Mental health
fromPsychology Today
13 hours agoMinimizing Unnecessary Drama
Increased drama leads to nervous system dysregulation, causing arguments and mood swings, but mindfulness can help mitigate this issue.
Carlos described his return home as a journey filled with memories of familiar neighborhoods and voices, yet he felt a quiet distance from them. Years spent in Tampa reshaped his identity, altering how he spoke and related to others. He recognized everything around him but felt a disconnection, as if the bond between his place and self had loosened over time.
According to the Free Energy Principle (FEP), developed by theoretical neuroscientist Karl Friston and colleagues, much of what the brain does can be understood as minimizing such mismatches—a technical form of 'surprise' defined as the improbability of sensory input given an internal model. The proposal brings perception, action, learning, and decision-making under a single framework.
True anger has characteristics that frozen fight-or-flight completely lacks: Directional: It points toward a specific violation, not diffuse irritability at everything. Connected to values: It arises from what you care about, what matters deeply to you. Proportionate: The intensity matches the actual offense. Resolving: When addressed or fully experienced, it naturally dissipates. Think of the parent protecting their bullied child. The person discovering they've been lied to by someone they trusted.
"You need to regulate your emotions." It's one of the most common pieces of advice in therapy, self-help, and everyday life. We're told to manage feelings, reframe thoughts, stay calm, and cope better. But modern affective science suggests that our everyday understanding of emotion regulation is incomplete-and sometimes misleading. Research across psychology, neuroscience, and cross-cultural studies shows that regulation is not a single skill you either have or lack.