Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - Become an Active Operator of Your Nervous System | Deb Dana
Episode Date: November 22, 2023Practical tools for regulating your nervous system in stressful times. Deb Dana is a licensed clinical social worker, clinician, and consultant who specializes in working with comp...lex trauma. She is the author of Anchored: How to Befriend Your Nervous System Using Polyvagal Theory.In this episode we talk about:What polyvagal theory isThe case for understanding our nervous systemThe practical tools and exercises for changing our nervous system and learning to become more regulatedThe fact that our nervous systems aren’t simply isolated, self-contained phenomena – they are social structuresOur responsibilities for our own nervous system and the nervous systems of othersFull Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/deb-dana-rerunSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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It's the 10% happier podcast on your host, Dan Harris.
Hello everybody, how we doing?
We don't often think about it this way, but as we move through the day, the various
moods we inhabit, excitement, engagement, aggression, fear, dejection, depression, they are
all dictated by or correlated with our nervous system, or to be more specific, our autonomic
nervous system. And the cool thing is, as you're about to hear, you can become an active operator of your
nervous system.
My guest today is Deb Dana.
She's a clinician and consultant who specializes in working with complex trauma, although to
be clear, the advice you're going to hear her give today is not specific to people dealing
with trauma.
Deb is the author of a book called Anchored, How to Befriend your nervous system using Polyvago theory.
We talk about what Polyvago theory actually is,
practical tools and exercises for changing your nervous system
and learning to become more regulated generally,
and how to take a little bit of responsibility
for the nervous systems of people in your orbit.
This interview is part of our deep cuts series
where we resurface popular episodes
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Deb Dana, welcome to the show. Thank you. It's nice to be here.
It's nice to have you here. I'm going to open with a big question. What is polyvagal theory?
Oh boy, that is the most common opening question. So in the simplest terms, polyvagal theory is a theory that my colleague and dear friend Stephen Porges developed
about how the nervous system works. And in its simplest form, which is the way that I use it,
is it has three organizing principles that govern how we navigate our daily
life, hierarchy, neuroception, and co-regulation.
If we understand those three principles, then we understand what's happening in our biology
that then gets translated into our thoughts, our feelings, our behaviors, the stories that
we enter into as we move through the world. Okay, so we'll go in depth, I hope, into these three layers or levels you described. But
let's just stay on the level of so what? Why should we care about polyvagal theory?
So we should care about polyvagal theory because it helps us understand our biology. And
even though we think our brains are running the show, truly
our brains are getting the communication from our body. And so if we understand this embodied
system, if we understand how the nervous system works, we can begin to shape it differently.
I like to say we can become active operators of our own nervous system. And that gives us a
level of management over our responses
and a way to engage with the world with more awareness
and more intention.
So we think we've got like an inner executive
that we're running the show,
we're controlling it all,
all of our actions with our thoughts.
But actually there's this,
I'm gonna use a metaphor that's often used
in a slightly different context from Jonathan Height.
He often talks about the elephant and the rider that there is a person on top of an elephant,
and the person thinks he's controlling everything, but it's the elephant who's in control.
Often when he uses that analogy, the elephant is our subconscious, but you're referring to
our body, our nervous system that is really running the show most of the time.
Yes.
And through the vagal pathways, and what we know is that 80% of the information is traveling
the pathways from your body to your brain.
80% and 20% is coming back from the brain to the body.
So, you know, in my work with people who have experienced lots of trauma, it became clear that understanding
this body to brain pathway was important.
And then as we began to discover more about the everyday role of the nervous system,
I thought, so everyone needs to understand how this system works.
It's like this is the vehicle we're driving through life and we need to know how it works. So we can, you know, manage it in a new way.
We can regulate so that we can be in connection with others.
We can create healthy relationships.
We can practice self-care, all of the things that depend on a regulated nervous system.
Because if we are dysregulated, if we move into one of the two adaptive survival
responses, it's not that we don't want to be in relationship or practicing self-care
or any of these things.
It's that our biology won't allow it any longer.
We've moved out of a place of being able to into a survival response.
So, it's like polyvagal theory.
It's my words, not yours.
It's kind of like an operator's manual and owner's manual for this mind-body system that
is our life.
Yes, beautiful.
It's a lovely way to put it.
You know, one of the things you wrote about the nervous system that I found so interesting
is that I don't know if this is the exact term you use, but it is a social structure.
It's not self-contained.
Yes, our nervous system, although it's embodied, is always connecting both with our own brains,
our own minds, but it's also connecting with the environment around us with other people's
nervous systems. The nervous system has three parts to it. We are a system that then is in
relationship with other systems, and
you can keep expanding out and out. One of the things I say is that we are inextricably
linked nervous system to nervous system around the globe. Every nervous system is communicating.
Our nervous systems are in communication right now. And so what I like to do is help people
be able to speak that language, understand that language.
How are our nervous systems communicating right now, mine and yours?
So that would take us to neuroception one of those organizing principles and neuroception is the nervous systems way of listening and it's listening
Inside our own bodies. It's listening inside to what's going on in our visceral lungs, our hearts.
It's listening in the environment around us and it's listening in the space between. So my nervous
system is looking for cues of welcome from your nervous system. I mean the words you speak are
lovely as well, but the look on your face, your movements, your eye gaze, the tone of your voice.
These are the below the level of conscious awareness ways the nervous system feels welcomed
or warned.
And that's happening micromania to micromania every time we're around another nervous system.
And so if we can bring that to the level of explicit awareness, we then get much more
information.
We often think, I don't know why, but I just don't like being around that person.
That's your nervous system sending you those cues.
