The Mel Robbins Podcast - Why Do I Have Few Memories From Childhood? Deepen Your Healing & Find Answers With Dr. Nicole LePera
Episode Date: January 26, 2023In this episode, you will learn how to deepen your healing by understanding how your parents may have created silent trauma that is still impacting you as an adult. I want to introduce you to a woman... who has had a really big impact on my own healing. She is the renowned psychologist and #1 New York Times bestselling author, Dr. Nicole LePera, who you may also know as The Holistic Psychologist. Today, Dr. LePera will normalize the common experience of having few memories from childhood. This is something that I struggled with silently. I personally have very few memories from my childhood, and I assumed there was something wrong with me. It was only when I started sharing about this lack of memories online that I realized I wasn’t the only person who can’t reminisce about their past. I now understand why this happens. I also know there is nothing wrong with me. And if you have very few memories from your childhood, there’s nothing wrong with you either. Today, we are digging into parenting styles and how your childhood experiences (whether you remember them or not) are still impacting the way you respond to stress as an adult. The research and tools in this conversation will help you understand not only why it’s so easy to get triggered, but also how to deepen your healing journey now that you do. This is one of those episodes that I also know you will be sending to family, friends, and siblings because there is so much empowering information here. I personally made all three of our kids listen because I both recognize as a daughter how my childhood impacted me – and as a mom, I’m also very aware that my parenting style has impacted my kids. And, Dr. LePera so beautifully teaches us how to take control of the rest of our lives as adults. Xo Mel PS: After you listen to this one, listen to “Take Control of Your Life: A Toolkit for Healing” if you haven’t yet, because I’m sharing details from the last few years of my healing journey. Plus, there’s a companion workbook to help you go deeper. In this episode, you’ll learn: 3:00: So many of you wrote in about this particular detail of trauma.8:00: Childhood amnesia – What the heck is that?9:30: Here are 3 reasons why you don’t have many childhood memories.11:30: What do psychologists mean by “dysregulated nervous system?”15:00: Introducing my friend and world-renowned psychologist, Dr. Nicole LePera.17:45: What’s an emotionally immature parent and how do you know if you had one?24:30: Two big reasons why your brain shuts down in childhood.28:00: Do you need to remember your past trauma to recognize it in yourself?35:00: What does it look like in real life when you start to heal your nervous system?37:30: Is trauma only for those who’ve lived through a big, horrific event?44:00: Here is why the silent treatment can be harmful. 48:00: Here’s your first tactical step toward healing your body and mind.53:15: Feeling cynical about your own healing process? You need to hear this. Disclaimer If you uncover or have a history of trauma, consider enlisting the support of a trained therapist. This podcast episode and the companion workbook are not meant to be a substitute for therapeutic support.
Transcript
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Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to a very memorable episode of the Mel Robbins podcast.
Hey, I'm Mel Robbins, I'm so fired up that you're here.
I'm a New York Times bestselling author and one of the most trusted experts in the world
on behavior change and motivation.
And I'm also just noticing that whenever I get on the microphone, literally while the
drums are beating and the show is about to open, my voice drops like an octave.
I feel like I get the stuff in my throat, but that is not what this show is about today.
This show is about something really important.
It is something that's really personal to me.
It's something that I was really, it's not that I was struggling with this. I was really
confused by something. And the topic is about memory. And I wanted to talk to you about
this today because the last episode that we dropped was all about the nervous system,
how you calm your nervous system, nervous system, repair, dysregulation, and also trauma.
And the episode was like a runaway train.
It's unbelievable how many of you listen to it, and it is already one of the most shared
episodes that we've done.
And of course what happened is you had a ton of questions about trauma and about your
nervous system.
And here's one thing I want you to understand.
If you are breathing right now, you have trauma.
No question.
There is no way that you can get through childhood
and not experience some kind of trauma,
because trauma is just a situation that is either small
or it is enormous and terrifying, a situation
that makes your nervous system go on high alert.
So whether your trauma comes from a childhood where you felt unseen, unheard, or unloved,
or your trauma comes from some major catastrophic accident, or some violent crime, or physical harm, or a tour of duty.
You are experiencing moments where life triggers you, and your nervous system goes on alert,
and then you have an emotional response.
This is something that we all deal with.
And many people remember what caused their trauma. You wrote to me about
it. And I cannot thank you enough for your deeply, deeply personal stories for opening up about
it. And for the revelations that you had, when you listen to the simple things that you can do
based in neuroscience to start the work of repairing your nervous system. And I want to applaud you
for being interested in your own healing and interested in this
subject and interested in taking control not about what happened to in the past, but how
you're going to heal this in your mind, body, and spirit moving forward.
Well, because of your questions, today I wanted to dig deeper.
And I wanted to dig deeper on a particular angle about the topic of trauma.
Because so many of you resonated with one particular aspect of that episode. And it was
the moment when Jesse, who is a member of my team, and she runs video production here at
1-4-3 studios, she jumped in in the middle of the recording and asked a question, and this was
the one thing that so many of you wrote to me about because you were like ding, ding,
ding, that's me. So what I want to do to bring every one of you into the fold is to play
the clip where Jesse asked this particular question.
Well, I have a question for you.
I've never been to therapy, but I get what you're saying.
I just don't know how to connect it.
Like, I feel the emotions, and I see what you're saying about the little T-trauma, the big
T-trauma.
But I don't remember it.
Do I have to know what that little T-trauma is to recognize it, or can I just keep it
generic and say, nope, that's little T-trauma?
Excellent question.
Yeah, I know exactly what you mean.
When you talk about emotion,
how would you describe sort of that repeated response
that you're experiencing as an adult
that you're now like,
oh, that's probably little T-trauma.
What is your emotional response?
I think there's a lot.
It just instantly makes me want to cry, get emotional.
I also resort to shutting down. But again, I don't know where that's coming from. Why am I so emotional
about certain things? I don't have a bad memory associated with it.
Now, did you pay attention to what she just said?
That here she is, she's an adult, and she feels emotional all the time, and she doesn't
know why she's getting triggered.
She doesn't know where it's coming from.
