyday media they enjoy – books, TV, movies. When reading picture books with young children, help them explore the illustrations for emotions. Dramatize the story by weaving in feeling words: “The wolf was seething with frustration when he could not get into the house.” With your older children, initiate discussion about characters and events in their favorite shows. Attach interesting feeling words to their observations. A ‘perplexing’ problem. A ‘moody’ friend. An ‘inspiring’ teacher. An ‘annoying’ classmate. A ‘monotonous’ story. Ask questions like “What would you feel?” Watch for cues from the characters: hands on hips, eyes wide, frowning.

Sad has many faces: When a child says, “I feel sad” he may actually want to articulate worry, loneliness, or helplessness. Sadness related to a loss can range from disappointment to grieving. Help them to say what they are feeling, with specificity. Be sure to be age appropriate. You don’t want your children to walk around sounding like emotional dictionaries, “I was just devastated that Jordan did not invite me to his birthday party.” However, you can help your children to more precisely label what they feel. ” I was disappointed.” “I felt ignored.” “It made me angry.”

2. Teach the many hues of an emotion.

3. Play drama games. Make a list of feeling words and their corresponding body language and facial expressions. Be dramatic. Be silly. Exaggerate to make the point! This is a good exercise with children and young adults who have High Functioning Autism or Asperger Syndrome because they need explicit instruction in how to ‘read’ people’s faces and behaviors. Help them see and experience the various nuances of a single emotion.

Each card has a face expressing a particular emotion. They are a fun and useful visual tool for discriminating human moods and emotions. Use real life situations, or make them up, and brainstorm appropriate responses to the emotion. “If you felt [jealous/confused/afraid] what would you do?” See below for a link to free feelings face graphics.

4. Enrich emotion vocabulary with Feelings Face Cards.

5. Avert a looming crisis by labeling a negative emotion as you see it coming. When your child is on emotional overload, sometimes just acknowledging what she is going through will help her stay composed. For example, Parent: “You feel just too tired and cranky to finish your homework.” Child: “Yes!”

For example, for the emotion proud, collect pictures of faces and events that depict pride and proud moments. When working with children or adults with Asperger Syndrome or Autism, start with one emotion word and build, spending lots of time working with the ‘visuals’ of each emotion. This is a terrific way to spend time with your child in an ongoing project, organizing the images on index cards or in a scrapbook. Create activities with them: categorizing, role-play, rate the feelings for intensity, write stories about them. Ask lots of reflection type questions. Be imaginative and keep the feeling words rolling along!

6. Create picture collections of real life situations that portray an emotion.

Sprinkled through this issue are some of the more useful emotion words to work with. Here are a few more good ones to equip you child through the daily ups and downs.

Unsure – Impatient – Amazed – Embarrassed – Jealous – Anxious – Loving – Ashamed
Questions to Inspire Feelings Talk

“What can you do to help someone feel [happy]?”

“How would you know if someone felt [scared]?”

“What can you do when you feel [impatient]?”

Remember the feeling!

“How do you feel?” is always answered by emotion words. ”I have a ton of work and I don’t know how I will get through it.” does not tell what one feels, although in that simple example, most of us get the message. “I am overwhelmed with work and worried about finishing on time.” does clearly tell the feeling.

Here is your on-line activity resource:

Feelings Faces Cards http://feelingsfacescards.com

Have fun!

Copyright Ellen Mossman-Glazer 2009. All rights reserved. You are welcome to share or reprint this article, providing it remains as written with all contact and copyright information included along with a link to http://artofbehaviorchange.com This content is coaching and education and not intended to take the place of psychological services, where advised and appropriate. Contact me at ellen@artofbehaviorchange.com

This entry was posted in Parenting

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