Neurobehavioral Counseling & Consulting

Neurobehavioral Counseling & Consulting Emily Stevens Brown is a psychotherapist specializing in a comprehensive approach to treatment and emerging brain-based interventions.

She is licensed as a professional mental health counselor in Georgia and Florida.

11/19/2025

Research shows that mothers experience the highest levels of stress hormones, and for single mothers, that stress is comparable to working up to three full-time jobs. Psychologists explain that this level of emotional and physical strain comes from the overwhelming demands of parenting, work, and household management, all without consistent support. The constant juggling of responsibilities keeps the body in a state of chronic stress, raising cortisol levels and leading to exhaustion, sleep problems, and emotional burnout.

Single mothers often have little time for self-care, which intensifies the effects of prolonged stress on the brain and body. Elevated cortisol can affect mood regulation, increase anxiety, and even weaken the immune system. Over time, this can impact both physical and mental health, making resilience harder to maintain despite their strength.

Researchers emphasize that this does not reflect a lack of capability but rather the immense pressure placed on women who manage everything alone. Support systems, social interaction, and rest are crucial for recovery and emotional balance.

Motherhood, especially single motherhood, is one of the toughest roles in the world—and understanding its psychological toll is the first step toward valuing and supporting it better.

11/18/2025

A fascinating new study shows that women who wore rose essential oil on their clothes for just 30 days experienced a significant increase in gray matter volume across the whole brain, as revealed by MRI scans. This suggests that simple, natural aromatherapy may have measurable effects on brain structure and cognitive health.

Gray matter is crucial for memory, learning, and emotional regulation, and its increase could indicate enhanced neural connectivity and brain function. Researchers believe that the pleasant aroma of rose oil may stimulate brain activity and neuroplasticity, potentially supporting mental well-being and cognitive resilience.

Incorporating rose essential oil into daily life is easy, just adding a few drops to clothing, scarves, or fabrics could provide a subtle yet powerful brain-boosting effect. While more research is needed to fully understand the long-term impact, this study highlights the potential of natural scents to influence brain health in meaningful ways.

This discovery opens a new chapter in exploring how aromatherapy and lifestyle practices can support neurological function and mental wellness.

11/15/2025

She screamed "I hate you" so loud the neighbors probably heard. Then slammed her bedroom door hard enough to rattle the pictures on the wall. And I stood there in the hallway—the same hallway where she used to run to me with open arms—and I couldn't breathe.

This is the girl who used to think I hung the moon. Who cried if I left the room. Who told everyone at preschool that her mommy was a princess. Now she looks at me like I'm the villain in her story, and I don't know what I did to deserve this rage.

I cry in the shower so she won't hear me. I scroll through old photos of her at five, at seven, at nine—back when I was her hero—and I wonder where that little girl went. My husband tries to comfort me but I think he doesn't get it. He doesn't know what it's like to have someone you'd die for look at you with pure contempt. To hear "you're the worst mom ever" and know she means it in that moment.

I've apologized for things I didn't do wrong just to get her to talk to me again. I've second-guessed every parenting decision I've made for the last fourteen years. I lie awake at 2am wondering: Did I break her somehow? Is this my fault? Will she ever love me again the way she used to? The absolute worst part? I still have to pack her lunch tomorrow. Still have to drive her to practice and remind her to do homework and pretend my heart isn't shattered into a thousand pieces every time she rolls her eyes at me. I have to keep showing up for someone who acts like my presence is a punishment.

Dr. Lisa Damour sat across from me (metaphorically, through her book) and said five words that made me sob with relief: "Your daughter is not broken:

1. She's Not Lost—She's Building New Rooms
Your sweet daughter didn't disappear—she's expanding. Damour reveals the seven distinct developmental transitions that turn girls into grown-ups, including Parting with Childhood and Contending with Adult Authority. That stranger in your house is still your daughter; she's just trying on different versions of herself. The moodiness isn't personal; it's architectural—she's renovating her soul and you're watching the construction.

2: Her Cruelty Is Actually a Compliment
The most counterintuitive truth: when your teenage daughter saves her worst behavior for you, it's because you're the person she trusts most not to abandon her. Girls practice emotional regulation with their safest people first. Her cutting words aren't signs of hate—they're signs of ultimate trust that you'll still be there when she figures herself out. You're her safe landing pad, even when she's crashing hard.

3: She Needs Boundaries More Than Friendship
Every fiber wants you to be the cool mom. Damour destroys this fantasy: teenagers don't need another peer—they need a parent brave enough to hold the line. When you enforce curfews despite her fury, when you say no despite her tears, you're being the lighthouse she needs to navigate safely to shore. Love isn't always liked. And that's okay.