And here's the part I want to highlight for you.
She doesn't know where it's coming from because she has no memory that
is associated with feeling overwhelmed or shut down. And in particular, she has no bad
memory from her childhood. And so she's not quite sure now that she realizes, huh, I
clearly have some kind of trauma because I can't handle my emotions and I get triggered
all the time and I don't like it, but I don't know where this came from. And so many
of you resonated with this.
And many of you wrote something else that not only do you not remember where your trauma
came from, but that you have no memories of your childhood at all.
So I wanted to talk about this topic because not having memories or not having a lot of
memories from childhood, This is really common.
This is one of those topics that is so common in terms of the human experience
and nobody talks about it.
There are some of us like me that have very few memories of childhood at all.
And we walk around forever thinking that there's something wrong with us.
So we're going to explore this today.
Because every time I talk about this on social media, I cannot believe how many of you go, holy cow, that's me. I don't remember much from my childhood at all. I thought I was the only one.
And so I wanted to start by saying, this is normal. You're not alone. And if you're somebody that can
recall your childhood with very detailed memory,
there's still an important reason for you to listen to this. I think it's going to be
very eye-opening when we connect the dots between not having a lot of memories and small
T-trauma and also the kind of household that you were raised in. And so I'm going to bring
an expert on to connect all these dots for us, but first I want you to understand something about memories from childhood.
So the first place I wanted to start was by putting a highlighter on the fact that this
is normal.
I'm normalizing the fact right now that if you don't have a lot of childhood memories
or heck, you have no memories at all from your childhood, do not worry.
There are lots of people like myself that go through
this and have experienced this. And so here's what we're going to do. I'm going to bring on a world
renowned psychotherapist who is an expert on this topic. And we're going to unpack this because I want
you to understand why this happens, what you can do about it. And I also want you to understand
how this is connected to trauma that you may have experienced
or what it was like for you growing up
in the household that you grew in.
And there are reasons why I wanna make sure
that I take a balanced approach here on this topic
because I not only know this topic
based on my personal experience,
but I always like to remind you when we dig into
a big topic like this that I'm not a medical doctor, I am not a licensed therapist, I am not giving you advice on this topic.
I'm just sharing my experience and what I've learned as I've researched this topic, but
you're going to be able to hear a world-renowned clinical psychologist explain this to you.
It's not only natural, it's normal to not be able to recall everything that happened in childhood.
In fact, researchers and scientists have a word for it. They call it childhood amnesia.
Now, they've not fully studied this yet, but they think that the reason why it's natural for a lot of us to not be able to recall what happened
is because it has to do with how your brain sheds brain cells
and they speculate even memories as you grow up.
And here's the thing though about your brain.
Even if the memories are in there,
and this is what I believe,
I think that the memories are in there inside of you,
but it's just that it's buried so deep in your subconscious,
you're just not present to it in your day-to-day life.
You know, I look at all of our kids or any of you
that listen to the show that are in your 20s
or that are in your late teens,
and you know, you grow up in a world
where you are basically digitally native.
And so you've grown up with apps like Snapchat and Be Real
and all of these kind of cool social media platforms
where you can have memories.
And you know what that means?
It means your entire life is basically documented online and you can go back into your memories
literally seven years, 10 years ago even.
And you can see what you're wearing.
You can remember that exact day.
Heck, you probably even have video from it.
And on some level, that's a gift because your brain doesn't work that way.
You can't just on demand go back in time with your brain and recall details like the song that
was playing at 7.23 pm on a random Tuesday night 18 years ago. Now photos, photos jog your memory,
photos will bring that thing, that memory that's stored in your subconscious to the forefront of your mind.
And that's a really cool thing.
But one of the reasons why you may not recall a lot of memories is because it's just buried
deep in the vault of the subconscious of your brain, just waiting to be jogged, waiting
to be reminded.
There's another reason why you might not have a lot of memories.
You may have grown up in a culture or with a family that doesn't do a lot of reminiscing.
And reminiscing primes the brain to remember certain things.
And some of you may have had the experience where you ask your parents or your grandparents
to tell you stories about when they were little and they really don't want to talk about
it.
So, if your parents aren't reminiscing with you to help you jog your memory and you're old
like I am, I'm not really old.
I mean, you know, if you're 54 like I am, those memories are also not getting stronger
as you age, and the muscle to recall them is also not getting stronger.
But there's a third reason why you may not have a lot of memories, and that's the reason
why I don't.
I have trauma.
Trauma? Past trauma triggers your nervous system to go on a state of hyperalert. And when
your nervous system is in a state of hyperalert, or you're living with a constant state of anxiety,
or you're always on edge, or you're waiting for the next shoot to drop, or you had a childhood,
where you were constantly under threat,
whether it was poverty or discrimination or abuse,
or you lived in a country or in a neighborhood
that had a lot of violence.
When you're on edge like that all the time,
medically speaking, neurologically speaking,
this comes from research at UCLA.
When you're on alert and your nervous system
is in a state of alarm, it overrides your
brain's ability to function properly.
The part of the brain where you're paying attention and you're storing long-term memory,
it's overrided by the state of alert that you feel of always being on edge, or if you're
like me, and you struggle with anxiety for decades.
Basically, if you're always worrying about what's about to happen,
you're not even in the room or in the moment to be able to encode memories. When you hear
the term dysregulated nervous system, that's exactly what researchers, scientists, doctors,
psychiatrists, neuroscientists, that's what they're talking about, that you're in such a state of hypervigilance or alert
that you're not really even present to make the memories.
And I think a lot of people are just like Jesse,
that you realize now that you're adult that something's up,
that you don't like how you can't control
your emotional response, that you snap,
that you shut down, that you micromanage,
or you're starting to go, well, Mel, I'm kind of like you, that there are large parts
of my life that I just don't remember.
And it may not be just in childhood.
For me, I don't even remember a lot of college or law school.
And by then I was a young adult.
See, there are also times in your life
where you may go through something very acute,
like grieving the death of somebody you love,
or going through a massive change like a divorce.
It's very, very common for people to say
that they don't remember months of their life
when those sorts of things happen.
