I swear to God, i have never seen a therapist who gives this good advice. I myself am in therapy with a very decent therapist but Emma your techniques have helped me so immensely. Unlike others you don't talk abstract ideas, you make it it so damn practical and applicable. Love your approach. May God reward you for all the free help you are offering
@proverbs31507 ай бұрын
Get to know Jesus, stop swearing to God, and you will have peace beyond all understanding.
@Crystalquartz9647 ай бұрын
@@proverbs3150 Take your condescending religious comment out of here, its completely irrelevant
@brianciofani46987 ай бұрын
@@proverbs3150100%!!
@brianciofani46987 ай бұрын
@@proverbs3150100%
@Sbd2227 ай бұрын
Same! I had a cool therapist who listened to me talk for an hour. Which was great. I learned that routine is the best way to get through a difficult time i.e. divorce but I didn’t get practical insight or techniques like I do from this channel.
@adamrosefire7 ай бұрын
I really like that saying in the end: life isn’t about waiting for the storm to pass, it’s about learning to dance in the rain.
@sherryberry23947 ай бұрын
❤ I love this, so helpful.
@norcalzack7 ай бұрын
My wife has this tattood down her side 😊
@adamrosefire7 ай бұрын
@@norcalzack Wow! 💥
@Encaris6 ай бұрын
I remember seeing this quote on the wall of a restaurant when i was in a really crumby situation. I now have that quote above my bed to help me remember that negative things are based on perspective and that there is always a silver lining or lesson to a pursumed negative situation.
@adamrosefire6 ай бұрын
@@Encaris Awesome! Thanks for sharing.
@plainjaneproud7 ай бұрын
Thank you for the phrase "I am safe enough right now." Frequently people will tell you to tell yourself you're safe but when you have an overactive imagination you can come up with lots of reasons why you're technically not safe or could be at risk. But safe enough, is a lot more calming to my mind. I am safe enough right now to relax, or...(fill in the blank with an action I want to complete).
@avielp7 ай бұрын
Yes
@wittymystic73616 ай бұрын
Yes, and sometimes a person is not truly safe. I've noticed that most people who tell others to say that they're safe are often living in safe middle-class or better neighborhoods. I'm poor, and it is not truly safe where I live, so why lie to myself? However, I can find moments when I can honestly say I'm safe enough. I'm usually not in a crisis situation, although I could be at any moment. Reality check.
@clonessgirlness5 ай бұрын
I completely agree, 'you're safe' feels like gaslighting in this world, but 'safe enough' is usually true.
@victoriastone39885 ай бұрын
The reality of my life is that I am not safe. I have tried many different things to regulate my nervous system but it is very difficult when you are:poor without access to supports,have chronic illnesses, and live in a unstable housing situation.In addition I deal with multiple mental illnesses. I think this video is very exclusionary to all of us who are not part of the privileged class.
@paigebecker64463 ай бұрын
Yes, thank you! I have always been entirely confused by the affirmation “I am safe”. My brain and nervous system strongly oppose that idea! It’s the same thing with the affirmation often said during guided meditations/yoga “You are exactly where you need to be right now. There is nowhere to go, nothing to do.” Like, what?!? I’m relieved to know that I am not the only person for whom these affirmations backfire!
@Joe-fi4hv5 ай бұрын
The best advice I received in paramedic training was “your patient’s emergency is not your emergency. Skill saves not emotions.” Complete paradigm shift.
@chandrad9515 ай бұрын
I love this!
@nurhayat812 ай бұрын
Very good.
@jenniferfirer28377 ай бұрын
As a professor who has been coming home, collapsing on her couch, and watching KZbin, I appreciate this post😂 Also thankful to whatever algorithm that cause me to even see this🙏Thank you, Emma.
@daveandjodyharrell5 ай бұрын
Hahaha. I am one of those professors also. 😂. Thanks Emma. That was great.
@alexandraritter35423 ай бұрын
I read this before she got to the example and thought, "that's really weird. I am too." :P
@craiglist4837 ай бұрын
This master of hyper vigilance appreciates knowing there is something called relaxed vigilance! Thank you.
@anitas58176 ай бұрын
I don’t have anxiety but I have ADHD and my nervous system is constantly “on”. Fatigue and burnout are real. Downregulating the sympathetic nervous system is crucial.
@yvonnerahui87293 ай бұрын
Good if you could have massage daily to soothe the body & train it to relax. And to find out what it is you're running from or why you are on run mode?? If it's fear based to be able to face it with someone wise & caring.
