Y11W31WR The vocabulary of feeling
Examine a difficult emotional experience you’ve had by working through it with greater emotional granularity than you initially used — and describe what that specificity revealed.
1Retrieval check
Q1.What does Lisa Feldman Barrett’s research on emotional granularity find?
- AComplex emotions are harmful
- BPeople with a larger vocabulary for their emotions show better mental health, stress regulation, and relationship outcomes
- CSimpler language produces better outcomes
- DNaming feelings makes them worse
Q2.What is the article’s counter-thread about emotional labelling?
- AMore labelling is always better
- BEndless emotional labelling can become a form of rumination; the goal is precision when needed, not constant self-narration
- CLabels should never be used
- DFeelings shouldn’t be examined
Show answer key
Q1 → B. People with a larger vocabulary for their emotions show better mental health, stress regulation, and relationship outcomes.Precision enables specific response; ‘I feel bad’ produces only general distress that doesn’t point anywhere.
Q2 → B. Endless emotional labelling can become a form of rumination; the goal is precision when needed, not constant self-narration.Emotional granularity is a tool for response, not a project for self-monitoring — the goal is precision, not volume.
2Prompt deconstruction
- Command verb
- EXAMINE — re-examine one experience with more specificity than you used at the time
- You pick
- one recent, identifiable experience you can describe analytically
- Goal
- move from ‘I felt bad’ to three specific, precisely-named feelings; notice what that reveals
- Must reference
- Barrett’s research
3Pick nudge
Which feeling label will you refine into a more accurate emotional map?
4Planner — for each of your picks
5Sentence stems
- I noticed that ___ when ___.
- The specific moment it stood out was ___.
- Before paying attention, I had been assuming ___.
- [Researcher’s] finding that ___ captures what I saw, because ___.
- The pattern across my cases is ___.
- What this tells me about [wider topic] is ___.
6Exemplar paragraph (not about this article)
(1) The experience: receiving a lower grade than expected on a Year 11 English essay. (2) At the time I would have said ‘I felt bad’. (3) Working through it with more specificity: I felt (3-a) disappointed — the grade was below my prediction by one band; (3-b) anxious — specifically about what it signalled for end-of-year rankings; (3-c) slightly humiliated — because I had told a friend beforehand that the essay was ‘strong’. (4) The granularity reveals that what I had been calling ‘upset about the grade’ was mostly the third feeling — the gap between my publicly expressed confidence and the actual result. (5) Barrett’s finding lands: the more precise name pointed to a different response (reflecting on the habit of predicting grades aloud) than the general one would have.
What this paragraph does, move by move
- Names the experience.
- Contrasts the vague initial label with specific feelings.
- Identifies three feelings precisely.
- Finds what the granularity reveals.
- Links the specificity to a different response.
Private-reflection note: Analysis is the work; personal disclosure is not required.
- Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.
- Opens in a new window.