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Why Your Teen Is Not Overreacting: Their Nervous System Is Protecting Them

20 min · 25. juni 2026
episode Why Your Teen Is Not Overreacting: Their Nervous System Is Protecting Them cover

Beskrivelse

The moment your child says something cruel about your body can hit like a shock, even when you thought you’d built a kind, shame-free home. We start there: a real family story, a clear boundary, and the baffling aftermath where the child storms off, sulks, and seems to make it all about them. If you’ve ever thought, “Why is this so dramatic?” or “Am I getting it wrong?”, you’re not alone. We unpack that reaction through nervous system regulation, not blame. A firm correction can land as a threat to belonging, approval, and identity, especially for pre-teens and teenagers who are wired for pack safety. We talk fight flight freeze in everyday language, why shutdown and “I don’t know” are protective responses, and how overwhelm from life factors like poor sleep, end-of-term pressure, and constant stimulation can make small feedback feel huge. From there we zoom out into teenage brain development: the adolescent brain is literally being remodelled, with emotional intensity often arriving before planning, impulse control, and long-term decision making are fully online. We explore dopamine, novelty, and why modern life and screens can hook the reward system so easily, then bring it back to what actually helps at home: more movement, better sleep, real-world connection, and a compassionate, curious approach that supports safety and repair. If you want a calmer way to understand teen behaviour and support wellbeing without quick fixes, press play, subscribe, and share this with a parent or caregiver who needs it. If it resonates, leave a review so more people can find their way back to trusting their body.

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33 episoder

episode Why Your Teen Is Not Overreacting: Their Nervous System Is Protecting Them cover

Why Your Teen Is Not Overreacting: Their Nervous System Is Protecting Them

The moment your child says something cruel about your body can hit like a shock, even when you thought you’d built a kind, shame-free home. We start there: a real family story, a clear boundary, and the baffling aftermath where the child storms off, sulks, and seems to make it all about them. If you’ve ever thought, “Why is this so dramatic?” or “Am I getting it wrong?”, you’re not alone. We unpack that reaction through nervous system regulation, not blame. A firm correction can land as a threat to belonging, approval, and identity, especially for pre-teens and teenagers who are wired for pack safety. We talk fight flight freeze in everyday language, why shutdown and “I don’t know” are protective responses, and how overwhelm from life factors like poor sleep, end-of-term pressure, and constant stimulation can make small feedback feel huge. From there we zoom out into teenage brain development: the adolescent brain is literally being remodelled, with emotional intensity often arriving before planning, impulse control, and long-term decision making are fully online. We explore dopamine, novelty, and why modern life and screens can hook the reward system so easily, then bring it back to what actually helps at home: more movement, better sleep, real-world connection, and a compassionate, curious approach that supports safety and repair. If you want a calmer way to understand teen behaviour and support wellbeing without quick fixes, press play, subscribe, and share this with a parent or caregiver who needs it. If it resonates, leave a review so more people can find their way back to trusting their body.

25. juni 202620 min
episode Teen Overwhelm And The Nervous System cover

Teen Overwhelm And The Nervous System

Everybody feels it right now: kids are more emotional, adults are exhausted, and nobody seems able to properly switch off. We look at that collective pressure through a nervous system lens, because once you understand what your body is responding to, the shame drops away and practical change becomes possible. I share why I am focusing the next run of shows on tweens and teens, and why these years can feel like a booby trapped landscape when you are trying to parent inside an always on world. We unpack what constant input does to the body, from notifications and group chats to streaming and 24 hour news. Humans are not built for endless stimulation, and even “relaxing” can keep the system on low level alert. That matters for sleep, digestion, hormones, mood, and behaviour. I also explain why we still crave the scroll when we know it drains us, using a simple view of dopamine, novelty, and the tired but wired loop that shows up in so many homes. Then we zoom out to what the research is really pointing towards: it is not only screen time, but the quality of the online experience, how it affects sleep, and the culture of comparison. We end with small, realistic ways to create tiny gaps that help your nervous system remember safety again, like a phone free morning, screen free dinners, conversation cards, walks without headphones, and more real presence. If you want more calm, connection, and resilience for your family, press play, share this with someone raising a tween or teen, and subscribe so you do not miss the rest of the arc. If it helps, leave a review and tell me which micro change you are trying first.