And I'll be honest with you,
I used to think there was something wrong with me and wrong
with my brain.
For years I'd kind of make this joke that I thought I had early dementia, but the truth
is I was kind of scared that something was wrong.
I mean, why did my best friend have total recall of absolutely everything that happened
in her childhood?
But I couldn't remember much of anything.
It's as though years went completely missing.
And it's only when I started talking about it online that I realized how common this is.
Every single time I would post about it, I would be flooded with comments, oh my God,
that's me, that's me, that's me.
Now, what you're going to learn today is going to give you incredible insight on this topic.
And it's going to give you deeper, deeper knowledge
about trauma and how it connects to not having memories.
And we're also going to dig deep into a really important topic.
And that's about how having emotionally immature parents
can also be connected to having no memories.
So buckle up because whether or not you remember your childhood, this is going to be a very
memorable episode of the Mel Robbins podcast because everything you're going to learn today
will make a positive impact on your life moving forward.
So I reached out to a friend of mine, Dr. Nicole LaPara.
You probably know her as the holistic psychologist
because she is followed by millions and millions
of people online around the world.
And I wanted to have Dr. Nicole on to dig deeper with me
and talk about why she thinks it is
that people like Jessie and myself
and perhaps even you have very few memories.
Dr. Nicole LaPera was trained in clinical psychology at Cornell University,
the new school for social research and the Philadelphia School of Psychoanalysis.
She is the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book, How to Do the Work,
and the host of the podcast Self Healers Soundboard.
As a clinical psychologist and private practice,
Dr. Nicole often found herself frustrated
by the limitations of traditional psychotherapy.
She wanted more for her patients and for herself,
so she began a journey to develop
a united philosophy of mental, physical, and spiritual health
that equips people with the tools necessary to heal themselves.
Dr. Nicole is the creator of the Self-Healers Movement.
Where people from around the world are joining together in a community to take healing into their own hands.
In 2019, she founded Self-Healer Circle, the first virtual self-guided global healing membership.
Self-healer circle has become a movement with members from over 60 countries who
heal as a collective.
Her latest book had a meet yourself.
The workbook for self-discovery was just released.
And one of the things that I love about Dr. Nicole is how fierce she is.
She is so committed to you being your best
healer. This woman has taken so much flack from the traditional psychotherapy, psychology,
and psychiatry fields. And she is not stop a man. She is on a mission to equip you with
everything that you need to do the most important thing you could do for yourself. And that is to heal yourself and to create a better life in doing so.
Woo! I am so excited to introduce you to her.
And the topic we're going to do first is what it means to be raised by an emotionally
immature parent, which is basically someone who does not have the ability to deal with their
emotions in an effective or healthy way. They can't deal with stress, sadness, frustration,
rejection, and you as the kid,
you feel the brunt of that inability to cope.
And I'm embarrassed to admit to you
that when Chris and I first had our kids,
I was that emotionally immature parent.
So coming up, you're gonna meet Dr. Nicole
and you're gonna learn the signs
that you were raised by an emotionally immature parent, and we're going to go deep into this topic.
How that emotional immature parenting relates to having very few memories and to trauma.
Hey, welcome back. It's Mel and I'm really excited because Dr. Nicole LaPara is here and I am so happy Dr. Nicole that you are here. Congratulations on your new book, How to Meet
Yourself, the workbook for self discovery. Thank you so much for having me, Mel. Thank
you, Dr. Nicole, for saying yes. Because you are the one person on the planet that I wanted to
talk to you about this topic, and I know how busy you are since you just released this book.
And so I want you to give us a master class on emotionally immature parents, and how that connects
to little T-trauma, and how it also connects
to having no memories of your childhood.
How do you even know if your parents are emotionally immature?
Yeah, I mean, there's a lot of things, so that kind of unpredictability, having the explosive
parent where we're always waiting for the next shoot to drop, having on the other side
of that disconnected parent who's never really either
physically present or emotionally present, it can look like being made for different circumstances,
different reasons to parent ourselves or to show up as our siblings parent or our parents parent.
It can look like a lacking of boundaries where oftentimes we're very well-intentioned,
anxiety-based reasons. We have a hyper-vigilant, a helicopter type of parent, always micromanaging, always, you
know, tending or worrying, over-wiring, overstepping our boundaries, telling us what to think,
feel, do with our lives.
It can look like that.
It can look like a parent again who has so many boundaries that they show that emotional
disconnection.
How does having a parent who can't handle their own emotions,
they're either absent or they're all up in your face
or they're inappropriate or abusive or abandoned?
Like, how does that impact you as a child?
When we don't feel safe in our environment
because of external circumstances, resources
that we lack, our family lacks, or
we don't feel emotionally safe to just share ourselves, share our thought, share our ideas, share
our feelings. That creates an overwhelming emotional experience in us. And without that
attunement or that safe, grounded human, more often than not, this isn't the one off, you know, where
a parent was screaming and yelling one time when emotions ran high. This is when this
has become a key consistent pattern. It creates overwhelming stress in our child body with
a lack of support or a lack of resources that creates us or that shifts us physiologically
our nervous system into that survival mode. We are very
adaptive creatures. Our body will deal with it in one way or another by, you know, fighting
the situation by becoming overreactive ourselves as a child. This looks like tantruming, yelling,
unable to actually soothe ourselves. It looks like being distracted, a flee, a flight type response, where a child is always
unable to have pay attention, distracted,
doing a million different things at once.
It creates a shutdown experience.
If the stress is too much, too consistent,
and I don't have that support, you'll do what I did.
I just began to check out entirely.
And I'm just describing very simply all
of the different
nervous system-cycled responses that we go into when the stress or there is lack of safety in our
environment. And we don't have an attuned caregiver to help literally our bodies come back into
that regulation or come back into that safe experience. I think for a lot of people that hear this
the first time, Dr. Nicole, it's easy to kind of go like,
well, isn't everybody's childhood like that?
What have you been being on the planet?
Isn't like that?
I'm so used to that.
Isn't that what life is like?
Absolutely.
And I wanted to say two things quickly too,
that I think contribute.
