Beyond words : The shared soul of human and animals - Deepstash

Explore the World's Best Ideas

Join today and uncover 100+ curated journeys from 50+ topics. Unlock access to our mobile app with extensive features.

Mirror Emotions: Reflected but Not Identical

Idea: Both humans and animals express core emotions like fear, joy, and anger — but the form and complexity differ.

Explanation:

Humans may cry, scream, or laugh aloud when emotional. Animals, on the other hand, express through body language — wagging tails, flattened ears, or growling. A dog’s joy looks like tail-wagging and jumping; a human's may include laughter or speech. The emotion is shared, but expression is species-shaped. This reflects biology and evolution — yet, the emotional intent is often mutual.

2

21 reads

Silent Language of Pain

Idea: Animals express pain and sadness silently, while humans verbalize and seek comfort.

Explanation:

Humans tend to cry, talk about grief, or isolate themselves when in pain. Animals, especially prey species, may hide their suffering (a survival instinct). A limping dog or a cat avoiding food is an emotional signal. This emotional silence in animals often leads to underestimation of their feelings by humans. The key idea: Pain is universal, but not always loud.

2

15 reads

Emotional Bonding Beyond Words

Idea: Emotions form bonds in both — like a mother-child bond, love, or loyalty — but humans use language, while animals rely on physical cues.

Explanation:

A human mother hugs or talks to her baby; a cow licks her calf or stays near it. Dogs feel loss when an owner dies, even showing signs of depression. This shows that attachment, loyalty, grief aren’t exclusive to language-using humans. Emotions travel through touch, gaze, nearness — a shared emotional fabric across species.

2

18 reads

Expressive Faces vs. Expressive Bodies

Idea: Humans use facial expressions heavily; animals often rely on full-body movements.

Explanation:

Humans frown, raise eyebrows, or smile. Chimps show teeth in aggression (not smiling). Dogs wag tails, cats arch backs — the whole body becomes a communicator. Animals don’t mask emotions as humans do (e.g., fake smiles), making their expression more honest but harder for us to read. This teaches us: Understanding emotion needs observing beyond the face.

2

18 reads

Empathy and Emotional Intelligence

Idea: Some animals can sense human emotions and react — showing empathy, proving emotional intelligence.

Explanation:

Elephants mourn their dead. Dogs cuddle sad humans. Some primates comfort crying companions. This suggests not just emotion, but emotional awareness. Humans analyze feelings deeply; animals may not "analyze" but intuitively respond. The shared sense of empathy shows that emotion is not owned by language, but by connection.

2

16 reads

IDEAS CURATED BY

saimanilekaz

Produce, Publish, Preserve.

CURATOR'S NOTE

An evocative exploration of how emotions—grief, joy, pain, and love—bridge the invisible gap between humans and animals, revealing a universal language beyond words, shaped by instinct, expression, and empathy.

Similar ideas

Care of the Soul

13 ideas

Care of the Soul

Thomas Moore

The Untethered Soul

21 ideas

The Untethered Soul

Michael A. Singer

Read & Learn

20x Faster

without
deepstash

with
deepstash

with

deepstash

Personalized microlearning

100+ Learning Journeys

Access to 200,000+ ideas

Access to the mobile app

Unlimited idea saving

Unlimited history

Unlimited listening to ideas

Downloading & offline access

Supercharge your mind with one idea per day

Enter your email and spend 1 minute every day to learn something new.

Email

I agree to receive email updates