Lauren Dummit-Schock Lauren Dummit-Schock

How to Calm Your Nervous System: Somatic Tools to Ease Stress, Anxiety & Trauma

How to Calm Your Nervous System: Somatic Tools to Ease Stress, Anxiety & Trauma

Learn evidence-informed somatic tools to calm a dysregulated nervous system. Embodied Wellness & Recovery guides you through breath, movement, grounding, and neuroscience.

A Nervous System Under Strain

Do you ever feel like your body is running on overdrive, heart pounding, muscles tight, mind racing, even when nothing obvious is happening? Or perhaps triggers from past trauma leave you stuck in hypervigilance or shutdown? Many people struggle with a dysregulated nervous system, especially when unresolved trauma still courses through their physiology.

That chronic internal tension often shows up in stress, anxiety, disrupted relationships, intimacy challenges,  and emotional overwhelm. But your nervous system is not a rigid machine; it’s plastic, responsive, and capable of repair. In this article, we’ll explore somatic tools (body-based practices) grounded in neuroscience and trauma therapy, offering concrete ways to settle your system and recover your sense of safety and connection.

At Embodied Wellness & Recovery, we specialize in nervous system repair, trauma resolution, relational healing, and embodied sexuality and intimacy. Let us walk you through effective, grounded practices you can begin using today.

Why Somatic Tools? The Science Behind the Approach

Trauma, the Body, and Neural Patterns

When trauma (big T or small t) becomes lodged in the body, it often gets expressed—not in words, but in physiology. The brain and body are deeply intertwined: bodily states influence emotional and cognitive patterns, and vice versa (the “brain-body connection”)

Somatic therapy begins from the premise that the body holds experience. In contrast to therapies that engage primarily the mind (e.g., cognitive therapies), somatic work tunes into emergent sensations, tension, subtle tremors, and interoceptive awareness (the sense of what’s going on inside the body). 

One influential modality, Somatic Experiencing® (SE®), works by gradually “renegotiating” implicit trauma responses in the nervous system without forcing full re-experiencing. Rather than pushing you into overwhelm, SE helps generate corrective interoceptive experiences that challenge the patterns of helplessness or hyperarousal encoded in your system 

Somatic approaches also harness neuroplasticity, your brain’s ability to rewire itself, so that new, healthier patterns of regulation can take root over time.

Recognizing Dysregulation: What Your Body Is Trying to Say

Before diving into tools, it helps to tune your awareness to signs that your nervous system is out of balance. Ask yourself:

     — Do you feel chronically on edge, keyed up, or restless?
    — Do you experience waves of
anxiety, panic, or a sense of being unsafe in your own skin?
    — Do you sometimes “
freeze,” shut down, detach, or feel numb?
     — Do interpersonal or
sexual intimacy situations trigger tension, dissociation, over-reactivity, or shutdown?

     — Do you hold persistent muscle tension, headaches, digestive issues, or difficulty sleeping?

These are not mere inconveniences; they're signals from your
nervous system. Wounds from unresolved trauma often leave fault lines in your physiology that need gentle repair, not forceful suppression.

Somatic Tools to Calm & Repair (Beginner to Intermediate)

Below are evidence-informed somatic practices you can explore. Use them gently, experiment, and adjust to your current capacity. These are not “quick fixes” but bridges into deeper regulation and nervous system resilience.

1. Breath and the Physiological Sigh

One of the most direct ways to reset the autonomic nervous system is through intentional breathing. A physiological sigh (two quick inhales followed by a longer exhale) is built into mammals and can quiet hyperarousal.

Other effective breath tools include:

     — Box breathing (inhale-hold-exhale-hold, e.g. 4-4-4-4) 

     — 4-7-8 breathing (inhale 4 sec, hold 7, exhale 8)

     — Diaphragmatic (belly) breathing, placing one hand on the abdomen, the other on the chest, and emphasizing slow, full belly expansion 

Over time, these patterns can engage the parasympathetic system (the rest-and-digest branch), reducing fight-or-flight reactivity.

