Flip Your Mindset

Stacey Uhrig

Having spent over four decades overcoming childhood adversities and helping others with my post-traumatic wisdom, I decided to change careers and pursue my purpose at the age of 49. I became a Certified in Trauma Recovery, Rapid Transformational Therapy Practitioner, and Parts Work soon after, I launched Flip Your Mindset, a podcast that serves as a no-cost entry point for those looking to resolve their own traumas. Through Flip Your Mindset™, my goal is to help listeners transform their perspectives and see their lives through a new lens. As a foul-mouthed, unapologetic Buddhist enthusiast, I'm not afraid to use colorful language to express my emotions, but I draw the line at any derogatory or dehumanizing language. Join me and let's explore new ways to overcome life's challenges and emerge stronger and more resilient than ever before. Thank you for listening. flipyourmindset.substack.com

  1. Ep 183: The Primal Wound: Healing Hidden Trauma Through Neurofeedback With Dolly Regier

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    Ep 183: The Primal Wound: Healing Hidden Trauma Through Neurofeedback With Dolly Regier

    What if you could train your brain to find calm after living in a constant state of high alert? This week on the podcast, I sat down with Dolly Regier, an expert in neurofeedback and the founder of Balanced Brains + Bodies. Dolly brings a wealth of knowledge with her Master of Education in Neuroscience and Trauma, but she also brings her deeply personal experience as both an adoptee and an adoptive mother. We discussed the complex layers of developmental trauma and how emerging technologies are offering new paths to healing. Here are my biggest takeaways from our conversation. The Primal Wound and Implicit Memory We often think of trauma as a specific, terrible event. However, as Dolly and I discussed, trauma is actually what happens inside the body as a result of an event. For adoptees, this often begins with what is known as the primal wound. When a baby is separated from its biological mother, there is an immediate loss of connection. These are pre-verbal, implicit memories stored deep within the nervous system. The body remembers this lack of safety, keeping the nervous system in a chronic state of fight or flight. For Dolly, this hypervigilance showed up as overachievement and people-pleasing: coping mechanisms she used to secure connection and safety. The Limits of Talk Therapy When we experience trauma, our standard response is to seek talk therapy. But what happens when talking about the trauma actually re-triggers the nervous system? Talk therapy relies heavily on the prefrontal cortex, which is the logical, decision-making part of the brain. Trauma, however, lives in the amygdala, the brain’s survival center. The amygdala does not process language; it processes instinct and safety. This is why traditional therapy can sometimes feel like you are spinning your wheels while your body remains in a state of panic. What is Neurofeedback? This is where neurofeedback comes in. Dolly described it beautifully: it is like holding a mirror up to the brain. During a session, sensors are placed on the scalp to monitor cortical activity. As you listen to a soundtrack, the software detects turbulence or dysregulation in your brainwaves and creates tiny pauses in the audio. These pauses alert the brain to its own dysregulation. Think of it like defragging a computer hard drive. The brain recognizes the disorganized information, intuitively self-corrects, and brings itself back to a state of calm and present-moment regulation. It is entirely passive. You do not have to relive painful memories or even speak a word. Parenting Trauma: Why Love Is Not Always Enough One of the most profound parts of our conversation centered on parenting children with trauma histories. The old advice of “just love them and they will be fine” falls incredibly short. When an adopted child exhibits challenging behaviors, they are rarely acting out of malice. These behaviors are survival adaptations. The child is trying to take control in a world that fundamentally feels unsafe. Traditional parenting methods, or even approaches that worked for biological children, often fail because they do not address the dysregulated nervous system underneath the behavior. Final Thoughts Healing the nervous system is a vital component of emotional wellness, especially within the adoption space. Our brains possess an incredible capacity for change, meaning we do not have to remain stuck in survival mode. Resources for You: * Connect with Dolly Regier: To learn more about at-home neurofeedback training, visit her website at https://www.balancedbrainsandbodies.com/ * Take the Assessment: Are hidden patterns holding you back? Gain clarity on your emotional well-being by taking my free H.U.R.R.T. self-assessment at https://www.flipyourmindset.com/hurrt See you on the flip side! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit flipyourmindset.substack.com/subscribe

    21 phút
  2. Ep 182: Exposing the Patterns: Inside “The Narcissist’s Playbook”

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    Ep 182: Exposing the Patterns: Inside “The Narcissist’s Playbook”

