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.

If you’ve ever thought, “I don’t need anyone,” you’re not alone. For many women, especially after years of carrying resp...
02/23/2026

If you’ve ever thought, “I don’t need anyone,” you’re not alone. For many women, especially after years of carrying responsibility, disappointment, or emotional instability in relationships, independence can feel like the safest option. It can even feel empowering.

And sometimes it is.

But there’s a difference between healthy independence and hyper-independence. Healthy independence is choice. Hyper-independence is protection. It’s the nervous system saying, “If I rely on people, I get hurt. If I stay in control, I stay safe.”

What it looks like day-to-day

Hyper-independence often shows up as:

• feeling uncomfortable when someone offers help
• avoiding asking for what you need, even when you’re overwhelmed
• downplaying your emotions so you don’t feel “too much”
• distancing when someone gets close
• secretly wishing someone would show up, but resenting them when they try

On the outside, you may look strong and capable. On the inside, it can feel lonely, exhausting, and oddly tense, like you’re always bracing.

Over time, your nervous system stays in a subtle fight-or-flight state. Not because you’re in danger today, but because connection still feels like risk.

The goal isn’t neediness. It’s capacity.

The goal is not to become dependent. The goal is to become flexible and to know you can stand on your own and let yourself be held when you need it.

Why You're Doing Things That Lower Your Mood (And What to Notice)When you're feeling down, unmotivated, or overwhelmed, ...
02/22/2026

Why You're Doing Things That Lower Your Mood (And What to Notice)

When you're feeling down, unmotivated, or overwhelmed, it’s easy to slip into habits that quietly keep you stuck.

These behaviors are often protective patterns your nervous system uses to cope when you feel emotionally unsafe, discouraged, or disconnected.

It can be tricky because, these habits feel like relief in the moment. But over time, they slowly chip away at your energy, confidence, and sense of self.

Start by simply noticing if any of these are showing up in your life right now.
Awareness is the first step toward breaking the cycle.

Emotional flashbacks can be confusing because nothing “big” is happening in the present, yet your body reacts like it’s ...
02/21/2026

Emotional flashbacks can be confusing because nothing “big” is happening in the present, yet your body reacts like it’s an emergency. That’s because an emotional flashback isn’t just a memory. It’s your nervous system re-entering an old survival state.

A simple way to understand the pattern is F.L.A.S.H.

F is for Flagged for danger. Something in the moment sets off your threat detector. It might be a tone, a look, silence, criticism, or feeling dismissed. Your body tightens before you even have words for it.

L is for Locked into the past. An old wound gets touched. A younger, vulnerable part of you rises up carrying fear, shame, hurt, or loneliness. Even if you know logically “this is different,” your system doesn’t feel that yet.

A is for Alarm takes over. Your protective responses kick in fast: fight, flight, freeze, or fawn. You might snap, shut down, overthink, or people-please. The goal is protection, not connection.

S is for Story spirals. Your mind tries to regain control by creating certainty. It pulls up old beliefs like “I’m not enough,” “I’m not safe,” or “People always leave.” Now you’re reacting to the story, not the moment.

H is for Hardening or collapse. You stay braced and guarded, or you drop into numbness and exhaustion. Either way, it takes longer to recover.

The good news is that noticing the cycle is the first step to changing it. When you can name where you are in F.L.A.S.H., you can slow the spiral and come back to the present with more choice.

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You’re trying to say something important, and it comes out wrong. Or someone responds in a way that shows they heard you...
02/20/2026

You’re trying to say something important, and it comes out wrong. Or someone responds in a way that shows they heard you through their own lens, not yours. Maybe they assume your intention. Maybe they jump to advice. Maybe they correct you. Maybe they dismiss it.

And suddenly, your body tightens and your mind goes blank.

You might think:

“It’s not worth it.”
“They’re not going to get it anyway.”
“If I explain, I’ll sound needy or dramatic.”
“I’m tired of defending myself.”

That moment is a clue about what is happening. It usually isn’t about the sentence you just said. It’s about what your system learned about being heard and what your system just processed as happening.

In IFS, the part that feels unheard is often an exile or is closely connected to one. It carries the older wound of:
• not being taken seriously
• not being believed
• having to justify your feelings
• being dismissed, talked over, corrected, or minimized
• learning that your needs were inconvenient

And when it’s activated, it can feel young. Not childish, just younger than your adult self. That’s why the reaction can feel bigger than the moment. Once that unheard part gets activated, other parts jump in to keep it from feeling exposed. This can be being defensive, shutting down, getting snappy, and over-explaining.

In Internal Family Systems (IFS), an exile is a vulnerable part of you that carries old emotional pain and the beliefs t...
02/19/2026

In Internal Family Systems (IFS), an exile is a vulnerable part of you that carries old emotional pain and the beliefs that formed around it.

Exiles usually hold the feelings that were too much to feel fully at the time, especially in childhood. That can include fear, shame, grief, loneliness, or helplessness. They can also carry “meaning” beliefs like I’m not safe, I’m not enough, or I don’t matter.