And when we can bring awareness to what we can think, oh, now I know why, because there
is this thing that person does that reminds me of somebody in my life, has nothing to do
with that person.
It's a reminder, a nervous system, autonomic reminder of somebody else.
So it's interesting. We sometimes find that, oh, I really do like that person. It's just when they do that thing that I feel unsafe.
So you said there are three parts of the nervous system. One is neuroception. What are the other two?
Hierarchy. And hierarchy are the three basic states
that the nervous system has access to,
that it takes us through.
There's a state called Ventral,
which is the state of regulation, safety connection,
that you and I are experiencing now, we hope,
so that we can communicate, connect,
our prefrontal cortex, our brain works with us
when we're in this place of regulation.
When the world feels too challenging,
the next place we go is to sympathetic fight and flight. And we probably all know what that feels
like that cortisol adrenaline flooding us. And when we go to that place, our prefrontal cortex no longer
works in the same way. So we lose access to planning and thoughtfulness and awareness, and we move into this survival
response. So the nervous system now says, I don't care about anything else, but survival.
And fighter flight does not resolve the situation. The third place the nervous system can take us
into dorsal shutdown collapse disconnection. And so whereas sympathetic is an overwhelming flood of energy, chaotic, disorganized
energy, purposeless energy, dorsal is a draining of that energy. And you might think of a time
recently when you felt sort of that just going through the motions, but I'll have the energy to
really be here, be present or care. That's a dorsal flavor. In its extreme, it's sort of curled up in a
fetal position unable to move or dissociate it, but his first flavor is just going through
the motion. It's not really here. And we go through these all the time in little ways,
all the time during the course of the day, and then in big ways, when we're challenged
by experiences that are just overwhelming.
Just to clarify some terminology for folks,
people who listen to the show may already know
that sympathetic nervous system,
but it can be confusing because it sounds good.
Sympathetic, this is awesome,
but actually the sympathetic nervous system,
that's fight or flight or fleet.
That is fight or flight, yeah.
Or fight, flight or freeze, rather, yes.
I guess Dorsal is freeze. Well, it's interesting because they're actually two kinds of freeze. There is a freeze where
everything is flooding through your body, but you can't move. That's that deer in the
headlight sort of experience. And that is a combination of the sympathetic fight flight
and the Dorsal immobile. So it's an interesting thing. So yes, sympathetic fight flight and
Dorsal is collapse shut down. And the ventral is engaged. Be organized, move through the world in that way.
So we go through this in micro ways throughout the day, assuming that we're not in an emergency where we're going through it in a macro way.
Just trying to think like back on my own life, examples of dorsal just because that's somehow the most intriguing to me. There are times when I'll be in a difficult conversation, I remember when my wife and I
did couples counseling, I would just get so tired and dissociative with no reason really.
I wonder if that is just a version of what you're describing.
Yeah, see, there's no brain reason, no logical reason, but the nervous system, neurocepting, if we want to use that, neurocepting, cues of danger.
And the nervous system, I think, always works in service of our safety and
survival. And so in that moment, the nervous system felt you were in danger,
and it enacted a survivor response. It took you into that tired, certain
not here, can't respond place.
And if you know that, and if your partner knows that,
the story becomes a very different one, right?
The story doesn't become, oh, Dan just doesn't want
to do this.
Here we go again, he's just not paying attention.
The story becomes, oh, Dan's nervous system
is dysregulated in a way that he can't be present.
And that's a very different story.
Right, so if you're fluent in polyvagal theory and your partner is too, you could just call out
dorsal right now. There's not that I don't care, but something that maybe below the level of conscious
awareness is going on here. Right. Yeah. And my goal in life is to help people become fluent in
this because it changes the way we look at others.
It changes the way we can have curiosity and self-compassion.
And I can be curious about what's happening to somebody else rather than going immediately into the story,
the story of shame, blame, judgment, criticism.
I'm so good at that.
Yeah, most of us are.
You're taking that away from me.
Well, I'm offering you a different pathway.
I don't know.
What do you think it might be like to not immediately go
to the judging story about self another, you know?
I think it would be a much more supple and smooth life
than the one I'm leading now.
Yeah.
And the thing I would like to say is that as you enter into that place and
have a more flexible nervous system, that then gets transmitted to the people around you.
And so the way we move through the world impacts the world, which I find fascinating.
I find it's a huge responsibility, but I also find it's a great opportunity.
So is that the third level, which is co-regulation? Yeah, co-regulation. And co-regulation is, we call it a biological imperative. It's something
we need in order to survive. We come into the world, we need another human to be there with us.
And for many of us, the biological expectation is, you come into the world and you get met
by a regulated nervous system.
Someone who cares and is ready to welcome you.
And for so many of us that didn't happen.
And so that co-regulation didn't emerge
the way it needed to in the beginning.
It is a lifelong need.
And when I say that to some people, it sounds terrifying.
You mean, I need to be safely connected to others forever
to live a life of well-being, yes sounds terrifying. I need to be safely connected to others forever to live a life of
well-being, yes. And then, however, we all have our own sort of needs for how much. And so, in my
experience, I don't need as much connection to others as some other people in my life. And yet,
I know how much I do need. And so so as you think about your life, you think,
oh, you know, I'm pretty good on my own for a long time. But then I need, right? And what we need
is to feel safe with another person. So we need to be met by a regulated nervous system.
And that's a lifelong need. Do a cats count? Yes, mammals, cats, dogs, yes.
Yeah, I mean, we do also need a human, but for many of my clients in the beginning, it
was their pet that was their co-regulating safe mammal.
And then it was me because I could predictably show up.
