The Quiet Hours

depression the nervous system's response

1 min · 30 de ene de 2026
portada del episodio depression the nervous system's response

Descripción

There’s a kind of tired that sleep doesn’t fix. A kind of sadness that doesn’t have a clear reason. A weight that sits on your chest even on days when nothing “bad” is happening. That’s what depression often feels like. And if you’re listening to this late at night… If your body is exhausted but your mind won’t stop… If you’ve ever thought, “I shouldn’t feel this way, but I do” — You’re not broken. You’re not weak. And you’re not alone. Tonight, we’re talking about depression — not the way it’s usually explained, but the way it’s actually lived. How it shows up. Why anxiety is almost always part of it. Why people feel ashamed for something they didn’t choose. And most importantly — how to cope when getting out of bed already feels like too much. No fixing. No toxic positivity. Just truth.

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4 episodios

episode depression the nervous system's response artwork

depression the nervous system's response

There’s a kind of tired that sleep doesn’t fix. A kind of sadness that doesn’t have a clear reason. A weight that sits on your chest even on days when nothing “bad” is happening. That’s what depression often feels like. And if you’re listening to this late at night… If your body is exhausted but your mind won’t stop… If you’ve ever thought, “I shouldn’t feel this way, but I do” — You’re not broken. You’re not weak. And you’re not alone. Tonight, we’re talking about depression — not the way it’s usually explained, but the way it’s actually lived. How it shows up. Why anxiety is almost always part of it. Why people feel ashamed for something they didn’t choose. And most importantly — how to cope when getting out of bed already feels like too much. No fixing. No toxic positivity. Just truth.

30 de ene de 20261 min
episode depression the unseen struggle artwork

depression the unseen struggle

There’s a kind of tired that sleep doesn’t fix. A kind of sadness that doesn’t have a clear reason. A weight that sits on your chest even on days when nothing “bad” is happening. That’s what depression often feels like. And if you’re listening to this late at night… If your body is exhausted but your mind won’t stop… If you’ve ever thought, “I shouldn’t feel this way, but I do” — You’re not broken. You’re not weak. And you’re not alone. Tonight, we’re talking about depression — not the way it’s usually explained, but the way it’s actually lived. How it shows up. Why anxiety is almost always part of it. Why people feel ashamed for something they didn’t choose. And most importantly — how to cope when getting out of bed already feels like too much. No fixing. No toxic positivity. Just truth.

30 de ene de 202647 s
episode Why Trauma Doesn’t End When the Event Does EP #2 artwork

Why Trauma Doesn’t End When the Event Does EP #2

Most people think trauma is the moment. The accident. The abuse. The loss. The betrayal. The explosion. The sentence. The day everything changed. They imagine trauma like a single point in time. Something that happens — and then it’s over. But trauma doesn’t work like that. For a lot of people, the moment itself is only the beginning. The real trauma starts after — when everyone else thinks it’s done. When the danger is technically gone. When the story is over for everyone watching from the outside. But inside your body… inside your mind… nothing feels finished. That’s because trauma doesn’t just live in memory. It lives in the nervous system. In muscle tension. In breathing patterns. In sleep. In how safe or unsafe the world feels — even on a good day.

30 de ene de 20267 min