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.

Shame and guilt often get lumped together because they can feel similar in the body: tight chest, heavy stomach, that ur...
12/25/2025

Shame and guilt often get lumped together because they can feel similar in the body: tight chest, heavy stomach, that urge to replay what happened on a loop. But clinically, they operate differently. And understanding the difference matters, because the path to healing is not the same for each.

Shame - identity-based experience: “I am bad.”
It’s the internal belief that something about you is flawed, unacceptable, or unworthy. When shame is active, people don’t just think, “That was a mistake.” They think, “This proves I’m the kind of person who doesn’t deserve love, respect, or belonging.”

In therapy, shame often shows up as withdrawal and disconnection. You might notice you avoid people, minimize your needs, stop speaking up, or put on a “fine” mask to prevent anyone from seeing what you’re carrying. Shame can also lead to perfectionism and trying to manage the fear of being judged by being “smarter,” “more helpful,” or “more agreeable.”

Guilt - behavior-based: “I did something bad.”

It focuses on an action, choice, or impact. From a psychological standpoint, guilt can actually be a healthy emotion because it signals values. If you feel guilt, it may be because you care about integrity, about the other person’s experience, about alignment between your intentions and your behavior.

Guilt can motivate accountability and change. It nudges you toward repair: apologizing, making amends, cleaning up what you can, or choosing differently next time. That’s why guilt often supports growth and relationship health.

Here’s the key clinical point: guilt is about behavior, and shame is about identity. Guilt says, “I can correct this.” Shame says, “I am the problem.” And when shame becomes chronic, it can fuel anxiety, depression, disordered eating, compulsive coping, people-pleasing, and emotional shutdown.

Recognizing whether you’re in guilt or shame can be the turning point. If it’s guilt, the question is: What repair is needed? If it’s shame, the question is: What support do I need to feel safe enough to be seen?

1) Emotional Breakthrough: Feeling what you’ve been holding backAn emotional breakthrough is when an emotion that’s been...
12/23/2025

1) Emotional Breakthrough: Feeling what you’ve been holding back
An emotional breakthrough is when an emotion that’s been stuck, suppressed, or overwhelming finally becomes accessible and moves through you. This might look like grief you couldn’t touch before, anger that finally has clarity, or sadness that comes with relief instead of collapse.

2) Somatic/Physical Breakthrough: When your body releases the load.
A physical breakthrough is when your body stops bracing and begins to release. You might notice a deep exhale, yawning, trembling, warmth, tingling, or a sudden loosening in your chest, jaw, or shoulders. These are not random. They’re signs your nervous system is shifting out of protection.

3) Cognitive Breakthrough: The “click” that changes your inner narrative.
A cognitive breakthrough is a new understanding that reorganizes your experience. It’s not just learning a concept it’s recognizing yourself in a way that reduces shame and creates choice.

4) Nervous System Regulation Breakthrough: Recovering faster and spiraling less.
This breakthrough shows up when your baseline becomes steadier. You still get triggered, but the spiral is shorter, and you return to yourself more quickly. You notice early signs like tight throat, racing mind, urge to people-please and you intervene before it takes over.

5) Relational Breakthrough: New ways of connecting without losing yourself
A relational breakthrough is when you start doing relationships differently. You communicate more clearly, set boundaries, tolerate closeness, or stop chasing people who can’t meet you emotionally.

You might be the funny one in the room.The one who always has the witty comeback…Who makes the heavy moments light…Who’s...
12/22/2025

You might be the funny one in the room.
The one who always has the witty comeback…
Who makes the heavy moments light…
Who’s quick with a joke, especially when things start to feel too real or uncomfortable.

But being funny doesn’t always mean you are fine.
Sometimes, humor is often about protecting ourselves from feeling too much.

We make light of things so we don’t have to feel the weight of them.

Sometimes, it’s the only way we were able to express pain we are feeling.
We disguise it as a joke.

Because sarcasm keeps people from getting close. And sometimes its easier to not let others in.

Therapeutic Sound BathSaturday, January 10th 10:30 am This immersive sound experience is intentionally crafted to help y...
12/22/2025

Therapeutic Sound Bath
Saturday, January 10th 10:30 am

This immersive sound experience is intentionally crafted to help your system reorganize, recenter, and restore balance through carefully selected sounds and frequencies.