First and foremost, it's the reality that when we're children,
we don't really have exposure to other experiences of life, right?
It isn't until we have peers and we start to go over other people's houses.
We don't have the experience to say, okay, well, this is what looks like in my house and
it doesn't look like that everywhere else.
So we'll assume, we'll generalize, we will make statements that, oh, this is what it is
for everyone.
That then gets complicated by the many of us who for very different reasons were told explicitly
or indirectly not to talk about how things were.
Right, so we either maybe shame ourselves
for acknowledging the reality
and we don't even we suppress it,
we don't allow ourselves to say,
you know what, this is how it was in my childhood
that was very much part of my journey.
The story that I heard about this present mother,
from my siblings, didn't match up with my lived experience.
And because as a child, we will always defer
to the adults around us, especially when we need them to care
for us, I suppressed the reality that, you know what,
my mom wasn't super present.
And outside from celebrating me academically and at softball,
my mom spent a lot of time dealing with her chronic
pain. That wasn't the story though, that I heard in my family. So I suppressed my version of reality
until I entered my 30s when I started to say, wait a minute, this, this is how it was for me.
It might have been different for you in your childhoods because my siblings are 15 and 18 years
older than me. Right. So to answer your question, the more we become conscious
honest and allow ourselves to then feel,
I've left that out of this whole process,
feeling about how it is that our experience was for us,
allowing us to say, you know what,
I didn't get some needs met and I'm sad
and I'm in grief and I'm angry
and I'm a million different things wrapped up into one,
allowing us to have that space now
to tend to how we feel about the experiences that maybe we have suppressed for so long for whatever reason it is
will then allow us to begin to change them. I just want to share that because a byproduct for many of us
I used to think I was solely there was something wrong with my brain, the neurology and my brain
because I came to realize quite early on when it was a joke with my friends in high school of how little memories I have. I would go out, right? I would do things
with them and I would have no memories. With time with them, I wouldn't be able to even
share how my early, you know, Christmas is looked. And I started to entertain Mel this
I, this, this concern for a very long time that I must have something wrong in my brain
Mm-hmm that happened to me too for years I
Thought something was wrong with me and
I believed that this was a sign that I was either gonna have Alzheimer's or dementia that there was like something up with my brain
And you know whenever I would admit to friends from childhood
that I just don't remember much,
they would look at me like I had two heads.
I actually submitted myself for a study
that I thought I was suffering from something
called selective autobiographical memory disorder.
I remember it because I thought,
okay, that's what's wrong with me.
I have this very rare neurological issue
that created this experience of,
I don't remember my childhood.
None of that was talked about my family.
It turns out none of us do.
And the reason for that is when, a couple of reasons,
when we're not fully present,
when we don't have that attuned safe space
to be present to what we think, how we feel,
how to navigate or regulate our emotions,
going from overwhelmed, legally stressed back into safety.
And we begin to check out like I did.
We're not consciously present enough to encode the memory itself,
the recall, the kind of movie screen of what happened.
I'm hesitant to use the word memory
because the memory does live within our mind and our body.
But we're not able to draw it up, call it to my,
describe it to someone else.
And then another aspect of this that impacts memory
is stress when cortisol goes up,
which is the major hormone that deals with
or that is released within our bodies when we're stressed out,
the more consistently the higher levels
of cortisol racing through our mind and body, especially in childhood, when our brain is still
developing, because we now know that our brain is actually still developing well into our 20s,
that high level of cortisol actually impacts a part of our brain that is responsible or plays a
role in memory, which is our hippocampus. So now we're not present.
Our hippocampus and the functioning of our hippocampus,
one of the memory systems is impacted.
Now we have this experience of I don't remember.
And it took me beginning to share that I don't have memories,
you know, walking through the shame of it all,
that I'm actually hearing overwhelmingly,
how few of us really, truly, again,
remember those early things.
So I just wanted to go down that path quickly because a question I commonly get then is,
well, then how do I heal? Don't I have to go back and, right, talk myself in and replay
that terrible memory and know what happens. And the answer is no, because chances are
again, you're living, you're, you're a living memory of that. You'll see it in these
moments of emotional immature react it in these moments of emotional
and mature reactivity or these moments of shutdown
or even just in your general habits
of relating to another human.
Because all of that is so imprinted again
in those earliest experiences that for the many of us,
the many of you listening who don't have memories,
I hope to relieve maybe some of the shame,
maybe some of the worries of something neurologically wrong with you that I once had and also give you the place to start, which
is right here right now by becoming conscious to how it is you're showing up now. Because
again, that often is a remnant of that memory in and of itself living in your mind, in your
body and often in your relationships creating the world around you.
That's relieving to hear that this is normal. Did you hear that everybody? I mean, I know I said it was normal because I've experienced it, and I now know so many of you have, but you know, when you hear a psychologist say huh, I have some trauma that I need to address
because you get so emotional or you get triggered and you shut down or you explode.
What Dr. Nicole is saying is that you're emotional in maturity as an adult, basically meaning
that your emotions overwhelm you, you can't process them,
you can't cope. That right there, that is evidence that you are experiencing past trauma right there.
And she's saying that the place to start is exactly where Jesse did, by recognizing that when
you get triggered by life and you're not in control of your emotional responses
as an adult, that is evidence of past trauma.
You don't have to remember when it began
because you know it's happening now.
And when we come back,
Dr. Nicole here
with us today, you probably know her as the holistic psychologist.
And one of the things that you and I first connected over is the fact that we both have almost no
memories from childhood. And I like you used to think there
was something terribly wrong with me that I was going to
have early on stage Alzheimer's that there was something
off its metaphors it's this it's that it's my anxiety. And I have so many experiences,
like talking to my best friend from childhood,
Jody Brick, and she'll be like,
remember that time, it's not little shit, Dr. Nicole.
It's like, remember that time you came to visit me
at Central Michigan University, I'm like, no.
She's like, yeah, you came for the weekend.
I'm like, I don't remember that.
And so learning that it's not only just me and it's not something wrong with my brain that
this is a function of the childhood shit that is in my nervous system and how I was coping
and processing all this stuff that impacted my ability to make memories.
