• Entropywins
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    811 months ago

    I went through a great 2 year soberiety/life change program at the union gospel mission and we used those a lot in group. I remember trying to be a bit of a jerk and trying to pick the angry ones my first few groups but as you go outwards and more specific it really got me thinking. This wheel was sooo helpful in expressing myself and getting deeper into things I needed to share both in group and solo counseling. Thanks for the share brought back some good memories!!!

    • @galaxiOP
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      311 months ago

      Hell yeah I love to see it! I feel like anger is the most socially accepted outside of happy so that seems really reasonable to me. I’m glad you gave it a chance and had a place to open up :)

  • @Barely
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    711 months ago

    I can imagine this being useful for people who write fiction, too

  • noughtnaut
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    511 months ago

    Old but gold. It’s quite useful; it’s good to see it shared once more. Also, something similar (albeit in list form) was posted recently.

    I frequently use freethesaurus.com to find “smacks of the same” variants.

  • @[email protected]
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    511 months ago

    I thinks that should be a poster in every english classroom. I mean in countries with other official languages.

    Our teachers always had to encourage us to use other (more nuanced) words than happy and sad.

  • @Juliie
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    11 months ago

    Skeptical as angry is odd. I am skeptical of that particular feeling location. Great post though. It is inspiring somehow and makes me want to try to create a game with such complex pawn/sims feelings system

    • @lamentforicarus
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      411 months ago

      When people feel skeptical, this is often inline with a more defensive feeling, which leads to anger. At least that’s how I took it.

  • @ows
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    411 months ago

    This is great. Where is it from? Is it something standard and commonly used? Or did you magic it up?

    • @galaxiOP
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      411 months ago

      You know, I honestly can’t remember. Maybe google? I sent it to a loved one a while ago. They are really common though! They might not all have the same words on them, but they all follow a similar structure. I believe it’s used to treat symptoms like alexithymia or childhood neglect. I remember learning about this concept in the book “Running on Empty” by Jonice Webb. She provides a list of feelings and recommends checking in with oneself often to see how they feel so it becomes second-nature. Glad you liked it!

      • @ows
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        211 months ago

        I love things like this. Thanks for the extra info.

  • mrbubblesort
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    411 months ago

    This is cool, but where’s “desire/unfulfilled/needy/hungry/jealous/hungry/horny”? Seems like a big chunk of the pie that they missed.

    • @VubDappleM
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      311 months ago

      Good point! This is an emotion wheel, but emotions are just one part of the larger concept of affects, which also include the appetites.

      • @TeamDman
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        111 months ago

        How many appetites are there?

        • @VubDappleM
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          111 months ago

          I thought it would be an easy question to answer but it isn’t. The closest I came was this article:

          “appetitive motivation is active in contexts that promote sustenance (obtaining rewards, water, nutrients, shelter, sexual partners, nurturing the young) and defensive motivation in contexts that threaten life (attack, illness, injury etc.)”

  • Ash
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    311 months ago

    This was the first thing my therapist showed me when I started DBT therapy. I always forget to use it, even when I find myself wondering why I’m in a bad mood.

  • @korny
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    110 months ago

    Thank you for sharing this, opened some doors for me