Most people believe emotions happen to them. Clinically speaking, they do not. Emotions arise within the nervous system, shaped by history, attachment, memory, and interpretation. The moment a person treats emotion as something caused by another, authority transfers. That transfer appoints an emotional gatekeeper. This distinction matters because intimacy collapses the moment emotional authority leaves the self. Emotional accountability requires presence. It means staying with bodily sensation, affect, and interpretation long enough to identify one’s role in the interaction without collapsing into defense, blame, or self-erasure. Accountability does not ask who caused the feeling. It asks what arose internally and why. This process restores authorship over one’s emotional state.