And then we'd be in to feel safe that, oh, maybe there's another person in the world who's
safe enough, regulated enough, predictable enough. And those people are not always there
to co-regulate with us because they have their own nervous systems that have their own
moments of dysregulation, which is to talk about couples. We depend on our partner for
co-regulation and that's not always present and available. And so we have these ruptures and we make
repairs. That strengthens the relationship. We have a rupture where you move into a disregulated
state and I'm thinking where did he just go? And then you come back to regulation and we make
the repair, we come back into connection, nervous system to nervous system and brain to brain.
That strengthens our relationship.
You talked earlier about co-regulation, giving you a sense of responsibility, because how you are matters. Is it possible that it's also an opportunity in that you can kind of
create the world you want by being a vector of, I don't love this term, but safety.
Yeah, to say you don't love that term safety.
Well, I don't love the term because it's kind of
to regir right now the type of thing that people are saying on college campuses and it can come off as a
jargonny. So that's why I don't love it. Yeah, and I love that you brought that up because I use
safety danger because it's the easiest way to teach people that kind of understand safer, unsafe,
safety danger. But for many people, safety is not the word they want to use. And so when I'm working with people, I
always invite them, what word would you use to describe this place? It could be
connected, disconnected, it could be approach-avoid, welcome-worn words can
become sort of jargonny and they also don't always fit for all of us. So yes, as
we go back, however, we can use safety or welcome, whatever we want to use for the word. And yes, it is an opportunity if I am regulated and I am in
connection with other people, their nervous systems feel that regulation and their nervous systems
begin to feel the ability to regulate as well, come into connection.
And I think that's a really beautiful thing.
The other is also true, however,
if I'm dysregulated,
then I'm sending warnings to all of the nervous systems
around me.
The same is true if I'm in a one-to-one relationship
or I'm with my family or my colleagues,
or if I'm simply walking through the world,
or I'm out in the world,
doing the grocery shopping, nervous systems are still communicating.
It feels a big responsibility.
It's also humbling to know that each of us impacts the world in this way.
So as I'm out in the world, if I'm, you know, feeling distressed. I'm noticing, oh, yeah, I was one of those people who added to the level of
distress in the world today.
And so the next time I'm out, feeling regulated, I'm going to really notice,
oh, today, I'm sending regulating energy out.
I always just look at things through the selfish lens because that's my wiring.
And if you're walking through the world as regulated as you can be at that moment, and
your small interactions with somebody who's delivering something to your house or the
barista or whatever, and then your larger interactions with your family members and friends
and coworkers, you can just make your world cozier.
Yes, it's a circular experience, right?
Because as you are sending that out,
you're also receiving back
and then it can build micro moments
add up to create bigger moments.
I love that thinking about this.
It's micro moments.
We're looking at micro moments.
And those micro moments have meaning.
Coming up, Deb Dana explains how even if we've spent our whole lives building up patterns of self-protection,
calcified layers of armor, we could still change our nervous systems using some very simple exercises that she will lay out for us.
Simple exercises that she will lay out for us.
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I'm sure you're familiar with the work of Barbara Friedrichson who's been on the show.
She wrote a book called Love 2.0.
I'm stealing a lot of her activities and a lot of my work, which is to create a sort of
a broader more often used a fancy word, capacious understanding of what love is. And she sort of defines it
down, usefully, from Tom Cruise declaring, you complete me to just how are you with the
professional shows up at your house to fix something. Right. And Barb Fredrickson, the work is
beautiful. And she talked about an upward spiral, which is what we're talking about here, the micro moments build and we have more access to this regulating ventral energy and her research
actually has showed that our baseline of ventral energy can increase. We can change our nervous
system. I think that's the hope that Polyvago theory brings brings, that we can reshape, even if we have had a lifetime
of patterns of protection that are embedded in our system and we move into them easily,
and we have not had many experiences of feeling safe in connection, that can change.
That, I think, is so wonderful working with clients.
It's important, but just for curious human beings knowing you can shape
your nervous system in new ways. If anybody's curious to learn more about Barbara Fredericks,
and she was on this show, and we'll put a link to that in the show notes, but to pick up on that
extremely intriguing thing, you just said you can change your nervous system, which sounds like
what we should title this episode. How do we change our nervous system? We change our nervous system, which sounds like what we should title this episode. How do we change our nervous system?
We change our nervous system by doing small things over and over.
And some of the ways we do it are by finding these micro moments of control and noticing
the bringing them into explicit awareness.
You know, one of the things that I talk about all the time, and what I call glimmers, we
have these moments, micro moments,
of regulating energy, a glimmer of that place of okeness.
We just move right by it,
because our built-in negativity bias
doesn't allow us to see it.
So we have to be on the lookout for those glimmers
for those micro moments.
And when we find one, we want to stop,
just for a moment, save it and recognize it.
I like to give people easy practices, right?
Because then they're more willing to try and monetize
and they have a positive response.
So looking for glimmers is one way,
and as you find one, you begin to look for another and another.
So again, it builds on itself.
That's one of the ways that we do it. Their breath practices, their movement practices,
there's so many practices that we can do, that build
ventral capacity that help us come to ventral and stay there longer.
And I do want to put in that the goal is not to always be in ventral.
That's an unachievable goal, nor is it one that
is desirable. The goal is to be regulated when I can and to know when I've moved out of regulation
into a survival response and be able to find my way back to ventral. Ventral is a home. Every human
being has a biological home in this place of regulation. It is built into our biology, right?
