Self-disclosure
is perhaps the most important way to use the spoken words for emotional
wholeness. Tardy and Dindia (1997:213) define self-disclosure as “the process
whereby people verbally reveal themselves to others”. Many people have
bottled-up secrets, fears, and feelings of inadequacy which they would not
share/reveal with/to someone else for fear of being rejected or dropping in
such person’s esteem. And so they continue to tag along in life, wearing
cheerful countenance, preferring to bear alone the agony of their challenges
rather than the risk of sharing it with someone else.
Osborne
(1997:9), remarking on this phenomenon, says:
Each
of us is in a state of tension between the need to reveal and the need to
conceal ourselves. We have an urge to
share our true feelings, but we fear that we shall become vulnerable, that we
shall be rejected or criticized. As a
result, we tend to settle for commonplace discussions about the
superficialities of life.
Most
people are ignorant of the fact that such dammed up tensions may lead to all
kinds of neurosis or outright insanity. The best way, therefore, to attain
emotional healthiness is to have one or two confidante(s) among your friends
whom you can unburden to regularly. The irony of self-disclosure is that the
revelation that most fear would drive people away from them usually have the
opposite effect, as the person entrusted with such confidence about the
weaknesses and inadequacies of his friend usually ends up understanding,
respecting and loving him the more. Osborne (1997:23-24) further expatiates on
this:
Invisible
barriers prevent us from knowing and loving each other… loneliness and sense of
isolation are experienced by reluctance to reveal ourselves to others for fear
of rejection… the more others learn about us, the easier it is for them to
accept and love us. No one can love a
mask. As we remove our mask we find ourselves being accepted at a new level…
You may never have thought of yourself as lonely, but the feeling is there just
the same, unless you have broken through the barrier of your fear of
rejection. And when you can reveal your
true self, however slightly, you will find yourself accepted and loved at a new
level…. you will come to know yourself, while revealing yourself to others for
fear of being known by others is no greater than our fear of knowing ourselves.
The second way to use speaking for emotional development is through
affirmation. Affirmation is the act of stating as obvious what you want to be,
even when all indications are pointing to the contrary. Fieger (2004),
commenting on this concept says:
The words you
speak, to yourself and others, define the quality and the content of your
thoughts and beliefs, AND, they affirm your reality. Therefore, you must always
talk about that which you desire to be made manifest in your life. Why waste your breath talking about
trivialities, when you can be talking about what is really important to you?
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