They’re called exiles because your system often pushes them out of awareness so you can keep functioning. When those feelings felt overwhelming or unsafe to express, other parts stepped in to protect you by keeping the exile’s pain contained.

Even if an exile has been “buried” for years, it can still get triggered by present-day moments that resemble the original wound, like criticism, rejection, conflict, or feeling ignored. When that happens, you may feel suddenly younger, flooded, or intensely emotional, and then protective parts rush in (overthinking, shutting down, snapping, people-pleasing) to prevent you from being overwhelmed.

In IFS, the goal isn’t to get rid of exiles. It’s to help them feel safe, witnessed, and cared for from your calm, compassionate Self, so they don’t have to carry that pain alone anymore.

Overthinking keeps your nervous system activated. Even if nothing is happening, your body stays in “preparing” mode. Tha...
02/18/2026

Overthinking keeps your nervous system activated. Even if nothing is happening, your body stays in “preparing” mode. That makes you tired, irritable, and more reactive.

It turns life into a constant threat scan. Instead of being present, you’re always looking for what might go wrong. The world starts to feel unsafe, not because it is unsafe, but because your nervous system is treating it that way.

When you catastrophize, you stop seeing options. You see only danger. That leads to avoidance, procrastination, people-pleasing, controlling behavior, or shutting down.

And overthinking can lead to reassurance-seeking, interpreting neutral cues as rejection, or reacting to imagined problems. It creates tension because your system is responding to a story, not always the reality.

This is the big one. Overthinking can become a way to avoid grief, fear, anger, sadness, shame, and loneliness. It keeps you busy so you don’t have to feel what’s underneath.

If your inner critic shows up the moment you try to rest, speak up, or do something new, it’s that voice inside that is ...
02/17/2026

If your inner critic shows up the moment you try to rest, speak up, or do something new, it’s that voice inside that is trying to prevent something. (to protect you)
It might be: Rejection. Embarrassment. Failure. Being seen. Being “too much.”
It learned that pressure and criticism could keep you in line and keep you safe.

The problem is, when you fight it, the whole system gets louder.
Now you’re not just dealing with the original stress or worry. You’re dealing with an internal argument that drains your energy and feeds the belief that you’re never doing enough.

Here’s a shift that helps:
Instead of battling the critic, get curious about what it’s protecting.

Try this the next time it flares up:
• Name it: “My inner critic is here.”
• Ask: “What are you trying to protect me from right now?”
• Lead: “I’m listening, but we’re not doing shame today.”

That’s how healing starts. By changing the relationship you have with your parts.

If you want a guided next step, I made a free download that walks you through how limiting beliefs get wired in and how to replace them with something more accurate and stabilizing:

✨ Free download: 7 Steps to Overcoming Limiting Beliefs
Grab it here:https://thefeelingexpert.com/shop-our-products/

How the inner critic protects youThe inner critic usually has a few core jobs. They don’t feel loving, but they are ofte...
02/16/2026

How the inner critic protects you

The inner critic usually has a few core jobs. They don’t feel loving, but they are often aimed at safety.

1) It tries to prevent rejection.
“If I point out your flaws first, you won’t be blindsided when someone else does.”

2) It tries to keep you in control.
“If you stay on high alert and keep improving, you won’t feel helpless.”

3) It tries to motivate you through pressure.
“If I’m hard on you, you’ll work harder and you’ll be safe.”

4) It tries to avoid shame.
“If I criticize you now, maybe you won’t do the thing that could embarrass you later.”

5) It tries to keep you small enough to stay safe.
“Don’t risk too much. Don’t get your hopes up. Don’t be seen.”

Protection is helpful until it becomes rigid. That’s where many people get stuck. When your part goes into extreme. The inner critic may have once protected you, but when in extreme it can create chronic stress, anxiety, perfectionism, procrastination, and shame.

If your inner critic has been running your life for a long time, it can be hard to shift this alone. Especially if the critic formed around trauma, chronic invalidation, or deep shame.

Therapy can help you understand what your critic is protecting, heal the wounds underneath it, and build a more compassionate internal leadership that actually lasts.

learn more about Internal Family Systems (IFS) therapy
https://thefeelingexpert.com/internal-family-systems-ifs-therapy/

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Irritation can act like a shield. If you feel embarrassed, hurt, rejected, or powerless, that can feel vulnerable. Those...
02/15/2026

Irritation can act like a shield. If you feel embarrassed, hurt, rejected, or powerless, that can feel vulnerable. Those feelings carry more risk, especially if you learned early that vulnerability led to criticism, dismissal, or being ignored.

So the nervous system chooses a feeling that creates distance and protection. Irritation does that well. It gives you energy. It gives you an edge. It keeps you from needing anything. It helps you stay in control.