Even if you've had a trauma-saturated life, your biology still has that place of
ventral that you can find your way to. We uncover those pathways, which is a lot of the work
that we do. So even when we get taken out and go to, you know, I call it our home away from home,
go to one of the survival responses that's so familiar to us.
My home away from home is in dorsal disconnect collapse.
I'm really good at taking that step back and not really being here.
Yours might be sympathetic, don't know, that place of overwhelming energy.
But when we go to our home away from home, the work is, can I find my way back?
That's when we build flexibility and flexible nervous system is what we're looking for.
So, noticing glimmers, breath practices, stopping for a moment to sigh.
Right? Sying is one of the simplest breath practices. We do it spontaneously many times an hour,
but we can also intentionally sigh. So if you're in a place of dorsal hopelessness
to spare, collapse, you can breathe a sigh of despair and bring awareness to it, and it
begins to just interrupt that just a bit. A sigh of frustration in sympathetic disrupts
it just a bit, and then when we are back and ventral, a sigh of relief that we got there,
or a sigh of contentment that we are there.
So that simple sighing is one thing
that I love to invite people to do.
Let's keep talking about these little practices
that we can do.
Just to go back to your glimmers of OKNIS exercise,
the little example that comes to mind for me
that I think I probably didn't appreciate as much,
as I should have, but just before this podcast I was writing and then
I decided to take a micro break and went in the other room and we have a six-month-old cat,
Aussie Mandeus, and he unfurled and showed me his belly and purred. And so like I got in there
and gave him a kiss. And that all happened somewhat reflexively, but if I had noted, this is a glimmer of
Ocanis, and then I accumulated enough moments from Aussie or my wife for just some view
out the window throughout the day and was conscious about that, that is part of the training
of the nervous system. Exactly, and the glimmer of Ocanis with your cat will happen over and over,
and as you bring sort of that awareness to it, and even as you remembered it and reflected on it, did
you feel it come alive again?
Yeah, you can, that's interesting how you can just kind of bring the taste back.
Yes, and that's your biology bringing the taste back, right?
It's a brain body combination because your brain is remembering the experience and putting
language to it, but your body is bringing it alive again. And that's the beauty of these things,
is understanding that even in a trauma saturated life, the nervous system also has these glimmers,
these moments, micro moments. And so understanding that the nervous system can do both,
moments. And so understanding that the nervous system can do both can be both, you know, deeply dysregulated because of what's going on in the world and have these micro moments
of a glimmer of alkanis. If we can catch those and then reflect on them, we bring it
alive and in the nervous system, it strengthens that pathway, which is really what we're doing.
The pathway is in there. We're uncovering it and we're strengthening it. So now when you next time you go see your cat, you're going to think,
oh, yes, and you'll feel it. And then it becomes a different experience. Right? I call them anchors,
ventral vagal anchors. What are the things? The people places the objects, the times when we
predictably can feel those moments of Okeness.
You talked about maybe looking out the window.
Nature often brings a moment of Okeness.
Looking out the window, I often look out the window just to feel connected to something.
Objects, I live half my time in Maine by the sea. And so I have beach stones all around, and when I just need a moment to remember, oh, yes,
I have this regulated place, I grab a beach stone.
We have things we wrap up in.
You have a favorite thing you wrap up into stay warm.
It brings that experience alive, a biological experience of Okanus alive, and then we give
it meaning with our brain, but
before it hits that brain place, it's an embodied experience. And I think that's really lovely
to remember. The brain's job is to really make sense of what's going on in the body.
So it creates these wonderful stories, right? It creates amazing stories that emerge from
the autonomic state, from either ventral
sympathetic or dorsal.
And one of the practices that I talk about and I love to do is to take a very simple experience
and look at it through each of the states and hear how very different the story is.
And I don't know if you have an experience you want to think about or I can use an example, but it's fascinating
to just see that my state creates my story. Is that not wonderful? I'm just trying to think
about how this would work. You pick an experience and you look at it through
ventral dorsal and what's the third? Sympathetic. Yeah, yeah. So we were flocked on it to really hear how this one experience is interpreted three very
different ways by the brain because of the state we're in.
So I can use an example in getting ready for this podcast, you know, having to arrange
a space.
And the one thing that I needed to do was hang some moving blankets to dead in the sound.
And I tried really hard to do it myself and couldn't do it.
So if I look at that through three states, my sympathetic fight flight, I got really angry
about it in this sort of, I can't believe that I can't figure this out by myself.
What is wrong with me?
I am so stupid.
I might as well just give it up now.
Really angry around that.
In dorsal, it was this despairing hopefulness.
I'm just gonna give it up
and I'm just gonna cancel everything
because I can't do this.
Inventual, it was, you know, my son-in-law came over
and did it with no problem and inventual,
it was this is really cool. I could ask for help. My son-in-law appeared and we actually had some fun
figuring out how to hang these things. The experience is exactly the same. It was hanging a moving blanket.
But the story about it is so different. And all of those stories were available to me.
Right? They all live inside my nervous system.
It's fascinating.
And this is a practice you would recommend we do once and well.
Yes, absolutely.
I invite people to get good at listening.
I call it the story of three states.
Listen to the story of three states.
I usually do it as a reflective practice
because when I'm in the middle of it, it's hard to remember.
There are two other stories.
When I'm in the midst of a survival response,
it's hard to say, wait a minute, there are two other stories.
But as a reflective practice, it really begins to build
that awareness, that, oh, there are three states circulating
inside here all the time.
And if I get better at finding ventral,
that's the story that I'm going to be hearing more often. So let's stay with getting better at finding ventral, that's the story that I'm going to be hearing more often.