4: Your Calm Is Her Anchor
Teenage girls are emotional sponges, absorbing every vibration of parental panic. When you manage your anxiety about her choices, you give her permission to manage hers. Your calm doesn't fix her storms, but it teaches her that storms can be weathered. She's watching how you handle yourself when she's at her worst, learning what emotional regulation actually looks like.

BOOK: https://amzn.to/3XuvotD

You can find and listen to the audiobook narration using the link above.

11/12/2025

A simple sniff of rosemary could supercharge your brain. Scientists have found that inhaling the scent of rosemary can increase memory by up to 75%, making it one of nature’s most powerful mental enhancers.

The secret lies in how rosemary affects the brain’s chemistry. When you inhale its aroma, compounds from the herb enter the bloodstream and reach the brain, where they break down acetylcholine , a vital neurotransmitter that helps nerve cells communicate. By preventing its breakdown, rosemary keeps acetylcholine levels high, improving focus, memory retention, and mental clarity.

In studies, participants exposed to rosemary’s scent performed significantly better in memory tasks, especially in recall and processing speed. The effect was so strong that even small amounts, like a few drops of essential oil or a sprig placed nearby, made a measurable difference.

Beyond memory, rosemary is also known to reduce stress, improve mood, and enhance alertness. Its benefits are being explored in classrooms, offices, and even elderly care homes to support cognitive health naturally.

This discovery supports ancient wisdom , rosemary has been associated with remembrance for centuries. Now science is catching up, proving that what once was tradition may also be truth.

Want a sharper mind? You might not need caffeine , just a breath of rosemary.

11/11/2025

Science now confirms what love has always whispered , when a woman feels truly loved, her body begins to heal at the deepest level, even down to her genes.

New research in psychoneuroimmunology shows that emotional safety and deep connection directly influence a woman’s physical health. When she feels valued, respected, and emotionally supported, her body responds in powerful ways:

Stress hormones like cortisol drop, reducing anxiety and emotional overload.
Inflammation levels fall, lowering the risk of chronic diseases like heart issues, autoimmune disorders, and even certain cancers.
And most incredibly, gene expression shifts , activating pathways linked to healing, cellular repair, and stronger immune responses.

Love isn’t just a feeling. It’s a biological force. Studies show that women in nurturing relationships have better sleep, faster recovery from illness, and fewer symptoms of depression or fatigue. It’s not about perfection , it’s about presence, kindness, and emotional safety.

Feeling loved increases oxytocin, the “bonding hormone,” which also happens to be one of the most healing chemicals in the human body. It soothes the nervous system, repairs emotional wounds, and strengthens the immune response like nature’s own medicine.

This research reminds us that love isn’t soft , it’s cellular strength. To love a woman deeply is to nourish her health, her mind, and her spirit all at once.

Real love heals , inside and out.

11/06/2025

Picking up this book, I’ll admit, I was skeptical. The title The Art of Living Alone & Loving It felt like a bold, almost defiant claim. Like many, I associated living alone with a temporary state or, worse, a silent admission of loneliness. But Jane Mathews doesn’t approach solo living as a problem to be solved. Instead, she reframes it as a vibrant, valuable, and profoundly rewarding life skill, an "art" to be mastered, regardless of your relationship status.

This book is a masterclass in shifting your perspective from "I am alone" (a state of lack) to "I am with myself" (a state of presence). It’s a toolkit for building a life that feels full, rich, and complete on your own terms.

Takeaways from The Art of Living Alone & Loving It:

1. Your Home is Your Sanctuary, Not Your Prison.
Mathews emphasizes transforming your space into a place that purely serves and delights you. This isn't about extravagant redecorating; it's about intentionality. What smells, sounds, and sights make you feel at peace? It’s the permission to leave a project sprawled out, to cook exactly what you crave, and to create a environment that reflects your inner self, uncompromised.

2. Curate Your Solitude, Don't Just Endure It.
There’s a profound difference between loneliness and solitude. Loneliness is a sense of lack, while solitude is a chosen state of productive and restorative alone time. The book is filled with ideas for "dating yourself"—whether it's a solo movie night, a long walk, or dedicating an hour to a forgotten hobby. It teaches you to fill your own cup first.

3. Build a Robust "Village" of Your Own.
Loving your alone time doesn't mean becoming a hermit. In fact, Mathews argues it’s essential to proactively build a diverse support network. This includes "fun friends," reliable neighbors, family, and community ties. When your social needs are met from multiple sources, your solo time becomes a choice, not a sentence.

4. Master the Practicalities for True Independence.
There’s immense empowerment in being able to handle your own life. The book doesn’t shy away from the nitty-gritty: managing finances, dealing with a leaky tap, assembling flat-pack furniture, and cooking healthy meals for one. Conquering these small tasks builds a deep-seated confidence that radiates into every other part of your life.

