
A Feelings Tool
Journal Questions to Ask When You’re Stuck in Your Emotions
Remember when you do this questioning part of the exercise, you need to
make the effort and be persistent. Results will follow.
Question 1: What are my thoughts in connection to this feeling?
Question 2: What did I think next? How did I feel about it?
Keep asking the above questions and write down as many answers as you get,
boiling it down for as long as it takes, until you get to the bottom where there are
no more thoughts and no more feelings.
A Second Feelings Tool
Drawing Can Uncover What’s Hidden for You
Next draw a stick figure or something else that represents where you are after the last question. Put a dialogue balloon over its head and let the drawing speak to you. What would it say if you drew anything else?
Write three sentences that begin with, “I am _____________” underneath the picture and finish the sentence with a different characteristic of what you felt when you drew the picture.
Remember to do the best you can. There is no right or wrong way to do this
drawing. The important thing is to take action and do it. When you draw, use symbols and images—-the easiest language for the subconscious to understand. This exercise is valuable in beginning to clear out feelings that are blocking you.
After you do this exercise, wait a few minutes and see if you start feeling better. Then check again later in the day to see if the feelings have decreased in intensity. Learn to look for shifts and little steps that will lead you to feeling better. You’ll find as you check in with your feelings, you’ll learn which ones lead to overeating, bingeing, starving or other compulsive eating behaviors.
Acknowledging unconscious habits and fear of feelings, rather than denying them, puts you on your way to balancing them and finding out what will truly make you happy. Feelings are the key to your truth.