And that that's okay.
And I actually think it's way more common than you think.
Absolutely.
And I'll speak to the point of how recent it is for me,
even in the early years of my relationship with my partner, Lolli.
I mean, she has, talk about the opposite.
She has an elephant memory.
This girl can remember like what I was wearing and wild.
And there's many things in moments where she's like,
do you remember when we went to this place,
did this thing?
And up until very recently, my answer has been, no.
I don't remember being there with you,
going, meeting this person really.
And I love to be like, can you say more about what happened?
And maybe I can recollect, give in other details,
given what she said.
But sometimes when I was in a place
that we might have revisited,
I'll get a feeling of familiarity.
She'll be like, oh, you don't remember
when we were here last time?
We did this.
This person was here.
I might not have that recall,
but my body feels somewhat familiar to what
she's describing what she's saying, the environment that we're in. And again, I just want to
share that, you know, it didn't miraculously for me go away the second I realized I didn't
remember because when I first met Lolly, I was very disconnected. I was very dissociative.
I was there in person, right? Having interactions in all of these different places, but my attention,
my awareness, myself was so, so far away that again, I still didn't retain those recall
based memories in moments. So I just want to share that again because I think some of us might
still have many moments. We might have something last week that we're hearing from a loved one
that we did or didn't do or you know, place that we were at and we might not have the ability to recall that.
And again, that might be maybe for someone listening an indicator of how, you know, lacking
presence of how there might have been something that feels unsafe.
You might generally never feel safe.
Your nervous system might still be so dysregulated that you're still on that spaceship.
So your answer is honest to God.
No, you don't yet remember that thing though. I yielded it that you're still on that spaceship. So your answer is honest to God, no,
you don't yet remember that thing though,
I will share that as I become conscious,
and for me, it's a daily commitment,
it's a daily intention,
because I do have that habit to check out
to dissociate, especially as stress goes up,
it doesn't immediately, just my nervous system
doesn't just get on board, I have to teach myself
how to stay grounded,
how to stay connected, how to tolerate more and more stress so that I don't just check out,
and I can begin to remember and retain the life that I'm living.
I want to just to land this for anybody listening where this is brand new. You've never even considered
these concepts. When Dr. Nicole talks about the nervous system,
and then she talks about slowing down,
and working through, for example,
the first part of the book, which is going to force you
to slow down, and it's going to force you
to get out of the autopilot of your life
and truly go inward and consider your lived experience in your
body.
The visual that I think about is your nervous system is sort of like the engine of a car
and it's like for me, revving all the time.
And so my lived experience for a long time, my version of autopilot, was feeling like I was a car
that was at, you know, like, that was just the engine was revved all the time, but I wasn't
going anywhere.
And that I had this sense of always like, try, try, try, try, try, try, try, try, try,
but no relief of feeling like it was enough. And what happens and what Dr. Nicole is saying
is available to you that you are your best healer,
that you can pull over.
Like the view that you are driving past
because you're on autopilot or you're checked out
or you're flooring it and you're addicted
to being busy and achieving and outrunning the sadness and whatever it is that you're checked out or you're flooring it and you're addicted to being busy and achieving and
outrunning the sadness and whatever it is that you're trying to outrun. You are missing this
extraordinary view because your nervous system is just Revan. Healing is the process of slowing it
down and pulling over and doing the inner work. And again, how to meet yourself.
This latest incredible transformative work of yours,
the whole first third of the book is dedicated
to exercises to help you do that.
And so that's the first thing that I wanted to say,
that what we're talking about,
when we talk about nervous system regulation,
is imagine a life where when you go to the grocery store
and somebody else walks in front of you
and grabs the last can of tomato sauce
that you had gone to the store to buy.
You don't lose your shit.
You literally are able to tolerate that
and not lose your shit,
or you get an email from work and your boss is curt with you.
And it doesn't trigger a spiral of thinking that has been around since childhood,
where you, that's it.
I'm so unworthy.
I'm so stupid.
The beat down.
And so when we talk about healing and we talk about regulating your
nervous system, what she's actually saying is that you can liberate yourself from the experience
of day to day life where you deliver the childhood beat down you've been doing subconsciously forever.
And the small daily irritating, disappointing crap that happens in life doesn't send you into an
emotional tsunami or send you to bury yourself in alcohol. That
that is what's on the other side of this. My correct, Dr.
Nicole, 100% and it begins just using a personal live, it might
entire childhood lived experience up until my 30s and I became aware, it begins
with becoming aware, becoming conscious of yourself and your current experience and in
particular of your body and what I wanted to share was I'm a self-proclaimed hippie at
heart, I like to say, because all I've ever wanted is peace, rest, a moment to just be
in the freedom that I imagined that came with that.
Yet, what I was so largely unaware of until I began to turn that spotlight of attention rest a moment to just be in the freedom that I imagined that came with that.
Yet what I was so largely unaware of until I began to turn that spotlight of attention
down to my body is I never could rest.
My family used to joke with me that I used to say, I'm bored, I'm bored, run a mile
a minute, I was doing, doing always on the go, which very much mimicked, always going
to that next hurdle, checking that next box to simplify, I couldn't relax.
No matter how much my mind wanted that moment of relaxation
when I didn't have anything on my schedule, for instance,
or, and I was just sitting there, right here,
it was my day, my Sunday, it's time to relax.
My body, because our body is talking to our brain
and communication every moment of every day.
My body was so tense, my nervous system was so dysregulated.
This is where no amount of, in my opinion, positive thinking, me looking around saying,
I want to call nothing to worry about, you're just relaxed.
You have nothing on your schedule, there's nothing to do.
Why can't you just feel at peace?
And the reason was because all of the signals that my body was sending my mind
was that piece relaxed.
There is something unsafe.
There's a threat.
I want to talk about this buzzing experience because for people that have never been to
a therapist, never even occurred to them that maybe some of the things they experienced
in childhood could be a former trauma.
Like, because you hear the word trauma and you think people that have had tours of duty or have been victims of violent crime or who have experienced a horrible accident
or witnessed something catastrophic.
