The Diego Mangabeira Show

How To Deal With Emotions


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How To Deal With Emotions
Script
– Introduction
– Origin of the word emotion: 1570s, “a (social) moving, stirring, agitation,” from Middle French émotion (16c.), from Old French emouvoir “stir up” (12c.), from Latin emovere “move out, remove, agitate,” from assimilated form of ex “out” (see ex-) + movere “to move” (from PIE root *meue- “to push away”). Sense of “strong feeling” is first recorded 1650s; extended to any feeling by 1808.
– The science of the heart
– Emotional intelligence
– Tip
– Conclusion
Text Transcript Automatically Generated From The Podcast*
Hey everybody this is the Diego Mangabeira welcome to the Diego Mangabeira show today we talked about how to deal with emotions so let’s get started if this is your first time listening then thanks for coming come back often feel free to add the podcast to our favourite RSS feed or iTunes you can also follow me on Twitter at Diego Mangabeira Facebook page Diego Mangabeira now let’s get it to the show hey everyone today is a great day okay we are talking about emotions and when we talk about emotions this subject is such a stunning one that I love to talk about it since emotions are part of ourselves I would say that this is the pronunciation of our lives since we are here to love we are here to live the emotions most of the time we are just disconnect ourselves with that feeling with that meaning of the world most of the time if we studied the ancient cultures and also the etymology etymologies the study of the words we will understand and what that what a true knowledge that the ancient cultures in ancient people had about the the situation’s they are they were facing in the past in the century many centuries ago and also we want to understand how we can deal with our emotions today okay this disconnection that we did have about brain and heart and that’s specifically saying about the emotions were made by the Greeks okay most of the time we understand that the reason part comes from the brain and the emotion emotional part keep emotions this kind of feeling is related to the heart but that’s wrong and in my document I that to my clients and also many studies that are being made and there’s a great Institute that our developing a lot of research also there are a lot of Institute’s all around the globe but this one is really fascinating is the names of the sisters is hard math okay and hard math is studying a lot of things about the emotions you have the neuroscience new psychology psycho bill biology and a lot of researchers doing a great job in working with in in both of their areas in order to have this translated to everybody and this kind of information will not be in mainstream media or even in newspapers or journals or any kind of mature that you have because you need to go and act as a researcher okay and that’s why I want you grab all this stuff and bring to you as a masterpiece because you deserve that information in order to have a new life a new level of life that’s really important if you do not know I’m going to start today with the etymology of the word emotion and it’s fascinating because if we’re going forward backward sorry backwards we understand that this word is not coming from the English part but if you’re going to the 16th 16th century it came from the middle French emotion and it the the the the meaning of it was related to stir up and if we’re going backwards even further we understand that the French the old French came from the Latin and basically emotion it’s really is related to move out to remove to agitate and that that’s the whole meaning that’s the true part that I want to describe fo...
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The Diego Mangabeira ShowBy Diego Mangabeira