2. Grounding & Sensory Anchors

When your system is in reactivity, orienting through sensory input helps restore stability.

     — 5-4-3-2-1 grounding exercise: Name 5 things you see, 4 you touch, 3 you hear, 2 you smell, 1 you taste (or internal).

     — Cold water /splash face / cold compress (activates the mammalian dive reflex) 

     — Touch, gentle self-holding, or the “butterfly hug” (cross arms and lightly tap alternately)

     — Scan your body: shift attention slowly through body regions, noticing tension, warmth, tingling, and release (body scan)

These sensory anchors help the nervous system remember: safety is possible.

3. Movement, Tremor & Shaking

One often underestimated tool is movement, or biological tremoring, which allows the body to shake, shimmy, or release stored charge.

     — Gentle stretching or somatic yoga with attention to inner sensation (not forcing) 

     — Shaking or free form movement: wiggle hands, shake legs, dance with soft intention to let energy discharge

     — Progressive Muscle Relaxation (PMR): sequentially tense and release muscle groups, noticing contrast between contraction and relaxation 

     — Mindful walking: slow, attentive steps, paying attention to sensations in feet, legs, posture, horizon, air on skin 

The goal: help the nervous system shift from hyperactivation to regulated engagement.

4. Pendulation & Titration (Somatic Principles)

Somatic therapies often use pendulation, alternating gentle movement between states of activation and ease, and titration, which is gradual exposure to sensation to avoid overwhelm. These strategies allow you to approach trauma or discomfort at the edge, with incremental steps, rather than collapsing or flooding. 

In practice, you might gently allow a faint sensation of anxiety or tension, then shift attention to a sense of solidity, support, or calm, and oscillate between them until the system becomes more flexible.

5. Co-regulation & Safe Relational Contact

Your nervous system is social by design. Connection with someone calm and attuned can help co-regulate your state.

     — Share presence: Sit quietly with someone whose presence feels steady. Let your breath softly sync.
    — Gentle touch or holding (if safe and appropriate)
    — Voice, humming, or soft vocalization (hum, sing, toning); vibrations feed into the vagal network and support
parasympathetic activation

These relational practices can feel supportive, especially when solo tools feel too thin.

A Sample Micro Practice You Can Try

1. Sit comfortably (or lie down) with your hands resting on your body.

2. Begin diaphragmatic breathing: inhale for 4, exhale for 6, eyes softly closed.

3. After 4–6 breaths, shift into 5-4-3-2-1 grounding, naming your sensory environment.

4. If you feel activation (tingle, heat, tension), allow micro-movement or soft shaking in the limbs for 30 seconds.

5. Return to breath, noticing your system’s response.

6. Optionally, hum or softly vocalize as you exhale.

Even a 3-minute practice like this can interrupt cycles of reactivity and guide you back toward safety.

From Self-Practice to Deep Repair (When You’re Ready)

These tools are foundational; they offer entry points to somatic awareness and regulation. But for more profound nervous system healing, partnership with a skilled trauma-informed clinician accelerates and stabilizes the process.

At Embodied Wellness & Recovery, we weave together:

     — Somatic therapy
    — EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing)
    — Attachment-based and
relational therapy
     — Specific work around sexuality, intimacy, and relational boundaries

We understand how dysregulation interacts with relationship patterns and the nervous system,  and we hold space for safely exploring trauma without retraumatization.

With guidance, you can move from survival mode toward flexible regulation, a state in which intimacy, pleasure, vulnerability, and trust can reemerge.

Hope, Consistency, and the Way Forward

A dysregulated nervous system does not have to define your life. Though trauma may have shaped your default tendencies, your physiology is adaptive and can be retrained. Over weeks and months of consistent, safe somatic practice, you may notice:

     — Less reactivity (emotional outbursts, sudden tension)
     — Greater ability to self-soothe
    — More capacity for closeness,
trust, and relational safety
    — More restful sleep, ease in your body, smoother regulation across daily life

This is not about
perfection. It’s about gradual rewiring, incremental restoration, and reclaiming more of your embodied self.

