The Art Of Being Crabby
Tags: women, moods, PMS, hormones
I wish that I could say that I am feeling fabulous and âoutta siteâ and full of positive thoughts and feelings right now, but I happen to be an honest person (sometimes to my detriment) and I canât lie well. So how am I REALLY feeling, you ask? CRABBY. Iâm being visited by my dear and old friend, PMS, and sheâs making me feel murderous one minute, and pathetically weep-into-a-hankie sad the next. Iâm guessing that wherever you are on the female hormone continuum, you can relate to what Iâm talking about. As I write this, I would laugh at a button I have on my desk in front of me (but my present mood doesnât tolerate happiness, let alone a wee chuckle) that says, âPMS- Harness The Energyâ. So thatâs exactly what Iâm doing by writing this article. And perhaps I can make at least one of you laugh which would be greatâŚAs a woman-centred therapist, I feel that it is my duty to empower and uplift women and to encourage them to become all they dream of being. And I truly believe that us gals cannot be fully empowered and uplifted unless we feel totally free to feel whatever we need to feel at any given moment and to not be ashamed about it. As girls, we learn that âgood girls donât get angryâ, and that it is somehow âunfeminineâ for us to get mad and express it. I wish I could say that this is changing with our younger generation, but sadly, from the work that I do, I see countless young women killing themselves in various ways; internalizing their rage and taking it out on themselves instead of getting mad at society or people in their lives who have controlled, manipulated, violated, and/or abused them. What do I feel when I hear these stories? MAD!
I wish desperately that more of us could embrace our âinner crabâ and let her out when she needs to say something, stand up for something/someone, or express the pain thatâs underneath her anger. I have come to learn that âthe inner crabâ is very wise indeed and can help us lead happier, healthier, and more balanced lives once we learn to tune into her and take her advice.
I donât know about you, but as a young woman, whenever I expressed crabbiness or anger, I was immediately shut down by the adults in my life. I was shamed and called, âmoodyâ, âdisagreeableâ, âunladylikeâ, or âuncooperativeâ.
It didnât stop there either. Still, as a woman, I get called names any time Iâm not âniceâ or âcompliantâ and it really makes me mad. In fact, the more I get judged for being crabby, the crabbier I become. Same for many women I know. So whatâs the solution?
EMBRACE YOUR INNER CRAB AND LISTEN TO WHAT SHE IS TELLING YOU!
Often, when weâre crabby, itâs a sign that someone has crossed a personal boundary we have. This can be a good thing because sometimes we are unaware of our boundaries until they are crossed. Once we know our boundaries, we can enforce them and stop letting people walk all over us, and thus, become less crabby in the long run because we wonât be feeling so resentful so much of the time.
Plus, when we stop fighting feeling crabby, and just let ourselves feel as crabby as we want, the feeling usually goes away much faster because itâs been given the airtime and release it needed. Sometimes weâre crabby because of certain circumstances in our lives and sometimes itâs just raging hormones and there ainât a lot we can do about it. The thing to remember is that feelings are just feelings and they donât last forever. If youâre in such a crabby mood that you canât see it ending, remind yourself that âthis too shall passâ and that youâll feel better soon.
But while youâre riding the waves of crabbiness, try one or some, or all of the following to get through to the other side where rainbows and pots of gold await youâŚ
Estherâs Top 5 Tips to Embracing Your Inner Crab
1. Go with it and stop fighting how youâre feeling
2. Follow these two important rules while youâre in the throws of crabbiness: donât hurt yourself or anyone/thing else.
3. Let your anger out in healthy ways like: intense exercise, shouting in your car with the windows rolled up (not when youâre driving), punching pillows, writing all the vicious thoughts youâre having out on paper and destroying them afterwards, âventingâ to a caring person who realises that itâs healthy to let off some steam once in a while.
4. After youâve let out your anger, nurture yourself by doing nice things like having a bath, petting an animal, getting a massage, or doing some yoga and/or meditation.
5. Youâll probably move into feeling sad and weepy after youâve released your anger, as sadness is often what is beneath the surface of our crabbiness. Let yourself have a good cry- let it out. Youâll feel a whole lot lighter and freer afterwards.
About the Author
Author: Esther R. Kane | Total views: 110
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Esther Kane, MSW, Registered Clinical Counsellor, is the author of âDump That Chump: A Ten-Step Plan for Ending Bad Relationships and Attracting the Fabulous Partner You Deserve (http://www.dumpthatchump.com), and âWhat Your Mama Canât or Wonât Teach You: Grown Womenâs Stories of Their Teen Years (http://www.guidebooktowomanhood.com). Sign up for her free monthly e-zine, Womenâs Community Counsellor, to uplift and inspire women at: http://www.estherkane.com.
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