Many women are remarkably comfortable and at ease talking about their emotions. They can often recognise what they feel, articulate it clearly, and provide immense support to others navigating their own emotional landscapes. Yet, despite this high level of awareness and empathy, a quieter, more deep-seated difficulty often remains – the struggle to feel truly secure and valid in those very emotions.

As women are considered more emotionally aware than men, the editorial team of Onlymyhealth spoke to Dr Chandni Tugnait, MD (A.M), Psychotherapist, Life Alchemist, and Founder & Director of Gateway of Healing. Continue reading to know what she shared with us.

The Habit of Self-Doubt

For many women, the struggle isn’t a lack of feeling, but a constant questioning of whether those feelings are allowed. Dr Tugnait points out that this often begins in small, almost invisible moments. Many women still question whether their feelings are valid in the first place.

 

Dr Tugnait explains, “It often begins with small moments, like when a woman feels hurt after a conversation, but quickly tells herself that she may be overthinking. When she feels angry about something unfair but tones down her reaction so that it does not seem too strong.”

Over time, this pattern creates a significant distance between what a woman feels in her heart and what she allows herself to acknowledge openly. This internal editing leads to a sense of instability.

The Weight of Societal Labels

A major factor in this struggle is how female emotions are traditionally interpreted by society. There is often a double bind where women are judged regardless of how they express themselves.

According to Dr Tugnait, “Part of this comes from how women’s emotions are often interpreted in society. “When women express frustration, it may be labelled as being overly emotional. If they speak firmly, they may be described as aggressive,” she adds.

When responses are repeatedly framed this way, many women begin a process of internal policing. They start monitoring their own reactions before anyone else has a chance to, wondering whether their emotions are reasonable rather than simply trusting their initial, honest response.

The Peacemaker Burden

Another layer of this difficulty stems from the roles women are socialised to play within their families and friendships. Often cast as the emotional glue of the home, women learn to prioritise the collective harmony over their individual truth.

Dr Tugnait underlines, “Many grow up learning to keep harmony in families, friendships, and partnerships. “They notice tension quickly and try to resolve it before it grows. While this ability builds empathy, it also creates pressure. When someone is constantly aware of everyone else’s emotional comfort, their own feelings may start to feel secondary,” she notes.

The Myth of Constant Stability

There is also a persistent expectation for women to remain emotionally stable and supportive at all times, regardless of the circumstances.

Dr Tugnait adds that women are often expected to be patient, understanding, and supportive in a lot of areas of life. “When they feel anger, exhaustion, or disappointment, it can feel uncomfortable to express it openly. Instead, those emotions are often softened, explained away, or delayed,” she further says.

Building Emotional Confidence

The journey toward emotional security doesn’t require a total personality overhaul; it begins with a small shift in how a woman views her internal signals.

“Emotions are not problems to justify. They are signals that something matters,” Dr Tugnait explains. “Feeling hurt, frustrated, or uncertain does not make someone unreasonable; it simply reflects human experience.”

She suggests that when women allow themselves to acknowledge their emotions without immediately questioning them, their emotional confidence slowly begins to grow. “The goal is not to react impulsively but to trust that what you feel deserves attention. When that trust returns, emotional security begins to take shape,” Dr Tugnait states.

 

Bottomline-
Your emotions are the compass of your life, not an inconvenience to be managed. Reclaiming emotional safety means moving away from the need for external validation and learning to stand firmly in your own truth. As Dr Tugnait suggests, by trusting that your feelings are valid simply because they exist, you can stop editing your life and start living it authentically.

The articles, news features, interviews, quotes, and media content displayed on this page are the property of their respective publishers and media houses. All such materials have been sourced from publicly available online platforms where our name, views, or contributions have been referenced, quoted, or featured.

Gateway of Healing / Dr. Chandni Tugnait / Others (as applicable) does not claim ownership over any external media content reproduced or linked here. The purpose of displaying these articles is solely for informational use, record-keeping, and to acknowledge media mentions related to our work.

Full credit for authorship, editorial content, and intellectual property rights belongs to the original publishers, journalists, and media organizations.

If any publisher or rights holder wishes to request modification, updated attribution, or removal of any content featured on this website, they may contact us at info@gatewayofhealing.com, and we will take appropriate action promptly.

Read the Article on Author's webpage - CLICK HERE

    Leave a comment

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    Share.

    Comments are closed.

    Exit mobile version