Closing Words

If you feel called to more than self-practice, and you want a therapeutic partnership attuned to your history, body, relationships, and goals, Embodied Wellness & Recovery is here to support you. Our clinicians are steeped in trauma, somatic, and relational modalities. We support nervous system repair, relational healing, sexual and intimacy exploration, and resilient flourishing.

Start where you are. Breathe gently. Move subtly. Listen inward. And know: your system can learn new rhythms, new safety signals, new contours of trust.

Reach out to schedule a free 20-minute consultation with our team of therapists, trauma specialists, somatic practitioners, or relationship experts, and begin the process of reconnecting with your life force energy today.



📞 Call us at (310) 651-8458

📱 Text us at (310) 210-7934

📩 Email us at admin@embodiedwellnessandrecovery.com

🔗 Visit us at www.embodiedwellnessandrecovery.com

👉 Check us out on Instagram @embodied_wellness_and_recovery

🌍 Explore our offerings at Linktr.ee: https://linktr.ee/laurendummit


References

Brom, D., Stokar, Y., Lawi, C., Nuriel-Porat, V., Lerner, K., & Krammer, N. (2017). Interoceptive awareness in Somatic Experiencing. Frontiers in Psychology, 8, 155. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00155 (discussed in broader review) PMC

Levine, P. A. (1997). Waking the Tiger: Healing Trauma. North Atlantic Books.
(Referenced indirectly through Somatic Experiencing theory)
PMC+1

Payne, P., Levine, P. A., & Crane‐Gillies, J. (2015). Trauma and the body: A sensorimotor approach to psychotherapy. W. W. Norton & Company. (underpins somatic, titration, corrective interoceptive experience concepts) PMC

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Lauren Dummit-Schock Lauren Dummit-Schock

Anxiety in the Body: How to Release Nervous System Energy Before You Can Truly Relax

Discover why extreme anxiety makes it so difficult to calm down and meditate. Learn how up-regulating practices like movement and sound discharge nervous system energy, making space for soothing practices such as breathwork, yoga, and meditation to restore balance.

Why Can’t I Just Calm Down?

When anxiety takes hold, it can feel impossible to settle. You may sit down to meditate, breathe deeply, or practice yoga, only to find your body is buzzing, your thoughts are racing, and your restlessness only grows. Instead of feeling calmer, you feel trapped inside a storm of activation.

Do you ever wonder: Why can’t I just relax? Why does my body feel hijacked by anxiety no matter how hard I try?

The truth is that anxiety is not only in the mind. It is a full-body experience, a surge of energy in the nervous system that needs an outlet before true calm can arrive. Understanding this process through the lens of neuroscience and somatic regulation is the key to learning how to soothe anxiety effectively.

At Embodied Wellness and Recovery, we help clients recognize what state their nervous system is in and respond with practices that truly fit the moment. By aligning body, mind, and relationship, we guide people toward lasting nervous system repair and emotional resilience.

The Neuroscience of Anxiety: When the Sympathetic Nervous System Takes Over

Anxiety is the body’s way of preparing for threat. When your nervous system senses danger, whether real or perceived, the sympathetic branch activates:

     — The amygdala (the brain’s alarm system) signals danger
    — Stress hormones like cortisol and adrenaline flood your system
    — Heart rate increases, muscles tense, breath quickens

This “
fight or flight” response is adaptive if you need to act quickly, but when it is triggered chronically, your body becomes flooded with activation and has nowhere to release it. That’s why sitting still and forcing calm rarely works. Your body isn’t ready for down-regulation yet.

Why Traditional Relaxation Can Backfire

Have you ever tried to meditate while your heart is racing? Or practice deep breathing while your body feels restless and shaky? Instead of feeling soothed, you may end up more agitated.

