The Regulation Revolution
I put out a post on Threads asking what people actually want when it comes to nervous system regulation. Because I could talk shit all day long here, but if it doesn’t HELP you, it doesn’t matter. One woman wrote back: “Understanding emotions as a language. What they’re trying to communicate, how to respond in a way that promotes regulation rather than fueling the spiral.” I love this because who here has been in an argument and had zero idea what the person in front of you was trying to say? Then they get frustrated. You get frustrated that they’re frustrated. Now you’re both pissed off because no one’s speaking the same language anymore and the day ends in an argument no one signed up for. This isn’t uncommon but it is one of the most important practices we can master, as long as we give ourselves patience and practice it with others. What happens here is someone gets emotionally flooded mid-conversation, their nervous system has essentially “hijacked” their rational brain. Recognizing this, and staying regulated yourself, is the difference between a fight and a resolution - but how do we understand what is happening to the person in front of us in real time? What Is Neurological Hijacking? When the person in front of you is heated, two things help: * You understand what’s happening in their nervous system. * You don’t match their escalation. Here’s what’s happening in their brain. When emotions take the wheel instead of logic, that’s neurological hijacking. Very scientific here. I love a good action movie, so entertain me with this analogy. Picture your brain as the opening scene. The prefrontal cortex is the skilled driver of an submarine. Inside the submarine is your judgment, your logic, and your ability to think clearly under pressure. Then, out of nowhere, hijackers ambush the submarine. The leader is the amygdala. The leader (amygdala) doesn’t ask, “Is this actually dangerous?” It sees a threat and takes the wheel, shoving the driver aside. The mission has changed. The sonar which holds your long-term goals, environmental understanding, gets completely ignored and your rational thinking is abandoned. The only objective now is survival with no experience behind the wheel. We are grasping. The amygdala puts everything into emergency mode: * Engine revs higher (heart rate spikes) * Fuel diverts to the engine (blood rushes to your muscles) * Comms shut down (digestion, creativity, complex thought go offline) * Every alarm starts blaring Meanwhile, the prefrontal cortex, your trained strategist, hasn’t disappeared. It’s just zip-tied in the back seat. That’s neurological hijacking. Here’s the thing: the hijackers aren’t evil. In the movie, they think what they are doing is for the GREATER GOOD. They’re trying to keep you alive with the information they have. The problem is they’re running an outdated playbook. To the amygdala, a tense conversation can look a lot like life-threatening danger. Now how do we essentially armor our submarine with better support? Why This Matters Nervous system regulation. Every slow breath, every grounding exercise, every reminder that you’re safe loosens the restraints on the prefrontal cortex. The alarms quiet. The strategist climbs back into the driver’s seat. The mission gets back on course. The goal isn’t to eliminate the work of the amygdala. We need it to keep us alive. It’s our alert system. The goal is making sure it doesn’t hijack our processing center every time someone or something upsets us. This isn’t just relationship advice, it’s biology that affects us in every aspect of our lives. Research [https://psychcentral.com/health/amygdala-hijack]has found an inverse relationship between amygdala and prefrontal cortex activity: the more activated your amygdala gets, the less activated your prefrontal cortex becomes. When emotions run high, blood and oxygen shift away from the part of your brain responsible for clear thinking. You’re not imagining it when a conversation suddenly feels impossible. Your partner’s brain, or yours, is running on fumes simply grasping for whatever will keep you afloat, rather than what is the best way to move forward. How to Talk to Someone Who’s Dysregulated Best advice I’ve ever gotten: treat these interactions like you’re talking to a two-year-old. Or maybe you are??? Assume the person in front of you doesn’t know what they’re saying, and neither do you. This happened to me last night with my husband. We went for a couples massage 🤤 and right after, he started telling about something that came up for him while he was on the table. He specifically used the word “entangled” in regards to larger concepts and I was NOT following. He was getting pretty frustrated with my response and I genuinely had to check myself so… I went back to the toddler concept. When a toddler doesn’t have the words for what they’re feeling and get frustrated, the shutdown on their end may look like: * A temper tantrum * Isolation * Anger * Defeated tears Adults do this too. We just forgot that we are working with the same system as a toddler, and although we would hope a little more knowledge, that’s not always the case. So how do you talk to someone who’s dysregulated? First: sometimes you have to be the regulated one. Full stop. We live in a selfish culture and if someone doesn’t naturally slot into our lives, we cancel them. But sometimes people just need guidance and a little love. So even when you want to be the toddler who shuts down, you have to be the one who guides the conversation toward regulating BOTH of you. All of these will take deep levels of self-awareness, which if you stick around here - you’ll be a pro. Steps to Listen to Emotions as a Language * Listen without judgment. When my husband first told me what he was experiencing, I was tired and thought “what the hell is he talking about?” Then I caught myself judging him through my own somatic lens, which is nothing like his and took a step back. * Notice your physical reaction. If you flinch or tense up or pull a face, remind yourself: they’re allowed to feel things too. Even if we don’t like it. If understanding how you physically manifest dissatisfaction is new to you: * Say you’re processing. You don’t owe an instant response, but you do owe them a form of communication. I get SO aggravated when my husband goes quiet, which used to send us down a dark path because I’d assume he was ignoring me. Now we use a filler phrase: “I don’t have an answer to that right now.” That’s it. It helps me understand he is listening, and it helps him process. Not everything has to be immediate, it’s okay to take time. * Ask clarifying questions the second things start sounding foreign. It helps you understand what they are trying to get at and it helps them sharpen what they’re actually trying to say. Open ended clarifying questions (why, how, where, when) invite more opportunity for explanation. Closed questions get a yes or no to solidify. * Detach from the outcome. You can’t predict anyone’s emotions, no matter how well you know them. Stay present and care enough to reach a resolution, but stop trying to steer toward the outcome you want. When someone’s deeply dysregulated, they might get annoyed by all the over-communicating. Stay gentle. Stay open. They’ll come around. The goal: help them find the root, then work on choosing a path forward. If this pattern shows up in your relationships, or you want to go deeper on nervous system regulation, that’s the work I do 1:1. [Book a coaching session [https://tiadevincenzowellness.checkout.kiwilaunch.com/date-and-time?serviceId=8abe4ba5-8c9a-4331-a8d6-9a1b26632173]], or reach out about having me speak on this at your next event. Lots of love, Tia Email me at: wellness@tiadevincenzo.com FAQ What is neurological hijacking? It’s when the amygdala, your brain’s threat detector, overrides the prefrontal cortex, your logic and judgment center, causing emotional reactions instead of rational ones. How do I stay regulated when someone else is dysregulated? Listen without judgment, notice your own physical reactions, ask clarifying questions, and detach from controlling the outcome. Your regulation helps co-regulate them. Why do I shut down or get angry during arguments? Your nervous system perceives a threat, even an emotional one, and triggers fight, flight, freeze, or fawn. It’s not a character flaw. It’s biology, and it’s workable. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit tiadevincenzo.substack.com [https://tiadevincenzo.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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