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.

Sometimes empath coping mechanisms are easy to miss because they look so normal.Procrastination. Scrolling. Overthinking...
03/18/2026

Sometimes empath coping mechanisms are easy to miss because they look so normal.

Procrastination. Scrolling. Overthinking. Staying busy. Pulling away. Saying yes when you mean no.

These behaviors often get labeled as bad habits, but many times they are actually protective responses. When your system takes in a lot emotionally, it finds ways to reduce pressure, create distance, or avoid one more thing.

That does not mean the coping mechanism is helping long-term. But it does mean it makes sense.

When you understand the behavior through a nervous system lens, you stop making everything about laziness, weakness, or lack of discipline. You begin to see that your body may be trying to manage overwhelm the best way it can.

Awareness is where change begins.

1. Pause and notice your body�Before anything else stop, breathe, and check in physically.�Ask yourself: Where do I feel...
03/17/2026

1. Pause and notice your body�Before anything else stop, breathe, and check in physically.�
Ask yourself: Where do I feel tension, heat, or collapse?�
Take three slow breaths, gently unclenching your jaw, shoulders, or stomach.�This is mindfulness returning to the body so the mind can follow.

2. Name what’s present�Label what you’re feeling right now without judgment.�Examples: sad, anxious, numb, shame, anger, confusion, hope.�
Naming emotions helps lower their intensity because what’s acknowledged stops fighting for attention.

3. Reality-check your thoughts�Ask:
* What story am I telling myself right now?
* Is there another possible interpretation?
* Am I in the past, the future, or the present?�
This helps you shift from emotional mind to wise mind the place where truth and compassion meet.

4. Regulate through the senses�Ground yourself in one of five ways (DBT: “Self-Soothe” skills):
* Listen to calming music or nature sounds
* Smell something grounding (essential oils, coffee, your shampoo)
* Touch something comforting (a blanket, pet, or warm mug)
* Look around and name five things in your space
* Taste something simple (mint, tea, or cold water)

5. Reconnect with what helps you cope�Choose one small supportive action — not to “fix” your feelings, but to hold them safely.�
Examples: step outside, write a note to yourself, text a trusted friend, stretch, or move your body gently.�Tiny actions root you in self-agency.

6. Close with compassion�End your check-in by saying to yourself:
“I’m learning how to stay with myself, even when it’s hard.”�Remind yourself that dysregulation is just your nervous system asking for care.�

Offer yourself something kind before re-entering your day: a break, a deep breath, or a moment of stillness.

For anyone who keeps showing up but still feels unseen, even after doing everything “right”, this is for you.Beneath the...
03/16/2026

For anyone who keeps showing up but still feels unseen, even after doing everything “right”, this is for you.

Beneath the words “I feel invisible” often live some old truths from past pain:
> You were unseen: no one noticed your inner world.
> You were unprotected: you had to carry too much alone.
> You were not chosen while you watched other get picked: your needs didn’t come first.
> You felt unworthy and not enough: you learned love had to be earned through what you did, not who you were.

Those early lessons shape a life pattern: overfunctioning on the outside, but you were starving for support on the inside.

And after a while, the story you tell yourself starts to sound familiar:�“I’m always the one who shows up. People don’t really show up for me.”

So now as an adult, you keep showing up. You give, you understand, you hold space.�But somewhere deep inside, you’re aching for someone to finally do that for you.

Over time, it starts to sound like: “I’m always the one who shows up for others. No one really shows up for me.”

If love or connection used to feel unpredictable when you were young, your nervous system might still be living as if connection has to be earned and that means by giving more, trying harder, being the strong one.

Real connection is mutual. It grows slowly, through small, consistent acts of honesty and willingness.
*�It happens when you begin to:
* Speak honestly about your needs
* Let people reveal who they truly are and believe them when they show you
* Practice not rushing in to fix, overgive, or over-explain
* Choose relationships that offer repair, consistency, and reciprocity

Because being seen isn’t about doing more it’s about allowing yourself to stop disappearing.

