The Feeling Expert

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Elyce Gordon, MS,LCMHC,NCC
A Psycho-Spiritual Approach To Healing

Mental Health Services: Anxiety • Depression • Trauma
Certified Level 3 Internal Family Services (IFS) Therapist
Certified International Integral Sound Healing Therapist

Information contained on this site is for educational purposes and is not intended as a substitute for treatment or consultation with a mental health professional or consultant.

Guilt can often have a sabotaging effect on relationships, showing up in various detrimental ways. Here’s how guilt can ...
01/09/2026

Guilt can often have a sabotaging effect on relationships, showing up in various detrimental ways.

Here’s how guilt can impact interpersonal dynamics and potentially undermine connections:

1. Overcompensation:
When someone feels guilty, they might overcompensate in their relationships by being overly generous, overly accommodating, or excessively apologetic. While these behaviors may seem positive on the surface, they can lead to an unbalanced relationship where one person feels perpetually indebted or overwhelmed by the guilt-driven actions of the other. This imbalance can breed resentment and discomfort over time.

2. Withdrawal:
Guilt can also cause individuals to withdraw from relationships because they feel undeserving of affection or friendship. They might isolate themselves, decline social invitations, or be less communicative, believing that they need to punish themselves. This withdrawal can be confusing and hurtful to others, leading to misunderstandings and a breakdown in communication.

3. Projecting Feelings:
Individuals dealing with unresolved guilt often project their feelings onto others. They may accuse partners or friends of being disappointed or angry when these feelings actually reflect their own internal state. This projection can create conflict and strain relationships, as the other person feels unfairly judged or accused.

4. Avoidance of Conflict:
Feeling guilty can lead someone to avoid necessary conflicts or discussions. They might fear that addressing certain issues could exacerbate their feelings of guilt or lead to further blame. This avoidance can prevent the resolution of underlying issues, allowing minor misunderstandings to fester into significant problems.

Addressing guilt in therapeutic or reflective settings can help individuals understand and mitigate these effects. Learning healthier ways to cope with and process guilt is essential for maintaining and nurturing relationships.

Healing begins when your system learns that safety doesn’t require constant alertness and that peace, connection, and cl...
01/08/2026

Healing begins when your system learns that safety doesn’t require constant alertness and that peace, connection, and clarity are no longer threats.

Trauma doesn’t just affect how you remember the past.
It shapes what your nervous system allows you to access in the present.
Many of the things trauma keeps you from aren’t dangerous, they are safe.
But safety can feel unfamiliar, and unfamiliar can feel threatening.

You may gravitate toward emotionally unavailable or chaotic relationships and feel bored or uneasy in healthy ones. Relationships remain surface-level, and emotional intimacy feels out of reach.

Decisions may be reactive, avoidant, or driven by fear rather than clarity. You may have difficulty relaxing, chronic tension, and feeling disconnected from life.

When you’re in survival mode, your brain and body are focused on one thing: keeping you safe. This state is triggered by...
01/08/2026

When you’re in survival mode, your brain and body are focused on one thing: keeping you safe. This state is triggered by stress, trauma, or prolonged periods of difficulty, and it prioritizes immediate survival over everything else. As a result, disconnection happens as a protective mechanism.

In survival mode, your brain is constantly scanning for danger, both real and perceived. This hyperfocus on threats means that your mind is less available for other activities, like connecting with others, enjoying life, or reflecting on your emotions. Your brain shifts its resources away from long-term thinking and emotional processing to focus on getting through the immediate situation.

Your body and mind are working overtime to manage stress, which drains your energy. As a result, you may disconnect from activities, people, and even your own thoughts that require energy you just don’t have. This disconnection is your body’s way of conserving energy for what it perceives as more critical tasks.

Children don’t have the capacity to understand context. Instead of recognizing the adult’s limitations, the child intern...
01/07/2026

Children don’t have the capacity to understand context. Instead of recognizing the adult’s limitations, the child internalizes the experience.

The internal meaning becomes:
“If someone pulls away, it must be because of me.”

