Unravel with Elaine Clark

32- How Somatic Work Helps Rewire Emotional Responses

11 min · I går
episode 32- How Somatic Work Helps Rewire Emotional Responses cover

Description

Sometimes you can understand something intellectually, but your body still reacts as if nothing has changed. Your chest tightens, your breath gets shallow, your stomach drops, or you shut down before your mind has had a chance to catch up. In this episode of Unravel, I explore Neuro-Associative Conditioning (NAC) from a somatic perspective — how the brain and body begin to link certain experiences with safety, danger, rejection, belonging, grief, intimacy, rest, and protection. I also share reflections from returning home from Greece after leading a somatic retreat and training, where I was reminded that so much of healing happens in the small moments.  We explore: • Why insight alone isn’t always enough to change a pattern • How the body learns emotional associations through lived experience • Why rest, visibility, boundaries, intimacy, or calm can feel unsafe • How reproductive loss can create layered associations in the body • The role of memory reconsolidation and how old emotional patterns can be updated • Why your body is not trying to sabotage you — it may be trying to protect you • A simple somatic tool: Pause, Place, Prove This episode is for anyone who has ever wondered, “Why am I reacting this way when I know I’m safe?” or “Why does my body shut down when I want to stay present?” Stay Connected: 🌿 Follow the show: @elaineclark_ 📩 Email: info@elaineclark.ca 🎧 Listen + Subscribe to Unravel with Elaine Clark on Apple Podcasts & Spotify 💫 Visit www.elaineclark.ca for more resources and offerings

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32 episodes

episode 32- How Somatic Work Helps Rewire Emotional Responses artwork

32- How Somatic Work Helps Rewire Emotional Responses

Sometimes you can understand something intellectually, but your body still reacts as if nothing has changed. Your chest tightens, your breath gets shallow, your stomach drops, or you shut down before your mind has had a chance to catch up. In this episode of Unravel, I explore Neuro-Associative Conditioning (NAC) from a somatic perspective — how the brain and body begin to link certain experiences with safety, danger, rejection, belonging, grief, intimacy, rest, and protection. I also share reflections from returning home from Greece after leading a somatic retreat and training, where I was reminded that so much of healing happens in the small moments.  We explore: • Why insight alone isn’t always enough to change a pattern • How the body learns emotional associations through lived experience • Why rest, visibility, boundaries, intimacy, or calm can feel unsafe • How reproductive loss can create layered associations in the body • The role of memory reconsolidation and how old emotional patterns can be updated • Why your body is not trying to sabotage you — it may be trying to protect you • A simple somatic tool: Pause, Place, Prove This episode is for anyone who has ever wondered, “Why am I reacting this way when I know I’m safe?” or “Why does my body shut down when I want to stay present?” Stay Connected: 🌿 Follow the show: @elaineclark_ 📩 Email: info@elaineclark.ca 🎧 Listen + Subscribe to Unravel with Elaine Clark on Apple Podcasts & Spotify 💫 Visit www.elaineclark.ca for more resources and offerings

Yesterday11 min
episode 31- The Wound of Abandonment: Adoption, Attachment & Healing the Nervous System with Catherine Moore artwork

31- The Wound of Abandonment: Adoption, Attachment & Healing the Nervous System with Catherine Moore

In this episode, I’m joined by registered clinical counsellor, author, and adoption advocate Catherine Moore for a tender and deeply insightful conversation about adoption, abandonment, belonging, and healing the nervous system. Catherine brings a unique perspective as an adoptee, adoptive mother, counsellor, and co-director of We Are Adopted. Together, we explore the emotional complexity of adoption, including the impact of early separation, the longing to know where we come from, and the hidden grief, shame, and anxiety that can live beneath the surface. Catherine shares her own story of reunion, the silence and secrecy that often surround closed adoption, and how these early experiences can shape attachment, identity, relationships, and the felt sense of safety in the body. We also talk about how somatic therapy, mindfulness, movement, breath, and compassionate presence can help soften old imprints and support healing. In this episode, we unravel: 🧬 The emotional complexity of adoption and reunion 💔 How early separation can shape attachment and belonging 🧠 Why abandonment wounds often live in the nervous system 🌿 How shame, anxiety, and hypervigilance can show up in adoptees 🌀 The difference between who we are and the adaptations we developed to survive 🤍 How somatic therapy can help heal preverbal trauma 👂 How to support someone you love who is adopted ✨ Why being seen, heard, and understood can be profoundly healing Stay Connected 🌿 Follow the show: @elaineclark_ 📩 Email: info@elaineclark.ca [info@elaineclark.ca] 🎧 Subscribe on Apple, Spotify & iHeartRadio 🌐 Explore more at www.elaineclark.ca [http://www.elaineclark.ca]

