Naming Feelings Without Blame
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Step 2 of the NVC structure: name what you actually feel. Sounds simple. Almost no one does it well.
Two Common Mistakes
Mistake 1 — saying you feel something that's not a feeling.
- "I feel attacked" — "attacked" is what you think they did, not what you feel;
- "I feel manipulated" — same problem;
- "I feel ignored" — same problem;
- "I feel disrespected" — same problem.
These describe what you think the other person did. They're judgments wearing feeling-clothes.
Mistake 2 — feelings with hidden blame.
- "I feel like you don't care";
- "I feel that you're being selfish";
- "I feel you're not listening to me."
Anything after "I feel that" or "I feel like" is usually not a feeling — it's an accusation with feeling-flavored packaging.
What Real Feelings Sound Like
Use actual emotion words. The basic vocabulary:
- Sad, hurt, lonely, disappointed;
- Scared, anxious, worried, nervous;
- Angry, frustrated, irritated, resentful;
- Embarrassed, ashamed, small;
- Tired, overwhelmed, drained;
- Hopeful, grateful, relieved, calm.
A real feeling can be checked against your body. "Am I actually feeling sad right now? Yes." You can't check "I feel manipulated" the same way.
Why This Works
Naming a real emotion does three things:
- Locates the feeling inside you, where it actually lives, not in their behavior;
- Makes you specific. "Frustrated" is different from "disappointed" is different from "hurt" — and the other person responds differently to each;
- Disarms. The most defensive person on earth doesn't argue with "I felt sad." They might not believe you, but they can't dismiss it.
The Real-Time Practice
Next time you're about to say "I feel like you...", stop. Ask yourself — what's the actual emotion? Hurt? Scared? Embarrassed? Use that word instead.
The whole sentence transforms:
- "I feel like you don't respect me" → "I feel hurt" or "I feel small";
- "I feel attacked by you" → "I feel defensive right now" or "I feel scared";
- "I feel ignored" → "I feel lonely" or "I feel unimportant."
Same situation. Completely different conversation.
This step costs zero — just word choice. The impact is disproportionate. Practice on small feelings before you need it for big ones.
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