@lindseycassella3015Ай бұрын
Same here I think the stimulants I take keep it in overdrive sometimes and it gets me through shutdown but with a cost.
@Martha_My_Dear7 ай бұрын
Emma you've changed my life... you still are doing it. You can't know the extension of your work. It has been like heaven sent. Thank you SO much from the opposite side of the continent. 🇦🇷
@TherapyinaNutshell7 ай бұрын
Aguante Argentina ❤
@Martha_My_Dear7 ай бұрын
@@TherapyinaNutshell Geniaaaa ♥ abrazos desde Córdoba
@psyclotronxx30837 ай бұрын
I didn't know her name is Emma
@SamuelSamawit2836 ай бұрын
She is amazing.i have no words about how much you help me
@FelipePerestrelo6 ай бұрын
That's a really great video. I'm a therapist myself and I work with somatic techniques to help people develop more awareness of themselves, reorganize behaviors and learn how to self-regulate. You video has certainly enriched my repertoire and gave me ideias to use with my clients. Thank you! By the way, putting a little bit of my experience for whomever this might be suitable: One thing that can help the grounding step is using hands and/or feet. You can, for example, after getting awareness of your body, press the feet slightly against the floor and open it softly, or caress the tip of your fingers with your thumb, open and close your hands slowly. Hands and feet have an incredible number of nervous endings and by using them consciously helps engage the structures that changes behavior patterns. Experiment with them and see how you feel. Hope this helps!
@romyhochwald14366 ай бұрын
Thank you so much.
@yvonnerahui87293 ай бұрын
Thanks for that. Do you have a website or anything??
@anthealee72 ай бұрын
A few more that I use regularly and find massively helpful are, Peter Levine's technique where you cross your arms in front of your body and squeeze your upper arms (works well in public places as can be done without drawing attention). Stamping your feet and shaking your body, and the vagal nerve neck stretch. Thank you so much for sharing re the relaxed hypervigilance and the system to reprogram/train ourselves. Sending wishes for a healthy, healed and happy future to anyone reading 🙏
@lalash85397 ай бұрын
This is life changing for daily life, i have practised this and my energy levels and health is restoring. I dont rush anymore. I dont hold my breath n have a pounding heart while working anymore. Im not trying to grocery shop as fast as possible. Im not rushing. If i dont wanna be late i make sure to leave in good time. If im late for a not so important situatipn, 5 minutes of running around n rushing isnt going to help me.
@WorkerBeesUnite7 ай бұрын
You nailed it. That has been my biggest Takeaway as far as mental health as well. As far as simple specific habits, just not rushing when I do things has been the biggest help for my mental state. After a while, I realized that I was just rushing around so I could get back to sitting down on the couch that much faster.. and laughed at myself.
@Heyu7her36 ай бұрын
It's cute til you're a chronically late person because "slowing down" means you lose track of time (even with alarms) 🥲
@lalash85395 ай бұрын
Yes but I see that as a new problem to solve. Becuase I dont like to be late. So im not willing to stress and not willing to be late. That means i need to figure out how to deal with that :) for me making a plan and stickning to it and not procrastinating things like getting ready, showering making to do lists of what i need to bring with me maybe pack the day before:)) i used to be chronically late and stressed so u kind of have to break two cycles :) @@Heyu7her3
@bobbyantonelli79784 ай бұрын
I thought I was the only one who was rushing around and holding my breath!
@LunaLaLove337 ай бұрын
Your 10-20 min videos are more healing than sessions of in person therapy! 🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽 thank you!
@aw47245 ай бұрын
Dancing tells your nervous system that you are safe so dancing in the rain is great advice! Love the kind heartedness of this girl. Her humble and joyful delivery is healing all by itself. Also postural problems cause weakened energy fields which can cause SEVERE anxiety.
@louisebotos73212 ай бұрын
interesting about posture..makes sense
@ravenprice61125 ай бұрын
I learned this while on a flight. I HATE flying. Everyone always said that the more I did it, the easier it would get, but that was never the case. So every flight I'm in a hyper anxious state on the verge of a panic attack. In my last flight, I took a moment before take off to become aware of my body and my safety. I noticed I was sitting with my legs crossed, biting my lip, and my hands were sweating. I told myself that if I force myself into a relaxed state physically, it might trick my brain into not being nervous. So I uncrossed my legs and put my feet flat on the floor, I laid my hands out at my sides with my palms up, and I smiled. I stayed this way during take off and there was a serious noticeable difference in my anxiety. I was also practicing my grounding technique. I typically will count slowly, sing a song, or talk to myself in my head about how excited I am about reaching my destination. Now, this becomes difficult when we hit some turbulence. But, I have made myself watch lots of videos about what turbulence is and have come to understand how safe flight is. I tell myself when feeling turbulence "it's uncomfortable but totally normal and not dangerous". These have helped me a LOT but It is still a constant battle
@tinatrachtenburg8489Ай бұрын
That is why I take the train. 🫣
@bradparmar4728Ай бұрын
Hope lot of Flyers in ur situation can be helped by this.