To prevent future abandonment, the system adapts. Parts step in with strategies designed to keep connection intact or avoid the pain of loss altogether. These strategies are survival-based, not conscious choices.

In adulthood, current relationships activate old memory networks. Even healthy distance, conflict, or boundaries can trigger the original wound.

The nervous system reacts as if abandonment is happening again.Healing the abandonment wound isn’t about getting rid of these parts. It’s about helping them update their role. When your adult Self leads with steadiness and compassion, these parts no longer have to protect in extremes.

Over time, connection feels safer. Boundaries feel less threatening. And relationships become places of presence instead of survival.

From an Internal Family Systems perspective, dismissive-avoidant patterns are often driven by protective parts that lear...
01/06/2026

From an Internal Family Systems perspective, dismissive-avoidant patterns are often driven by protective parts that learned early on that closeness led to intrusion, criticism, or unmet needs.

These parts prioritize independence to prevent emotional overwhelm or loss of control.

Emotional Deactivation
How it plays out: Emotions are minimized or shut down quickly. When closeness increases, the system dampens emotional intensity to avoid vulnerability.

Strong Self-Reliance Belief
How it plays out: There’s a core belief that needing others leads to disappointment. Depending on oneself feels safer than risking emotional reliance.

Discomfort With Emotional Intimacy
How it plays out: Deep emotional conversations can feel intrusive or overwhelming, leading to withdrawal, deflection, or intellectualization.

Preference for Independence Over Partnership
How it plays out: Autonomy is prioritized, sometimes at the expense of connection. Relationships are structured to preserve freedom and personal control.

Downplaying Relationship Importance
How it plays out: Relationships may be framed as “nice but not essential,” which protects against disappointment but limits emotional depth.

These parts aren’t “bad.” In fact, they were brilliant survival strategies at the time. They carried the pressure of kee...
01/05/2026

These parts aren’t “bad.” In fact, they were brilliant survival strategies at the time. They carried the pressure of keeping you safe when you were young and had no other options.

Those same parts often keep protecting us in the extremes, even after the danger is gone.

• That perfectionist part may drive you into burnout.
• That angry protector may push away people who love you.
• That quiet, hidden part may keep you isolated, even when you long for connection.
• It’s like they’re still fighting yesterday’s battles in today’s relationships.

The path forward isn’t to fight these parts or shame them into silence. The real healing begins when you start to befriend them. When you, as your adult Self, turn toward them with curiosity and compassion.

Internal Family Systems therapy calls this Self the calm, confident, connected center of who you are. It’s not a role, it’s your essence, the part of you that can lead your inner system instead of being hijacked by old survival strategies.

This shift doesn’t just heal old wounds. It also transforms your relationships. You begin showing up with more confidence, clearer boundaries, and deeper authenticity. Instead of parts protecting you in the extreme, your Self leads with balance, compassion, and strength.

So if you feel like certain parts of you are “too much” or “getting in the way,” pause and remember: they once saved your life. Now, as an adult, you can meet them with kindness and let your authentic Self lead. That’s where healing lives.

01/04/2026

Turning insight into healing
Parts Mapping is the door; healing is what happens when your Self meets exiled pain with warmth, patience, and respect. In guided IFS work, you don’t force change. You build trust with protectors, earn permission to visit the wound, and allow the stuck emotion and beliefs to release. That’s how your nervous system stops bracing and your life opens up.

Download my ebook
https://thefeelingexpert.com/product/ifs-and-the-roles-your-parts-play-when-protecting-you/

Self-sabotage is often protection trying to keep you safe, especially when you’re growing and close to something that ma...
01/03/2026

Self-sabotage is often protection trying to keep you safe, especially when you’re growing and close to something that matters to you.

The shift happens when you spot the pattern early and choose one “brick” action that keeps you building.

A “one-brick move” is the smallest, most specific action that still counts as building. Think of it like laying one brick instead of trying to build the whole house in a day.

How to pick your “one brick” action (in 60 seconds)

Step 1: Name the outcome (one sentence)
• “What would ‘better’ look like by the end of today?”
• “Email sent.”
• “Workout started.”
• “Conversation initiated.”
• “Outline created.”
• “Budget checked.”

