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.

Your nervous system is smart. Its job is to keep you alive. When it senses danger, it doesn't stop to think. It just REA...
04/25/2026

Your nervous system is smart. Its job is to keep you alive. When it senses danger, it doesn't stop to think. It just REACTS.

When your nervous system perceives threat, it has three primary survival responses:

FIGHT:

You sense threat → your system floods with aggression.

You become aggressive, defensive, controlling.

You want to attack, argue, dominate.

You're ACTIVATED.

FLIGHT:

You sense threat → your system floods with escape energy.

You become avoidant, busy, distracted. You want to RUN.

You leave relationships. You stay so busy you don't feel.

You're MOBILIZED.

FREEZE:

You sense threat → your system shuts down completely.

You become numb, disconnected, paralyzed.

You can't move. Can't speak. Can't feel.

You've DISAPPEARED.

Your nervous system doesn't CHOOSE these responses. It LEARNED them.

In your specific environment, with your specific circumstances, your system
developed the response that was MOST LIKELY to keep you alive.

If you grew up in an environment where aggression was normal, FIGHT became your
default.

If you grew up in an environment with unpredictable danger you could sometimes
escape, FLIGHT became your strategy.

If you grew up in an inescapable, overwhelming situation, FREEZE became your
only option.

WHICH ONE IS YOUR PRIMARY RESPONSE?

Most people have one they default to.

You might shift between all three depending on the situation.



HOW TO WORK WITH RAGE: The goal isn't to eliminate rage. The goal is to help your nervous system understand: "That origi...
04/24/2026

HOW TO WORK WITH RAGE:

The goal isn't to eliminate rage. The goal is to help your nervous system understand:

"That original threat isn't happening now. You don't need to fight this hard."

STEP 1: RECOGNIZE IT COMING
Don't wait until you're in full rage.

Learn the early signals:
- Heat in your chest
- Tension in your jaw
- Pressure building
- Thoughts getting sharp/critical
- Body getting tense

When you feel these early signs, PAUSE. This is your window.

STEP 2: DISCHARGE THE ACTIVATION
Your nervous system is flooded with adrenaline.

You need to move it out SAFELY.

→ Intense exercise
→ Heavy bag work
→ Running
→ Cold shower
→ Shaking/tremors
→ Any vigorous movement

DO NOT act on the rage.
Do not direct it at anyone.
Move it through your BODY.

STEP 3: REGULATE YOUR NERVOUS SYSTEM
Once you've discharged activation, calm your system.

→ Slow breathing (long exhales)
→ Gentle movement
→ Connection with safe people
→ Vagal toning

STEP 4: UNDERSTAND THE TRIGGER
Later, when you're calm:

"What did this situation remind my nervous system of?"

"What original threat is this triggering?"

"Why did my system think I was in danger?"

This is awareness work, not judgment work.

STEP 5: RETRAIN YOUR SYSTEM
Each time you DON'T rage in response to that trigger, you're teaching your
system:

"Actually, this isn't a threat."

"We can handle this without fight mode."

"It's safe to respond without overwhelming aggression."

Over time, your system learns.

The rage responses get quieter.

It takes time.

It takes practice.

It takes compassion for the part of you that's trying so hard to protect you.


That voice in your head telling you you're not good enough?The one that's always criticizing.Always pointing out what yo...
04/23/2026

That voice in your head telling you you're not good enough?

The one that's always criticizing.
Always pointing out what you did wrong.
Always comparing you to others.

You've probably thought of it as something wrong with you.

But here's what you need to know: It's a protector trying to keep you safe.

Your inner critic was created over time and through experiences in order to protect you.

It developed because:
→ A parent was critical
→ A teacher was harsh
→ Mistakes you made were punished
→ Love was conditional
→ Your worth was based on achievement

Your system learned: "Criticism of myself keeps me safe from shame."

Your inner critic actually IS trying to do its job and protect you.

• It keeps you from taking risks that might fail.

• It maintains high standards so you stay "good enough."

From your system's perspective, self criticism = safety.

But what its not taking into account is:

You're not that vulnerable child anymore.