Rather than pushing for change, the body is supported in doing what it naturally knows how to do, return to equilibrium.

Join us in person in Boca Raton.

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

We all experience traumatic events in our lives from time to time. Trauma has no boundaries. Trauma events can cause a w...
12/21/2025

We all experience traumatic events in our lives from time to time. Trauma has no boundaries. Trauma events can cause a wide range of physical and emotional symptoms.

There are several types of trauma including:

Acute: A single, isolated event limited in time, such as being the victim of a crime, serious accident, or witnessing a violent event.

Chronic: Being exposed to multiple, ongoing events over an extended time such as abuse, domestic violence or war.

Complex: Occurs repeatedly and cumulatively, usually over a prolonged time within specific relationships.

System Induced: Being exposed to systems that are meant to help, like being removed from a home, foster care system or education system.

Studies have shown that stress signals can continue long after the trauma is over. This might affect your mind and body, including how you think, feel and behave. Trauma can affect your body as well as your mind, which can have a long-term impact on your physical health.

When you've experienced trauma, it can be overwhelming. It's essential to find treatment that can help you after you've experienced trauma. If you or a loved one are suffering from trauma-related symptoms, it’s critical to reach out for help. It can be helpful to talk about your pain and start to process what happened to you to begin your healing journey.

Self-esteem is your overall sense of personal worth and how much value you believe you have as a person.It’s the inner s...
12/20/2025

Self-esteem is your overall sense of personal worth and how much value you believe you have as a person.

It’s the inner sense that says:
‘I matter.’
‘I’m allowed to take up space.’
‘I’m enough, even when I’m growing.’

It’s not about arrogance or boasting.
It’s about grounded confidence and emotional security.

When your self-esteem is healthy and steady, it shows up in every part of your life.

When your self-esteem is low, the world feels different.
You might constantly doubt yourself.
You might settle for less than you deserve.
You might feel like you’re never ‘enough’, no matter what you do or how hard you try.

And most of that happens deep inside your thoughts, your body, your relationships.
That’s why building self-esteem isn’t just ‘self-help’, It’s about healing.

When abandonment has shaped you, parts of you often become devoted to preventing it from happening again. In IFS terms, ...
12/19/2025

When abandonment has shaped you, parts of you often become devoted to preventing it from happening again. In IFS terms, you may have protective parts that manage connection (people-pleasing, perfectionism, caretaking) and other parts that react when the fear spikes (with anger, shutdown, distancing, or panic). Underneath them is usually a younger, more tender part carrying the wound: grief, fear, shame, loneliness.

These parts aren’t trying to sabotage your relationship. They’re trying to protect you from pain they still remember.

Abandonment trauma is highly treatable—especially with approaches that work with both the nervous system and the emotional layers beneath it. If you’re ready to stop repeating the same relationship cycle and start building secure connection from the inside out, consider working with a trauma-informed therapist trained in modalities like IFS, somatic work, and nervous system regulation.

At The Feeling Expert, we talk a lot about the ways your body learns safety. When abandonment is part of your story, your system may learn a painful association: connection feels fragile. Like something you have to earn, manage, or hold together on your own. So even when you’re in a healthy relationship now, an old part of you may still brace for the moment it falls apart.

Social anxiety doesn’t always look like someone hiding in the corner or refusing to go out. Most of the time, it’s quiet...
12/18/2025

Social anxiety doesn’t always look like someone hiding in the corner or refusing to go out. Most of the time, it’s quieter. It can show up in high-functioning people who are friendly, capable, and successful, but internally feel like they’re walking through social situations with their nervous system set to “high alert.”

Social anxiety is often a learned strategy. In many cases, it’s connected to past experiences where social moments were paired with embarrassment, criticism, exclusion, or unpredictability. Sometimes it comes from growing up in environments where you had to “read the room” carefully to stay emotionally safe. Your nervous system learned: visibility equals risk.

From an Internal Family Systems (IFS) perspective, social anxiety can also reflect protective parts that are trying to keep you from being hurt.
One part might overthink to prevent mistakes.
Another might push you to perform so you’re accepted.
Another might avoid altogether because it believes avoidance is the safest route. Underneath, there’s often a more tender part that carries a fear of rejection or shame.

And with the right support and tools, you can retrain your mind and body to experience connection as something safer, steadier, and more natural over time.