This happens because:

     — Suppression doesn’t work. Forcing stillness ignores the body’s need to release activation.
    — Energy needs an outlet. Without release, the
nervous system stays stuck in sympathetic arousal.
    — Relaxation feels unsafe. When your body is still flooded with adrenaline, slowing down can actually feel threatening rather than soothing.

The key is not to force calm but to complete the cycle, allowing the body to discharge the activation first.

The Pressure Valve: Up-Regulation Before Down-Regulation

Think of your body like a pressure cooker. Anxiety is the steam building up inside. If you try to clamp the lid down tighter with meditation or stillness, the pressure only increases. But if you open the valve—giving the energy a way out—the nervous system can reset.

Up-Regulating Practices: Releasing Energy

Before moving into calming practices, the body often needs movement or sound to discharge activation. Examples include:

     — Shaking out your limbs
     — Dancing to rhythmic music
    — Going for a brisk run or walk
    —
Humming, chanting, or singing
     — Vigorous breathwork (e.g., Breath of Fire)

These practices provide the
nervous system with a release, helping reduce the “buzz” of sympathetic arousal.

Down-Regulating Practices: Restoring Calm

Once the energy has moved through, your body is ready to enter a state of restoration. Now, soothing practices can take effect:

     — Slow, diaphragmatic breathing
     — Gentle guided meditation or visualization
     — Yin or restorative yoga
    — Progressive muscle relaxation
    — Soft humming or lengthened exhalations

Instead of trying to force calm on a
nervous system still flooded with energy, these practices now land deeply, helping the body shift into the parasympathetic “rest and digest” state.

The Key Is Discernment

The most important skill in regulating anxiety is discernment, noticing what state your nervous system is in and responding accordingly. Ask yourself:

      — Am I feeling restless, buzzing, or trapped with energy?
➡️ Then I likely need up-regulation and movement.
      — Am I feeling depleted, exhausted, or flat?
➡️ Then I may benefit more from down-regulation and
soothing.

By tuning in to these signals, you learn to respond with what your body truly needs, rather than forcing practices that don’t align with your current state.

Questions to Consider

     — What happens in your body when anxiety peaks: racing heart, shallow breath, restlessness?
    — Do you notice trying to force calm when your body is still in overdrive?
    — What up-regulating practices have you tried that help release energy before you settle?

Nervous System Repair at Embodied Wellness and Recovery

At Embodied Wellness and Recovery,  we see anxiety not as a flaw but as a full-body survival response. Our work integrates:

     — Trauma-informed therapy to uncover root triggers
    —
Somatic practices to release stored activation
    —
EMDR and neuroscience-backed approaches to rewire stress responses
    —
Relational repair to restore intimacy and trust in connection

By combining these methods, we guide clients from a place of
anxious overdrive toward nervous system balance, resilience, and authentic presence.

From Stuck to Balanced

Anxiety is not simply a mental battle; it is a physiological experience of the nervous system. When energy is stuck, the body cannot simply be forced into calm. By learning to first release activation through up-regulating practices and then soothing with down-regulating ones, you can guide your nervous system back to equilibrium.

The next time anxiety surges, instead of asking yourself, How can I suppress this? But instead, what outlet does my body need right now? This shift can transform anxiety from an endless loop into an opportunity for nervous system repair and a deeper connection to yourself.

Contact us today to schedule a free 20-minute consultation with our team of somatic practitioners, trauma specialists,  and relationship experts and begin your journey toward embodied connection, clarity, and confidence



📞 Call us at (310) 651-8458

📱 Text us at (310) 210-7934

📩 Email us at admin@embodiedwellnessandrecovery.com

🔗 Visit us at www.embodiedwellnessandrecovery.com

👉 Check us out on Instagram @embodied_wellness_and_recovery

🌍 Explore our offerings at Linktr. ee: https://linktr.ee/laurendummit



References

Eisenberger, N. I., & Cole, S. W. (2012). Social Neuroscience and Health: Neurophysiological Mechanisms Linking Social Ties to Physical Health. Nature Neuroscience, 15(5), 669–674. 

LeDoux, J. (2015). Anxious: Using the brain to understand and treat fear and anxiety. Viking.