@Rick40yearsАй бұрын
I had the same problem and I was flying a lot for work. It took a long time for it to go away but it eventually did. It helped me a bit to go on roller coasters or rides where you are falling fast. I think the main fear of flying is the fear of falling. Hope that helps.
@bedlam5296 ай бұрын
As a DBT therapist, I think you are brilliant! It is so rare to find a therapist with this knowledge.
@BeTheLightOfYourOwnLife6 ай бұрын
Very helpful! I had a season of homelessness that was extremely stressful. Even though I’m back on top now, my body still needs to recover fully. “I am safe here right now!” Perfect.
@glittercupkate5 ай бұрын
Your videos have been FUNDAMENTAL to my healing of PTSD. I've been watching them for years now and have recommended your work to many people. I'm so grateful. Thank you
@slane_design6 ай бұрын
Thank you! I feel like therapists would never provide this much advice and detail even after numerous appointments and thousands of dollars! You are contributing to the wellness of so many who can not otherwise afford it in a big Pharma governed industry. Thank you
@jos.57375 ай бұрын
Find a better therapist.
@slane_design5 ай бұрын
@@jos.5737 nonexistent
@EMuro-wu7uy7 ай бұрын
I've been meditating and micro meditating. At end of day I take time coloring. After a horrible car accident I retrain myself with happy things. It helps get emotions out, journaling. Micro journaling also helps.
@andybreedlove6 ай бұрын
What’s micro journaling?
@lindseycassella3015Ай бұрын
I want to know this too
@DocSnipes7 ай бұрын
I love “I am safe enough right now”. I like how you used the popular phrase “Life isn’t about learning for the storm to pass, it’s about learning to dance in the rain.” and saw dancing in the rain as our parasympathetic cue. I think that’s awesome. Another thing that I think might help is for people to maintain a consistent awareness of their environment to identify problems early and decide on interventions. This doesn't mean being on edge but rather being observant and prepared.
@dawnriddle-knowlton99327 ай бұрын
Yes!! To all you stated. Your videos are super helpful, also. You and Emma are my go-to YT counselors. Have watched your All CEU channel and comprehend videos eventhough I am not a counselor. Thanks for all you.
@bkirstie6 ай бұрын
but rain is a trigger for me 😂
@sarathguttikonda40657 ай бұрын
Helpful video for one who's battling depression and gets nervous and anxious at everything
@Awesomes0076 ай бұрын
Long Covid directly breaks the prefrontal cortex and causes anxiety and panic. I was forced to learn to manually calm myself down, over and over, hours a day, for years. Best skill I’ve ever developed.
@FantasticDrums5 ай бұрын
I am in Long Covid right now and this is exactly what it feels. What techniques did you use and can you live a normal life again?
@zanebutler85285 ай бұрын
Same here, it a skill a wish I learnt years ago. How we think is how we feel
@daveywavey34365 ай бұрын
Can you point us to where you got this information?
@lindsayh15025 ай бұрын
@@FantasticDrumsthere are so many amazing nervous system programs out there now for long covid recovery. Check out Rebecca Tolins KZbin channel, Your Grateful Guides KZbin channel, CFS School, Vital Side, That Healing Feeling (check Insta for some of these too). You can heal. It’s so possible with the proper nervous system work ❤
@Awesomes0074 ай бұрын
@@FantasticDrums I’m far from recovered. No one has truly recovered. No, my life is completely different. I’ll be lucky if I can work ever again.
