Hi,
Sounds like you are referring to the emotion of `fear`. I'm not so sure that you can redirect an emotion like that, but you can try to maintain your control and use your logical thinking to over ride the fear and overcome the emotion.
The common term for that is `courage` or `courage in the face of fear` as it's often described. This is when you submit your willpower over your emotions and continue on regardless of what you feel.
Everyone gets scared or frightened at times and for various reasons. Your personal resolve to subdue the fight or flight emotion will depend on you and the situation you find yourself in at the time. And most of the time, as F.D.R. one said, "We have nothing to fear, but fear itself".
See if you can determine the real underlying reason for the specific fear that you feel. Take it apart and analyze it. It may not be as bad as you believe it to be.
I wish you all the best of luck, and you can do it of you try.
Cubby
The area of the cat's brain that is responsible for emotions is very similar to that area of a human's brain. Much more so than a dog's.
Psychology in contains the study of behavior. It is the study of the brain and emotions, behaviors. It seeks to explain and understand behavior, emotion, and the brain.Schools of Thought:StructuralismFunctionalismPsychoanalysisBehaviorismHumanism
Pinky and the Brain - 1995 Brain's Night Off Beach Blanket Brain was released on: USA: 21 February 1998
The dog's name was Brain
Either "The Brain From Planet Arous" or "The Brain Eaters"
Emotions are complex psychological and physiological reactions to various stimuli, such as thoughts, experiences, or events. They originate in the brain, specifically the limbic system, which is responsible for processing and regulating emotions. Additionally, hormones and neurotransmitters play a role in the generation of emotions.
In ancient beliefs, the heart was considered the seat of emotions because feelings such as love, joy, or sorrow were believed to originate from there. However, we now know that emotions arise from complex interactions between brain regions, hormones, and neurotransmitters.
Smells are recognized by our brain only. Similarly the emotions by brain too, this are attached.
Emotions are caused by hormones released by the body, signaled by the brain. For example, fear is stimulated by something the brain senses (seeing or hearing or smelling or feeling or tasting). The brain then sends an instant signal to the adrenal gland near the kidneys, and that gland releases a hormone called adrenaline, which stimulates the rest of the body to ramp up into high gear and get ready for "fight or flight."
Of course they have feelings. Cats have a limbic brain, responsible for emotions.
Cerebellum
The brain. The heart is just a pump.
Drugs are the ones that affect the brain directly. Thus drugs can alter where brain stores it's emotions.
Emotions are caused by complex interactions between various brain regions and neurotransmitters. Different emotions are associated with different patterns of brain activity. For example, the amygdala is involved in fear and anger, while the prefrontal cortex is involved in regulating and expressing emotions. Hormones such as adrenaline and cortisol also play a role in triggering emotional responses.
Fear has evolved in humans as a survival mechanism to help protect against threats and danger. It triggers a "fight or flight" response that prepares the body to react quickly to potential harm. Over time, fear has also become more complex, involving cognitive processes that allow humans to anticipate and plan for future dangers.
Emotions comes from your brain. It sends signals to you, and then you know what your feeling.
Emotions come from the brain to different parts. They are caused by the external stimuli.