And what we now know is that that's not true.
That there are all kinds of small experiences
that you may have dismissed or not remember
that do cause your nervous system to go,
oh, mom's mad, oh, someone is not talking to me.
Oh, what, dad's not coming home again tonight?
Oh, she's drunk.
Oh, what do you mean I have to be the man of the house? I needed a hug. Like all these little like things that just flip this switch inside you
as the little you that made you flip into what you refer to as hyper vigilance. Now, I refer to
this as that buzzing. That's sort of like, and what I noticed in my childhood is that if I was achieving everybody's happy.
But if I wasn't doing something worthy of bragging about, then it was ducking cover.
Who's upset?
Is everybody okay?
And so that's that buzzing, that sort of hyper-vigilance. And when can you talk about why it's important to notice
if that's part of how you experience adult life
and what it is?
I wanna go back to that, kind of expand it,
expanding the need to expand the idea of what trauma is.
Because for a very long time, I didn't know why.
As I was always beginning to become aware of the similarity in patterns and coping mechanisms
that I was seeing in myself and the clients that I was working with who did have those
big T, those big events.
Again, this was another moment where I entertained this belief that maybe there's something wrong
with me.
I even scoured the very few memories, the recalls that I had,
you know, to try and imagine, could something really bad have happened? Because why am I coping? Why am
I dealing? Why am I struggling in that same way? So, you know, trauma, then again, trauma really
maps onto how supported are we when overwhelming upsetting things happen. How safe are we consistently generally? Because
the reality in our childhood is we are completely dependent on someone, at least one person,
showing up to meet our needs. We can't continue to survive on our own. And the reality of
it is, and sometimes as factors in generationally, the reality of it is children have needs
that are beyond just being kept physically alive.
I mean, I even know there's a brand of parenting and the not so distant past of this idea that
children are like a plant, right?
Just feed them.
And again, some of this is colored by trauma.
Being resentful if you need more, right?
Yeah, exactly.
Or this idea of even being indebted, right?
You know, what I give to you, even though I've made the choice to create you, to have you.
And again, some of this I want to be sensitive
because it is colored by lacking of resources
in our childhood.
I mean, I know my parents at the age that they are,
my dad was born in 37, right after, right?
The Great Depression, where it was a feat for parents
to have even enough to put food on their table.
So again, I'm extending, you know, the opportunity
to be compassionate and to understand all of the different reasons why you might have had
a parent who really did believe you were just a plant to be kept alive in the room. And
that's not the reality. We need that emotional safety. We need that space to explore ourselves.
We need a curious safe human to create that space. And when we don't have that,
when they're not physically present, when they're not emotionally present, when they're emotionally
unstable or erratic, one of the ways that we cope because we are incredibly adaptive is we begin
that buzz. We become hyper vigilant to the external world. Because if I become so attuned to a change in mood, to a change in facial expression,
to whether or not my parent, if I learned the patterns of what upsets mom or dad, what creates
a situation where they're not present to us, what creates a situation where they are able to give
me the little bit of attention or connection that they are unable largely in other moments. And for me, very similar to you,
it was when I was keeping the peace, not causing an issue, not putting any more stress
on the already overwhelming stress table of the family. And when I was achieving, when I was
bringing something for my mom, for my dad to be proud of. And for me, that happened very early
on academically. And athletically, those were the moments where I would
be celebrated at my softball games. I played softball well up through college where the moments where
my mom was actually present physically present celebrating me talking to me about my performance in
the game. So being hyper attuned to that, I very early on saw that pattern. Okay, everyone's really stressed out.
If I don't bring any stress to the table,
which means if I don't share what happened at school,
if I don't bring the thing that I'm worried about,
understanding that my mom, that was only gonna upset her.
So when we don't have someone who's able to attune to us
emotionally, detect when we're upset,
help soothe, bring us down.
I mean, again, the reality of our nervous system
is not only is it developing in childhood,
we need another safe person to help us regulate,
to bring us from overwhelmed, stressed upset
back into that calm, peaceful safety.
So when someone's emotionally apparent
is emotionally unavailable, that means more consistently that they're emotionally unavailable, that means the more consistently
they're emotionally unavailable, of course. And for a lot of us, that was our parents' own
survival mode, disconnected, locked away on their own spaceship. That means then we're consistently
overwhelmed by our own emotions. I'm just on behalf of my husband who had emotionally unavailable father.
And that's right.
Just jam those emotions down.
Jam those emotions down.
Let's talk about the silent treatment.
When you have a parent that gives you the silent treatment, how does that impact you?
Often times a silent treatment is used in reaction to an upset.
Often when the parent is angry with us.
And now the byproduct of that not only is lacking the emotional attunement or their availability,
they're not present because they're not speaking to you in that moment.
Again, creating overwhelming sensations without the support of them.
A lot of times it gives us this underlying again because we're so attuned, it gives us this
underlying feeling that indirectly the statement is there was something inappropriate wrong shameful
about how it is you were or what it is you did in that moment. And again, the more consistently
that happens, the more likely it is some of us are going to internalize that idea that if I me or
if I express this aspect of me or this
feeling, whatever it is that resulted in the silent treatment, we do a lot of times embed
that deeper belief that that part of me is inappropriate, does cause people to leave
and a byproduct that then often is not only the shame, and that we just are embedded within
us, deep rooted beliefs of how it is that we're not worthy,
that we carry through us, making us less likely to show
that aspect of ourself, a lot of times,
and this was my experience, we then,
anytime we perceive anyone as being distant,
as giving us that Kurt response, right?
And not being available to us,
at needing time, natural human time, on their own,
a lot of us very immediately
hypervigilantly go to that narrative of I must have upset them.
I've must have done something wrong and maybe we can't tolerate it.
Maybe we begin to chase them to try and get their attention
because what it is is activating that deep rooted abandonment.
You either largely weren't present or you weren't present in these moments
when I was doing something shameful. And now I'm just overlaying that filter into what's happening now. Even if again,
why their current why they're short, why they're unavailable might not have anything to do with us
at all. They might be distracted with work, right? They might just need some time like every human needs
to be by themselves. It might not be anything in reaction, anything that we've done, but a lot of times we then struggle to tolerate distance silence.
