30 Days to Emotional Awareness & Wellness Challenge
Day 3: Build Your Emotional Vocabulary
It’s Day 3 of the 30 Days to Emotional Awareness and Wellness Challenge and your survey results are in! So, how’d you do? What did you learn about yourself? Did the results confirm your feelings or help you gain insights about your level of self-awareness? If our discoveries were similar, it’s probably fair to say both. Remember: Self-exploration and reflection are not one-time events in the emotional wellness process and should be done regularly.
Now that we’ve slightly heightened our sense of self-awareness, we can use this new information to explore another key aspect of emotional intelligence (EI) called emotional literacy. At its most basic level, literacy helps us understand and communicate. Becoming emotionally literate is a considerable part of the EI process that helps us confidently share with others by speaking the universal language of emotions.
Human emotions are complex phenomenons that involve biological, psychological, and social dynamics, so it’s easy to understand why it’s challenging for many to recognize, reveal, and translate them with precision. Steve Hein of EQI.org reports there are more than 4,000 words that can be used to describe the many different types of positive and negative emotions we experience. So many words, so little time. Right?!
While more than 4,000 feeling words may initially seem overwhelming and excessive, it actually expands our emotional vocabulary by adding and confirming word meanings. This type of resource also exposes us to terms and descriptions of emotions we may not have otherwise considered although we may be experiencing them. In addition, learning about emotions in a rudimentary way allows us to build our emotional expertise which further facilitates positive social interactions through emotionally intelligent conversations.
Remember those vocabulary tests in grade school? Well, today’s task is designed to trigger your memory of their value. Access Hein’s list of emotions (provided in the link below). Using the word list, identify two feeling words you do not know the meaning of and define them by looking them up in the dictionary. Next, identify two positive and two negative emotions that you’ve experienced in the last 24 hours. As a final step, reflect on each emotion and corresponding description and try to pinpoint what factors may have triggered those emotions.
Like each step in the EI process, repeated action is needed to improve. Continue to build your vocabulary using this method to boost your EI awareness and capabilities. What strategies do you use to increase your knowledge and awareness about your emotions?
References
Hein, S. (n.d.). Feeling words/emotion words: Words describing feeling and emotions. Retrieved from http://core.eqi.org/fw.htm