@sienna.cd337 ай бұрын
I’d been waiting to watch your video, and I’m so glad today was the day. A new job that’s trying to make me stick 12 hours of work into each 8 hour day. I was so overwhelmed when I finished today that I literally screamed at my dogs. Not raised my voice, not yelled, screamed. Listening to you I realized that those many many triggers had built up and I was done. Stick a fork in me done. This has been going on for years. You explained it all so well. When I’m afraid I usually calm myself with two quick breaths in and one longer one out. As you were talking I started doing it. I feel like I’ve just gone from 100 down to 40 on the insanely angry level. I never correlated my anxiety with fear, even though I had a mother who physically abused me from the age of 6. It makes so much sense now. Thank you ❤
@deborarita99717 ай бұрын
Emma, this is definitely your dharma, your life purpose. May life be wonderful and generous to you, as you are to others (and I really believe that!). A warm hug, from BR. =)
@SIC6477 ай бұрын
I developed health anxiety, and scanning my body every 15 minutes sounds horrible. I do use grounding techniques, but they are more based on deliberately laughing (actual physical laughing) at what my brain/body now came up with. Or talking to that part of myself like a small kid: "Aww, you really want to protect me and keep me safe. Thank you for letting me know, now you can let it go." Or doing funny or silly things with my body, because the boogie-woogie shakes out the jittery feeling plus you wouldn't do a silly dance if there was any danger.
@ishanibhardwaj4217 ай бұрын
I love the idea of how you tell yourself that your body wants to protect you and you tell your body to let go stress 🥰🥰
@SIC6477 ай бұрын
@@ishanibhardwaj421 I first developed it back when I decided I was done being scared of the dark.
@robinc42897 ай бұрын
CherelleThinks is a great KZbinr who talks about how to overcome health anxiety ❤
@WorkerBeesUnite7 ай бұрын
Awesome stuff. In the same vein, sometimes I will kind of giggle to myself and wink a little-sometimes physically, sometimes mentally-but basically react to myself the same way I would react to a little child who is nervous for no real reason
@Bmoney9026 ай бұрын
I do very similar things! The silly movements and talking to my brain, but next time I'll try talking to it like a child. The other night I was having bad anxiety ruminations, so I imagined my anxiety as a scary dark shadow standing in the corner of my room, which I know sounds counterintuitive, but I imagined myself dancing and singing the SpongeBob SquarePants theme tune at it with my whole heart because it disempowered it lol
@asilong90496 ай бұрын
Advice starts at 6:20. Say youre safe, take a deep breath. And repeat a lot.
@Movingstillness7 ай бұрын
Wow! Thank you so much, Emma. Powerful perspective! I'm in fight or flight all day everyday and so tired. Seeing them as micro-stressors makes it all make sense and is now easier to work with. You are a true hero. ❤
@sarahmward4 ай бұрын
I really like that you mention the aspect that some people believe they MUST FEEL STRESSED during a stressful situation. This resonated with me because I feel like if I dont react in a stressed way then I must not care about the outcome or other people will think I don't care or if I'm not "feeling" the stress, I might not be effective in dealing with stressful situations. It's hard to change the physical response if you're thinking that your stressed out response is somehow "helping" you. Hearing this today has helped me go back to noticing these thoughts and reminding myself that being stressed is not actually showing people I care or helping me make sure everything is under control. Its just making me feel hypervigilent all of the time
@PhDchick6 ай бұрын
I had a neurologist tell me to randomly tense up and then relax and then after your muscles will naturally relax. I have issues with holding tension in my body to deal with stress, which all my life is stress and dealing with problems and stress. Made such a difference in my life.
@bedlam5296 ай бұрын
Paired Muscle Relaxation. Gets the parasympathetic nervous activated
@sammfabish52306 ай бұрын
This is called the contract-relax technique and you can use it for stretching too! First tense the muscle you want to stretch, relax it, and if it's available, maybe deepen your stretch. Paired with a good breath is basically yin yoga. Which also teaches you how to find comfort in the uncomfortable.
@saragreenfield16487 ай бұрын
By the end of the work week, I am exhausted and need to weekend to regroup and rest. Just yesterday I was wondering if there was a better way to relax and unwind throughout the week so I'm not so beat by Friday, and you might have just posted the answer! Thank you!
@williamchamberlain22636 ай бұрын
4:00 Why relaxation = avoidance = continuing anxiety 4:45 Continual practice through the day -> exercise the parasympathetic muscle 5:25 relax _during_ the situation 5:30 How
@amberklein68937 ай бұрын
Watching movies/tv continues to create stress. Since the mind can’t tell the difference between fantasy and reality, whatever netflix we watch is perceived as ACTUALLY HAPPENING. Our bodies continue to internalize the stress. We CAN use the handle-in-the-moment technique you’ve taught in this video. But without the emotional high of whatever is happening in the show, the movie loses its point. It’s like constantly being reminded that Frodo is fine & “Lord of the Rings” isn’t real while watching. It spoils the experience. Which supports the idea that Netflix, movies, etc is not the best way to de-stress.