You are not invisible. You were simply taught to be unseen. And little by little, you can teach your nervous system that you no longer have to earn your place ... you already belong here. You are safe.

Trauma and chronic stress leave signals in the body. Muscles stay contracted. Breathing stays shallow. The nervous syste...
03/15/2026

Trauma and chronic stress leave signals in the body. Muscles stay contracted. Breathing stays shallow. The nervous system stays on alert. Somatic stretching uses slow movement and attention to help release that “bracing” pattern.

But the bigger shift is this: as you stretch gently, you’re practicing staying present with sensation, without getting overwhelmed.

That’s nervous system healing.

You’re teaching your system: “I can feel this, and I can stay safe.”
How it feels when it’s working
Somatic stretching often feels subtle at first. You might notice:
* a spontaneous deeper breath
* warmth in an area that’s usually tight
* a wave of emotion that surprises you
* a sense of “coming back” into your body
* a quieter mind afterward
That emotion piece is important. Sometimes people cry after a stretch and don’t know why. It’s not because stretching “made you emotional.” It’s because your body finally got a moment to release what it’s been holding.

Think of it like unclenching a fist you didn’t realize was clenched all day.

Detachment: “I’m stepping back on purpose.”Detachment is usually a conscious choice. It’s a boundary. A pause. A decisio...
03/14/2026

Detachment: “I’m stepping back on purpose.”

Detachment is usually a conscious choice. It’s a boundary. A pause. A decision to not get pulled into something that feels unhealthy, draining, or unproductive.

It can actually be a sign of growth when it’s coming from clarity.

What detachment feels like:
You’re present, but you’re not fused with the situation. You can think, choose, and respond. You might feel less emotionally activated, but you still know who you are and where you are.

Dissociation: “My system pulled me out.”

Dissociation is different. It’s not a decision. It’s a nervous system survival response. It often shows up when something feels too intense, too threatening, or too overwhelming to stay present for.

It’s the brain and body saying, “We’re going offline to protect you.”

What dissociation can feel like:
Foggy. Floaty. Far away. Numb. Like you’re watching yourself from the outside, or moving through life on autopilot. Sometimes it’s blankness. Sometimes it’s losing chunks of time.

Side-by-side: the simplest way to tell

Detachment: You can still access choice. You’re present and aware, even if you’re emotionally guarded.
Dissociation: Your access to choice narrows. You’re not fully present, and it may feel hard to “come back” quickly.

You don't have bad reactions. You have a nervous system doing its job.That's the thing nobody tells you when you're in t...
03/13/2026

You don't have bad reactions. You have a nervous system doing its job.
That's the thing nobody tells you when you're in the middle of a spiral, a freeze, or a complete shutdown.

You're wired for survival and your body is following a very old set of instructions.
Polyvagal Theory gives us a map for understanding why we respond the way we do. It's called the autonomic ladder, and most of us move up and down it every single day without realizing it.

🟢 Safe & Social is where you feel like yourself. Calm, connected, able to think. This is where healing actually happens — in therapy, in relationships, in quiet moments of rest.

🟠 Fight or Flight kicks in when your system detects a threat. Doesn't matter if it's a real danger or a tone of voice that sounds like one you heard years ago. Your body responds the same way. Adrenaline. Tension. The urge to run or push back.

🔵 Freeze happens when fighting or fleeing doesn't feel like an option. You go blank. You lose your words. You can't move. People call this "shutting down" in an argument but it's actually your nervous system hitting pause to protect you.

🟣 Shutdown is the deepest state. Full disconnect. Numbness. The lights are on but nobody's home. This isn't laziness or avoidance. This is your system doing the most it can when it's been overwhelmed for too long.

Here's what changes everything:
When you know which state you're in, you stop judging yourself for being there.
Instead of "what is wrong with me," you start asking "what does my nervous system need right now?"

That's the shift. That's the work.

Which state do you find yourself in most often? Drop it in the comments — you might be surprised how many people are right there with you.