So let's stay with getting better at finding ventral. You mentioned other kinds of exercises
earlier, I believe you used the word movement. Yes. So movement is a really wonderful way to move
through the states. And I often do a practice of inviting movement to move ventral,
too sympathetic to dorsal and back up again.
Because again, remember, we go through these states in an order,
in a predictable order.
And so part of our work to build flexibility is to be able to move
down the hierarchy and back up.
And movement can be very activating of a survival response.
So I often start with imagining movement before
you actually enact the movement because even for me often you're really getting to know my nervous
system, aren't you? But even for me enacting a movement when there are other people around
challenged my capacity to stay regulated because your motor cortex when you imagine movement
comes to help. And so you get some of the same bang for the buck to begin with.
Just find a movement. And I usually do hand movements, but you can do a full body movement.
That feels regulating. Find a movement that feels regulating. And just notice,
this is connecting with your ventral regulated nervous system.
And everybody's movement is going to be different. connecting with your ventral regulated nervous system.
And everybody's movement's going to be different.
I do find that ventral movements have a rhythm.
They often have a circular flow to them.
And so once people find that movement,
then they can imagine it when they want to reach for ventral.
They can enact it.
And they can do that over and over. And their body becomes used to, oh, yes, ventral. Oh, yes, ventral, they can enact it, and they can do that over and over. And their body becomes
used to, oh yes, ventral, oh yes, ventral. And then sympathetic, when you're in sympathetic,
when you're in that place of overwhelming flood of energy, chaotic disorganized,
the work is to let that movement come to life, and it's usually jagged and
disjointed movement, and then very slowly see how it might
begin to come into a bit more of a rhythm and regulation. Because as you allow the movement to
change in that way, don't stop the movement. We're not trying to stop what's going on. We're
simply trying to help it organize in a different way so that we then come from sympathetic back
up to ventral.
So that's the sympathetic challenge, which I think is lovely.
And when you're feeling some of that mobilizing energy that feels like it's going to be too
much, take that energy out and do something.
Go for a walk, go for a run, find a way to let the movement move you in a way that doesn't
then turn into this anxiety and anger.
And then endorecel because dorsal is this absence of energy.
So endorecel, it's very hard to bring movement back, right?
We're in this immobilized sort of shutdown place.
And so oftentimes endorecel, it truly is imagining some energy coming back in.
It might be just noticing the breath, not trying to do anything, just noticing, oh yes,
I am breathing.
My heart is beating because something's always moving in our body, wrong heart, something,
blood flow, and then to just invite a very gentle movement, a reminder that, oh, I'm
here, I'm present.
Does that bring us back into this
moment in time? Because dorsal is really experience of being lost, floating, untethered. So
we want to bring a movement, sometimes just rubbing your feet on the floor, right?
And people will find their own movements. I like to say there's no right way to do this.
There's just the way of your nervous system. So the work is to be friend
your own nervous system and get to know what works for me. You also mentioned breathing exercises.
You talked about size, but are there slightly more elaborate breathing exercises we should
think about? There are, and again, breathing is an autonomic nervous system experience. It's regulated by the nervous system.
And so as we begin to change our breathing, we're directly contacting the nervous system,
so it is a great regulator, but it's also an intense activator. As we have gone through life,
our body has found a way of breathing that it uses. And there's a good
reason for that. And if you have a trauma history, your breath pattern has been created
to make sure that you can manage your way through the world without coming into connection
with parts of that trauma history that may be overwhelming. So again, we want to be very careful and dipitone
into breath practices as we begin because it can be really challenging for people. That said,
yes, in general, a longer exhale is a way to bring more ventral. So changing the ratio
of inhale to exhale so that your exhale is longer than your inhale brings more ventral.
Resistance breathing brings more ventral and resistance breathing.
The easiest way to think about it, I love thinking about is you know, blow through a straw.
That's resistance breathing. If you want to have some fun with it, get some bubbles, right, and blow through the bubble wand.
Because in order to do that, you have to have a long slow exhalation
and you usually push your lips to do it and it's so it brings a bit of joy to the experience as well.
So I just want to encourage people to sort of experiment, see what works for you and don't feel
you know like you're a failure or broken in some way if something doesn't work for you.
It's just that your nervous system says oh this one's for me, or this one's not for me right now.
Again, that this sort of this welcoming experience
of there are lots of ways you will find
to bring more of mental to your nervous system.
One of the things that I do think is sort of universal
is music.
And music can be a way that we find our way to ventral,
but it also can be a way that we can be with
sympathetic and dorsal in healthy ways. We can even enjoy some sympathetic and dorsal through
music, right? So think of some of the songs that sort of bring that sympathetic fight, you know,
to life, and you can be with, and it feels, oh yes, right? And then think of some of the songs that might bring you some of that dorsal despair or hopelessness,
right?
And yet you can be with it and not feel alone in the world.
So it's lovely.
And then Ventral, what are the songs that just fill you with the many flavors of Ventral?
It could be just fun, joy, happy, or it could be, you know, Jonathan Height talks about elevation, right?
That experience of awe and elevation, the more self-transcented experiences, it could be that music can take us to those places as well.
You're talking about self-transcented experiences. You talk about it in your book as a way to care for our nervous system.
Can you elaborate on that? They're based in the nervous system. The nervous system is part of these experiences of awe, gratitude, compassion.
Compassion is only possible for us when we have enough ventral energy active in a live
in our nervous system.
You can't find compassion from sympathetic, survival, or dorsal disconnect. So again, as we practice
compassion, we are engaging with that ventral experience. But I think if we could talk
about awe for a minute, I love awe because we have these extraordinary moments of awe.