You don't need that protection the same way and the breakthrough comes when you understand that your inner critic isn't the enemy. It's just a scared part trying its best with the tools it learned. And you can work WITH it instead of fighting it.

Comment: What does your inner critic sound like? (Whose voice is it really?)

I'm reading all of these and understanding the protectors.

Save this. You'll reference it.

Hyperarousal is the state of activation. This is when your nervous system is on high alert.  This form of sabotage often...
04/22/2026

Hyperarousal is the state of activation. This is when your nervous system is on high alert. This form of sabotage often looks productive on the outside. You are doing, fixing, planning, thinking, checking, pushing. But underneath that momentum is fear.

• Fear of failure.
• Fear of judgment.
• Fear of losing control.
• Fear that if you stop moving, you will have to feel what is really there.

Hyperarousal sabotage can make you overwork, overthink, overcommit, or become reactive in relationships. You may call it being driven, but your body may actually be bracing.

Dorsal shutdown is a very different kind of sabotage. This is the collapse state. Instead of speeding up, your system slows everything down.

You may feel numb, disconnected, foggy, unmotivated, withdrawn, tired, or emotionally flat. Tasks feel too big. Conversations feel draining. Even things you care about can feel far away.

This is often the nervous system saying, This feels like too much. I cannot keep going like this.

Dorsal sabotage can look like procrastination, avoidance, disappearing, or telling yourself you do not care when deep down you actually do. It is often a system that has gone into conservation mode because it does not feel resourced enough to engage.

Ventral state is usually associated with safety, connection, and regulation. But even this state can be disrupted.

Ventral sabotage often happens when peace feels unfamiliar. When things are going well, part of you may start scanning for what could go wrong. You may pick a fight, create pressure, doubt the good, or pull away from connection because calm does not feel fully safe yet.

This is what happens when your system has adapted to stress for so long that ease feels suspicious.

• You want closeness, but distrust it.
• You want rest, but feel guilty in it.
• You want success, but feel exposed when it arrives.

That is not self-sabotage in the simple sense. That is your body trying to protect you from vulnerability.

Anxiety isn't ONE response. It's TWO completely different nervous system states.HYPERAROUSAL = FIGHT/FLIGHTHYPOAROUSAL =...
04/21/2026

Anxiety isn't ONE response. It's TWO completely different nervous system states.
HYPERAROUSAL = FIGHT/FLIGHT
HYPOAROUSAL = FREEZE/SHUTDOWN

Same diagnosis. Completely opposite experiences. Need opposite healing approaches.

HYPERAROUSAL (The Activation State):
What it feels like:
• Racing heart, rapid breathing, muscle tension, sweating, trembling
• Intense anxiety, panic, fear, irritability, overwhelm
• Racing thoughts, catastrophizing, hypervigilance, can't turn mind off
• Pacing, fidgeting, avoidance, seeking reassurance, overworking

Why it develops:
• Environment was unpredictable (had to stay alert)
•Threats required quick reaction (had to be ready)
• Fighting back sometimes worked (resistance was rewarded)
• Learned: "The world is dangerous. I need to stay alert."

Looks like: PANIC (you feel the anxiety intensely - visible to others)
HYPOAROUSAL (The Shutdown State):
What it feels like:
• Low energy, fatigue, numbness, dissociation, feeling frozen
• Emotional flatness, emptiness, hopelessness, disconnection
• Foggy thinking, difficulty concentrating, intrusive thoughts feel distant
• Withdrawing, canceling plans, isolation, procrastination

Why it develops:
• Environment was inescapable (couldn't run away)
• Threats were overwhelming (couldn't fight back)
• Resistance made things worse (fighting got punished)
• Learned: "I can't escape this. The only way to survive is to disappear."




Your heart is racing. Your breathing is shallow. Your hands are shaking. And your immediate thought is: "Something is wr...
04/20/2026

Your heart is racing. Your breathing is shallow. Your hands are shaking.

And your immediate thought is: "Something is wrong with me."

But nothing is wrong with you. Your nervous system is doing exactly what it's supposed to do. It's trying to save your life.

