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Crying
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This isn't a health & fitness question but I can't put it under any other category. Somewhere I read that there's a trick to prevent yourself from crying in public. Anyone heard of it? I hate it when I cry at funerals & get embarrassed. Thanks
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I expect a lot of us would like to know the answer to this one, not just for the funeral context. I get stupidly weepy over all sorts of things. And I always blub when I go to the theatre and the cast take their bow at the end. I think it comes down to feeling embarrassed about showing emotion, but at a funeral, surely there's nothing wrong with that - and will anyone else be really looking at you anyway?
The best solution I have (and one that only works occasionally, depending on the intensity of emotion) is to look away and think about something completely different, such as the plot of a soap opera.
The best solution I have (and one that only works occasionally, depending on the intensity of emotion) is to look away and think about something completely different, such as the plot of a soap opera.
I also very much dislike crying in public. When it's something I feel like I'm going to do and want to stop myself, I generally just try to find something to read, it could be fire escape instructions and I'd just read it over and over again. Reading has always helped me remain calm and distanced, I also read a lot of signs when in the dentist chair!
Unfortunately sometimes it can't be helped like yesterday when saying goodbye to sis so I just try and get it under control again very quickly which is easier than trying to stop it in that circumstance.
I do agree that crying can be good and therapeutic but I personally prefer not to cry in public wherever possible.
Unfortunately sometimes it can't be helped like yesterday when saying goodbye to sis so I just try and get it under control again very quickly which is easier than trying to stop it in that circumstance.
I do agree that crying can be good and therapeutic but I personally prefer not to cry in public wherever possible.
I stopped myself from crying last Wednesday when I was walking past a stationary bus and a lady with a little boy and a baby in a buggy fell out of the doors. The woman fell on top of the buggy and when she got up and picked the buggy up the little bay girl had a massive black bruise on her head.
I have no idea why this upset me so much but it took all of my energy to hold the tears back. Maybe it was because the baby was in pain, I don't know.
I have no idea why this upset me so much but it took all of my energy to hold the tears back. Maybe it was because the baby was in pain, I don't know.
Arwyn, I'm sorry. No one should post nasty comments. That's not what this site is all about. Easier said than done, but just ignore them. Thanks everyone for your replies. I agree, nothing wrong with showing emotion but I was brought up to believe in a stiff upper lip & remember being told off by my Mother for crying at my Father's funeral.
I think crying is vastly underrated, and something western society - especially men (Big boys don't cry ...) is ashamed of, to its detriment.
I was a Samaritan for three years, and i have lost count of the number of men and women I have either heard crying down the phone, or crying in front of me, and without exception, they always apologised, because I am supposed to be embarassed. My response was always the same - "Don't be sorry, there's no need, it doesn;t embarass me, and it's good for you, let it all out ..." and with that 'permission' people would do just that.
So don't worry about showing your emotions, it is a good emotional release, and it shows you care, and may break the ice for otherreulctant criers around you. We are far too buttoned up about our emotions, time it changed.
I was a Samaritan for three years, and i have lost count of the number of men and women I have either heard crying down the phone, or crying in front of me, and without exception, they always apologised, because I am supposed to be embarassed. My response was always the same - "Don't be sorry, there's no need, it doesn;t embarass me, and it's good for you, let it all out ..." and with that 'permission' people would do just that.
So don't worry about showing your emotions, it is a good emotional release, and it shows you care, and may break the ice for otherreulctant criers around you. We are far too buttoned up about our emotions, time it changed.
I hate crying especially in public. It's not the crying in itself but it makes my face look a mess. If I cry too much my eyes bloat and can stay like that for hours. Because of this I have learnt to stop myself or prepare myself beforehand. I detach myself from what's happening around me; it's as if I'm looking down on a film set and I imagine it's not true what's happening. I have been caught out when I wasn't expecting something said to me but overall this works for me.