    Today’s conversation is not a standard discussion about narcissism. It is not a simple checklist of traits , nor is it a basic “five signs you are dealing with a narcissist” type of overview. In our latest episode, I sit down with Kimberly Weeks to discuss a deeply uncomfortable but incredibly necessary new documentary called The Narcissist’s Playbook. Directed by Mark Vicente, who spent over a decade inside the Nexium organization before realizing the truth about its leader, the film asks one central question: “How did I not see it?”. This documentary does something completely different. It lets you hear directly from self-aware malignant narcissists who openly explain how they think, how they operate, and why they manipulate. There are no filters and no softening. They lay out their tactics in real time. The Illusion of the Hook One of the most insidious patterns Kimberly Weeks and I discuss is the initial fast-moving connection, often recognized as love bombing. When a predatory personality hones in on you, it can feel intoxicating. It feels like you have finally met someone who sees you, understands you, and appreciates every detail about your life. However, as Kimberly Weeks explains in our interview, this is not a genuine connection. It is a highly calculated strategy. The offender acts like a chameleon, shape-shifting to become the exact character you need in order to feel attached. They study you, mirror your desires, and lull you into a sense of absolute safety. Once the hook is in, the psychological abuse begins. The Covert Threat in Plain Sight We also explore the dangerous reality of covert or communal narcissists. Unlike the loud, grandiose personalities we often picture, covert narcissists are the “undercover” operators. They are the people pulling strings behind closed doors to pit others against one another, all while maintaining an altruistic public image. They purposely hide in positions of trust. They are community leaders, mentors, and individuals running charitable organizations. They seek out these positions to access vulnerable populations, utilizing people to feed their own need for power with total disregard for the devastating harm they cause. Facing the Reality Realizing that you have been on the receiving end of this manipulation is shattering. It forces you to question your entire reality and watch the whole house of cards fall. But as we emphasize in our conversation, accepting the reality of what happened is the bravest thing you can do. It moves you out of the confusion and gives you the clear agency to make different choices moving forward. The knowledge shared in this documentary is vital for survivors, families, and anyone trying to navigate these complex, toxic dynamics. The film is self-funded and relies on a grassroots effort to reach the people who need it most. If this message resonates, be part of getting this truth out: ➡ Donate to help complete and distribute The Narcissist’s Playbook film: https://www.narcissistsplaybook.com/short-trailer-landing-page?utm_source=weeks_aff_uhrig This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit flipyourmindset.substack.com/subscribe

    47 phút
  3. Ep 181: What the News Hides About Gun Violence Trauma (Listen Now)

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    Ep 181: What the News Hides About Gun Violence Trauma (Listen Now)

    We see the statistics on the news constantly, but we rarely hear about the families left to pick up the pieces. Today on Flip Your Mindset, we are having a conversation that society often tries to avoid. It is a heavy topic, but it is an incredibly necessary one. We are talking about the hidden, long-term trauma of gun violence and how it physically alters our bodies and our communities. I sat down with Jill McMahon, a licensed professional counselor who spent 20 years specializing in suicide loss and bereavement. She is also a survivor herself. Jill brings a perspective that challenges the mainstream narrative and offers a real path forward for those struggling to find safety in an unpredictable world. During our conversation, Jill shared insights that literally made me catch my breath. Here are just a few realities we face today: * The 50% Reality: Over 50% of adults in the United States report being impacted or threatened in some way by gun violence. This means half the people you interact with daily are carrying this specific weight. * The Ripple Effect: For every death by firearm suicide, an average of 135 individuals are impacted. It is not just the immediate family; it is the first responders, the coworkers, and the witnesses. * The Invisible Brain Injury: Trauma literally changes our neurobiology. If we looked at a brain scan before and after a traumatic event, they would physically look different. * The Generational Burden: Our children are growing up hardwired for hypervigilance. They sit in classrooms identifying the fastest exits instead of just learning. The cortisol and stress placed on their nervous systems at such a young age is changing an entire generation. One of the most profound moments of the interview was when Jill explained how our bodies process fear. She noted that we are really good at putting on a mask for society, but if you do not clean the trauma out, your body will eventually show you what your brain tries to hide. However, this episode is not just about the heavy statistics. It is about hope, recovery, and regulating our nervous systems. Jill utilizes a concept in her workshops called “The Lemon Test” to prove a very simple fact: your brain believes what you tell it whenever you tell it. The amygdala does not have a filter. If you tell yourself you are broken, your body responds in kind. Jill wants every survivor to know one vital truth: You are not broken. You are bruised. We are wounded, but healing is completely possible. This is an episode I believe everyone needs to hear. Whether you have been directly impacted, or you simply want to understand the anxiety walking through our communities, there is something in this conversation for you. If you found value in this conversation, please hit the like button, leave a comment, and share this post with someone who might need to hear it. Let’s keep this important dialogue going. See you on the flip side, Stacey Uhrig *** Resources Mentioned in the Episode: * Take my free Hurt Self-Assessment: flipyourmindset.com/hurt * Learn more about Jill McMahon’s practice: jillmcmahoncounseling.com * Read Jill’s book: Bulletproof: Healing after gun violence and trauma (Available on Amazon) This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit flipyourmindset.substack.com/subscribe

