EMDR Safe/Calm Place Practice
This month's practice is for our friends who are in EMDR therapy and need help practicing their Safe/Calm place more regularly. Safe/calm place is relatively easy to develop for most of us but can be hard to use to its full potential especially if we don’t practice. This month’s video will guide you through a calm place practice and is meant for you to use repeatedly to build those neural pathways for feeling calm.
Regulation Practice for the Winter Blues
We are in the thick of winter and a lot of us are experiencing those seasonal affective symptoms like sadness, fatigue, and a lack of motivation. If that describes you, then try out this video. It includes some mindfulness, affirmations, and breathing to help regulate your nervous system. Our brains learn through repetition so repeat this as often as needed during the winter months.
Regulation Practice for Dealing With Your Toxic Family
Do you have to spend time with your toxic family or friends this holiday season? Do you find yourself nervous or upset beforehand?
Then this new regulation video is just for you. You can use this before, during, or after the event and it will both help you to regulate your nervous system as well as provide some affirmations to help with common issues we see with toxic or abusive family members.
What You Can Expect From High Quality Trauma Therapy
Trauma therapy can help you to move past what happened to you so that you can enjoy your life and create a better future. Taking the time to find someone who is a good fit and who implements an evidence-based model of care can help to set you up for long-term success. Being educated on the process and what you should expect can also help you to choose a therapist from an informed place.
The Vagus Nerve and Your Mental Health
The vagus nerve, also known as the wandering nerve, is the longest and most complex of the twelve cranial nerves. The Vagus is actually the tenth cranial nerve, or cranial nerve x, consists of two nerves, and travels from the brain stem into the stomach and touches all of our other bodily systems.
PTSD vs CPTSD: What Are They and What’s The Difference?
If you think you’re someone who is struggling with either PTSD or CPTSD then I encourage you to reach out for help now. A good trauma therapist can help you to sift through what happened to you and help you move on in a constructive and healthy way.
Fear, Shame, and Guilt: Signs of Doing the Right Thing?
For those of us who have experienced abuse, our early warning system for danger can go awry causing us to feel guilt, shame, or fear about things that are actually healthy and good for us. This can happen with any abuse but is especially prevalent in folks who experienced child abuse as these misplaced reactions can become ingrained in the patterns and beliefs that make up our personality.
Managing Emotional Flashbacks
Emotional flashbacks are a terrifying reality for many trauma survivors but with practice can be managed more effectively. Learning to identify when a flashback is occurring, using a flashback script, using mindfulness and cognitive strategies to manage the flashback while its occurring, giving yourself the room to feel your feelings, gaining support, building insight, and being easy on yourself are all key skills to practice.
What To Look For In A Trauma Therapist
Finding a therapist can be challenging but with a little education about what to look for, you can find someone who can help you on your journey with recovery from trauma.
COVID Trauma: Three Things You Can Do Today to Start Healing
The more you can focus on what you CAN do, instead of spinning your wheels thinking of what you can’t, the better you’ll be. There’s no way to come out of this pandemic unaffected but we can mitigate any negative symptoms from PTSD and rest in the knowledge that we did the best we knew how.
Generational Trauma: How to Start Healing
Generational trauma, like trauma in general, is a hugely under-addressed public health issue that affects almost all of us. The world is a brutal place and was more brutal 100 years ago than it is today. For our ancestors, trauma was just the way of life and this impacted them, their kids, and their grandkids all the way down to us.
Trauma Is More Than You Think It Is.
There are a lot of people walking around suffering with the impact of trauma who have no idea that’s what is going on. They think they are “defective” or “broken” since no one can seem to help them figure out how to manage their symptoms but in reality no one is treating the right thing.