12/17/2025

If you feel on anxious or on edge, try the 5–4–3–2–1 reset.
Name five things you can see.
Four things you can feel.
Three things you can hear.
Two things you can smell.
One thing you can taste.

This brings your attention back to the present so your nervous system can settle.
When you’re dysregulated, your brain tries to solve the feeling with more thinking.

Grounding works because it brings you back into your senses, which helps your nervous system recognize: I’m here. I’m safe right now.

Share this with someone who’s been on edge.

How to tell it’s dysregulation talking (not “you”)Look for these markers:Certainty without curiosity: You stop asking qu...
12/16/2025

How to tell it’s dysregulation talking (not “you”)

Look for these markers:

Certainty without curiosity: You stop asking questions and start declaring conclusions.

Absolutes: “Always, never, everyone, no one.”

Speed and pressure: Thoughts race; your body feels like it has to act immediately.

Narrowed options: Everything feels like two choices: control it or collapse.

Identity fusion: “I feel unsafe” becomes “I am unsafe” or “I am broken.”

Body-first intensity: The body is already in a state (tight chest, clenched jaw, heavy limbs), and the mind is trying to justify it with a story.

Overt narcissists are the “obvious” version: louder, more attention-seeking, openly superior. They may dominate conversa...
12/15/2025

Overt narcissists are the “obvious” version: louder, more attention-seeking, openly superior. They may dominate conversations, exaggerate achievements, or put others down to stay on top.

You’ll often feel like you’re competing with their ego or walking behind their spotlight.

Covert narcissists can look very different on the surface. They may seem shy, wounded, sensitive, even self-sacrificing. But underneath, the same drive for validation and special treatment is still there, just expressed through indirect methods like guilt, martyrdom, passive-aggression, or playing the misunderstood victim.

People often say, “I can’t prove it, but I always feel like I’m the bad one.”

The Solution Focus: What You Can Do With This Information

The goal isn’t to diagnose someone from a social post. The goal is to get clear about patterns so you can make healthier choices.

Start here:
• Name the pattern, not the person. (“When I set a boundary, I’m punished.”)
• Track your body’s data. Confusion, dread, or chronic self-doubt after interactions is information.
• Set smaller, firmer boundaries and watch the response. Respect is revealed over time.
• Get support. Narcissistic dynamics are isolating by design. Therapy, coaching, or a support group can help you stay grounded in reality.

If you’re trying to manage a relationship that leaves you feeling unseen, responsible for everything, or emotionally “spun,” you don’t need more willpower. You need clarity, strategy, and support, so your relationships can move toward healthier outcomes, whether that means repair, distance, or a clean break.

So, why do we engage in self-destructive behaviors, even when we know they’re not helpful? These impulses often stem fro...
12/14/2025

So, why do we engage in self-destructive behaviors, even when we know they’re not helpful? These impulses often stem from:

• Past Trauma: Your brain might be stuck in survival mode, repeating patterns it learned to cope with stress or pain.

• Low Self-Worth: You might feel like you don’t deserve happiness, success, or peace, leading to behaviors that sabotage those things.

• Fear of Failure or Success: Sometimes, the fear of what might happen if we succeed can be just as overwhelming as the fear of failure.

• Emotional Overload: When emotions feel too big to handle, self-destructive actions can serve as a way to distract or numb the pain.

Recognizing these patterns is the first step. Here are some ways to start managing self-destructive impulses and breaking the cycle:

Pause and Identify the Trigger:
When the urge hits, pause and ask yourself, ‘What am I feeling right now?’ Is it fear, loneliness, or frustration? Naming the emotion can help you understand what’s driving the impulse.

Practice Self-Compassion:
Instead of criticizing yourself, try saying, ‘I’m struggling, but I’m working on it.’ Being kind to yourself can interrupt the negative cycle.

Replace the Behavior:
Find healthier ways to cope with the same emotions. For example, instead of numbing out with alcohol, try journaling, taking a walk, or talking to a friend.

Set Small Goals:
Focus on small, achievable steps to build momentum. If procrastination is the issue, commit to working on something for just 5 minutes. Small wins build confidence.

Seek Support:
Self-destructive impulses can be tough to tackle alone. Therapy or support groups can provide tools and encouragement to help you move forward.

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