    58 phút
  4. Ep 180: Are Your Limiting Beliefs Actually Survival Skills?

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    Ep 180: Are Your Limiting Beliefs Actually Survival Skills?

    Have you ever noticed the same negative thoughts showing up again and again? These thoughts are automatic and usually not very kind. You might have an active inner critic, which I like to call the itty bitty s****y committee. I recently recorded a solo podcast episode about this exact topic. My amazing podcast manager, Starlin Santos Cruz, encouraged me to start sharing more of the insights I usually save for my one-on-one clients. We often think our limiting beliefs are just facts about who we are, but the truth is much more complex. Redefining Survival I want to start by saying something clearly: the stories that you tell yourself are not random. They formed during survival. When people hear the word survival, they often think of extreme situations. But survival happens quietly and covertly. In this context, it means your nervous system is doing whatever it needs to do to maintain connection, predictability, or emotional stability. Survival can mean: * Learning to stay small because taking up space could create conflict. * Learning to stay alert because changing moods did not feel safe. * Learning not to need too much because your needs were not met consistently. Survival is not just about danger; it is about adaptation. Beliefs are Survival Strategies Here is the reframe that changes things for people: beliefs are not opinions. They are survival strategies. They answer questions like: what do I need to believe to stay safe here? For many of us, those questions were answered early in life. Children are self-referential by nature. When trying to make sense of a confusing or painful experience, the conclusion often becomes “it must be me.” That single belief can shape an entire adult life. It turns into feeling like you need to work harder, stay in control, or not need too much. These are not personality traits. They are survival strategies. Why Forcing Positive Thoughts Fails This is why arguing with your beliefs rarely works. When you try to force a new positive belief on top of an old survival story, your nervous system will resist. From the perspective of your nervous system, that old belief once kept you safe. It does not know that you are older now or that you have more choice. It only knows what worked in the past. Compassion Over Conflict You cannot heal what you do not understand. Instead of asking how to get rid of a belief, try asking what was happening when this belief became necessary. That question changes your entire relationship with yourself. It brings compassion in instead of conflict. Just because a story helped you survive does not mean it gets to run your life forever. If you are ready to explore this further, you can check out my eight-week live course called The Calm Code, where we gently update those old stories through safety and community, next cohort begins April 22, 2026: https://flipyourmindset.com/thecalmcode This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit flipyourmindset.substack.com/subscribe

    14 phút
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    Ep 179: The Hidden Link Between Toxic Stress, Safety, and ADHD With Dr. Bethany Bilodeau

