I agree with the others, I think everyone is like that sometimes.
I tend to be more logical than emotional, whereas most people I know are strongly driven by emotion. I've been told that this is magnified because I have Asperger's, but I don't really know if that has anything to do with it. I notice the difference especially when anger and hurt feelings are concerned; I react by withdrawing to think things over and then come back to discuss calmly, whereas they will react by immediately bursting out in a rageful rampage, twisting my words into what they imagine they hear rather than what I'm actually saying. It's like they want to be mad, so anything I say is going to make them mad, until they finally cool down. When I can't open my mouth without being misconstrued and attacked, it tends to make me go quiet and shy away, which makes them even more mad. It's a "damned if you do, damned if you don't" situation, which can be really upsetting for me and always seems to come out of nowhere.
A lot of people think I have an uncanny intuition about things, but I think it's really just that I see patterns and can easily predict where someone's behavior will lead them. It can get frustrating after awhile when someone comes to me for sensible input but then refuses to listen to reason. (Not that I'm callous about speaking my mind; It's good to be honest, but it's also good to be tactful and considerate of feelings.) Sometimes they get angry with me because they don't like what I have to say and would rather believe their own lies. This is exasperating. Why ask for an outsider's view when you don't really want one? They always come back to me saying, "Well you were right, I should have listened to you," but then they still don't listen to me the next time they ask my advice, lol. Sometimes it's like watching a train wreck and not being able to do anything to stop it. I've simply learned to take on a "live and let live" mentality. It doesn't really matter what you say, people will always do what they want. Their decisions, mistakes, consequences and regrets are their own.
I appreciate rational people (rare though they are), but I have found that rational and logical aren't always the same. To me, "rational" connotes an element of wisdom and human decency, whereas "logic" is just mind math -- A thought equation that leads to an answer, whether it's the best one or not. A logical decision might make sense, but that doesn't necessarily make it right. I have on many occasions seen people use logic to rationalize horrendous and cruel behavior.
Logic is not automatically more straightforward than emotion, either. Two people can both have used logic but still come to completely different conclusions about the same thing. There is very little information out there that is truly "fact". Most is theory and perspective.
Most people seem to value one over the other; but in my opinion, logic and emotion are of equal value, each with uses and flaws, both beneficial when properly balanced.