Approximate reading time: 12 min
I am feeling better.
I had a really lovely weekend.
I feel like I am starting to plug back into my old self again.
About 4 months ago I wrote about a new friend that I made at a meetup, Surjay. As co-incidence would have it Surjay actually lives 3 streets away from me. I had no idea he even lived in this area when I was house hunting but I couldn’t be happier to have him so close. On a whim, we decided to go and get something to eat on Friday night and we found a really lovely Thai restaurant just up the road from us. The food was amazing, the company was even better and it just reminded me how grateful I am to have such supportive and caring friends in my life.
I have been waiting a long time to share my learning about the Polyvagal Theory (PVT). I decided, however, that it would be better to stick to the progression of my healing and not jump ahead of myself.
(It’s been hard ya’all!!)
I’m not a patient person.
But finally, I am here and I don’t think it could have come at a more perfect time.
As I have already mentioned
(numerous times)
the last couple of months have been quite emotionally difficult for me.
But throughout this whole period, what has consistently been at the forefront of my mind is everything that I have learnt about the Polyvagal Theory.
The Polyvagal Theory, for me, epitomises the phrase:
Before I go into my explanation of how it works, I need to add a disclaimer.
As excited as I am to share my learning I am also very mindful that there is a lot of criticism of Dr Porges’s work, with some people labelling it a pseudo-science. The arguments range from a lack of scientific evidence to oversimplifying complex emotional reactions.
I wish I could say I have been thoroughly down that rabbit hole but it would be a lie.
In fairness, I did try.
Frankly, I got bored.
Trying to understand different people’s arguments as to why it doesn’t work all got a little confusing.
At the end of the day, I am not a neuroscientist, so I will not even attempt to wade into an argument I have little scientific knowledge about.
All I can say is this.
As a layperson who has embraced and incorporated the understanding of this theory in my life….it has helped me a lot.
I am not going to say it was the magic pill that fixed everything. But it definitely has been a significant piece in my mental health journey…
(So far)
So that’s enough for me.
Seeing my world through a Polyvagal lens has facilitated a huge shift in my healing of childhood trauma and simply understanding my anxiety. I feel that it links up so well with the attachment theory in explaining how co-regulation with our caretakers is such a central aspect of early attachment and the development of us having a healthy nervous system.
As young infants, we begin to internalise a sense of safety, security and trust with our caretakers. Unfortunately, when our carers are struggling with their own unresolved traumas many of them cannot meet our cues that we need to be soothed, comforted and cared for. This, as a result, has a huge effect on infants, making them prone to anxieties relating to perceived threats to their safety and to how they trust and relate to others later on in life.
The first time I was introduced to the Polyvagal theory it just made sense and explained so much of how I had felt most of my life. When I started therapy years ago my main objective was to stop the emotional swinging. I could be happy, connected and embracing life with passion and excitement one day and then completely crashing and shutting down the next.
It was EXHAUSTING and I just wanted it to stop.
Throughout my years of therapy, I began to realise that the ups and downs were a normal part of life, and I started to very slowly build up my emotional resilience. I also started to realise that so many of my shutdown periods weren’t just happening in a vacuum. I began to see how I would so often, unconsciously react, to stuff that was happening around me. Rather than feeling the emotions, and processing what I was feeling I would quite simply feel overwhelmed and shut down….while all the time blaming myself for not being able to stay upbeat and positive all the time.
Self-judgment can be soul-destroying.
By the time I learnt about the PVT, it just so beautifully summarised and explained so much of what I was beginning to understand about myself and how my body reacts in different situations.
Quite simply, it felt like a simple blue-print for my life to help me navigate the ups and downs.
I have this picture stuck on my bedroom door and I clock in with it daily.
One of the things that the Polyvagal theory did for me was explain the power of connection with others.
In a way, I feel like it has brought me full circle back to myself.
I spent the first 30 years of my life drowning in my emotions and then trying to hook into other people to save me from them. In my late 30’s and early 40’s I started to realise how unhealthy that was, especially when I was not particularly picky about who my rescuers were going to be.
My attempt to rectify the situation and become more resilient involved me convincing myself that I needed to become self-reliant and to stop needing people so much.
I swung the pendulum too far to the other side and I missed the point completely.
As humans, we need other people.
The Polyvagal Theory talks a lot about the co-regulation we can get from caring supportive people who are able to be there for you and provide a safe, non-judgmental space for you to just be you.
These are those friends who
- Don’t try to fix you
- Who aren’t continually handing out advice on how you can ‘be’ better or ‘do’ better
- Who see your brokenness and love you despite it
- Who allow you to experience and express all of your emotions
- These friends are the keepers of the faith…..for those days when you are fresh out
But most importantly these are the friends that allow you to do all of the above for them and who are growing and healing with you.
Co-Regulation is a mutual process.
I am so very grateful that I have started to build such a loving and supportive network of friends around me over the last couple of years. It hasn’t always been easy. A couple of years ago my therapist asked me why I always allow my friends to choose me. It was one of those eye-opening moments when I realised how I had been allowing myself to connect and hook into so many unhealthy friendships simply because they liked me.
