Rate the intensity, not just the type

Add a number: "irritated, about a 3" tells you more than "irritated" alone.

Why it works

Granularity includes precision about degree, not only category. Putting a rough number on intensity turns a vague surge into measurable data, which itself creates a small observing distance and tells you whether the moment needs a light touch or a real intervention.

How to do it

  1. After naming the emotion, rate it 0–10 for how strong it feels right now.
  2. Notice what pushed it up or down over the last hour.
  3. Match your response to the number — a 3 needs a breath, an 8 needs a pause and support.

Evidence

Pairing labeling with intensity ratings draws on emotion-regulation research where monitoring and quantifying internal states supports regulation. The numeric add-on is a low-risk, mechanistically sensible practice. (mechanistic)

Intensity rating as a standalone tactic is reasoned from broader self-monitoring research rather than tested on its own.

Common mistake

Treating every feeling as a 10 and reacting at full volume, instead of noticing that most emotions are moderate and pass.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach tracks the intensity you report over a session and reflects the shift back, so you can see feelings rise and settle rather than assuming they only escalate.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).