@scottfitzpatrick19395 ай бұрын
This is spot on. The trouble i have is the modern world is saturated with stress. We are faced with 4 times the costs to make ends meet as the previous generation while making less adjusted for inflation. Basic stress management is something i am so greatful to have learned. But the world's demands are too overwhelming to ever recover.
@ajordan18477 ай бұрын
"Relaxed Vigilance" is my new phrasing. Thank you. ❤🙏🏾❤️
@dfab24867 ай бұрын
Oh Emma, i hope you know how helpful you have been. You have been a true blessing for me. Thank you very much!
@amenhotep77047 ай бұрын
Thank you endlessly for your work my dear Emma.
@ralitsailieva22056 ай бұрын
Such an incredible thing! “Life isn’t about waiting for the storm to pass, it’s learning to dance In the rain” 💜🙏Thank you!
@randybackgammon8904 ай бұрын
Yes and no.Trying to be happy in a shitty situation has it's limits and anyone who says it dosen't isn't in it forever.Somtimes you gotta look beyond the present restriction.At least thats been my experience this far.But good luck if that viewpoint works for you✌️
@tatianamachado14937 ай бұрын
I love so many things about your work, I love how you talk lightly. Your videos are so safe to me. Thank you so much. God bless. ❤
@dani883726 ай бұрын
This mixture of explaining the reasoning behind behaviours plus giving practical advice is really so helpful. It’s really making me feel hopeful when previously I just thought something was inherently wrong with me. Thank you so much.
@Burnrate6 ай бұрын
Your body language is absolutely on another level. Even when you blink it is like an engaging separate action but somehow still part of your entire communication. Every movement is x10, but not exaggerated, it's expanded and wonderful.
@Jamies0n7 ай бұрын
the quote that you concluded this video with, "....learn how to dance in the rain" was the quote that I really harped on when beginning my healing journey over 10 yrs ago... there was a time that I couldn't see a way out of my nervousness and need for substances, bad behaviors, avoidance, self sabotage, etc.. but now as today is the eve of my 40th bday those feelings are lessening day by day, and I have changed/transitioned... and the universe keeps reinforcing my positive health choices with confirmations! I really enjoyed this video, and would like to make a list of more micro grounding techniques to try! xx,j
@JessicaDarling26 ай бұрын
Happy belated birthday! May the next decade bring you more and better than you can even imagine today. ❤✨
@pstimpert2 ай бұрын
This technique works. I'm a lifelong people pleaser, and have been anxious enough to cause nerve injuries several times. I set up a reminder (at random times) to check in and downregulate (mostly just a yawn or two). After a few months, I feel noticeably more chill. Super helpful, thanks!
@girlfriday12996 ай бұрын
As someone who gets wound up tighter and tighter as I go about my business, requiring periods of quiet and stillness to recharge, this is so helpful! Thanks so much! ❤
@sarahstoll65777 ай бұрын
I am a paramedic and will definitely try to focus on relaxed vigilance on my next shift. Thank you!
@danih75776 ай бұрын
Dr. Tim Fletcher does videos on secondary trauma (trauma with a little t not big T ) or complex trauma. It will help you 🙏 greatly.
@terryg44157 ай бұрын
If I can watch that video without my hands sweating, I consider that a success! Thank you for this. It is so timely for me!
@Snugos7 ай бұрын
Thank you so much. I've been freelancing for many years and I noticed in recent years I've been getting more and more into a cycle of doing everything immediately and being unable to relax until it's done, but then of course there's always more. This is such good advice!
@Julie-lz5hg7 ай бұрын
Emma, you have no idea how much you’ve helped me! Thank you from the bottom of my heart for providing A+ content. You’re changing lives ❤
@puspid7 ай бұрын
Thank you for making all these resources available for the masses, Emma! They really, really help me ❤
@intensivecakeunit7 ай бұрын
You are an absolute Godsend. Been watching your videos wrestling through postpartum depression/anxiety and I can’t even put into words how much they’ve helped me. God bless you for everything you have done through this channel. Thank you so so much!!
