
“For two decades, I’ve said, ‘We need to understand emotion so we can recognize it in ourselves and others,’” she writes.

She even takes her own oft-given advice and gets vulnerable, admitting to having made a mistake in her previous work. Brown mentions in passing that she came from a dysfunctional but high-performing family, and that she’s a recovered alcoholic, a committed swimmer, a former waitress, resentful, a perfectionist and prone to comparison, among other things. In Atlas of the Heart, she frequently flicks at her personal biography, using her own life as a source of exposition.

But unlike America’s most famous public health official, Brown has the freedom to be much more of a sharer. Fauci of feelings she can take complex subjects that require years of study and explain them in a comprehensible and reassuring way. And so on.Īs a potential cartographer for the human experience, Brown is a solid candidate. Hopelessness is a fleeting fear that a task is too difficult, and despair is a feeling that life is too difficult. The difference between envy and jealousy is that envy materializes when one wants something somebody else has-looks, status and wealth are the big trio-while jealousy is the feeling that a relationship is being threatened. 1 best sellers and her Netflix lecture series, is that guilt tells people they did something bad while shame tells people they are something bad.

The difference between guilt and shame, for example, as fans of Brown already know from her wildly popular Ted talks, her five previous No. So, in Atlas of the Heart, she sets out to map 87 different emotions, pointing out the distinguishing features of each. For Brown, who made her name by illuminating the finer contours of humans’ emotional landscape, this is not nearly enough. In surveys taken by 7,000 people over five years, Brown and her team found that on average people can identify only three emotions as they are actually feeling them: happiness, sadness and anger.
