Shift Managing your emotions--so they don't manage you

Ethan Kross

Book - 2025

"A myth-busting, science-based guide that addresses the timeless question of how to manage your emotional life using tools you already possess-from the bestselling author of Chatter"--

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Subjects
Genres
Self-help publications
Published
New York : Crown, an imprint of the Grown Publishing Group [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Ethan Kross (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xxvi, 258 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 219-252) and index.
ISBN
9780593444412
  • Introduction: Why is a crooked letter
  • Part one: Welcome to your emotional life. Why we feel
  • Can you really control your emotions?
  • Part two: Shifting from the inside out. What a 1980s power ballad taught me about emotion : sensory shifters
  • The myth of universal approach : attention shifters
  • "Easier f***ing said than done" : perspective shifters
  • Part three: Shifting from the outside in. Hidden in plain sight : space shifters
  • Catching a feeling : relationship shifters
  • The master switch : culture shifters
  • Part four: Shifting be design. From knowing to doing : making shifting automatic
  • Conclusion: It's 5:00 a.m., do you know where your emotions are?
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Far from being the enemy of rational thought, emotions are actually valuable "guides through life's most consequential moments," according to this illuminating guide. Neuroscientist Kross (Chatter) examines how emotions evolved in humans to drive attention to key priorities--anxiety "helps us marshal an adaptive response to either approach or avoid" threats, for example--and become problematic when they are outsize, distracting, self-perpetuating, or uncontrolled. He provides readers with strategies for better managing their emotions, including using a sensory stimulus like drinking something sweet to boost one's mood, mentally reframing negative situations (thinking about "how you'll feel about a stressor some time down the road" alters one's emotions in the present), and leaving a location if it's reinforcing an "unwanted emotional response." Kross makes valuable use of his own research to debunk myths about emotions (for example, that anxiety is inherently pathological, and that feelings must be confronted because avoiding them inevitably prolongs suffering) while reinforcing their fundamental value. This will be a boon to readers looking to take better charge of their inner lives. (Feb.)

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