    Welcome back to the Flip Your Mindset Substack! I recently sat down for a raw, honest conversation with Dr. Bethany Bilodeau, an expert in human behavior. I actually found Bethany scrolling on social media because she was speaking the exact same language I use with my clients. I had been researching literature to help the parents I work with, and everything she was saying aligned perfectly with what I was looking for. I had to get her on the show, and this conversation completely shifted my perspective. If you are a parent or educator feeling overwhelmed by challenging behaviors, this episode is going to change how you look at everything. Bethany is a behaviorist, but she does not rely on traditional behavior modification tactics like forced compliance. Instead, she focuses on finding out where a person feels unsafe and what underlying needs are not being met. Here is a breakdown of the core lessons from our powerful conversation. Behavior is a Smoke Signal, Not a Character Flaw Parents often come to me when their children are having meltdowns, struggling to focus, or showing complete apathy. In the traditional mental health model, these children are frequently slapped with labels like ADHD, ADD, or Generalized Anxiety Disorder. Bethany views these actions through a completely different lens. She argues that behavior is simply a sign or a “smoke signal” that something is off. At our most basic level, humans are mammals. When an animal in the wild feels unsafe, it reacts with survival instincts like fight, flight, freeze, or submit. We are no different. Behaviors are adaptations to survive circumstances, and absolutely no child is born a problem. People love to say, “Oh, I’m just this way.” B******t. Everybody has learned how to survive their environments. The True Meaning of “Safety” Safety is the entire missing link when it comes to addressing behavior. But a lack of safety does not just mean physical danger. Bethany explained to me that a nervous system can feel threatened by a variety of hidden factors: * Environmental Triggers: A child’s nervous system might feel unsafe due to loud heating systems, fluorescent overhead lighting, or even toxic mold in the home. * Relational Disconnection: Children have a foundational need to know they matter and are lovable. If we are physically present but emotionally distracted by text messages or our phones, it can send a signal to the child’s body that they are not safe. * Neuroception: This is when the body senses something is off before the conscious mind is even aware of it. It is that feeling of the hair on your arms standing up. Rethinking Trauma and Diagnoses Trauma plays a massive, often ignored role in behavior. Bethany noted something that literally made me stop in my tracks: if you have been born, you have experienced post-traumatic stress disorder. She gave a profound example regarding a 17-year-old student who was adopted at birth. That child experienced relinquishment trauma because her body biologically sensed she had been removed from her source of origin. The nervous system reacts to this deep sense of abandonment and rejection, which can lead to extreme fight or flight reactions. These reactions are routinely misdiagnosed as ADHD or Bipolar Disorder. Even Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) is completely misunderstood. It actually comes from a part of the brain called the anterior cingulate gyrus. When a child cannot shift or move forward because they do not feel safe, their automatic response is to shut down and say “no.” It is not defiance; it is a lack of perceived safety. The Danger of Compliance Models Traditional compliance models are dangerous because they force kids to stuff their emotions down. Bethany shared her own experience of being diagnosed with ADHD as a child. She was repeatedly told by well-meaning teachers to sit down and shut up, which caused her to stifle her true energy and identity for years. Changing an identity is terrifying for a child. A kid known for having meltdowns might be scared to become a “better person” because their bad behavior currently yields a predictable response from the adults around them. The crisis feels normal to them. They fear that if they change, they might lose the love and acceptance they rely on. The Ultimate Takeaway We cannot heal what we do not understand. If the goal is just to modify a child’s behavior with positive reinforcement, you are screwed. You will fail because you are never addressing the core wound. I am viscerally passionate about this. I want to scream it from the rooftops because I hate seeing people being judged when all they are trying to do is survive the world. We need less judgment and more compassion. Instead of looking at a struggling child and asking “What is wrong with you?”, we must start asking “What happened to you?” To hear our full conversation, check out the latest episode of Flip Your Mindset. You can also find Dr. Bethany Bilodeau’s tools for educators and caregivers using the links below: * Get Dr. Bethany Bilodeau’s Book: “Ease the Pain in the Classroom: A Guide to Safety and Regulation”: https://www.thebehaviorbootcamp.com/ * Visit The Behavior Bootcamp: https://www.thebehaviorbootcamp.com/ This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit flipyourmindset.substack.com/subscribe

    1 giờ 4 phút
  6. Ep 178: The Invisible Backpack: Why You Feel Emotionally Exhausted

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    Ep 178: The Invisible Backpack: Why You Feel Emotionally Exhausted