@sixtoomanycats97696 ай бұрын
I never knew about checking in with our bodies until I started trauma therapy 2 years ago, and my therapist mentioned it as a suggestion and explained it, so I tried it not sure how to do it, and when I did what I call a "body check in" I started learning more and how it works. Now I set an alarm on my phone every 4 hours per day and even if I'm feeling ok, I do them listening to some calm meditation piano or guitar music, and when I'm stressed I notice more about what my body is telling me and how to breathe and calm down. Usually I end up meditating during them and sometimes fall asleep. Thank you for this video and sharing all this info. Your videos are very helpful for me in between sessions, and I have even shared your channel and some videos with my therapist. She loves seeing the work I do in between sessions and that I shared some of my tools with her. Thank you Emma, for being my unpaid therapist.
@eryl_at_home7 ай бұрын
Thank you so much Emma, this is exactly what I needed to hear. Being in a stressful situation doesn't mean I have to feel stressed.
@sonjarenteria69027 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this information.. you explained exactly how I used to manage my workload stress. But by me watching your videos I'm learning how to identify my stress triggers my emotions and my thoughts. Thank you very much
@xavierwatson54386 ай бұрын
Your an amazing individual! Every day i have been waking up feeling tense and not sure why. This knowledge and understanding equips me to overcome my nerves. I will be snapping up whatever you serve and be sure you are helping other people which is a great service to your fellow humans.
@Tictac_Tactic7 ай бұрын
This video was so soothing, and arrived at the perfect time for me. Thank you for this beautiful and helpful content, Emma. You have helped me so much. 💓
@carylfontaine36407 ай бұрын
Hello..I'm new to your channel, and words will NEVER express my gratitude..thanku goodness I found you!!!
@consciousobserver6293 ай бұрын
As a parent with four kids (while I'm working thru C-PTSD) this is seriously a life saver! I have already started doing some of these things, and it helps! I'll need to try out the 15 minute timer thing to really take it to the next level, though.
@Melanie44Michael2 ай бұрын
I love that you give several really good grounding ideas without making your audience wait for hours of explanations of the problem first. And, I am a retired professor who can totally relate to the work stressors of academia. I wish I knew this stuff 30 years ago to survive it all better. The stress made me sick and I had to leave my career early. What you are doing to help people has a huge reach. Thank you.
@bryonyvaughn24277 ай бұрын
Such practical habits! I'm downloading this video to rewatch every so often so I can refresh the implementation in my life. Thanks, Emma!
@sandracorrales-potts55866 ай бұрын
Moms are good at this. I have 5 grown children and you need to be calm for your own good. I was better then than now that they are grown and gone
@barbieharmonfrith12606 ай бұрын
Emma, you are so valuable to me! Thank you for giving so much to this community and helping so many!
@dlight26697 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this I'm so tired of being stressed out all the time so much negativity around me and lots of triggers in my daily work routine. Nice to know that I can prepare myself and take breaks throughout my day when I do have brakes and actively combat my nervous system wrecking havoc on my mental health. It's a great support to know that even though I cannot prevent stressors from happening I can prepare my body ahead of time to reset , strengthen and maintain a healthy nervous system. Thank you😊
@NightMode2146 күн бұрын
The quote at the end reminds me of a good one I know that I heard from a video game back in the day. "I didn't ask God for an easier life, I asked God to help make me a better man." Good video, I'm going to make it a point to focus on this more, which should help, thanks.
@laurenwinch57207 ай бұрын
I can't explain how much these clips help me, they truly do. Now i can do this at work daily, yesss😊😊😊😊😊
@JayTalksinjury7 ай бұрын
As a trucker that has 3 million safe km's and figuring out I've had 3 break downs @ work which was Anxiety so bad I've tore my back 3 times shaking . I'm off injured and meditating 2 hrs plus a day . My fear is that once back, i hope i don't return to my old self as i luv my Job.. Thank you for hope.❤.. I'll try and report.
@JayTalksinjury7 ай бұрын
I've been meditating and 18 days off a 3 month painkiller journey. The meditating gets rid of pain and as i have torn supraspinatus and frozen shoulder i have to do physio many times a day ..Torture @ this point would be easier . Thank you for checking in I need it as @ 55 changing path is difficult. There is something about a man losing their past physical abilities along with the 25 yr old brain that never ages . Your Faimly is Blessed to have you as well as you patients and the Channel. I'm putting in the work.. God bless
@unclemick-synths6 ай бұрын
@@JayTalksinjury the great thing is when you're becoming an experienced meditator you can take it "off-cushion" into other parts of your life. It was actually when driving a school bus that I learnt to do that. "Mindful school bus driving" was pretty well impossible with the kids on board but before and after the run was doable. As part of the bus driving training we were taught the Smith System of defensive driving so I used that as a framework for guiding my attention. I can't say I'm always successful at doing it even ten years later but I try.