24. juni 202639 min
episode 30- Early Signs of Burnout: Recovery Before Collapse artwork

30- Early Signs of Burnout: Recovery Before Collapse

Burnout does not always begin with collapse. It often begins quietly, while we are still functioning, still showing up, still getting things done, and still being praised for the very behaviours that are disconnecting us from ourselves. In this episode, I explore the early signs of burnout. I discuss how burnout can hide inside over-functioning, responsibility, productivity, and being the person everyone relies on. In this episode, you’ll learn: 🕯️ How burnout can begin long before collapse 🌀 Why burnout is different from ordinary tiredness ⚡ How over-functioning, productivity, and responsibility can mask depletion 🌙 Why rest does not always feel restorative when the body is deeply depleted 🫁 How nutritional nourishment may support capacity and recovery 🧭 Why burnout recovery may require both physiological support and deeper honesty Referenced Research & Resources World Health Organization. (2019, May 28). Burn-out an “occupational phenomenon”: International Classification of Diseases. https://www.who.int/news/item/28-05-2019-burn-out-an-occupational-phenomenon-international-classification-of-diseases Freudenberger, H. J., & North, G. (1985). Women’s burnout: How to spot it, how to reverse it, and how to prevent it. Doubleday. National Institutes of Health, Office of Dietary Supplements. (2025, June 27). Vitamin D: Fact sheet for health professionals. https://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/VitaminD-HealthProfessional/ National Institutes of Health, Office of Dietary Supplements. (2025, July 2). Vitamin B12: Fact sheet for health professionals. https://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/VitaminB12-HealthProfessional/ Whyte, D. (2001). Crossing the unknown sea: Work as a pilgrimage of identity. Riverhead Books. Stay Connected 🌿 Follow the show: @elaineclark_ 📩 Email: ⁠info@elaineclark.ca⁠ 🎧 Subscribe on Apple, Spotify & iHeartRadio 🌐 Explore more: ⁠www.elaineclark.ca

9. juni 202612 min
episode 29- How Creativity Shapes Us with Menaka Raman-Wilms artwork

29- How Creativity Shapes Us with Menaka Raman-Wilms

In this episode, I’m joined by author and podcast host Menaka Raman-Wilms for a thoughtful conversation about creativity, writing, loneliness, and the long process of bringing a story to life. Together, we explore the inspiration behind her novel The Rooftop Garden, how her time in Berlin shaped the book, and what it takes to stay connected to a creative project over many years. Menaka also shares how writing fiction can help us make sense of the world, process complex emotions, and look beneath the headlines to the human stories underneath. In this episode, we unravel:  ✍️ The creative journey behind The Rooftop Garden 🌿 How nature, cities, and Berlin inspired the novel 🧠 Why writing can help us process complex emotions 📖 What it takes to keep going with a long creative project 💭 How loneliness shows up in the book and in modern life 🌎 The human stories behind climate anxiety and extremism ✨ Why creativity can shape us as much as we shape it Stay Connected  🌿 Follow the show: @elaineclark_  📩 Email: info@elaineclark.ca 🎧 Subscribe on Apple, Spotify & iHeartRadio  🌐 Explore more at www.elaineclark.ca [http://www.elaineclark.ca]

20. maj 202629 min
episode 28- Why We Feel So Empty in the Age of Connection with John Vervaeke artwork

28- Why We Feel So Empty in the Age of Connection with John Vervaeke

In this episode, I’m joined by cognitive scientist, author, and professor John Vervaeke for a profound conversation about the modern meaning crisis, mindfulness, flow states, loneliness, and the deep human longing for connection. Together, we explore why so many people feel empty in the age of constant stimulation and digital connection, and how practices like mindfulness, contemplation, and self-awareness can help us reconnect to what is truly meaningful. John also shares insights from cognitive science, philosophy, and psychology to help us better understand consciousness, self-deception, intuition, wisdom, and the patterns shaping modern life. In this episode, we unravel: 🧠 What the “meaning crisis” really is 📱 Why social media can leave us feeling more disconnected 🌱 The difference between pleasure, happiness, and meaning 🫁 How mindfulness helps us become aware of unconscious patterns ⚡ What flow states are and why they feel so meaningful 🔄 Why insight and transformation require cognitive flexibility 💭 The relationship between self-awareness and human connection ✨ How wisdom is cultivated through relationship, presence, and practice Stay Connected 🌿 Follow the show: @elaineclark_ 📩 Email: info@elaineclark.ca 🎧 Subscribe on Apple, Spotify & iHeartRadio 🌐 Explore more at www.elaineclark.ca

6. maj 202655 min