Laura said:
Since I'm sort of collecting examples here (and hope that ya'll will contribute other possible examples), there's a particular type of personality that works this way when splitting/internal considering takes hold:
First, they have rapid and overwhelming emotional reactions to whatever the trigger is, and start out from a state of being emotionally worked up. Then, the more this type thinks while in that state, the more s/he freaks out the self, so to say. And the more convinced s/he is that s/he is RIGHT about whatever.
The sad thing is that the more this person continues to "think", the more inaccurate, outlandish, irrational, out of proportion and out of context the thoughts become. This sort of person can drive themselves to do many things that are damaging to others but, in the long run, mostly to themselves.
This was me before the diet changes, detoxing, and weaning off a list of medications. It can still be me if there's a bad shock involved, I've learned how to roll with it better now. (Maybe.)
In my case there are 'red flags' that can stop the wind up, one of which is the focus on 'being right'. If I feel 'I have to be right', then its a good bet I'm full of crap. When emotions run off with me, it's clear that's what's going on: I can't speak, get bug eyed, and shiver. Depending on what kind of shock it is, my legs go out from under me and I end up sitting there blinking at things. When I can speak? It varies between a ream of curses and outrage. It goes on to cycle through a series of obsession/compulsions that amount to basic drives: run down the threat, shore up defences against said threat, and run that threat right out on a rail.
When detoxing and stopping antidepressants, this happened a lot, and no overt or obvious shocks were needed. That's when I learned to avoid the internet, phone calls, and leaving the house when my emotions were freaking the rest of me out, and to take the time to process the emotions in order to function again. Communicating this was crucial in dealing with it. I let those few people that see me or hear from me on a regular or semi regular basis know what's going on. Hubby tends to be the first one to say "You look wound up, what's going through your mind right now?"
What I try to do is, first...stop and think. If I can't manage to do that, I tell someone I'm wound up, not able to think, and in need of 'walking it off'. Exercise works...provided my body will cooperate. When it can't, "Honey, I'm having the wiggins, can't move, where's a cat toy?" Throwing a cat toy until kitty gets bored and goes to sleep helps. So does cleaning something. It depends on how much energy is available. When I can't move? I write a story about it. My computer here is full of the nonsense that results from that.
Next: what's the root of it? If I can't find that, chances are good
it may be another person's emotional state setting me off. That means working through it and letting it pass without interacting with too many folks who won't 'get it'. I let it out through singing and dancing here in the house. My cat doesn't care, and my neighbors know that as long as I'm singing and they can hear the odd polka number, things are fine.
What are the facts here? This is the one question that can help the most when my 'horse' is tired. If I can't see any at that point? I'll ask someone if they can see any. If there are no facts to underpin the emotions, no real reasons for it? Then its chalked up to 'brain farts', 'bad wiring' and I do my 'purple minion dance'...and move on.
To recap:
1. Stop and think, and if thinking is not possible, don't act until you can.
2. Where is this coming from, the root of it (or the heart of it).
3. What are the facts here? No facts...work it off and move on.
Okay, so here's the deal: you HAVE to metabolize the emotions because it is clouding your thinking. But you want to do this with full awareness that your thinking is clouded! It's like grease burning in your oven, filling the room with acrid smoke, and you have to open open doors and windows to get the smoke out, but you KNOW that it is just smoke and what is causing it and you don't go calling the fire department, or get out a fire extinguisher and spray down your room and make a huge mess to clean up, or run screaming "the house is burning, the house is burning!"
Venting safely is "airing things out" getting the smoke out of the room. And then you have to work on getting the grease out of the oven so it doesn't happen again!
The only way I can explain it is that you have to KNOW that your brain is fogged when you think a certain way, feel a certain way, act a certain way, and that your system 1 is running the show and trying to force system 2 into service. And system 2 is usually very obliging.
Thing is, you can't get system 2 - thinking - to straighten out while the house is full of smoke, or using the other analogy, the horse is out of control. You have to get the smoke out, or run the horse safely until it is exhausted and THEN you can work on cleaning/training.
You can play "Ain't it Awful" with one very, VERY, important modification: you must know, and acknowledge throughout, that your brain is clouded with programmed emotions that are like old grease on the bottom of the oven. So, instead of being reasonable in your complaints, you MUST blow them out of proportion until they are ridiculous and you can see how ridiculous they are and laugh at yourself.
Here's an example of blowing the situation out of proportion, and Hubby and I use this almost every day:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uqszKFsaBpo
I've got the eye twitch naturally, and the rest works out. ;)