18. juni 202620 min
episode What I Realised In This Mindset Series cover

What I Realised In This Mindset Series

Welcome to the final episode in our "mindset arc"! Here I put together everything we covered over the last 10 episodes, including the realisations I've had along the way. So, if your phone is always within reach, your diary is full, your mind won’t switch off and somehow that’s considered normal. We’re closing the mindset arc by naming what sits underneath so much “failed mindset work”: a nervous system that’s exhausted, overstimulated and chasing relief. When you understand that pattern, you stop blaming yourself for needing comfort, certainty and distraction, and you can finally choose change that your body can actually sustain. We talk about why consistency creates transformation, even when the steps feel tiny, and why “common” habits like overthinking, scrolling and running on autopilot can still be deeply unhealthy. I share one of the most empowering reframes I’ve learned: you are not your thoughts. Your brain is built to predict danger and keep you safe, which means it can sound convincing even when it’s wrong. Learning to witness thoughts rather than obey them changes everything from boundaries to burnout. To ground it, I tell the story of a skydive that was meant to be meaningful and became truly terrifying, and what it taught me about feeling fear and still being safe. We also get honest about the wellness world: healing, mindset and nervous system regulation are nuanced, and quick fixes often collapse under real life. Hope isn’t pretending things are fine; it’s the spark that makes new behaviour possible. If you want practical tools, we explore gentle ways to reset your system, build self-trust and create a positive snowball effect, plus why community matters when you’re trying to normalise calm. If it resonates, subscribe, share with someone who needs it, and leave a review so more people can find their way back to their body.

11. juni 202619 min
episode How To Adult Better Through Curiosity And Play cover

How To Adult Better Through Curiosity And Play

Your nervous system is not only reacting to life, it is reacting to what you expect life to be. Naomi Mills closes out the mindset series by getting practical about how belief, curiosity and playfulness change what your body does under pressure, and why the placebo and nocebo effect is not a niche science fact but a daily reality for your health and wellbeing. We talk about what happens as adults when we become allergic to looking silly, failing publicly, or being new at something. Naomi shares a playful tool from improv, the “Yes And” game, and why practising agreement and creativity can open the system out of threat mode and into connection. We also bring back a simple perspective check many of us use with children, then forget for ourselves: will this matter tomorrow, next week, or next month? From there we go deeper into mantras as belief filters, not pretty quotes. You’ll hear an example that lands for a lot of high-achieving people: “I am deeply loved even at rest”, and how shifting that kind of story can change your physiology, your boundaries and your capacity to recover. We finish with a grounded take on manifestation: get clear on how you want to feel, take action, and let your subconscious start highlighting the opportunities you used to walk past. If you want a calmer, braver nervous system and a mindset that supports real change, follow the podcast, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find their way back to their body.

4. juni 202618 min
episode Placebo And Nocebo: How Belief Changes Biology cover

Placebo And Nocebo: How Belief Changes Biology

If a sham knee operation once outperformed the real surgery for pain and mobility, it forces a bigger question: what if expectation is not a side note, but a biological input your nervous system is using all the time? I’m Naomi Mills, and I’m digging into the placebo effect and the nocebo effect as proof of how tightly linked the body, brain, and healing really are. This is not about pretending you are fine or “thinking yourself well”. It is about understanding how meaning, belief, and repeated inner stories can shift physiology in measurable ways. We look at how nocebo can creep in through side effect lists, scary predictions, and the familiar line of “nothing can be done”, then how those messages can organise the nervous system around threat, fear, and increased pain. I share examples from my work and from firewalking, where attention and expectation can amplify sensation long after an event, and we connect it all back to survival wiring: your brain keeps asking “Am I safe?” and “What should I prepare for?” From there we move into what helps: genuine hope, clearer language, and practical nervous system support like sleep, hydration, food, daily regulation practices, and connection. I also share how learning about epigenetics changed my relationship with a personal fear after losing my mum to cancer, and why your “future self” is shaped by the filters you live through today. If you have ever felt betrayed by your body, this is a reminder to make it a friendlier place to be.  Subscribe, share this with someone you care about, and leave a review so more people can find their way back to their body. Do you have a mind/body or nervous system topic you want to hear more about? Visit www.youaretheanswer.co.uk or email hello@youaretheanswer.co.uk and let us know!

28. maj 202616 min