Porges, S. W. (2011). The polyvagal Theory: Neurophysiological foundations of emotions, attachment, communication, and self-regulation. W. W. Norton & Company.

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Lauren Dummit-Schock Lauren Dummit-Schock

Bombarded by Bad News? How Violent Media Affects Your Brain and What You Can Do About It

Bombarded by Bad News? How Violent Media Affects Your Brain and What You Can Do About It

Violent news coverage and social media content can take a serious toll on your mental health. Learn how media violence affects the brain, why emotional dysregulation occurs, and how Embodied Wellness and Recovery helps individuals heal from trauma and anxiety with neuroscience-informed care.

When the World Feels Unsafe: The Mental Health Toll of Violent News and Social Media Exposure

Have you ever felt sick to your stomach after scrolling through your feed? Found yourself anxious, angry, or emotionally numb after watching yet another breaking news story about mass violence or global conflict?

You're not alone.

In a digital age where headlines shout trauma and our screens constantly refresh with graphic images, many people find themselves overwhelmed, emotionally dysregulated, or trapped in a persistent state of fear. But what is all this exposure to violence actually doing to our brains and bodies?

At Embodied Wellness and Recovery, we understand how trauma doesn’t just come from what happens directly to us—it can also come from what we witness, especially when it's repeated and unprocessed. This article explores the neuroscience behind media-induced trauma, how violent content affects mental health, and how to find hope, regulation, and healing in a chaotic world.

The Hidden Cost of Consuming Violent Media

From mass shootings to natural disasters to wars livestreamed in real-time, media exposure today is unlike anything previous generations faced. While staying informed is essential, the 24/7 news cycle and social media algorithms are not designed to support our emotional well-being but to keep us watching.

The brain responds to violent imagery—whether witnessed in person or through a screen—by activating the same neural pathways associated with direct trauma (Porges, 2011). This means even passive exposure can dysregulate your nervous system, trigger your fight-flight-freeze response, and lead to symptoms of:

    – Anxiety or panic
    – Depression
    – Hypervigilance
    – Irritability or emotional numbness
    – Sleep disturbances
    – Difficulty
concentrating
    – Increased relational tension or withdrawal

Why Does Watching the News Feel So Overwhelming?

Because your nervous system wasn’t built for this.

From a neuroscience perspective, the amygdala, the part of the brain responsible for detecting threats, cannot always distinguish between real-time danger and a reported danger—especially when the imagery is graphic or repeated (LeDoux, 1996). Each time you see a violent video or hear a disturbing report, your brain and body react as if the threat is near.

You may feel emotionally hijacked, exhausted, or like you're “on edge” all the time. This is not a weakness—it’s biology.

In fact, prolonged exposure to media violence can contribute to vicarious trauma or compassion fatigue, especially in individuals who are highly empathic, have a trauma history, or work in helping professions (Figley, 1995).

Are You Asking Yourself…

     – Why can’t I handle watching the news anymore?
    – Why do I feel so
anxious after being online?
    - Why am I more reactive with my partner or kids after scrolling through social media?
    – Why do I feel hopeless or disconnected even though nothing “bad” is happening in my life?

These are valid, important questions. If the emotional weight of violent media is affecting your mental health, you're not weak or overly sensitive. You’re responding to chronic activation of your stress response—and you deserve support and regulation.

Hope, Healing, and the Path to Resilience

At Embodied Wellness and Recovery, we believe that resilience is not about “toughening up” or ignoring what's happening in the world. It’s about creating internal safety in the midst of external chaos.

Using neuroscience-backed approaches like somatic therapy, EMDR, Polyvagal Theory, and mindfulness-based interventions, we help clients:

     – Calm an overactive nervous system
    – Reprocess vicarious
trauma
    – Rebuild emotional regulation
    –
Reconnect with their bodies and inner safety
    – Develop mindful media
boundaries
    – Strengthen relationships and intimacy, even during hard times

What You Can Do Today: Small Steps Toward Mental Resilience

Here are a few gentle practices to support your nervous system and reduce media-induced emotional dysregulation:

1. Create a News Ritual

Instead of checking updates randomly throughout the day, set specific times to read or watch the news. Choose trustworthy sources that present information without sensationalism.