And you might think of sometimes in your life when you had that extraordinary moment of
awe. But we also have every day moments of awe.
And again, we miss them if we're not looking for them.
And so if you are on the lookout for every day moments of awe, you'll begin to find them.
And we find certain environments, bring that alive for us.
And so we're called to return to those environments.
For me, again, when I'm home in Maine,
the beach is an awe environment.
I know I can go to the beach and I can feel that sense of awe
is feeling small but connected to something much larger than yourself.
That's the experience of awe and your nervous system
is part of that experience.
And that's available for all of us, available to everyone.
Speaking of Maine, I find that one good way to get
dysregulated is even in the dog days of summer
to put a toe in the ocean.
Because it's so ridiculously cold.
Yeah, it is.
And yet, I will say I love to walk the beach
and I walk in the water.
I cannot walk in a beach and not walk in the water.
I'm only like, up to just about my ankles, but I have to have my feet in the water. I cannot walk on a beach and not walk in the water. I'm only like up to just above my ankles,
but I have to have my feet in the water.
There's something so nourishing to me about that.
So see, there's a way that you and I,
if we were walking the beach, I'd be walking in the water
and you'd be walking a couple of feet up on the sand.
If you had a coat of armor,
I would go in the water.
If we took this as an example and say, you and I were trying to connect and I'm saying,
oh, let's go walk the beach and let's go walk in the water. You're a nervous system. We're
saying, no, thank you. And then it would be interesting to know how would you then relay that to me.
Actually, I'm kidding. I think walking on the beach in the water or out would be awesome.
Okay. All right. It's just an interesting way to have a conversation.
It's like, oh, it's not that you're saying,
oh, I don't want to do what you want to do.
You're not dismissing what I want to do.
You're saying, yeah, maybe not what pulls me into the ability
to have a true, deep conversation with you, right?
Working with couples, you find this all the time.
Nervous systems regulate around different things
and disregulate around different things. It may be that one partner has this need to
be nourished in this way, and the other one says, my nervous system can't do that.
That's a beautiful thing to acknowledge, not to say I can't do that, but oh, my
nervous system just can't do that, or at least can't do it right now. Again, a
very different experience. So if I'm here, you're correctly, we can get better at understanding our own nervous systems,
but also back to that phrase you used earlier, neuroception.
Can we get better at reading other people's nervous systems and how?
Yes, we can, and we want to be careful about it as well, because we often make assumptions,
and the assumption can be wrong. So what I'd like to say is we feel
something coming from another nervous system. Then we can be curious about what's going on in
that nervous system, but I hesitate to make a assumption about it. So if you and I were having
a conversation and I was feeling some sort of cues of frustration, disconnection. Something is sending me a message that we're no longer in this flow.
Then I'm going to be curious about that.
I'm not going to immediately go to, oh, I am really bad at this.
Or he's really being mean.
I'm going to go to, oh, something's going on.
I wonder what.
And then I'm probably going to name it and say, you know what?
I'm just noticing,
it feels like something interrupted the flow we were in. Is there something going on on your end?
Because then we can enter into that conversation. I noticed it for me, something happened.
I'm going to name it and then be curious. Yes, because people generally don't like to be told
what they're feeling. No, please don't. Right?
Yes.
And so part of this way of connecting is to always be curious.
My responsibilities to know what's happening in my nervous system and the be curious about
what's happening in yours, not make any assumption or even think I know what's happening, but
be curious.
Coming up, Deb talks about what she calls re-storing.
She also talks about the role that other people can play in regulating your nervous system
and how to understand the vagus nerve, the AGUS.
How understanding that can help you make sense of and improve the world.
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Hey there, I know that life is full of challenges, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. A stoic philosopher once said that no man is more unhappy than he who never faces adversity
for he is not permitted to prove himself.
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listen to the Daily Stoke early and add free right now on Wondery Plus. What is a vagal break?
So vagal break is the word that Steve gave
to this specific circuit.
It's a ventral vagal circuit that runs
from your brainstem, your medulla,
to the Sinowatrial node of your heart,
which is your heart's pacemaker.
So the vagal break really controls your heart rate.
And the beautiful thing about this vagal breaks, well, B-R-A-K-A, like a break, right? It works like
all breaking actions. It allows us to speed up and slow down. And it does this on every inhalation.
It allows the heart rate to speed up a bit. And on every exhalation, it then allows the heart rate to speed up a bit and on every exhalation it then
slows the heart rate down again.
So the beauty of the vagal break is that it allows us to have access to this sympathetic
system's mobilizing energy but without bringing fight and flight survival responses on board.
So when I need a little more energy to run to the door and make
sure the cat doesn't get out, my vagal break releases a bit so that I have that energy
to go, do that, and then it re-engages so that I can relax afterwards. So the vagal
break is in a exquisite part of our nervous system, and such an important part, and people
often say, oh, Deb, I think my vagal break is broken.
And I say, not broken, because on every breath cycle
it's working, but probably not working as efficiently
as you'd like it to.
And the reason we work with increasing the efficiency
of the vagal break is that the vagal break allows us
to make transitions between things.
It allows us to become active and calm.
It allows us to have a conversation.
My vagal break releases a bit when I'm talking and then it re-engage so that I can listen.