Anxiety is a range of normal emotions. Worried. Nervous. Uneasy. Fear. Panic. Terror. And all of them are designed to do ONE thing: Alert you to a situation you need
to respond to.

Think of anxiety like an alarm system.

When your nervous system senses danger (real or imagined), it triggers your
fight-flight-freeze response.

And that's when the physical symptoms show up:

Dizziness, breathlessness, chest tightness → Breathing quickens to send oxygen
to muscles

Heart pounding → Blood pressure increases to pump blood to muscles

Visual disturbance → Vision sharpens to see threats

Muscle tension → Muscles ready for action

Sweating → Body temperature maintenance

Tingling, numbness → Calcium discharged as part of activation

Feeling sick, dry mouth → Blood diverted to major muscles

Unable to concentrate → Mind focuses on threat detection

Need to use bathroom → Body prepares to be light for escape

EVERY SINGLE SYMPTOM IS DESIGNED TO HELP YOU SURVIVE.

Anxiety is like physical pain. Pain keeps you safe by telling you to pull your hand off a hot flame.

Anxiety keeps you safe by alerting you to psychological, social, or existential
threats.

Without anxiety, you wouldn't prepare for exams.
Without anxiety, you wouldn't practice for presentations.
Without anxiety, you wouldn't jump out of the way of oncoming traffic.

So it's not that you have anxiety, the problem is when your system perceives threat where there isn't one. When it's determined that something is dangerous that actually isn't. And then it's stuck in scanning mode.

And the more you fight it, the more it thinks: "We must be in danger (because
you're fighting)."




Some people wake up already bracing.Before the day has even fully started, your body is tense, your thoughts are moving ...
04/19/2026

Some people wake up already bracing.

Before the day has even fully started, your body is tense, your thoughts are moving fast, and your nervous system is acting like something urgent is already happening.

You reach for your phone, start thinking about your to-do list, replay a conversation, or feel that familiar low hum of pressure sitting in your chest.

That is the problem for a lot of people. The day begins before you have even arrived in it.

When that happens, your system can slide into stress mode quickly. You may feel reactive, scattered, irritable, overwhelmed, or emotionally thin before 9 a.m. And once your body starts there, everything feels harder. Decision-making gets rushed. Patience gets shorter. Communication feels sharper. Even small things can feel like too much.

This is why a morning reset for your parasympathetic nervous system can be such a powerful best practice.

It can look like sitting quietly for two minutes before touching your phone. Taking five slow breaths and making your exhale longer than your inhale. Stepping outside and feeling the air on your skin. Stretching your body. Placing a hand on your chest and asking, What do I need this morning? Playing calming music. Drinking your coffee without rushing. Letting your body feel that you are here, now, and safe.

When a trauma trigger hits, nothing is “wrong” with you. It is your nervous system is doing its job. A protective part r...
04/18/2026

When a trauma trigger hits, nothing is “wrong” with you. It is your nervous system is doing its job. A protective part rushes in to keep you safe, and survival mode takes the wheel. The problem is that many of our go-to protections quietly abandon the very needs that would help us feel steadier.

Self-care in triggered moments isn’t a bubble bath. It’s refusing to abandon yourself. Every time you choose presence over punishment, you teach your nervous system that safety can be found with you, not away from you.

Create a “self-support menu.” List 5–7 things that help you regulate (breath, water, outside, music, stretching, journaling, calling a friend). Post it where you’ll see it.

"You're too much." "You need to be more emotional." "You think too much." "You're too sensitive." Pick any of these. Cha...
04/17/2026

"You're too much."

"You need to be more emotional."

"You think too much."

"You're too sensitive."

Pick any of these. Chances are you've heard at least one.

And you've internalized it. You made it your identity. And you started trying to be
different because of it.

But what if the message was wrong?

What if you're just a certain emotional type?

There are 4 types, and none is better or worse. Just different.

THE ROCK: The one who seems unbothered. Calm, dependable, never shows emotions.

THE GUSHER: The one who feels everything out loud. Intense, authentic, always
processing.

THE INTELLECTUAL: The one who needs to understand everything. Analytical,
logical, always thinking.

