Here’s the deal: the supervisor emotion doesn’t necessarily mean a person deals with some mental illness by default. The order in which emotions sit at the console represents personality and how one reacts to certain situations - .-
The mom is lead by Sadness and as such is calm, collected, rational and caring. Next to her are Joy and Anger, who being the first ones to react right after Sadness, make her a passionate woman who empathizes easily with others; and since Fear and Disgust are the bottom tiers, she can also be seen as open minded.
The dad is lead by Anger, so he’s serious, firm, respectul and assertive. Next up are Sadness and Fear, so he’s got this weird balance between calm and nervous that keep his anger-driven impulses in check by making him double guess. Since Digust and Joy are the bottoms for him, he’s a selfless guy who doesn’t indulge much in his own satisfaction, instead looking after others such as his wife and kid.
As you can see, the adults have their emotions in order and at the ready to react to what happens around them. In essence they respond to information in a systematic, proven way, whilst a kid such as Riley has no established hierachy over her emotions, so she can be seen as moody whenever they switch control of the console. I don’t want to spoil the movie tho, so I’m leaving my analogy analysis of her there - .-
ok but idk what you want from askin this, if I just mix whatever your supervisor emotiens are with my disgust then I’ll be done after two more of these and thats fuccin pointless >:Y
…anyway a Disgusted Joy = Embarrassment, or a Joyous Disgust = Vanity