I mean, we always assume we've upset.
We've wronged.
We've hurt someone in those moments.
Well, I know that everybody's now like, what do I do?
What do I do?
What do I do?
And so obviously, Dr. Nicole has incredible resources.
We're going to link to all of them.
One of which is how to meet yourself.
It's her latest book, although it is a self-guided workbook.
It is a gift that if you're sitting there going, I got to go in.
I got to heal.
I'm telling you, get how to meet yourself.
Now, while they're waiting for their workbook, is there one thing? One thing that you
could give everybody to do when they want to take the first step on the road to healing.
There absolutely is. Again, full circle beautifully.
Change happens when we first become conscious of where it is or at.
And the way that we create that consciousness is we begin to shift out of that autopilot
of all the habits that you'll explore within the book, within how to meet yourself.
If you listen to any of the content that I put out, any of the platforms, it's about becoming
aware in all of these different areas.
Awareness happens that when we're conscious first and foremost,
so the way we can begin is by creating one moment,
one, the commitment, setting the intention
because remember the further we move into that unknown,
the more we're gonna challenge that subconscious mind,
the more we're gonna go right back
into those familiar habits, because that's where we're comfortable. That's how we, the more we're going to go right back into those familiar habits
because that's where we're comfortable. That's how we know ourselves. That's where we feel safe.
So I will always talk about and we talk about in my membership the self-hilarial circle concept of a small daily promise
which literally means so for this exercise of a consciousness check-in
committing to every day
building in one moment where you're going to check in with yourself as a conscious
being. Now, because most of us walk around with a cell phone, a lot of people can be helped
benefit it by maybe putting an alarm on their phone for some time during their waking hours.
So say you're going to set it for 2 p.m. in whatever time zone you're in. So at 2 p.m. your alarm
is going to go off. If you don't want to set an alarm, you could set the intention of every day when you brush
your teeth.
Maybe that's going to be your moment.
You can anchor it to some activity that you know you do daily or more often than not.
Maybe it's your cup of coffee in the morning.
That will be your one moment, your reminder.
Others I developed when I began my journey understanding how difficult it is to create
change, how that autopilot, from the moment you open your eyes, autopilot is ready to
coast you through your day. I actually began a practice of what I call
future self journaling, which really simply is every morning and I still do it. I wake up
and I set my intention for the day in a journaling practice. I write what that small daily promise
is. So all of that is helping to remind ourselves that that autopilot is at the ready. It's
going to dictate your day if you're not aware.
So maybe others, I'll set one more final,
you know, possibility is post it notes, right?
Writing somewhere in your day,
that when you go into the bathroom,
you'll see the reminder for the consciousness check in.
And I'm laboring this point to really highlight
how powerful that subconscious is,
how if you don't set that
intention and remind yourself of that intention, you're never going to be able to make that
new choice.
So, of course, it's not a magic intention.
You don't shut the journal, you don't see the post-it note, and magically you're conscious.
Now you want to embody that consciousness check in.
So what that could look like when that alarm goes off, when you see that reminder, when
you're brushing your teeth, and you remember drinking your coffee,
you want to first just tune in naturally,
the second, you're, oh, come to mind,
oh, conscious this check in, now's the moment I'm going to do it.
Simply notice without judgment, where's your attention?
What was it that you were paying attention to,
were you actually pouring the coffee,
smelling the aroma,
were you, if it wasn't alarm that went off, where you really immersed in the
conversation that you were having or really present to the work that you were doing, or
the dishes that you were washing, or was your attention somewhere else?
You were lost in thought, worrying about an argument you had, an upcoming presentation,
right?
Were you not aware of the given moment?
Because where our attention is is going to dictate how present we are.
If I'm lost in thought, whether it's about yesterday or tomorrow or whatever it is,
I'm not here to what's, I'm probably still doing the action of doing the dishes,
of drinking my coffee, but intentionally, I'm a million miles away.
So again, not to shame yourself, just to notice.
Am I fully conscious? Am I aware of what's
happening or did the alarm almost scare me? I jumped out of my skin, went out and went off because
I was so lost in thought, I was disconnected, I was distracted, I was on my spaceship. And then in
that moment, you can embody the choice to focus, to shift your attention. I like to say grab a hook
for your attention. And some options are, your hook for your attention and some options are. Your
body will be breathing. It's what keeps us alive. So for some of us, we can just attune in that moment
to my breath. The breath of others coming from my chest or from my belly, maybe just I noticing,
just taking the moment. Once I've come to the awareness, oh, I was lost and thought somewhere else,
how is my breathing? Hocking our attention on our breath. For others, the breath
might be difficult at first. Maybe it can be what is happening in terms of the sensational experience,
my senses. Is it alive because I'm washing the dishes, right? And I smell the soap on my hands,
or the coffee that I've just made? Are there bright lights in the restaurant where I'm having the
conversation with my friend? I might go through that, you know, the five the restaurant where I'm having the conversation with my friend?
I might go through that, you know, the five senses checklist where I make the intention to
notice something I'm seeing, touching, tasting, hearing in that moment.
I'm now in my body because I'm either paying attention to my breath, I'm paying attention
to what's happening in terms of sensation, or I could just pay attention to the fact that
I'm in a body grounded in time.
Maybe I'm sitting and I just feel how it,
my heels are feeling upon the earth,
the walk that I'm on,
feeling what it's like to be in a human body with muscles
that are taking those next few steps
as I'm on the go and my alarm went off.
Maybe I'm sitting in enough nice comfortable chair,
I'm laying on my couch.
I can just turn my attention
to how it feels to be supported. However, it is that your human vessel is being supported
in that moment. And that commitment begins when we set that intention, when we notice
where our consciousness is, not shaming ourself if you're not present. And then when we find
the hook and it might take experimenting with all of those different suggestions I just made to discover the one that just gives you a little more likelihood
of becoming conscious.
And then you want to build on that daily commitment.
