What’s a trapped emotion? I know it sounds kind of out there.

When we talk about “trapped emotions,” we’re really referring to the energy of an emotion that can get stuck in our energy body, or even in our physical tissues.

To help you understand what I mean by “the energy of an emotion,” I need to get a little science-y and start here:

What is an emotion, really?

To understand this, we first need to make the distinction between emotions and feelings. Those terms are often used interchangeably, but they’re not exactly the same.

An emotion is an automatic (subconscious) physiological response to a stimulus.

A feeling is sort of like our (conscious) interpretation — how we decode and also feel about — having that emotion (physical response).

For example, if somebody jumps out at us from around the corner, the initial knee-jerk reaction (emotion) would be to jump and get really tense.

Let’s call that emotion “startled.”

That emotion automatically manifests as physical “tension,” e.g., the physical response of our shoulders and eyebrows raising, our gut tightening, etc.

Do you follow?

Moving on then, how a person feels about that physiological response varies between us.

For instance, when I get startled, I might feel fear. But you might feel amused or some combination of things.

That’s why one person can feel one way watching a TV show, but another person can feel completely differently.

Make sense?

If not, leave a comment. If so, keep this in mind as we talk about emotional energy.

Where is Trapped Energy Stored?

Remember the tension we experienced when somebody jumped out at us from around the corner? If we constantly have experiences that spark a particular physical response, especially if the body never gets to recover from those repeated physical responses, then that tension — for example — can get stored in the back of our neck or our hips.

For example, the psoas muscle — a primary hip flexor — is where a LOT of tension is held.

So much so that it’s actually referred to as the “fight or flight muscle” in trauma psychology: because it tenses up when we are under stress (ready to fight or flee).

This is what it means to say we can “store trauma or stress in our hips” – it’s the energy of that physical response (emotion) being stored in our body. (But to avoid going into all that when we’re making other points 😅… we just say “trauma gets stored in the body!”)

Emotional energy can get stuck, or trapped, anywhere in our physical tissues or in our energy body. (Every living thing, and some nonliving things, are surrounded by an energy field or “energy body.” Some call this the aura.)

In a similar way, this is how an emotion can get trapped.

It’s basically the energy of a certain emotion.

Frustration has a certain energetic signature, as does anger. It’s said that different organs and body parts generate uniquely different categories of emotions. We’ll go into that in another article. But the point is, now you might understand how “fear” or “anger” can get trapped, and get trapped in a certain place.

Right?

Also, remember that everything in our universe is comprised of energy.

Our thoughts, emotions, and physical body are made up of energy.

So, how does an emotion or its energy get trapped?

As we’ve just said, an emotion is just another form of energy. And this energy can get stuck when we don’t allow it to flow through and process in a healthy way.

This happens usually because we haven’t let the emotion naturally run its course.

Sometimes, this is conscious and willful, like when we don’t let ourselves feel a certain way.

But other times, we might semi-consciously 🙃or even unconsciously deny feeling a certain way.

For example, if a friend gets married and we’ve been waiting for our own proposal (or proposal acceptance!)… we might feel a bit of something negative.

Maybe it’s not jealousy, but it could be envy, anger, or frustration.

We might think, “Wow, what kind of person would I be to feel angry about Susie getting married? I’m not that type of person!” So, we might relabel it as something more aligned with what we view as our identity.

Those are the more conscious ways emotions get trapped.

But there’s also an unconscious way.

We experience tons of emotions every day, and we’re not aware of most of them. Sometimes, we honestly just don’t notice our emotions because our mind is elsewhere.

For instance, let’s say someone cuts you off in traffic and you feel scared and frustrated that this fool put your life in jeopardy.

But maybe, in that moment, you’re too focused on a big work issue, or a relationship problem, to really even notice it, much less process it.

That’s how an emotion can get trapped unconsciously.

And so, we use modalities like the Emotion Code to help you release this stuck “stuff” in your tissues that could cause career issues.