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Sue Siebens

Winter Blues Relief with EmRes: Find Peace in Every Season

Updated: Nov 17


Close up shot of a woman with a blue hue

How EmRes Provides Lasting Relief from Winter Blues

Some of us find the grey skies of winter affect how we feel. It usually starts in autumn and is better by spring. Somehow, the diminished hours of sunshine, outdoor activity and distraction settle into our being like a dense fog. This overcast expresses itself within each of us in a highly individual way. It is generally characterized as a persistent low mood, along with:

  • Increased irritability and being less sociable

  • Losing interest in everyday activities

  • Tearfulness and feeling stressed or anxious

  • Low self-esteem and experiencing feelings of guilt, despair and worthlessness

  • Feeling lazy, sleepy and having difficulty concentrating


Like the bears, we want to hibernate.


Sleeping polar bear

SAD—Seasonal Affective Disorder

Conventional treatments for SAD include Light Therapy, antidepressants, and talk therapy.

But like depressions with other names, our moods do not just arise from one event or thing. It is the result of many unprocessed emotions. When left untended, these feelings sink into the unconscious and reemerge as behaviors and attitudes whose origins are often untraceable. The darkness of winter and the weather add an environmental cue to trigger SAD, in particular.


Winter blues, also known as Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD), can turn the colder months into a time of struggle. Many people feel a drop in energy, mood, and motivation as daylight fades and temperatures fall. While traditional remedies like light therapy and lifestyle changes offer some relief, Emotional Resolution (EmRes) offers a lasting solution for Winter Blues Relief with EmRes. EmRes targets the root cause of lingering sadness and stress by addressing unprocessed emotions stored in the body. Through gentle guidance, EmRes can help release these emotional blocks, creating room for renewed energy and positivity. By resolving these triggers, EmRes allows individuals to experience a season filled with greater peace and resilience—even during winter.


For this reason, melancholy is more like a cake with many layers and sub-levels—not to be eaten in one bite. We need to slice it up into smaller, manageable pieces.

And while we may say that we are sad all the time, depression is like a wave, with moments that are lower than others. We’ll feel not great, but okay. An incident will strike us and send us into a trough of sadness. Then, we’re back to some level of okay again after a while.

These descending incidents are our way in.


Dog with a collar

When our feelings linger for over a few minutes, we are reexperiencing an unprocessed emotion. Emotions related to high-stress events will linger until we compel our bodies to finish the processing. Coping methods work temporarily. Talking about the feelings and identifying their origin is interesting but will not remove them from future episodes.

It is the body that experiences emotions and feelings. The body informs the conscious mind that an event has occurred that might need a response. The mind only reacts and is not the keeper or maintainer of emotions. It is the body that we must engage to help us out of depression.


Rocky lakeside view

Emotional Resolution, or EmRes, is an upcoming technology that evokes the natural mechanisms in the body to eliminate lingering emotions. By selecting recent episodes in our life, we can guide the body to its forgotten task.

The emotional relief is immediate. Once the unprocessed emotional memory is gone from the body, it can no longer be triggered. That piece of the depression cake is gone forever. It won’t come back tomorrow, next week or next year.

EmRes work is an exercise in resolving each unwanted emotion as it appears in our lives. Through sessions with a professional EmRes Practitioner and Self-EmRes, the waves of depression are lifted out of our lives so that we can enjoy the sunshine—even in winter.

Are you ready to take the BLUE out of your winter?

 

References


Image by Khusen Rustamov from Pixabay

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