1. "Emotions are not discovered — they are constructed"
Lisa Feldman Barrett ("How Emotions Are Made", 2017): emotions are not predetermined "natural kinds" — the brain constructs them moment-by-moment. Ingredients: 1) body signals (heart rate, muscle tension, breathing), 2) concepts (learned emotion words), 3) context (situation, memory). The same body signal (high HR, tense muscles) can be constructed as "fear" or "excitement".
2. What is "emotion granularity"?
How precisely you distinguish the same "bad mood":
- Low granularity: "angry" or "feel bad"
- High granularity: frustrated, irritated, disappointed, aggrieved, angry, enraged, seowoon, dappdaph, ashwo, jaded — exactly which one
3. Clinical effects (Kashdan 2015 meta-analysis)
| Metric | Low granularity | High granularity |
|---|---|---|
| Depression risk | ×4 | baseline |
| Alcohol use disorder | ×3 | baseline |
| Suicidal ideation | ×2 | baseline |
| Anger-outburst frequency | ×2.5 | baseline |
| Relationship-conflict resolution | Slow, worse | Fast, resolved |
4. Why does granularity determine mental health?
- Precise emotion → precise response ("frustrated" → try different strategy; "disappointed" → adjust expectations; "aggrieved" → clear communication)
- Low granularity → all negative emotions get the same generic response (alcohol, binge, social media) → ineffective
- fMRI: high-granularity groups show greater prefrontal cortex (emotion regulation) activity
5. The paradox of Korea's "emotion-vocabulary poverty"
Korean has one of the world's richest emotional vocabularies — han, dappdaph, eokuhl, seowoon, ashwo, miryeon, jeong, chenyeom, ulchik, mungkeul, meokmeok, etc. But daily use is 90% "good / dislike / annoyed". The vocabulary exists but is unused.
Causes: 1) learned "emotional expression = weakness", 2) absence of emotion education in school, 3) forced "good / bad" quick categorization, 4) emotional simplification in drinking parties / social media.
6. 4-week "30-emotion-word vocabulary" protocol
Week 1: 10 negative emotions
Frustration, irritation, disappointment, aggrievement, anger, rage, dappdaph, seowoon, jadedness, resignation. Pick "today's strongest emotion" from this list once a day.
Week 2: 10 positive emotions
Calm, fulfilled, fluttering, moved, joy, mungkeul, relief, peace, passion, satisfaction. Apply once a day.
Week 3: 10 subtle emotions
Areun, meokmeok, ulchik, sikun, mungkeun, ashwo, miryeon, jeong, lonely, holgaboon. Use in journaling.
Week 4: body-signal matching
7. RULER program (Yale)
Marc Brackett (Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence) school emotion-education program:
- Recognize: recognize emotions
- Understand: understand causes
- Label: precise words
- Express: appropriate expression
- Regulate: regulate
RULER schools show improvements in student depression, bullying, and academics. Some Korean schools have adopted it.
8. Daily application
- In journals, replace "mood" with concrete emotion words
- With family / colleagues, use "disappointed / dappdaph" instead of "annoyed"
- To children, "don't get angry" → ask "you're frustrated; what's bothering you?"
- Precise emotion expression in social media / texts
9. Clinical integration
- Combine with CBT / DBT emotion-recognition skills
- Mindfulness meditation raises body-signal awareness
- Synergy with expressive arts therapy (#233)
- Especially effective for borderline personality / self-harm patients (DBT core)
10. Korean resources
- "How Emotions Are Made" (Barrett, Korean edition)
- Yale RULER program (some Korean schools)
- Korean emotional-intelligence (EQ) testing / training institutions
- Emotion-recognition work in psychiatry / clinical psychology