That’s why irritation often shows up in moments like:
• when you feel misunderstood but don’t want to explain again
• when you feel unappreciated but don’t want to sound needy
• when you feel anxious but don’t want to admit you’re scared
• when you feel controlled and your body wants to push back

Irritation becomes the “front desk” emotion. It greets the world while the deeper feelings stay in the back.

The moment you identify the deeper feeling, you gain options. Irritation tends to push you toward snapping, withdrawing, controlling, or criticizing. But when you name what’s underneath, you can respond with more accuracy.

For example:
• If the truth is overwhelm, you need a break or fewer demands, not an argument.
• If the truth is hurt, you may need repair, not distance.
• If the truth is powerlessness, you may need choice, not control.
• If the truth is loneliness, you may need support, not self-judgment.

A simple practice: when you notice irritation, ask, “If irritation is the cover, what’s the real headline?” Then choose one sub-feeling and name it gently: “I’m actually feeling disappointed,” or “I’m feeling anxious.”

Save this to come back to when you are feeling irritated or share with someone who can use this.

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Have you ever caught yourself people pleasing, shutting down, snapping, or overthinking… and then thinking, Why do I kee...
02/14/2026

Have you ever caught yourself people pleasing, shutting down, snapping, or overthinking… and then thinking, Why do I keep doing this?

In Internal Family Systems (IFS), we understand that you have an inner team of parts, each with a job. Some parts manage life so you don’t feel too much. Some parts react quickly to stop pain fast. And underneath it all, there are often younger parts that carry the emotional weight you’ve been living around for years.

That’s exactly why we created Meet Your Inner Team: a simple, practical ebook that helps you identify what’s happening inside you in a way that feels clear, compassionate, and doable.

Download Meet Your Inner Team for $3 and explore 30 common protector roles (People Pleaser, Perfectionist, Inner Critic, Avoider, and more).
Instant digital access. Start today.

Get it here:
https://thefeelingexpert.com/product/ifs-and-the-roles-your-parts-play-when-protecting-you/

Discover the 30 protective roles your inner parts may be playing—and how they’ve been trying to help you all along. This free guide is your first step toward understanding yourself through the lens of Internal Family Systems (IFS). Learn to recognize your protectors, respond with compassion, and...

Have ever heard yourself say something sharp and thought, “That’s not even how I wanted to sound,”?  Snapping, defensive...
02/13/2026

Have ever heard yourself say something sharp and thought, “That’s not even how I wanted to sound,”? Snapping, defensiveness, and that intense need to be right usually are nervous system protection strategies. They show up when something inside you registers and alerts, even just briefly, “This isn’t safe.”

“Unsafe” doesn’t always mean you are noticing a physical danger. It can mean feeling danger from something like being criticized, misunderstood, exposed, dismissed, blamed, or like you’re about to lose connection with someone important.

The feelings underneath the reaction

Most snapping and defensiveness are covering something more vulnerable.

• Underneath, you might be feeling:
• embarrassment or shame
• fear of being seen as wrong, inadequate, or “too much”
• hurt, disappointment, or rejection
• powerlessness or being controlled
• the old feeling of not being listened to

Those feelings can be hard to manage in the moment, especially if your old wounds includes being dismissed, criticized, or punished for having any type of needs.

So the nervous system reaches for something that feels stronger. Anger. Certainty. Control. “Let me prove my point.” “Let me shut this down.” “Let me win.”

Once survival mode is online, your brain is filtering information through a threat lens. You may hear only the critical part of what someone says. You may assume intention. You may interrupt, raise your voice, or come out with a cutting remark. It can feel like you’re watching yourself do it, but you can’t stop.

Most people think of safety as a logical thing. “Nothing bad is happening, so I should feel fine.” But your nervous syst...
02/12/2026

Most people think of safety as a logical thing. “Nothing bad is happening, so I should feel fine.” But your nervous system doesn’t make decisions based on logic first. It makes decisions based on signals. Tone of voice. Facial expressions. Sudden changes. Uncertainty. Old memories that get touched. Even hunger and lack of sleep can make the world feel sharper.

When your system receives the message “unsafe,” it moves into protection mode. Here are three core things it does, and how you can recognize them in real life.

1) It shifts into survival physiology. You might notice:
-faster heart rate or shallow breathing
- tight jaw, clenched shoulders, tension in your chest or stomach
- restlessness, pacing, or the urge to escape
- numbness, shutdown, or feeling far away
- a strong urge to control the situation or keep the peace

2) It changes how you think and interpret everything
You might notice:
- overthinking, rumination, or worst-case scenarios
- reading into tone, facial expressions, silence, or delays
- feeling certain something is wrong even without evidence
- difficulty focusing or making decisions
- a harsh inner critic getting louder

3) It changes how you relate to people
You might notice:
- snapping, defensiveness, or needing to be right
- pulling away, going quiet, canceling plans
- people-pleasing, over-apologizing, over-explaining
- feeling easily rejected or misunderstood
- difficulty receiving support, even when it’s offered

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