Key definition

Emotional regulation is the capacity to experience emotion fully, understand what it is signalling, and respond in a way that reflects your values rather than your impulses. It is not about suppressing emotion, but about staying free to act under emotion, as opposed to reacting to the emotion and assuming that it is your deliberate and most appropriate response to the situation.

Scripture says, “Be angry, but do not sin” — meaning emotion is not the problem; but allowing it to control what you do afterwards and justifying your reaction to it is.

Emotional regulation involves five simple abilities:

Knowing how to regulate your emotions well safeguards your interior disposition to act freely.

What Emotional Regulation Is Not

  • Suppressing or hiding emotion

  • Faking or pretending to be calm

  • Avoiding conflict or discomfort

  • Becoming emotionally cold or numb

  • Never feeling strong emotion

  • Forcing yourself to be unaffected

These are forms of emotional control — not emotional regulation.

Quick question:

When I feel strong emotion, do I react immediately — or do I pause first?