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Have you ever nodded along in a therapy session… and had absolutely no idea what the word meant?You're not alone.Therapy...
03/12/2026

Have you ever nodded along in a therapy session… and had absolutely no idea what the word meant?
You're not alone.
Therapy has its own language. And when you don't understand the words, it's hard to do the work.
So let's break it down

Attachment Style: the word sounds clinical, but what it really means is: why you love the way you love. Why you hold on too tight, or push people away before they can leave. It didn't start with your last relationship. It started much earlier.

Window of Tolerance: this is the zone where you can actually think, feel, and function. Too much stress? You blow up or shut down. Inside the window? You can breathe, respond, and heal.

Dissociation: it's not just a trauma buzzword. It's that moment you drive home and don't remember the route. It's spacing out mid-conversation. It's surviving by going somewhere else in your mind.

Hypervigilance: constantly scanning for what might go wrong. Bracing for impact even when the room is quiet. Your nervous system learned to stay ready... and it never got the memo that the danger passed.

Understanding these words doesn't just make you smarter about therapy, it makes you more compassionate toward yourself.

Which of these hit close to home? Drop it in the comments and share this with someone who's learning the language of healing. 💗
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Have you ever tried to calm yourself down… and felt MORE anxious?That's the anxiety loop, and it's one of the most misun...
03/11/2026

Have you ever tried to calm yourself down… and felt MORE anxious?
That's the anxiety loop, and it's one of the most misunderstood things about how our nervous system works.

It starts with a threat. A text that hasn't been answered. A feeling in your chest you can't explain. A thought that comes out of nowhere.

Real or imagined — your nervous system doesn't know the difference.
Then your mind rushes in.
"Something is wrong."
"What if it gets worse?"
"I can't handle this."

The story builds faster than you can stop it.
• Your body floods.
• Tight chest. Shallow breath. Racing heart.

This is your system doing exactly what it was designed to do. And then you try to stop it. You try to distract yourself or you start to overthink. You clench and try to push it away.
But here's the thing no one tells you resisting anxiety sends your nervous system one signal: "The threat is real."
So then it escalates. Then comes the shame.
"Why can't I just relax?"
"What is wrong with me?"
Now you're anxious about being anxious.
And the loop tightens.
Here's what breaks the loop:
Not control. Not escape.
start with: Curiosity. Compassion. A moment of: "I see you. You make sense."
Your anxiety isn't your enemy.
It's a part of you that learned to sound the alarm — because once, that kept you safe.
When we stop fighting it and start listening to it, the loop loosens.
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Why Distrust Shows Up After Trauma (Even When You Want to Trust)If you’ve been through trauma, distrust can feel like a ...
03/10/2026

Why Distrust Shows Up After Trauma (Even When You Want to Trust)

If you’ve been through trauma, distrust can feel like a personality trait.

You might tell yourself, “I’m just cautious,” or “I don’t trust people because I’m smart,” or “I’ve learned my lesson.”

And sometimes, sure, discernment is healthy.

But what I’m talking about is different. I mean the kind of distrust that shows up even when someone is being consistent. The kind that kicks in fast, with no warning, and suddenly you’re scanning for the catch.

They don’t text back right away and your stomach drops.
They sound different and your mind starts building a case.
They compliment you and you assume they want something.
Things are going well and you can’t relax because you’re waiting for the flip.

“It’s safer to assume disappointment than to be blindsided.”

That’s the baseline. Expect the drop. Prepare for the worst. Stay one step ahead.

Here’s the nervous system piece most people miss: trauma doesn’t just teach you what happened. It teaches your body what to expect.

Try this when suspicion hits:

Name it: “This is an old expectation.”

Check for facts: “What do I actually know?”

Regulate first: longer exhale, feet on the floor, slow your system down.

Then communicate: “My system is reading distance. Can we clarify?”



When you live through repeated stress, unpredictability, emotional volatility, betrayal, abandonment, or being let down by the people you depended on, your system learns that connection comes with risk.

