My Emotions Are Mine

Autonomy Step 1

I know that no one else can control my emotions.

Paths to Recovery, p. 13

I used to give others tremendous power over my emotional life. If someone criticized me, I felt worthless. If they praised me, I felt valuable. If they were angry, I felt afraid. My emotions seemed to be controlled by everyone except me, rising and falling with others' moods and opinions like a boat on turbulent water.

The realization that no one else can control my emotions was startling. Yes, others can trigger feelings. They can say hurtful things or act in ways that impact me. But the emotion itself – how I interpret events, what meaning I assign, how long I dwell, what I do with the feeling – these belong entirely to me.

This isn't about suppressing emotions or pretending I'm not affected by others. It's about recognizing where the locus of control actually resides. When I understand that my emotions are mine, I can examine them with curiosity rather than just reacting to them reflexively. I can ask what they're telling me about my own needs, values, and boundaries.

I've learned that emotional autonomy is a form of freedom. Others' behaviors may be the occasion for my feelings, but they aren't the cause. I feel what I feel because of how I interpret and respond to events, not because others have direct access to my emotional control panel. This puts me back in the driver's seat of my own life.

Today I can notice one emotion I'm experiencing and explore what it's teaching me about my own needs and boundaries.

Today’s Reminder

I have authority over my emotional life

Carry this peace in your pocket.

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