
Valentine’s Day often brings emotions to the surface: connection, love, disappointment, loneliness, gratitude, resentment, or all of the above at once. Even when we try to keep things light or “fine,” our emotional world rarely stays contained.
That’s because emotions don’t just live in our thoughts. They live in our bodies and eventually show themselves.
This week, as we continue Heart Health Month, it’s worth talking about a concept that explains why unspoken stress and suppressed emotions still affect our relationships, our behavior, and our hearts: emotional leakage.
What Is Emotional Leakage?
Psychologist Paul Ekman spent decades studying facial expressions and emotional expressions. His research revealed something both fascinating and deeply human: even when people try to hide how they feel, emotions often “leak” out through subtle cues.
A tightened jaw.
A forced smile that doesn’t quite reach the eyes.
A sharp tone where calm was intended.
These micro-signals happen quickly and often unconsciously. They’re not character flaws or communication failures; they are signs that the body is still processing something the mind hasn’t fully acknowledged.
Ekman’s work also showed that while all humans experience the same core emotions, we’re taught display rules—cultural and social guidelines about when it’s acceptable to express them. Many of us learned early on that certain feelings were inconvenient, inappropriate, or unsafe to show.
But here’s the catch: what we don’t express doesn’t disappear. It simply finds another outlet.
Valentine’s Day Pressure & Emotional Load
For some people, Valentine’s Day is joyful and affirming. For others, it highlights stressors of unmet expectations, relationship strain, grief, or comparison. And for many, it’s a mix of all of it.
You can go through the motions, dinner reservations, cards, flowers, kind words, and candy, while still carrying emotional weight underneath. That weight often shows up physically:
shallow breathing
increased heart rate
muscle tension
fatigue
irritability
You are not overreacting. This is how the nervous system responds to emotional demand.
When emotional stress becomes chronic, especially when we feel the need to “hold it together” at work, at home, or in relationships, it places ongoing strain on the cardiovascular system. The heart doesn’t distinguish between emotional stress and physical stress. It simply responds.
Emotions Drive Behavior (Whether We Notice or Not)

One of the most important things I teach clients and leaders is this:
Emotions are not random. They’re signals that prepare us to do something.
Sometimes that “something” is helpful, like setting boundaries, having an honest conversation, or asking for support. Other times, it looks less productive, such as avoidance, withdrawal, snapping at someone we care about, or shutting down entirely.
From the outside, those behaviors can seem illogical. From the inside, they’re often attempts at self-protection.
When we’re emotionally overloaded, the body prioritizes immediate relief over long-term goals like relationship growth, productivity, or even health. Despite what the bully said in elementary school, it doesn’t make you weak; it just means you are human.
The problem isn’t that emotions influence behavior. The problem is when we aren’t aware they’re doing so.
The Heart as an Emotional Barometer
The heart plays a powerful role in emotional experience. It responds instantly to stress, connection, threat, and safety. Over time, unaddressed emotional strain can contribute to patterns that affect heart health, including poor sleep, elevated stress hormones, inflammation, and burnout.
This is why emotional awareness is not “soft work.” It’s preventive care.
When we learn to notice:
what we’re feeling
where we feel it in the body and
how it’s influencing our reactions
We create space for choice instead of default patterns. That awareness protects not just relationships but also physical health.
From Suppression to Self-Regulation
Healthy emotional regulation doesn’t mean oversharing or reacting to every feeling. It means recognizing what’s happening internally and choosing a response that aligns with your values, especially under stress.
That might look like:
pausing before responding instead of reacting
naming emotions privately before addressing a situation
prioritizing rest when stress is high
addressing tension early rather than letting it build
These small shifts reduce emotional load, and your heart feels the difference.
Supporting Your Heart Through Awareness
As we move through Heart Health Month, remember this: caring for your heart isn’t just about what you eat or how often you exercise. It’s also about how you process stress, navigate emotions, and respond to pressure, especially in close relationships.
Awareness doesn’t eliminate emotion. It helps emotions move through the body rather than getting stuck there.
Ready to Stop Stressing Your Heart Out?
If you want practical tools to support heart health in real life, not just in theory, then I invite you to join me for my upcoming workshop:
Don’t Stress Your Heart Out
In this educational, science-informed session, we’ll explore how diet, movement, sleep, and stress management work together to support cardiovascular health, without guilt, extremes, or overwhelm.
👉 Save your seat here:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/1981884723559?aff=oddtdtcreator
Your heart does more than keep you alive; it responds to how you live, love, and manage stress every day. Let’s take care of it accordingly.
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