Clinical Psychology and Therapy Services ~ Herefordshire

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Try this to soothe and calm stress

That heart thumping out of your chest, the clammy hands, jelly legs, shortness of breath, pale face, sickness in your gut, racing thoughts, swirling head, dry mouth, the intense urge to turn away, fight, avoid, run.

Every single one of these feelings is generated in the face of what your nervous system perceives as a threat….

…part of your bodies’ attempt to prepare you to get away, to survive what it thinks is about to happen.

Yet if you’re feeling it regularly, it’s likely that the response is out of proportion to the threat you’re actually facing? Maybe the threat here is a memory or thought… a hook back to a time when you were in danger. Perhaps you don’t even know the trigger.

Those intense symptoms of an activated nervous system can all too easily create a sense of frustration. Maybe you feel like your body is letting you down, working against you by reacting this way repeatedly when you don’t want it.

But your body is never the enemy.

It’s doing exactly what it THINKS you need in that moment. It’s stepping in to to mobilise you to fight or run for your survival.

Getting cross with it will only increase your activation and cause the intensity to last longer.

As an alternative, can you offer something like this as a silent message:

“Thank you, body
I know you’re standing up for me and working hard to protect me.
I’m so grateful for that.
But this time it’s ok.
I’m safe and I don’t need protecting.
We can be alongside each other.
We can breathe together,
we’re safe”

Please do come back and share how it feels 🙏🏻

Is stress making you ILL?

Your stress response is working for your safety but for many of us – the pressures of everyday life can feel like “stress” is the constant state.

Why do I always end up back here?

It’s not you, it’s your nervous system

Ever feel like you’re caught up in old patterns of thinking, feeling and doing with no clue how to escape? Here is a helpful analogy we use often in therapy:

What is Nervous System-informed Therapy?

Sticky post

Attachment and the Nervous System: How early attachment experiences can show up every day in your body, and how Nervous system-informed therapy can help.

The wellness advice that helps (a little) every time

Our autonomic nervous system – the part of the nervous system which operates silently, almost completely underneath conscious awareness – connects the brain with all our essential organs. In very simple terms, its understood to have two modes/ branches – sympathetic and parasympathetic. They’re both essential and ideally we move freely and easily as required from one to the other.

REST back to balance

There’s literally NO HACK for repairing and restoring a tired mind-body. Not one single substitute for rest. And if you’re having a harder time than usual, your need for rest will increase in order to balance out the additional energy you use via an activated nervous system.

You make sense

I vividly remember a conversation with my Mum at a really early age about something I didn’t understand in school, and she encouraged me to ask more questions “If you don’t get it, it’s likely that others won’t too”.

How to connect mind and body

If you haven’t been taught, or you’ve spent a long time disconnected, how would you know what “being in your body” actually means? What does it look like?

These ideas can be a bit abstract and mystical.

Here are 5 simple steps which might allow you to gently and gradually notice and inhabit your physical body.

A route away from overwhelm for all ages

The three R’s

These three steps come from Bruce Perry, a neuroscientist working in the field of trauma, and are offered as a guide for how adults can best support vulnerable children to learn, think and reflect. But I see absolutely no reason why these steps should be saved for children only.

The best and worst thing for your nervous system is…

PEOPLE AND RELATIONSHIPS

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