Just keep that one promise for a couple of weeks until you're almost like, ah, you know,
I do this now.
And then build two, three moments in of your day, because the more present we are, the more we can
then expand the more full focus to, okay, well, how is my body doing? Am I in that state
of dysregulation? What's racing through my mind? What are those meanings and those filters
like we touched on that are coloring emotionally, how I'm being or what I'm reacting from in
this moment? None of that is possible until we first learn how it feels to be present
to ourselves in our own presence in whatever moment it is that we're living.
Well, thank you for sharing that. And I want to just say something to the cynics, because
when you hear the word healing and you're dealing with topics like childhood, post-traumatic stress, dysregulation disorder, it can feel
sort of like, really?
That's how I'm going to start this.
And so I want to talk to you the cynic because I'm going to give you an example.
You know how when you go away on vacation?
And it's like amazing because you're in a totally different environment and you're present
to everything because it smells different and sounds different and looks different and
you're in a hotel room and you're on a beach or you're in the mountains and just everything
is different.
So it wakes you up and you have the sense of aliveness and presence.
What Dr. Nicole is saying is that you're not going to be able in your current life to snap
into that 24-7.
And so this practice that you're going to have to prompt yourself to do and that you
need to commit to doing is a way to start to awaken that feeling in your day-to-day
life now so that you can develop this muscle of being present to your own experience.
And it's only from there being awake
that you can then start to widen that out
into what you actually want your experience of life to be.
And I strongly encourage you, if you don't already,
to follow Dr. Nicole online with millions and millions
and millions of other people that she reaches every day at the holistic psychologist.
How to meet yourself is an extraordinary self-guided workbook that walks you through how to meet
your emotional self, how to meet your habit self, how to work through the ego, how to
work through past stories.
It's beautiful.
It is just a gift. And so give this gift to yourself.
And Dr. Nicole also has a membership program that is so popular that if you're interested,
you should check it out, self-healer circle. But you have to be on the wait list before you can
even register. So I want you to get in there and check it out if this is something that is interesting
to you.
So I want to thank you, Dr. Nicole, for showing up and for just really helping us understand
the opportunity that we all have to heal ourselves
and to, in your words,
start to be the parent that we didn't have
because they weren't able to do it.
I wanna thank you.
Now, as always, for the opportunity to connect with you,
to connect with your community
and for how you so authentically,
so bravely show up in this world.
I'm so, so grateful. And I'm so grateful for all of you listening. You know, I want you to take a moment, maybe as you sign off from,
from this podcast to celebrate the, the fact that you tuned in that maybe you heard some new,
maybe some even challenging ideas and you gave yourself, I love the language that you're using
the opportunity to hear
something new, to challenge maybe some familiar beliefs, because it is in that newness doing
something, making a new choice, challenging. Maybe what we imagined was again, just inherently
who we are that great change. Literal lifetime transformation begins. So I always like to just take a moment
and honor the listeners, honor the work
and the conversations, Mel, that you have,
that give people what I believe is a life-changing opportunity
to hear new information, to make the sense of it,
that makes sense and resonates in their own life,
will then give them with that opportunity
to begin to integrate it through those new daily choices. And in my opinion, it is like those dominoes that it quite literally begins with us becoming more
conscious, more aware. And in my opinion leads to maybe this sounds idealistic, but world changing
new actions of our collective. And that's what keeps me inspired to show up. So thank you again
for your time, your presence and who you are. Oh, you're the best. I like what you said about Domino's and how it all begins inside
of each and every one of us, that the first step is becoming more aware and the more aware
that we become. And I'll go all the way back to the beginning, like Jesse becoming aware that when she
gets overwhelmed in life, she shuts down or she cries and she doesn't know why when
you start with becoming more conscious.
That does open the door to healing and to changing your response to things.
And I don't think it's idealistic. I do think that when we start
and change ourselves, the world around us changes. There's no doubt. And one of the things that I
just love about you, Dr. Nicole, is that you help me get clarity around the issues that I don't
understand, you know, like not having childhood memories, which is one of the first things that you
and I connected around. And Dr. Nicole also says is one of the first things that you and I connected around.
And Dr. Nicole also says, one of the first places that you can start, once you start to become aware,
is just set an intention every single morning. And I like to think about this, like a tow rope.
That singular intention is something that you can hold on to that will pull you with that intention throughout your day.
And it's powerful because if you set an intention today, today I'm going to be peaceful.
Today I am going to tap into my belief in myself.
Today I'm not going to be in a hurry today.
That's going to be my intention.
You can come back to that singular intention and it will help you center yourself and gain control.
And the genius of it is in the simplicity.
Having a singular intention as Dr. Nicole recommends,
that is something you can remember,
which means no matter how complicated today gets or overwhelming it gets,
you can continue to come back to it, so I want you to use it.
One other thing that I love
about Dr. Nishkol is that every single time she reminds us that you are your best healer, I just feel like a,
oh, yeah, that's right. I am my own best healer because I can get conscious and I can start healing my
nervous system by setting an intention and noticing when I get triggered. And one more thing that you can do,
pick up her new book.
We will link to both her number one New York Times bestseller,
how to do the work,
and her latest instant bestseller,
how to meet yourself in the show notes.
And if you do decide to start healing,
know that I am right there alongside you
doing the healing work too.
In fact, it's been one of the greatest things
that I have done for myself in the last three years.
One thing that I notice now that I get older
is we all start down the path at some point.
At some point, you're gonna wake up and go,
I am so tired of this bullshit.
Doesn't matter how much money I make or I don't make
or what friends surround me or don't surround me,
I am tired of the inner chaos.
You deserve peace. And just know that as you
start to repair your nervous system and you start to dedicate your life to finding that
peace and that healing inside you, I'm right there alongside you. And I also want you to
know that I love you, I believe in you, and I believe in your ability to become more
conscious and aware and to use the
simple tools that you're learning every single time that we talk to create a
much better life for yourself and inner peace that you deserve as you live it.
All right, I'll see you in a few days.
Oh, one more thing. It's the legal language.
This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
It is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach,
psychotherapist, or other qualified
professional.
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