@Catseye1896 ай бұрын
Can you switch to a route/company that is closer to home?
@JayTalksinjury4 ай бұрын
@Catseye189 i am going to do that. .. Thank you and God bless
@JayTalksinjury4 ай бұрын
@oldunclemick i am @ 3 min holds 1 breath . I've had people across the river where i live cheer after the 3 min hold. Life is good ..God bless and Happy 2024
@TheRealMisterChopShop4 ай бұрын
You’re an angel…. I love you, Emma thank you for always helping us.❤
@anzaraphoenix79377 ай бұрын
Thank you for your time help and service. Deep gratitude and many blessings 😇
@KaiJames445 ай бұрын
This is from heaven! Thank you for your simple and clear guidance.
@GreenKnight12946 ай бұрын
Thank you, Doctor Emma! This is exactly what I needed to hear today. I'm glad there's people like you out there trying to help.
@cindyhavko53337 ай бұрын
I learn from Emma each time I watch her videos and I work in the Mental Health field. Amazing ❤
@rebecahernandez38514 ай бұрын
Oh yes, I love this woman, love the special way she has to explain, express and details too, I can sense her natural way of being 🤗🥰💙
@wildlife82 ай бұрын
thank you so much for providing these videos for free. you are literally changing my life for the better.
@michellemazzyy6 ай бұрын
This lady is amazing. My therapist is amazing too but this lady has taught me so much and it helping me with my crippling anxiety.
@Sylar-4517 ай бұрын
Thanks for your help Emma! So much more appreciated then I could explain here in a comment but it's meant the world to me to have your amazing information and compassion ❤ You've truly helped make life so much better for so many
@stevec4047 ай бұрын
I have five pages of notes to remind me of the major points throughout the video. I will refer to these notes, as I do to others, while practicing and habitualizing your excellent presentation. Thanks!
@GinaMartina20237 ай бұрын
“What is the perceived danger?” “I am safe enough now.” Relaxed vigilance
@brianciofani46987 ай бұрын
Emma!! Thanks for you knowledge and ministry.
@charbelelkhoury64566 ай бұрын
Ive put that quote at the end of my cool lifeguard working days, when i used to clear the stress out of all people and be happiest and strongest, and when i switched to my field of study career ive forgot it and dived into unfortunate havoc jobs with unfortunately uneducated people, nice to see that quote back made my day
@le_th_7 ай бұрын
It might also be fair to mention that police officer is one of the top 10 professions of psychopaths and psychopaths are biologically incapable of being traumatized and when their life is threatened they feel what the rest of us call exhilaration instead of fear. That makes "relaxed" a psychopath's default state even when someone has a gun pointed directly at their t-box. Those police officers who get PTSD are often the most empathic, good-hearted of the LEOs. ...but I agree, creating a mental bubble around yourself and walking this world in a state of relaxed vigilance is the way to go if you can pull it off 15-16 out of 24 hours of the day. I'll keep practicing. The mantra I say to myself as I walk the hall to my office, to/from the bathroom, and to the care is this: "I walk the world with calm confidence knowing I can effectively handle any situation that should come my way". Seriously. Been doing this for months and I'm shocked what a difference it has made. (Note: I've had PTSD from a predator before, but I'm not an anxious person by nature (nor was I before the event).
@jakevendrotti14967 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing, this was so helpful to read. I'm really really sorry you had to go through that. Please continue on your healing journey, sending you a good vibe from around the world ❤️👍
@iluxanus6 ай бұрын
Amazing video, thank you for sharing. Especially the part about “we all learned to be stressed when there’s stuff to do, and there’s always stuff to do” resonated
@ktcee8036 ай бұрын
My brother has just passed away and he fought cancer for 3 years. Im grieving. But im also hyperaware of cancer now! Im scared. And everything worries me. I miss him so much and My aged parents are heaetbroken, so ive got so much happening. I habe anxiety thats through the roof and I'm back to taking valium whenever im tense. Im hoping its just for a season.
@lucia31055 ай бұрын
Das tut mir sehr leid für dich. Mein herzliches Beileid 😢 Fühl dich gedrückt und ich wünsche dir viel Kraft für die nächste Zeit.
@louisebotos73212 ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤
@skeptism276 ай бұрын
I appreciate the professor example - I always thought I was just broken, to feel so stressed after teaching. You broke it down perfectly
@i.s.30017 ай бұрын
I absolutely loooove your videos... THANK YOU for AMAZING CONTENT!