These days I know what I want and what I need in a friend.
While I have a significantly smaller friendship circle than I did 10 years ago,
I feel so much safer and connected with the friendships that I have now.
Dare I say it, I feel like I am starting to trust again…and it feels good. 😉
Written the 18th February 2022
I love learning new things
Writing about them
Putting pen to paper
Seems to help things sink in
The latest of my fetishism will have to be
Dr Stephen Porges’s work
The Polyvagal Theory
I’m not going into the science
(I don’t have a clue)
Which made reading his book
So flippen hard to do
Neurotic Angel went ballistic
Screaming at me
“How dare you read this book
Without a science degree”
But I duly ignored her
I soldiered on
I found some online lectures
That helped me along
And then another book
that was simplified
On how to use the theory
How it is applied
So, thank you Deb Dana
For dumbing it down
For people like me
Who get so easily confound
So, I think I’ve got the basics
(I’m so proud of me)
I’m attempting to summarise
It all for you to see
Because I think it’s amazing
It explains so much
About how we can dissociate
How we can completely lose touch
With what’s going on around us
When we are triggered and scared
This theory, I believe
Is something that needs to be shared
It’s a more scientific approach
Of what’s going on inside
When my exiles get triggered
When I need to isolate and hide
It’s this deeper understanding
Of why I don’t feel safe
How my internal family systems
Connect to different states
So, here’s my thesis
(In poetry form)
Slightly plagiarised from Deb Danna
(With ever so much warmth)
When we open our eyes
When we take our first breath
Our tiny, young souls
Embark on a quest
To feel safe in our bodies
Safe in our environments
Feeling safe in relationships
(Which is a basic requirement)
Essentially, we come
To this world wired to connect
Our bodies come armed
To serve and protect
Hence mother nature
Has us all well-prepared
With a built-in surveillance system
(So, we don’t get insnared)
Our autonomic nervous system
Functions to help keep us alive
Regulating bodily functions
To help us survive
It’s constantly sensing
For safety and risk
Moment to moment it’s asking:
“How safe is this?
Dr Porges coined
The term ‘neuroception’
How we differentiate between
What’s safe and life-threatening
And all of this ‘listening’ happens
Way below
Our level of consciousness
So, we don’t even know
How our body is reacting
To all of these millions of cues
Which in turn affects what we think
What we say
And what we do
How we can get triggered so easily
At even a ‘perceived’ threat
It may not be real
But your body still clocks it
So, visualise your nervous system
As if it were a ladder
That we climb up and down daily
from happy states to the more sadder.
Let’s start at the top
Of this autonomic ladder
When we are safe and social
Feeling more connected to one another
Warm, passionate curious
Grounded and at ease
Our Ventral Vagal state is
The optimal place to be
Neuroceptions of safety
Seem to be the norm
We feel hardy within ourselves
More able to weather any storm
Our heart rate is more regulated
Our digestion is good
Our oxytocin increases
We practice better selfcare
(Like we should)
We focus easily on conversations
Our hearing is more intune
We find it easier to tune out
Distracting noise in a room
Ventral Vagal is the best state
That we clearly need to be in
When making important decisions
Or simply communicating
And to me it sounds a lot like
Our ‘S’elf with a capital S
From Internal family Systems
Not bogged down or overwhelmed
By undue stress
Calm and regulated
Just more at home in our skin
Those times in life when ease
Flows through everything
But as always in life
What goes up must come down
Our body picks up neuroceptions
Of danger and unsafety around
We become mobilised for action
(Which is often a good thing)
Ready for fight or flight
We can be angry and confronting
In our Sympathetic state
Our heart rate can increase
As does our Adrenaline
And how fast we breathe
Our ability to relate to others
Open and honestly declines
We can feel impulsive, irritable
Overwhelmed at certain times
And while this state is paramount
For us to get up and ‘do’
All of the things in our day
That we need to get through
Being stuck in this state permanently
When this state is our ‘home’
Leaving us anxious, worried
So often feeling very alone
The third step down the ladder
Our Dorsal Vagal state
Where we completely shut down
We can feel numb and dissociate
Unable to do anything
We feel immobilised
Disconnected, like a zombie
(Please don’t look me in the eyes)
As our heart rate decreases
We feel despair and hopelessness
Shutting ourselves off from the world
Helpless and depressed
A dark space that can often
Leave us drowning in shame
With an increase in endorphins
That numbs out our pain
But sometimes it’s our bodies way
Of taking a step back
Shutting down briefly so we can
Simply get back on track
Healthy Individuals can bounce
Through these different states with relative ease
But people who’ve experienced trauma
Don’t move through these states easily
Instead, they can get stuck mobilised
In chronic fight or flight
Or shut down and depressed
Unable to understand why
But there is beauty that comes
When you start to realise
That there is another way to live
Another way to be alive
There is obviously so much more
That I could say
But I think for now
That’s enough for today…
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