A person or situation in which different types of feelings are visible and on the surface is classified as emotional. It is important to understand that an emotion is both a physical and a psychic phenomenon and that, therefore, such events are not always manageable and measurable voluntarily by individuals, resulting in personalities in which the emotional sector exerts greater influence or power over the individual. rational sector of behavior.
The word emotion, from which the condition of emotional derives, comes from Latin and means 'to move', 'to take action'. This is where it can be said that emotion is the biological and psychological reaction of an individual to certain types of situations or phenomena that influence their behavior or conduct. The generation of an emotion starts from the brain and is evident through certain changes visible to the naked eye (such as a smile at joy, blushing at shame, a frown at anger, tears at sadness), as well as through expressions, ways of acting and responding that respond to more encompassing behaviors and attitudes.
For many professionals, emotion is not simply a reaction, but also a way of adaptation to the change that may be taking place around the individual. Obviously, this adaptation is in most cases involuntary and happens in thousandths of seconds as an immediate response to certain sensations and thoughts.
An emotional person is therefore a person who is characterized by the continuous display of emotions and sensations. While many people can develop rational, logical and emotional controlling personalities, other personalities (due to elements such as heredity, personal history, the space where they grow up and live) show great sensitivity to certain phenomena and immediately let out. the emotions they are feeling. Many times, such emotionality is not voluntary but happens without the person being able to measure or neutralize the visible symptoms (for example when one blushes or when one cries or laughs).