- Julie Barris | Crisis Counselor | Therapist-in-Training

- 1 hour ago
True emotional toughness allows you to express vulnerability with confidence rather than hiding behind silence.
Got 5 minutes? Join countless listeners who are exploring this powerful topic — listen here.

For decades, strength was defined by silence.
Children growing up in the 1960s and 70s were often taught an unspoken rule: don’t cry, don’t complain, don’t make it bigger than it is. Emotions were something to manage quietly — or better yet, not at all. If you were upset, you “got over it.” If you were hurt, you “moved on.” If you were scared, you kept it to yourself and handled it privately. Vulnerability wasn’t modeled as healthy — it was often framed as dramatic, weak, or unnecessary.
On the surface, that looked like resilience. It looked like grit, toughness, emotional control. It looked like maturity beyond years.
But was it resilience — or was it adaptation for survival?
The Appearance of Strength
Many from older generations pride themselves on being “tough.” They survived hardship without therapy, without emotional language, without safe spaces to process. They worked hard. They provided. They endured. And survival absolutely deserves respect.
But survival is not the same as emotional strength.
Emotional strength is not the ability to suppress tears or swallow discomfort. It’s the ability to tolerate those emotions without shame. It’s not the absence of feelings — it’s the capacity to move through them with awareness and flexibility. It’s being able to experience anger without exploding, sadness without collapsing, fear without denial.
When children are repeatedly told that their emotions are dramatic, inconvenient, or weak, they don’t become stronger. They become quieter. They become careful. They become skilled at reading a room before speaking. They become experts at minimizing themselves to maintain harmony.
And quiet pain doesn’t disappear. It relocates — into the body, into irritability, into control, into emotional distance in relationships.
When Feelings Feel “Unimportant”
Many adults raised in that era struggle not because they lack character or resilience, but because they were never taught that their inner world mattered. Their emotional experiences were secondary to productivity, responsibility, or keeping the peace.
If a child learns early that expressing sadness results in dismissal, or anger leads to punishment, or fear is met with ridicule, the brain adapts quickly. It says: “Feel less. Say less. Need less.” That adaptation becomes automatic.
Over time, this can create adults who:
Struggle with vulnerability even when they want connection
Shut down during conflict because emotions feel overwhelming
Feel uncomfortable when others cry or express strong feelings
Interpret emotional expression as weakness or incompetence
It isn’t that they don’t feel deeply. Often, they feel intensely. It’s that they learned their feelings were inconvenient, disruptive, or irrelevant.
That belief often follows them into marriage, friendship, and parenting, shaping interactions in subtle but powerful ways.
The Ripple Effect Into Parenting
Millennials and younger generations often say something quietly profound: “Something was missing.”
Not material provision. Not discipline. Not effort.
But emotional modeling.
Many parents from earlier generations provided stability, structure, and sacrifice. They worked tirelessly. They showed love through action. What was often missing, however, was the demonstration of safe emotional expression — the ability to openly say:
“I feel overwhelmed.”
“I’m hurt by that.”
“I need comfort.”
“I made a mistake.”
“I’m sorry.”
Without seeing that modeled consistently, their children grew up sensing both love and emotional distance at the same time. They may have felt cared for, yet unseen in moments of emotional vulnerability.
Now, as adults and parents themselves, many are trying to break patterns they can feel — but cannot fully articulate. They know they want their children to express emotions freely. They want homes where feelings are welcomed rather than corrected. Yet they are learning in real time how to do something they were never shown how to do themselves.
That isn’t weakness. That is generational growth unfolding in real time.
Suppression Isn’t Regulation
There is a critical and often misunderstood difference between emotional regulation and emotional suppression.
Suppression says:“Push it down so no one sees it. Don’t let it show. Don’t make it messy.”
Regulation says:“Feel it. Name it. Understand it. Then choose how to respond.”
Suppression creates disconnection — from self and from others. It builds emotional walls that protect in the short term but isolate in the long term. Regulation, on the other hand, creates resilience because it allows emotions to move through the nervous system instead of getting stuck there.
Research in emotional development consistently shows that the ability to name and express feelings strengthens stress tolerance. When emotions are acknowledged, the nervous system begins to settle. When they are denied or invalidated, the body often remains on alert — sometimes for decades.
True strength isn’t rigid. It’s flexible. It bends without breaking.
Redefining Strength
Strength is NOT:
Never crying
Never asking for help
Never needing reassurance
Never admitting pain
Never saying “that hurt me”
Strength is:
Staying present with discomfort instead of avoiding it
Repairing after conflict rather than pretending it didn’t happen
Allowing vulnerability without collapsing into shame
Expressing emotion without fearing you’ll be labeled weak or incompetent
When someone can say, “That hurt me,” calmly and clearly, that is strength.
When a parent can tell a child, “I was wrong. I’m sorry,” that is strength.
When a partner can remain emotionally available during hard conversations instead of shutting down, that is strength.
Emotional expression is not fragility. It is courage practiced out loud.
We Are Stronger When We Are Whole
Generations before did what they knew how to do. Many were navigating their own unprocessed trauma, cultural expectations, economic stressors, and survival demands. Suppression may have felt necessary. It may have been the only option available in certain environments.
But we now know something different.
We know that emotional safety builds secure relationships.We know that naming feelings supports brain integration.We know that vulnerability deepens intimacy instead of weakening it.
We are not weaker because we talk about emotions more openly. We are not fragile because we value mental health. We are evolving in our understanding of what it means to be resilient.
The ability to be fully ourselves — to express joy, grief, anger, fear, and love without punishment, ridicule, or shame — is not indulgent. It is foundational to psychological health and relational depth.
Perhaps emotional strength isn’t about how little you show.Perhaps it’s about how fully you can remain yourself while you show it.
And that leads to a question worth sitting with:
If silence was strength, why did it leave so many people feeling unseen — and what would change in our relationships if we redefined strength as the courage to be fully felt?
💬 Ready to start your own healing journey?
Book a session with one of our compassionate therapists at Moody Melon Counseling. We’re here when you’re ready. 🍉
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