5. Your Relationship with Yourself is Your Longest One.
The central, beautiful lesson of this book is that learning to be your own best company is the ultimate foundation for a happy life. When you stop waiting for someone else to complete your story, you become the author of it. You discover your own rhythms, your own passions, and your own strength. A partner, should one come along, then becomes a welcome addition to an already wonderful life, not the missing piece needed to make it whole.

The Art of Living Alone & Loving It is a permission slip to design a life you don’t need to escape from. It’s a compassionate, practical, and often joyful guide to turning a potentially daunting situation into your greatest opportunity for growth. Jane Mathews doesn't just promise you'll cope; she shows you how to thrive, proving that the most important person to learn to love living with is yourself.

BOOK: https://amzn.to/4nDLzzF

Enjoy the audio book with FREE trial using the link above. Use the link to register on audible and start enjoying!

11/05/2025

A recent study from Columbia University suggests that children who have dinner with their family at least four times a week tend to perform better academically. Regular family meals provide opportunities for communication, emotional bonding, and parental engagement, which can positively influence a child’s learning habits. These shared meals also create structured routines that promote discipline and consistency in daily life. Additionally, family dinners offer a supportive environment for discussing schoolwork and encouraging curiosity and critical thinking. Overall, the practice of eating together strengthens both social and cognitive skills in children.

11/01/2025

For years, I carried a sadness I thought was peculiar to me. The panic that crept in out of nowhere, hijacking my breath, the deep unease I couldn't name, the way certain moments triggered a reaction far bigger than the situation deserved. I thought it was proof that something inside me was fundamentally wrong, fractured in ways no one could fix.

Then I read It Didn’t Start With You by Mark Wolynn. By the end of the first chapter, I wasn’t just reading; I was remembering. Remembering feelings I had never been allowed to feel. Remembering stories I had never been told but somehow carried anyway. Wolynn gave words to what had been haunting me: the inherited grief, the unspoken traumas, the emotional fingerprints of people I had never met but whose pain had been folded into my very DNA. Generational legacies, not carved in stone, but carved in flesh.

1. What You’re Feeling Might Not Be Yours
Wolynn opens with a radical truth: not all wounds are self-inflicted. Some are inherited. That deep fear of abandonment? That overwhelming shame? That inability to feel safe in your own skin? They might belong to someone else in your family line—your mother, your grandfather, even someone you've never met. The body remembers what the mind forgets. Trauma doesn’t vanish; it finds somewhere to land. Often, that landing pad is us.

2. Unspoken Family Pain Doesn’t Disappear, It Echoes
What we don’t talk about in families doesn’t just go away. It sinks. It shows up as illness, as anxiety, as patterns we can't break. Wolynn explains how traumas that weren’t processed get passed down, not through stories, but through silence. And that silence has weight. This book made me realize: healing doesn’t start with blame. It starts with curiosity. With asking: What didn’t get to be grieved in my family? What’s been buried?

3. You Heal by Turning Toward the Pain, Not Away From It
Wolynn doesn’t offer quick fixes. He asks you to sit with what hurts. To look at your family tree not just for names and dates, but for patterns, ruptures, losses. It’s uncomfortable. But it’s freeing. Because when you trace the thread of your suffering to its source, it becomes less overwhelming. It becomes something you can hold, instead of something that holds you.

4. Words Matter, Especially the Ones You Didn’t Know You Were Repeating
One of the most fascinating tools Wolynn offers is the “Core Language Map.” It’s the emotional script that lives under your everyday language—the phrases you say without thinking, like “I feel like I don’t belong,” or “No matter what I do, it’s never enough.” These aren’t random. They’re clues. Echoes. Your core language can lead you directly to the origin of your pain. And once you hear it clearly, you can begin to rewrite the story.

5. You Are Not Doomed by Your Inheritance, You Are the Turning Point
This was the most hopeful part. Yes, trauma travels. But so does healing. Wolynn reminds us that awareness is power. That by facing what we’ve inherited, by grieving what wasn’t ours to carry, we begin to change the legacy. We become the ones who say, this pain stops with me. And maybe that’s the most sacred work any of us can do.

Reading It Didn’t Start With You was like being handed a map of a land I’ve been walking blindly my whole life. It didn’t fix everything. But it helped me understand where I’ve been, and where I can choose to go next. The book is uncomfortable and raw. But with every revelation, there was something else, hope. The kind that whispers: this ends with me.

BOOK: https://amzn.to/47eT0Z0

10/31/2025

Some of the pain we carry isn’t ours. It’s older than us, born in someone else’s silence, someone else’s heartbreak, someone else’s war with the world. Yet we feel it as if it began in our own bones.

Galit Atlas’s Emotional Inheritance is a stunning, intimate exploration of how trauma travels across generations, not through DNA alone, but through stories that were never told, feelings that were never processed, and memories that were too heavy to carry openly.

