“I cannot control my initial reaction and don't need to apologize for it BUT I can do better for myself and my own mental state by thinking what did I learn from the situation, was there a pattern in my reactions, and maybe the next time I don't have to let the emotions cloud my judgment and I can move on from situations without stewing in them.”Maybe I can help clarify and add to what @Rodafina said here.
Yes, when we initially react to a situation it is done so from our emotions. However, there's this thing we can do in retrospect after our initial impulsive reaction...call it a sort of post-processing the reaction.
Identifying what exactly triggered you, how it made you feel (and yes it's valid to have those emotions, we've all been there) and decide maybe if your emotions are making the situation bigger or worse than it really is.
What helps me is knowing that everyone frequently encounters situations that are out of their control, not just me. I cannot control my initial reaction and don't need to apologize for it BUT I can do better for myself and my own mental state by thinking what did I learn from the situation, was there a pattern in my reactions, and maybe the next time I don't have to let the emotions cloud my judgment and I can move on from situations without stewing in them. And that's not a matter of opinion, people do it everyday and most of the time not by choice.
With that said, I feel like many of us have been there where you are. And I think it's wrong to say someone "chose" to feel embarrassed etc. No one chooses their emotions when things happen but we can definitely learn from them over time and experience and like @Neonatal RRT said, give ourselves a little grace. It isn't easy navigating what life throws at you..
That statement in itself insists to me that emotions are not supposed to be trustworthy. That’s not a clarification. And it shouldn’t be. That’s just more of a belief that their emotions are the problem and are making them biased. Processing isn’t the right term for that anyway. Self respect is the more accurate term. When one says that emotions are clouding their judgement and are somehow making things sound worse than they actually are, this is a harmful strategy to sugarcoat one’s experiences.
This is how toxic positivity works. If one acknowledges that they might be overreacting, they overwhelm themselves to be grateful for the bad things that happen to them. You might think that exaggerating your emotions is bad, but sugarcoating them is much MUCH worse. The belief that emotions are exaggerating and biased and therefore should not be trusted does us a terrible favor by dismissing our instincts and behaving in a way that’s not true to ourselves.
It’s one thing if a person IS overreacting, but it’s another if they have a perfectly good reason to feel a certain way. And that should be deeply acknowledged.