12/07/2022
An Emotional Hangover is a common experience for people in therapy, especially when we’re just getting started. Emotional hangovers typically occur in therapy after processing a big emotion or heavy experience. It can often lead people to abruptly discontinue therapy. This often happens after “breakthroughs” or otherwise “good sessions”; the work done in session takes time to pass through the body, and that time can be painful.
[image text description:
7 slides of black, cursive text on a beige painted background. Each slide starts with the words “What is An Emotional Hangover?”
2- An Emotional Hangover is a common phenomenon that occurs after a person experiences an intense emotional experience, relives an intense emotional experience, or disclosesand describes an intense emotional experience.
3- An Emotional Hangover can feel like exhaustion, annoyance, fear, insecurity, second guessing, numbness, desire for isolation, difficulty remembering events or conversations, and generally increased stress levels, among many other more specific symptoms.
4- An Emotional Hangover does not only occur from hardship, stress, or trauma. Emotional hangovers can occur after celebrations, weddings, reunions, significant life events, achieving longed for accomplishments or successes, and other positive experience that produce a lot of good-feeling emotions.
5- An Emotional Hangover is a common experience for people new to therapy. An emotional hangover can typically follow a breakthrough in therapy. A person may realize something about themself, and perhaps even feel better or freer for a time, but after a few hours to a few days they begin to feel overwhelmed, like what they experienced in therapy was past their capacity to process.
6- An Emotional Hangover is a normal albeit unpleasant experience in therapy. It is important to be aware of your capacity to process things and learn from experiences of emotional hangovers. … cont’d in comments]