Numbness is one of the most confusing trauma symptoms because it doesn’t feel like a symptom. It feels like… nothing.Peo...
03/09/2026

Numbness is one of the most confusing trauma symptoms because it doesn’t feel like a symptom. It feels like… nothing.

People usually come in saying things like, “I know I should feel something, but I don’t,” or “It’s like I’m watching my life from across the room,” or “I can cry at a movie, but not about my own stuff.”

And then they start judging themselves for it. They assume numbness means they’re cold, broken, detached, or “not doing healing right.”

But numbness is often your nervous system being incredibly smart.
Not comfortable. Not fun. But smart.

Here’s a way to picture it: if your body decided a long time ago that feeling was dangerous, it may have installed an emergency switch. When stress gets too high, that switch flips and the system goes into shutdown. The goal isn’t to connect. The goal is to survive.

That’s why numbness shows up most when:
• you’re overwhelmed but still functioning
• you’re in conflict and suddenly go blank
• you’re asked how you feel and your mind goes empty
• you’re around people, but you feel far away
• you’re going through something hard and you can’t cry

It’s because your system is trying to reduce pain, intensity, and risk.

A lot of people assume trauma is only the “big feelings” like panic, fear, or anger. But shutdown is just as much a trauma response. It’s what happens when fight and flight aren’t available, or when your system learned that pushing back or running away would make things worse. So instead, the body goes quiet. Slower. Smaller. Less.

You can see it in the body: heavy fatigue, blank mind, low motivation, dullness, zoning out, scrolling for hours, forgetting what you were doing, feeling like you’re moving through wet cement.

So what helps?

Not forcing emotion. Not “talking yourself into” feeling.

The first step is simply recognizing numbness as a protective response: “My system is shutting down right now.”

When you’re constantly correcting others, it’s not always about them.Sometimes, it’s a part of you trying to prevent cha...
03/08/2026

When you’re constantly correcting others, it’s not always about them.
Sometimes, it’s a part of you trying to prevent chaos… fix discomfort… stay safe.

You don’t need to keep correcting everyone. You’re not responsible for making everything perfect.

That urge to fix, guide, or correct? It likely comes from an old part of you. the one that learned early on that being RIGHT meant being safe… or being valued.

You can let others handle it.
You’re allowed to let others find their own way.
You’re allowed to connect without controlling. It's okay. You are safe.

This isn’t about being controlling. It’s really about how your nervous system learned to survive. But what protected you then may be pushing people away now.

If you’re ready to understand why you do this, and how to soften it,
Start by getting curious about the part of you that’s trying so hard to help.

Healing begins with awareness.

Have you ever felt stuck in a moment you couldn’t shake? Like something small set you off, but hours later, you’re spira...
03/08/2026

Have you ever felt stuck in a moment you couldn’t shake? Like something small set you off, but hours later, you’re spiraling, questioning everything about yourself?

That’s shame.
And it rarely shows up loud.
It creeps in quietly… and before you know it, you're deep in a loop that feels impossible to escape.

It starts with a trigger.
A look, a tone, a silence. Something small ... but it pokes at an old wound. And suddenly, you're not just reacting to what happened... you're reacting to everything it brings up.

The next move? Your mind rushes in to make meaning.
You jump to conclusions: “They’re mad at me.” “I always screw this up.” “I knew I wasn’t enough.”
These aren’t thoughts. They’re parts of you, protective, scared, trying to keep you safe.

Before you even realize it, your beliefs take over.
Not your calm, grounded Self...
But the beliefs that were shaped in survival mode. And now? You’re stuck in the story, not the truth.

So you reach for something to manage the overwhelm.
You scroll. You shut down. You overwork. You numb out.

Then comes the shame about the shame.
You feel guilty for how you reacted, regret what you said… and now you’re judging yourself for the very thing your system did to protect you.

Shame is not who you are.
It’s a part. It has a voice. It learned how to speak that way because it had to.

When we bring compassion, curiosity, and connection to that part… the spiral slows.
And eventually?
You don’t spiral—you soften.

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