@jamesmurphy32197 ай бұрын
I love this concept of a bottom-up approach to nervous system regulation in contrast to a 'top-down' approach. Both are good for different situations. Top-down starting in the mind and with our thoughts.
@zomaariemand172721 күн бұрын
What is also a good exercise is focusing on your feet throughout the day. Try to feel your feet, the bottom of you’re feet, the inside of you’re. you’re literally grounding yourself which make you feel relaxed. You can do it while you’re cooking, exercising, watching tv, whatever it is what you’re doing. It really works. But give it time, it doesn’t work in one day
@vickyd75416 ай бұрын
Relaxed vigilance makes a lot of sense for someone who feels that it's not safe to relax because ... many reasons from being called lazy to letting your guard down leaves you unprepared. Something worth developing!
@phillydreamr6 ай бұрын
I love you! Thank you so much for all the care and love you put into your videos. The information you share is helping making our lives so much better. ❤
@HollyKrebs6 ай бұрын
This was so clearly explained and included so many helpful ideas and practices. I am a health care professional and I will be using this video to help my clients understand and regulate their nervous system. Thanks for such a great, educational resource!
@michaeljacobs34182 ай бұрын
I love this person. So genuine and expressive.❤
@backtoalaska67557 ай бұрын
Just the thought of a chime going off every 15 minutes would put me in a total state of anxiety. I don't sleep a wink when I have the alarm set. I would be in freeze mode all day every day bracing myself for the sound! Lol! :P
@Mimi-ux1vg6 ай бұрын
I knew exactly what you're going to say before I finish reading this comment. I'm just constantly reminding myself that it's a gentle friend nudging me. It also helps to choose a sound that sounds pleasant
@shadowfax91776 ай бұрын
Same. Not only that, it would annoy the absolute piss out of me hearing a chime go off that frequently. I think I would start with a chime every hour. Up it if I can tolerate it.
@mechanical_chaos6 ай бұрын
I feel where you're coming from. I think choosing a pleasant soft sound that doesn't alarm your system could be crucial. Might require a bit of trial and error.
@GreatGooglieWooglie6 ай бұрын
That comment really stressed me out and gave me loads of anxiety
@louisebotos73212 ай бұрын
Same here,noises make me jump. ..in my heart. l don't use an alarm....l naturally wake up.
@djimiwreybigsby52634 ай бұрын
I'm as grateful that you use a good microphone as I am for the clearly good information
@jwalkinit7 ай бұрын
The timing on this video for me is so perfect. Thank you, Emma!
@finifini50512 ай бұрын
I love the way you explain how things work in the body and the brain and how we can use that knowledge to feel and function better. Instead of feeling that everything is just happening to us, we learn how to influence the way we can deal with things in our best possible way. Great combination of knowledge and different techniques explained in a clear and gentle way. This should be taught in schools! Thanks from the Netherlands 🙂
@IrishMexican7 ай бұрын
An advertisement came up in the middle of the bike video. It was more of a stressor than the bike video 😂
@beverleybenjamin36486 ай бұрын
😅
@PraveenKumar-fe3vb3 ай бұрын
😂
@roxxy_rocket3 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂 💯
@ozzieenglelewis2 ай бұрын
Thx for heads up. I startle easily!
@daniellecarney14877 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! I’m going to set that timer today, especially at work. The idea of retraining the brain is fascinating.
@DanielL1433 ай бұрын
1-Scan your body for stress 2-stretch 3-breathe 4-say a positive affirmation, like "this is easy, I got this" and for me 5-imagine how good it will be when the task is over. 6-take a short break between tasks as a reward
@l3martin6 ай бұрын
Just listening you, I am immediately relaxed - far better than R&R or other techniques that I used in the past.
@ensabahnur76577 ай бұрын
I sent this video to my Girlfriend & hopefully she subscribes & the info helps her!🙏
@TeriHargraveartist7 ай бұрын
Having CPTSD, I can see how this could help in a meaningful way, thank you!
@KrislynLyon3 ай бұрын
Thank you for this practical, impactful way to coach a healthier lifestyle. Love and will incorporate.
@mononoke813Ай бұрын
My stress response in WAITING to hear how to stop stressing is stressing me out. 5:29 begins the answer for others like me
@kyrabarr28467 ай бұрын
Thank you so very much for explaining it as clearly, and plainly as you did. This helps me tremendously. I am truly grateful.