Cocktails and Mocktails of Emotion: Motivating Multitudes
Manage episode 519088665 series 3659990
Hosts:
Matthew Ellenwood (EmoVerity, Ellenwood Studios)
Ellenwood Studios – https://www.instagram.com/ellenwood_studios/
Berit Elizabeth (Emotive Agility Training)
Emotive Agility – https://www.instagram.com/emotiveagility/
Summary:
In this episode, Matthew and Berit dive into the "mixology" of emotions—how real-life feelings rarely show up neat, but as nuanced blends ("cocktails" and "mocktails"). Using performer-training tools, art analogies, and live facial-expression drills, they show you how to intentionally serve (and taste) emotional mixes to create clearer communication, better regulation, and deeper connection—at home, on stage, and at work.
Key Topics:
• Mixologist vs. Taster: the sender/receiver roles we play in every interaction.
• Why emotions show up in blends, not singles—and how that complicates interpretation.
• The "rule of three": curating no more than 2–3 emotions to keep your message clear.
• Color theory for feelings: subtractive mixing (CMY) and pigment ratios as an emotion map.
• Two-emotion gradients in practice (e.g., surprise+fear; appreciation+frustration).
• The Hexagon Task (Ekman & Friesen): morphing between emotions at set ratios (90/10 → 10/90).
• Live demos: moving from tenderness → anger at different ratios and what each "tastes" like.
• Exercise 1: The Taster—naming what you see when someone "serves" an expression.
• Exercise 2: The Mixologist—blending tenderness ↔ anger using only eyes/brows/mouth.
• Lightning Round: mixing disgust + joy (why your body laughs while your stomach turns).
• The Emotional Tree (Leslie Greenberg): affect → category → granular feelings (Parrott).
• Authenticity, privilege, and power dynamics: why "I'm just being honest" isn't a free pass.
• Leadership applications: choosing which emotions to serve in meetings and difficult conversations.
Practical Takeaways:
• Before a tough conversation, name the 2–3 emotions you intend to convey (and at what "volume").
• When reading others, describe observable cues first (eyes, brows, mouth, breath), then guess the mix.
• Practice ratio drills (90/10, 70/30, 50/50…) to expand expressive range and precision.
• Use "masking" strategically (not dishonestly) to regulate and match context without dumping.
• Increase granularity: move from "I'm scared" to "I'm apprehensive" or "I'm in distress."
• In leadership, curate blends that acknowledge both positives and challenges to maintain trust.
Try-It-Now Exercises (from the episode):
• The Taster: Watch a neutral face shift; list the physical cues you notice, then name the likely mix.
• Tenderness/Anger Flight: Hold a genuine eye-smile, then add small anger cues at 10%, 30%, 70%, 90%.
• Lightning Round: Disgust + Joy mixes. Recreate "gross but hilarious"—note your inner vs. outer mismatch.
Resources & Links:
🔔 Subscribe for more great content – https://www.youtube.com/@TheEdgeoftheStage
🎓 EmoVerity (Making Faces - Facial Expressions course)
💡CMY color mixing - a closer look https://youtube.com/shorts/OPL6pTX0Jss?si=lliMTPz5yP1tOBXQ
🎨 Pink + Turk Gold Color Blending Shades https://youtu.be/9gQ_WltYmys?si=ihSIGnksmOHGMmYA
🔎 Ekman & Friesen's "Hexagon Task" (emotion morphs) – ohttps://www.researchgate.net/figure/Facial-expression-continua-used-in-the-Emotion-Hexagon-task-Running-from-left-to-right_fig1_24418236
🌳 Leslie Greenberg – Emotion-Focused Therapy (Affect → Emotion Category → Granular Feelings) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ynHioCxAMEI
🌿 Parrott's Emotion Classification (for building vocabulary/granularity)
https://behavioralsignals.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/Parrott_Model_emotion_classification.png
📰The Problem With Your Authentic Self by Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic Ph.D.
📘 Emotion Thesaurus https://shopwritershelpingwriters.net/products/emotion-thesaurus-ebook
🎴 Show Don't Tell Cards https://writebadideas.com/products/show-dont-tell-cards-the-writers-guide-to-emotions
6 episodes