start sampling your personal experience you will need an alarm clock or a mobile application that will remind you to write a note about your temporary emotions seven times a day. If your time does not allow you to do so many repetitions, try to do it at least five times a day.
The best option is to set your alarm at random hours during each day. Doing it at different times each day will make sure that you aren’t consciously aware of when you have to write it down. If you do it at the same time, it’ll become a habit and you’ll start to regulate your emotions when that time is approaching.
You will also need a notebook that you can write all of your observations in. After setting 5 to 7 alarms for the first day, you can begin with the exercise. Every time your alarm or your mobile application goes off, you will have to stop whatever you were doing at the moment and focus on exactly how you are feeling in that moment.
Always pay attention to how you experience and feel something instead of just what you are feeling. Of course it is important also to note down what are you feeling and experiencing at a particular moment but to really increase your emotional intelligence you will have to learn to identify how you are experiencing it. At the end of the first week your notebook should contain seven (or at least five) entries, similar to this one:
I was walking down the street. A car passed by. Crazy driver, he was too fast, he almost hit me. I want to go after him. I feel so angry. My vain in my forehead is pulsing. I feel a strange sensation in my stomach. Maybe I am afraid. I am breathing heavily. I almost died. It’s probably both.
After 1-2 weeks of entries like this (with 5-7 per day); you can continue to the next phase which will help you understand what is going on with your emotions.
2) Reviewing your notes (Duration: 1 day)
After the first stage of writing down your emotions, you will need to go through your notes. This phase includes the self-remembering method, described in the previous section. Go through every entry you have made and try to recapture it.
Try to understand, why you felt the way you did and how it influenced your behavior and thoughts. Add any new observations you have to the notes and prepare for a new week of sampling. New observations might be things like “I got so angry about that car because it probably reminded me of the time my dog was hit by a car when I was a kid.” It can also just be as simple as noting the primary emotion (like fear) that was at the root of your anger.
When you start the process over for the next week, use the knowledge that you have gained about yourself so far and be really exact. This time your notes should look a little more like this:
I feel a strange sensation in my stomach. It’s not hunger, I just ate. It is kind of sharp but warm at the same time. I’m thinking about my girlfriend. Probably this sensation is connected with my thoughts. I love her.