With the steady compassion of a therapist and the courage of someone who has looked grief in the eye, Atlas lifts the veil on the hidden emotional legacies that shape our fears, relationships, and identities. She does not sensationalize trauma, she humanizes it. She makes you pause, reread, and wonder: What am I feeling that doesn’t belong solely to me?

This book doesn’t just inform, it invites you. To look backward with tenderness. To look inward with curiosity. To look forward with a new kind of freedom.

6 Transformative Lessons:

1. Unspoken Trauma Still Speaks
Atlas shows that silence is never empty. When painful stories are buried, children absorb the emotions behind them, the anxiety, shame, or hypervigilance passed down like an invisible heirloom. Understanding this doesn’t assign blame; it reveals context. It allows us to separate our wounds from our ancestors’ wounds, so healing can finally begin.

2. We Repeat What We Don’t Understand
Patterns in families, abandoning, clinging, mistrusting, self-sabotaging, rarely start with us. Atlas gently exposes how the human psyche tries to resolve inherited trauma by reenacting it. But once we become aware of these patterns, we no longer need to live them. Awareness is the first act of liberation.

3. Trauma Lives in the Body
Even when we forget the story, the body remembers: the panic attacks without reason, the fear of intimacy, the unexplained sadness. Atlas highlights the importance of connecting mind and body, listening to the places where history hides, muscles, breath, instincts. Healing isn’t just mental work; it’s embodied release.

4. Telling the Story is Transformational
Secrets isolate. Trauma multiplies in silence. Atlas shows how naming what happened, even when details are incomplete becomes the turning point. Speaking the truth breaks the generational contract of suffering. It turns inherited pain into shared understanding rather than private torment.

5. Compassion Expands the Narrative
Instead of villainizing parents or grandparents, Atlas encourages compassion: they adapted to survive. When we stop viewing their coping mechanisms as failures, we reclaim the ability to see ourselves and them, with softness. Compassion is not excuse-making; it’s context-making.

6. You Can End the Cycle
Atlas offers a hopeful truth: just because trauma is inherited doesn’t mean it’s permanent. Healing in one generation ripples into the next. Boundaries break patterns. Therapy rewrites history. Courage repairs what fear damaged. We become, in her words, “the generation that chooses awareness over silence.”

Emotional Inheritance is a mirror, one that reflects not just who we are, but who we came from, and who we still have the power to become.

It will make you wonder about the tears your mother never cried, the dreams your father buried, the truths your grandparents carried quietly to their graves, and how those stories shaped the way you love, fear, hope, and heal. This book is not about dwelling on the past. It’s about finally understanding it, so the future can be different.

BOOK: https://amzn.to/3J7Nf6j

Enjoy the audio book with FREE trial using the link above. Use the link to register on audible and start enjoying!

10/23/2025

All these years, when I lost my loved ones, friends, family, pieces of myself I never got back, I wished this book had found me. Conscious Grieving by Claire Bidwell Smith isn’t just a guide to loss; it’s a tender companion for the long nights when grief feels like a second skin. It doesn’t rush you toward “moving on.” It simply takes your hand and says, “Let’s walk through this together.”

Bidwell Smith, a grief therapist who has lived her own losses, writes with the kind of wisdom that can only come from pain transformed into purpose. She understands what so many of us fear to say out loud, that grief doesn’t end when the casseroles stop coming, or when the first anniversary passes. It shifts. It hides. It changes shape. And the only way to truly heal is to meet it consciously, not by pushing it away, but by learning from it.

Lessons from Conscious Grieving:

1. Grief is not a problem to fix, it’s a process to honor.
Healing begins when we stop trying to “get over it” and start allowing grief to teach us what it came to show us.

2. Presence is the most powerful medicine.
Instead of running from pain, conscious grieving invites us to stay, fully aware, fully feeling, fully human.

3. Every loss carries a lesson about love.
The pain you feel is the proof of love’s depth. Through grief, we come to understand what truly matters.

4. Grief changes form, not meaning.
It may soften with time, but it doesn’t disappear. Conscious healing means learning to coexist with your loss, not erase it.

5. Spiritual connection brings peace, not closure.
Whether you believe in signs, energy, or memory, Bidwell Smith reminds us that the ones we love never fully leave us.

6. You can grow through grief.
Loss can become a doorway to compassion, to gratitude, to a gentler way of being in the world.

If you’ve ever felt like grief made you unrecognizable, Conscious Grieving will remind you that the person emerging on the other side is not weaker, but wiser.

It’s not a book that tells you how to stop missing someone.

It’s a book that teaches you how to keep loving them, consciously, courageously, forever.

BOOK: https://amzn.to/3WjMSsb

Enjoy the audio book with FREE trial using the link above. Use the link to register on audible and start enjoying!

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