    Have you ever felt emotionally exhausted without being able to point to a clear reason why? Or have you ever reacted strongly to something and wondered, “why did that hit me so hard?” Have you ever noticed that certain patterns keep repeating, even though you have worked so hard to break them? If any of those questions landed for you, I want to introduce a metaphor that sits at the very heart of my work: the invisible backpack. What Are You Actually Carrying? The invisible backpack is the emotional weight that you have been carrying without realizing it was ever placed on your shoulders. It is filled with beliefs, expectations, and protective patterns that made sense at one point in your life. You did not wake up one day and decide to pack it. Backpacks do not get filled all at once; they get filled slowly over small moments and experiences. Every time a need was not met or safety felt conditional, those moments were thrown into the backpack and carried forward. Surviving Other People’s Worlds Here is what goes deeper. Some of what you are carrying was never a response to your direct experience. It was a response to the environment you grew up in. We do not just learn to survive our own experiences; we learn how to survive inside other people’s emotional worlds. You might have inherited: * Hypervigilance from an anxious parent. * Responsibility from a caretaker who needed emotional support. * Silence from a family that did not know how to talk about emotions. * The need to control chaos that was never named or explained. We do not choose these strategies; as children, we absorb them and become fluent in them. My Own Backpack For most of my life, I did not know I was carrying this backpack, but I knew I was exhausted and overwhelmed. I would ask myself why things were so hard for me, and I often bought into the narrative that I was the problem. In my early 30s, the weight caused a nervous breakdown. I got help, I got stabilized, and then I put the backpack right back on. I did not examine what I was carrying, and I became an incredibly high-functioning person who was dying on the inside. About ten years later, in my 40s, I had a second nervous breakdown. That time, something shifted. Instead of asking how to just get past it, I asked what I was supposed to learn and why I was carrying this weight. Taking It Off I finally took the backpack off, not to throw it away, but to investigate and get curious. I realized that some of those protective strategies were smart and wise for the time, but they just did not belong in my life anymore. Other things were simply inherited and never mine to carry to begin with. Healing is not about pushing through, moving forward, and being resilient. It is about learning how to take that backpack off and deciding with absolute self-compassion what can stay and what can finally go. If you feel like you are carrying too much, it does not mean you are broken or defective. It simply means you have not had the chance yet to take the backpack off, get curious, and look inside. Go Beyond Managing Anxiety. Heal It from Within. Introducing The Calm Code, an 8-week group coaching experience to gently untangle the roots of your anxiety, befriend your nervous system, and reclaim your inherent sense of inner safety and peace. The Calm Code runs two times per year. Next cohort begins April 22, 2026: https://flipyourmindset.com/thecalmcode This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit flipyourmindset.substack.com/subscribe

    11 phút
  7. Ep 177: The Reality of an Autism Diagnosis: Healing Parental Trauma with Dr. Theresa Lyons

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    Ep 177: The Reality of an Autism Diagnosis: Healing Parental Trauma with Dr. Theresa Lyons

    When a child receives an autism diagnosis, parents are often met with a wall of clinical logic and a list of things that their child supposedly cannot do. You walk out of the doctor’s office feeling like the floor just dropped out from under you, completely overwhelmed by the lack of clear, actionable guidance. But what if the mainstream narrative is missing a massive piece of the puzzle? In a recent conversation with Dr. Theresa Lyons, a scientist and mother of a non-speaking autistic daughter , we discussed a statistic that completely changes how we look at an autism diagnosis. We also explored the dark, hidden psychological trap that many special-needs parents fall into without even realizing it. Here is the truth about the 37% statistic, and why it is causing an identity crisis for parents. The Statistic That Changes Everything There is a long-standing belief that an autism diagnosis is a fixed, lifelong label. However, the data tells a different story. According to recent research from Boston Children’s Hospital, 37% of kids with an autism diagnosis actually lost it. This is a staggering number. It means that with the right targeted approaches, dietary changes, and therapies, many children gain massive levels of independence. Some become fully independent, and some lose their diagnosis entirely. But this incredible progress introduces a very unexpected problem for the parents. The Hidden Trauma of the “Advocate” Identity When you are thrust into the world of special-needs parenting, you have to become a fierce advocate. You fight with insurance, you battle the school system for IEP accommodations, and you manage a team of doctors. You live in a constant state of hyper-vigilance. Your entire identity becomes deeply tied to being the caretaker and the protector. So, what happens when your child starts getting better and putting on their own jacket? * The Grief of Not Being Needed: Some parents actually experience grief when their child gains independence because their personal value is so deeply aligned with providing constant care. * The Comfort of Chaos: A parent’s nervous system adapts to constant stress. When the house finally calms down, that peace can actually feel completely dysregulating. * Becoming the Roadblock: If a parent cannot let go of their crisis-mode identity, they might unintentionally hold their child back because they fear not knowing who they are without the struggle. Finding Peace After the Storm Dr. Theresa Lyons highlighted that the ultimate goal for a parent is to put yourself out of a job. When the crisis begins to fade, parents must do the hard internal work to shift out of trauma mode. You have to ask yourself a tough question: are you addicted to the hum of the chaos? If you are accustomed to functioning in overdrive, a calm and regulated life will feel unsettling at first. Recognizing this is the first step toward letting your child thrive while finally reclaiming your own peace. Resources Mentioned in This Episode If you want to explore these topics further, check out the resources discussed in the interview: * Navigating Autism: Visit Dr. Theresa Lyons’ website at https://www.navigatingautism.com to learn more about her platform and approach. * AWETISM YouTube Channel: Dr. Lyons shares extensive scientific videos and guidance on her YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@navigatingawetism * The H.U.R.R.T. Self-Assessment: Are you wondering what hidden patterns or past experiences could be holding you back? Take this free tool to gain clarity on your emotional well-being at flipyourmindset.com/HURRT. Over to you: Have you ever caught yourself struggling to let go as your child became more independent? How do you balance being a fierce advocate with maintaining your own identity outside of your kids? Let’s get real in the comments. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit flipyourmindset.substack.com/subscribe