2. Notice the Impact

After consuming violent content, pause. Ask: How am I feeling? What do I need? Bring awareness to your breath, body, and emotional state. This is the beginning of self-regulation.

3. Use the 3-3-3 Technique

To come back to the present moment:

     – Name 3 things you can see
    – Name 3 things you can hear
    – Move 3 parts of your body
This helps interrupt the brain’s stress response and
grounds you in safety.

4. Somatic Therapy

A trauma-informed, body-centered approach that helps individuals regulate emotional overwhelm caused by repeated exposure to violent news and distressing media. When the brain perceives a threat—whether real or witnessed through a screen—it triggers the same stress response, flooding the nervous system with anxiety, fear, and helplessness. Somatic therapy helps calm this chronic activation by guiding clients to gently reconnect with their bodies, release stored tension, and restore a sense of internal safety. At Embodied Wellness and Recovery, our somatic therapists support clients in processing the emotional impact of media violence, reducing anxiety, and building resilience—so they can feel grounded and empowered in an increasingly chaotic world.



5. Curate Your Feed

Mute or unfollow accounts that spike anxiety or push graphic imagery without context. Follow accounts that share beauty, healing, inspiration, or grounded news commentary.

6. Talk About It

Name what you’re feeling with someone you trust. Isolation amplifies emotional overwhelm. Connection helps metabolize it.

Why This Matters for Intimacy and Relationships

When our nervous systems are dysregulated, it doesn’t just affect our individual well-being—it ripples into how we relate to others. You might notice more conflict, avoidance, or detachment in your relationships. Or perhaps you find yourself needing more reassurance but feel ashamed to ask.

At Embodied Wellness and Recovery, we support couples and individuals in navigating the emotional fallout of collective trauma—including the way violent media can disrupt intimacy, trust, and co-regulation. You don’t have to navigate this alone.

When to Reach Out for Help

If you notice symptoms like chronic anxiety, emotional numbness, irritability, or hopelessness after exposure to violent media—or if these symptoms are impacting your relationships, work, or self-esteem—it's time to seek support.

Our trauma-informed therapists and somatic practitioners are here to help you reclaim your inner calm, strengthen your emotional resilience, and reconnect with your sense of agency and peace.

You Deserve to Feel Safe in Your Body Again

The world may feel chaotic, but healing is possible. With the right tools and support, you can regulate your nervous system, protect your peace, and engage with the world from a grounded, empowered place.

At Embodied Wellness and Recovery, we offer personalized therapy, intensives, and somatic healing experiences to help you navigate these modern stressors with grace and resilience.

Let’s Take the Next Step Together

Ready to explore how media exposure is affecting your mental health—and how to restore regulation and connection?


Contact us today to schedule a free 20-minute consultation with our team of top-rated therapists and trauma specialists to learn more about our trauma-informed therapy services in Los Angeles and Nashville.


📞 Call us at (310) 651-8458

📱 Text us at (310) 210-7934

📩 Email us at admin@embodiedwellnessandrecovery.com

🔗 Visit us at www.embodiedwellnessandrecovery.com

👉 Check us out on Instagram @embodied_wellness_and_recovery

🌍 Explore our offerings at Linktr.ee: https://linktr.ee/laurendummit

References

Figley, C. R. (1995). Compassion Fatigue: Coping with Secondary Traumatic Stress Disorder in Those Who Treat the Traumatized. Brunner/Mazel.

LeDoux, J. E. (1996). The Emotional Brain: The Mysterious Underpinnings of Emotional Life. Simon and Schuster.

Porges, S. W. (2011). The Polyvagal Theory: Neurophysiological Foundations of Emotions, Attachment, Communication, and Self-Regulation. W. W. Norton & Company.

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