So you might think about people in your life who have a really hard time in conversation,
right? The back and forth is really hard.
vagal break is really working to bring that smoothness. And again, just like the nervous system
can be reshaped, we can increase
the efficiency of this vagal break by working with it. How? So again, breath practices exercise
the vagal break. Play exercises the vagal break because we get loud and boisterous and then we have
to calm down. Anybody who has kids knows, you know, it can go wrong pretty quickly, right? Kids will
be doing that lovely rough and
tumble play and then somebody be crying and somebody be screaming because the vagal break couldn't
hold them in that place. It went off and then it became anger or frustration. So playfulness,
even movement, as we go out and you know walk fast and then slow, vagal break releases reengages. Anything that requires you to speed
up, slow down, engage, less engage, active calm, anything that requires you to do this exercises
your vagal break. Can you get a little technical about what vagal means? Yes. And again,
poly vagal. Steve's wonderful work decades ago now. And he started this work
working in neonatal intensive care units looking at premature babies. And polyvagal just means
there are two vagal pathways. The vagus nerve is cranial nerve 10. So it exits your brain stem
and moves down throughout your body. And it is the primary component of your parasympathetic nervous system.
Right?
And so Vegas, cranial nerve 10, has two basic components.
It has ventral vagal and dorsal vagal, same nerve.
But two very different components and brings two very different experiences to life.
Ventral bringing this safe social connection,
organized, moved through the world,
and dorsal bringing this disconnect,
collab shutdown.
So what Steve did was really identify
this dorsal vagal experience for premature babies
where heart rate gets so slow that death is at issue
because the dorsal vagal nerve has taken over and it slows the heart rate.
So when we enter that dorsal vagal survival response, our body goes into conservation mode.
Heart rate slows down, breath slows down, digestion stops, everything slows.
There's just enough energy to keep us alive. And for premature babies, that was really dangerous.
So he was the first one who really defined
these two parts of the Vegas nerve,
Polly Vagel is these two aspects of the Vegas nerve.
As ventral is overseeing the system,
so to speak, ventral is in charge.
Sympathetic and dorsal work in the background.
Sympathetic does its regulating role
of bringing you energy,
helping with your heart and breath rhythms.
And dorsal's job is to bring you healthy digestion.
So that's a system that's in healthy homeostasis, right?
Ventuals in charge sympathetic and dorsal work
in the background.
It's only when ventral is pushed offline,
that then sympathetic comes on to rescue us
or then dorsal comes to rescue us.
So again, we're talking about a system that's needing to be in relationship, three states in
relationship with each other. When you talk about practices to help us reach up our nervous system,
change our nervous system, I believe you draw a distinction between bottom up versus top down. What is that all about?
The world of therapy has been a top down world for a long time and now there are many more
bottom up practices. Top down is using my brain to create change. Bottom up is this embodied
experience of creating change. And really what we're talking about is bottom up has to meet top down.
They both have to cooperate again.
It's an embodied brain.
It's a mind body system that work together.
Body brain is Dan Siegel's word for this experience.
And really what we're talking about is nervous system and brain are connected and communicating
all the time.
What I'm talking about are bottom up experiences, but I'm bringing them to life in top-down ways,
because I'm giving people practices to do things to engage in, which is more of a concrete top-down experience, to bring a bottom-up to life.
What is re-storing?
Don't you love that word? I really love that word. Re-storing. this is the last piece when I'm working with people,
as we regulate, we reconnect, we reshape pathways, and then we restore. Because the story, again,
emerges from your autonomic state. So as the state changes, the story is going to organically
change as well. So this is a good example of top-down or bottom-up. If I'm wanting to work with someone to help
some change, have a moment of change, whatever it is they're wanting to change. I
can start with the story they bring to me, I can start with the behaviors they
bring to me, I can start with the feelings they're stuck in, or I can start with
the state. If I start with the state, the feelings they're stuck in or I can start with the state. If I start with
the state, the feelings, the behaviors and the stories will organically change as the
state changes. So I discovered it feels like the easiest way, the best way to go is start
with state, everything else will change, right? And the last piece is the story changes. And it's important as our nervous system reshapes
to explicitly notice, name, write that story,
to hear the new story.
That's the re-storing process.
That last piece to really put it into language and words,
or image art, however you want to story.
Sometimes people re-story through movement.
They dance the new story, or they draw the new story. I'm a worried person, so, they dance the new story or they draw the new
story.
I'm a worried person, so I usually write the new story, but it is an important step to
really bring that appreciation to the new story that has emerged from the work that
we've done to reshape the nervous system.
Sounds like there's a lot of power and agency in that.
Yes, there is power in that.
My nervous system is going to work on my behalf anyway,
but when I can engage with it, partner with it,
then it feels very different.
I know it's always going to be there for me when I need it.
I don't have to worry about that.
It's going to do what it needs to do to help me survive,
but I can also partner with it.
It becomes a very different experience. When it comes to do to help me survive, but I can also partner with it. And it becomes a very different experience.
When it comes to changing our nervous system, and you've touched on this already, but you
listen to the book, a powerful lever is community or other people.
Is there more to be said on that score?
Community is so important and also so challenging because again, we long for connection for actual proximity to other nervous systems, not just doing, you know, this lovely screen to screen, which yes, it's better than nothing.
And again, community for you might be 10 people. For me, it might be too. There's no rule. Community is based on the people that you can find to connect with
who share your way of moving through the world. For me, community is people who speak
you know the autonomic nervous system language and I can communicate with them around that
and I feel safe and welcomed. So community are people you feel welcomed to be with.
feel safe and welcomed. So community are people you feel welcomed to be with. You know, in my regulation and in my messiness, that's community because I'm
certainly not always regulated. I have many messy moments and community are the
people I can reach out to in those moments and I know that they will
understand and they will reach back. And community is so important for well-being.
For many people, community is hard to find.
So many people are living in isolation,
or living with people for whom their nervous system
doesn't feel safe, doesn't feel okay.