Step 2: Identify the first visible proof
• “What’s the first thing someone could see that shows I started?”
• An email draft exists.
• Shoes are on.
• Calendar invite is sent.
• Notes page is open with 3 bullets.

Step 3: Shrink it until it’s easy to do while anxious

Your brick should feel doable even with nerves. Aim for 2–10 minutes.

A good brick is: clear + small + finishable in the moment. Little actions will create progress.

Which self sabotage protect-pattern shows up most for you:
Avoidance, Perfectionism, Relationship Distance, or Self-Attack? Drop one word in the comments.

01/02/2026

body brain connection trauma. You can't always think your way out of old patterns.

New Year, Same You. Just a little more supported.If you’re walking into this year carrying a heavy nervous system, old r...
01/01/2026

New Year, Same You. Just a little more supported.

If you’re walking into this year carrying a heavy nervous system, old relationship patterns, or trauma that still shows up in your body, you don’t need a reinvention. You need steadiness. You need practices that help you feel safer inside yourself. You need less performing and more real care.

Use these mental-health shifts to bring into the new year. Not as a checklist to “get right,” but as a direction to return to.

New Year reminder: You don’t owe anyone a version of you that’s exhausted.
You’re allowed to build a life where you’re cared for too.

Save this for later. Share it with someone who’s starting the year tired.

Sound healing matters because it helps you work with your body, not against it.When stress and anxiety build up, most pe...
12/31/2025

Sound healing matters because it helps you work with your body, not against it.

When stress and anxiety build up, most people try to “think” their way back to calm. But your nervous system doesn’t respond to logic first.

It responds to signals of safety: slow rhythm, steady vibration, soothing tone, and a supportive environment.

Therapeutic sound healing uses instruments like singing bowls, gongs, and gentle frequencies to guide the body into a more regulated state. Many people leave feeling quieter inside, less tense in their muscles, and more grounded in the present moment.

What makes sound healing especially helpful is that it doesn’t require you to perform, explain, or fix anything. You can simply arrive as you are. The sounds become an anchor for your attention, giving your mind a break from looping thoughts and giving your body a chance to soften out of constant “brace mode.” Over time, that kind of downshift can support better sleep, improved mood, and a steadier ability to handle everyday stressors.

Join us for a Therapeutic Sound Healing Session in Boca Raton, FL.
Saturday, January 10, 2026.

https://thefeelingexpert.com/product/therapeutic-sound-bath/

Give your nervous system the kind of rest it actually responds to.

How to interrupt the shame spiral in the momentYou don’t interrupt a shame spiral by being perfect. You interrupt it by ...
12/30/2025

How to interrupt the shame spiral in the moment

You don’t interrupt a shame spiral by being perfect. You interrupt it by being honest about what’s happening inside.

Try this simple sequence:

1. Name the state, not the story.
“I’m getting flooded.”
“I feel myself shutting down.”
“I’m starting to feel ashamed.”

2. Buy yourself time without disappearing.
“I want to talk about this. I need 20 minutes to regulate so I don’t say something I’ll regret.”

3. Come back with the deeper truth.
“When we argue, a part of me panics that I’m too much, and I start pulling away. I don’t want distance. I want to feel close and safe.”

That kind of language changes everything. It keeps you in connection while still honoring your nervous system and your needs.

A question for you ...

When you feel hurt or tirggered, do you withdraw or pursue?

Withdrawers tend to go quiet, freeze, shut down, or disappear. Pursuers tend to press in, argue harder, demand clarity, or chase reassurance.

Neither is wrong. Both are protective. The work is learning how to stay connected while you’re activated.

If this hit home, follow for more insights rooted in real emotional patterns.

And if you’re ready to work with these patterns more deeply, therapy and IFS-informed support can help you understand what’s driving the spiral and how to shift it, one moment at a time.

Address

1612 NW 2nd Avenue
Boca Raton, FL
33483

Opening Hours

Monday 7:30am - 6:30pm
Tuesday 7:30am - 6:30pm
Wednesday 7:30am - 7pm
Thursday 7:30am - 4pm

Telephone

+18442264325

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