Trauma Response

October 9, 2022

The key to healing from emotional wounds is to be able to release the pain from those wounds. The number one way to do this is to call it by its correct name.  Grief

  1. When you’re hurt, your body responds by producing hormones and neurotransmitters which affect your emotions.  ~ Your heart hurts.

 

  1. The tendency is to keep thinking about what happened to you. This causes your brain to produce more hormones and neurotransmitters,

resulting in greater anxiety and depression.

 

3. The emotions which resulted from what happened also continue the cycle.

 

To stop this cycle, you’ll need to access your inner power, release the past, and form your new future. moving forward.

 

There isn’t a person in the world who hasn’t been hurt by someone. Releasing the pain from these wounds are difficult for many, if not most.

 

DOWNLOAD TRANSCRIPT

Related Podcasts

How Grief Affects Self-Identity

How Grief Affects Self-Identity

Grief doesn’t just take away a person you love—it can take away who you thought you were. Losing someone close to you can make the world feel unrecognizable, including the version of yourself that once existed. Suddenly, the roles you played, the routines you...

Breaking the Cycle of Grief Avoidance

Breaking the Cycle of Grief Avoidance

Grief is painful. It’s messy, unpredictable, and sometimes unbearable. And because of that, many people do something that feels easier in the moment: they avoid it. They distract themselves with work, social media, endless errands, or mindless TV. They push down their...

Guilt vs. Regret in Grief: Understanding the Difference

Guilt vs. Regret in Grief: Understanding the Difference

Grief carries many emotions, but two of the most painful—and often confusing—are guilt and regret. They whisper in your mind late at night, replaying moments over and over. I should have called more. Why didn’t I visit that day? I should have done something...