As I become more regulated,
I'm drawn to people who are regulated as well.
I may have to downsize some relationships.
And that's painful, right? We think about friendships. We think about family members who are just
so difficult for us to be around because our nervous system really feels in danger or feels
dysregulated around them. And we can't figure out how to navigate that. And so we downsize that relationship.
So it's both about downsizing, but then finding the people
with whom we do feel welcomed.
We do feel as though I can show up in all of my nervous system
states and it's okay.
And I will be welcomed and the other person will understand
this experience I'm having.
That to me is community. and I have a very small
community, very small, call it my micro community, right? But they are dependable, predictable,
and we have created a communication pattern where if I'm struggling, I can send an emoji
and they respond back, they know. So it's creating those patterns of connection
that understanding with another person, people,
that creates community.
And then as we feel safe in community,
we then might find our way out into the world
into other communities and larger communities.
Because if we look at what's going on right now,
we have a world that's polarized. If we look at it through the right now, we have a world that's polarized.
If we look at it through the nervous system, we have a world that is so many people are stuck in
fight or flight. And then we have a huge group of people who are in collapse, shut down,
hopeless despair, give up. And what we know is that unless or until we have enough people who are regulated and can offer that welcome,
we can't have these difficult conversations, we can't connect because survival responses
cut us off from connection.
So finding a community where you can feel ventral regulated and welcome is the first step
because then I can begin to reach out to others from that place.
But also in a world where so many people are in sympathetic or dorsal, those of us who
have some capacity to stay in ventral, it's like a public service to be out and mixing.
Yeah, it's our human responsibility, right? At least that's what I call it. I like your
public service. It's our responsibility
as humans to find our way, to shape our systems and to offer that. We come to regulation,
we come to ventral, but then benevolence is the active use of that ventral vagal energy
and service of healing. So it's not simply I get there and I'm experiencing well-being, but then I can actively use this
ventral energy in service of healing.
And it's good for you and the other people, and that's the upward spiral.
Right.
Before we close here, just on the subject of levers that can be pulled to change your nervous
system, you didn't talk about the type of things that we get lectured about a lot,
like sleep, exercise, meditation,
diet, et cetera, et cetera.
Are those important?
Yes, and it's always an and, right?
Yes, and if we think about, sleep is a complicated nervous system experience.
So sleep is important, but if I nervous system is dysregulated, I can't sleep.
Exercise is important, but if I'm exercising because I think I should, I may not be getting the
nervous system benefit of it. I may be doing it out of a fear, out of a sympathetic drive,
because if I don't, something bad is going to happen, and I don't get any nourishment from it
in that way. Think about food, yes, you know, everybody's telling us what to eat or not eat.
If I'm regulated, I'm going to make those choices.
If I'm doing it because again, out of fear, I may decide not to eat the junk food, but then I'm
going to binge on junk food at some point. So again, it comes back to for me anyway.
Regulated nervous system allows me to interact with the world differently. If I'm experiencing symptoms of psychological
disorder or a physical illness, again, if I can come to a more regulated nervous system,
what we're finding is those symptoms begin to reduce and resolve. We're even finding
that in the world of chronic pain that as we regulate the nervous system, chronic pain
begins to reduce and resolve.
So for me, I just keep coming back to what's underneath.
What's underneath my eating habits, my sleep habits, my physical exercise habits, what's
underneath it?
The research on meditation is profound and amazing.
And if you are a trauma survivor, if you have a history where slowing down
and attending in a different way is dangerous,
meditation is really hard to get to.
And so I always start with people just asking them
to have a mindful moment,
which then micro moments can build,
but a mindful moment.
And I like to tell people, ask your nervous system, right?
What kind of meditation, what mindful moment is right
for you. You know, our inboxes are flooded with five things to do to whatever or ten things to
bring well-being, you know, ask your nervous system because I discovered nine of those ten
my nervous system says, no, can't do that. And so that led me to invite people to make their own menu, make
your own menu of things that you can reach for. And we want to have things that are easy
and things that are more challenging, things that take no time, more time, so that we have
a true choice, right? When we have that choice, then we're going to reach for regulation
in a way that will move us forward. Instead of feeling, oh, there's something wrong with me because I can't do this.
Final question, it's not really a question.
It's a prompt.
If you could shamelessly plug your book, any other books, any other content you're
putting out into the world so people can learn more, I would be grateful.
Well, thank you.
I'm terrible at shamelessly plugging anything, but I do love
my new book, Anchored, which is the first book that I wrote for curious human beings. My other
books, The Polyvagal Theory and Therapy and Polyvagal Exercises for Safety and Connection
are for a more clinical audience. And so I love this moment in time when I'm beginning to reach out
to regular human beings, because I do think this is time when I'm beginning to reach out to regular human beings
because I do think this is a way for every human to understand themselves and move differently
through the world.
So my website, rhythmofregulation.com is probably the best place to go.
You can see what I'm up to.
Debt, thanks so much for coming on.
Great job.
Appreciate it.
Thank you.
Thanks again to Debt Dana. Thanks to you for listening. We could not and would not do this without you. Thanks again to Deb Dana.
Thanks to you for listening.
We could not and would not do this without you.
And thanks most of all to the people who work so hard on this show.
10% Happier is produced by Gabrielle Zuckerman, Justin Davy Lauren Smith and Tara Anderson.
DJ Cashmere is our senior producer.
Marissa Schneidermann is our senior editor.
Kevin O'Connell is our director of audio and post-production and Kimmy Regler is our executive producer Alicia Mackie leads our marketing
and Tony Magyar is our director of podcasts. Nick Thorburn of Islands wrote our theme.
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