    58 phút
  8. Ep 176: Why Your Anxiety is Actually Your Fiercest Protector

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    Ep 176: Why Your Anxiety is Actually Your Fiercest Protector

    Welcome back to my thoughts, straight from the Flip Your Mindset podcast. Today, I really want to talk about anxiety, and I want to give you a reframe. Let me start with something that might sound a little surprising: anxiety is actually not your biggest problem. I know that might feel really hard to believe, especially if it has been running your life, stealing your sleep, and making everything feel so much harder than it needs to be. Most people experience anxiety as intrusive. It shows up uninvited, hijacks the body, and makes small things feel huge. Naturally, people want it gone, saying they just want it to stop and want their old self back. For a long time, that is exactly how I saw anxiety: as something to fight, control, and outthink. Nothing would have made me happier than to wrap it in a really heavy chain and drop it to the bottom of the ocean. But the harder I fought it, the louder it got. A New Way to Look at Anxiety Here is the reframe that changed things for me. Anxiety is not a character flaw, a weakness, or a malfunction. What I can tell you is that anxiety is actually a protective response. It is your nervous system saying it doesn’t like a familiar feeling, it doesn’t want to be caught off guard, and it is trying to keep you safe. When we feel anxiety, we experience real physiological changes. We might feel it in our stomach, our chest gets tight, our heart races, our blood pressure goes up, and our mind races. But what you are really describing is a response to something, and anxiety does not always mean there is imminent danger. Instead of a random malfunction, anxiety is a collection of brilliant, devised coping strategies your nervous system learned to keep you prepared and safe. The strategy worked when you needed it at a specific time, and then it just became chronic. Stop Fighting and Start Listening When you fight anxiety, your nervous system interprets it as danger, so it doubles down. Anxiety does not respond well to force and elimination. It responds very well to understanding, listening, and safety. We feel as though the goal is to silence it, but the goal should actually be to understand what it is trying to tell you. Anxiety is a messenger. It is trying to tell you that it doesn’t feel like you are safe, even if you likely are safe right now. If your anxiety isn’t something to conquer, but rather something to listen to, you can talk to it differently. What if instead of asking how to stop this, you start asking what this is trying to tell you?. That single question can change your relationship with anxiety completely. It is not your enemy; it is your fiercest, most loyal protector that has not been updated yet to know that you are not in danger anymore. Discover Your Roots: The Free HURRT Assessment Are you ready to explore how your past might be affecting your present? I invite you to take our free assessment, called the HURRT Assessment. HURRT stands for Healing Unresolved Roots of Trauma. It is designed to help you see how your lived experiences may have impacted you in ways you might not have fully appreciated before. Take the free assessment here: https://www.flipyourmindset.com/hurrt Free Anxiety Masterclass If you are tired of understanding your anxiety without actually feeling any relief, I want to invite you to take the next step. I am hosting a free masterclass where we will explore how to regulate your nervous system and create the safety your body needs. * Dates: March 24 and March 25 * Time: 7:00 PM ET * Register here: https://www.flipyourmindset.com/masterclassanxiety This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit flipyourmindset.substack.com/subscribe

    14 phút

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Having spent over four decades overcoming childhood adversities and helping others with my post-traumatic wisdom, I decided to change careers and pursue my purpose at the age of 49. I became a Certified in Trauma Recovery, Rapid Transformational Therapy Practitioner, and Parts Work soon after, I launched Flip Your Mindset, a podcast that serves as a no-cost entry point for those looking to resolve their own traumas. Through Flip Your Mindset™, my goal is to help listeners transform their perspectives and see their lives through a new lens. As a foul-mouthed, unapologetic Buddhist enthusiast, I'm not afraid to use colorful language to express my emotions, but I draw the line at any derogatory or dehumanizing language. Join me and let's explore new ways to overcome life's challenges and emerge stronger and more resilient than ever before. Thank you for listening. flipyourmindset.substack.com

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