THE EMPATH: The one who feels everyone's feelings. Sensitive, compassionate,
deeply intuitive.

And here's the thing: Each type has their own unique gifts.

Rocks have resilience.
Gushers have authenticity.
Intellectuals have clarity.
Empaths have compassion.

But each type also has a shadow.

Rocks isolate.
Gushers overwhelm.
Intellectuals disconnect.
Empaths deplete.

The work isn't to become a different type.

The work is to understand YOUR type.

• To see its strength.
• To recognize its shadow.
• To develop some flexibility.

And most importantly? To stop hating yourself for being it.

Because the world needs exactly the emotional type you are.

Comment: Which type are you?



If you’ve been running on adrenaline, this sound bath healing session is your invitation to slow down. Through layers of...
04/16/2026

If you’ve been running on adrenaline, this sound bath healing session is your invitation to slow down. Through layers of crystal singing bowls, chimes, and resonant tones, Elyce guides you on a therapeutic journey that gently shifts your body from fight-or-flight into rest-and-digest.

Each frequency supports the release of physical and emotional tension while helping to lower cortisol, heart rate, and perceived stress levels.

As the sounds wash over you, your body begins to remember what safety feels like: grounded, open, and deeply at ease.

You’ll leave feeling clearer, calmer, and more connected to yourself.

What this sound bath is curated to support:

• Reduces stress and anxiety
• Supports nervous-system regulation
• Promotes emotional balance
• Encourages restorative rest and clarity

A sound experience to soothe your mind and bring your system back to peace.

Join our group session:
January 19, 2026
Boca Raton
Link
https://thefeelingexpert.com/product/therapeutic-sound-bath-stress-anxiety-relief/

CBT loop model:SITUATION → THOUGHT → EMOTION → BEHAVIOR → back to SITUATIONThey all affect each other. Bidirectionally. ...
04/16/2026

CBT loop model:
SITUATION → THOUGHT → EMOTION → BEHAVIOR → back to SITUATION

They all affect each other. Bidirectionally.

• Your thought doesn't just create your emotion.
• Your behavior creates your thought.
• Your emotion drives your behavior.
• Your situation creates all of it.

And the loop is self-perpetuating.

Example:
Belief: "I'm not good enough"
Situation: You make a mistake
Thought: "See? I'm incompetent"
Emotion: Shame
Behavior: You withdraw, become smaller
New Situation: You miss opportunities, confirm the belief

Loop continues.

Here's the good news: You can break it at ANY point. You don't have to change your thought first.

INTERVENTION #1: Challenge the thought
Is it actually true? What's the evidence against it?

INTERVENTION #2: Change the behavior
Do the thing you're afraid of anyway. Emotion follows action.

INTERVENTION #3: Shift the emotion
Use somatic practices (breathing, movement, connection).

INTERVENTION #4: Change the situation
Leave, move, end it. New situation = new loop.

CBT works because it's direct and practical.

You identify your loop. You pick your intervention. You practice consistently.

Comment: Which part of your loop do you get stuck in?

Save this.


Most people do not lash out because they are cruel. They lash out because something inside them feels threatened.What sh...
04/15/2026

Most people do not lash out because they are cruel. They lash out because something inside them feels threatened.

What shows up on the outside as anger, defensiveness, frustration, criticism, or shutting down is often covering something much more vulnerable underneath. Fear. Shame. Insecurity. Helplessness. The pain of not feeling seen, respected, wanted, safe, or in control.

That is what makes emotional reactions so confusing. The reaction looks big, but the deeper feeling underneath is often something a person has never fully named.

A sharp tone. A passive-aggressive comment. An overreaction to something small. A sudden outburst in the middle of an ordinary conversation. These moments usually are not just about what is happening right now. They are often connected to something older. Something unresolved. A fear of being rejected. A fear of not mattering. A fear of being blamed, exposed, abandoned, dismissed, or misunderstood.

When those fears live under the surface long enough, the nervous system starts reacting before the conscious mind has time to catch up.

Frustration becomes the quicker emotion.
Anger becomes the safer one.
Control becomes the strategy.
Defensiveness becomes protection.

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