Emotional Vocabulary is Power: Words That Heal vs. Words That Harm
There’s a quiet superpower we don’t talk about enough, our emotional vocabulary. Not the big, flowery words we use in essays, but the tiny, everyday ones that slip into our conversations, arguments, apologies, and even the way we speak to ourselves. We underestimate how much damage or relief a single sentence can carry. But the truth is simple: emotional vocabulary shapes the way we connect, the way we cope, and most importantly, the way we understand ourselves. Most of us grew up in homes where emotional language was… well, limited. If you were sad, you were told to “stop overreacting.” If you were anxious, you were asked to “be strong.” If you were angry, suddenly you were “disrespectful.” Many of us didn’t learn the difference between frustration and rage, worry and fear, disappointment and rejection. So we ended up mislabelling everything as “I’m fine” until our bodies started screaming what our words refused to say. Emotional vocabulary didn’t fail us, we were simply never h...