It may be easy to
mask emotions for a while, but over the course of a date you should be able to gauge if they are enjoying your company.
Not exact matches
Issue Contents: John Singer Sargent's «Dorothy»; DMFA Recent Acquisitions; Dallas Arts District; Dallas Collects American Paintings: Colonial to Early Modern; Symposium on American Art Sponsored by the Education Department; Counterparts: Form and
Emotion; Mexican Dance
Masks; A Print History, The Bromberg Gifts; Concentrations VII: Deborah Butterfield; El Greco of Toledo Wins Universal Praise; DMFA League; Calendar of Events; DMFA Recent Loan; DMFA Education Department; DMFA Profile; DMA Featured in Whitney Exhibit; Patricia Johanson: A Project
for the Fair Park Lagoon
Take a few minutes and review the steps in your cycle to see if you can 1) identify the secondary
emotions (anger,
for example) that
mask the more vulnerable, primary
emotions (insecurity or loneliness,
for example) underneath; 2) identify the ideas you come up with about your partner and the relationship; and, 3) identify the associated behaviors you engage in.
Masking painUncontrolled anger is often a
mask for hidden
emotions and pain.