Lauren Dummit-Schock Lauren Dummit-Schock

When the World Feels Unsteady: How Therapy Helps Process Powerlessness During Times of National Unrest

When the World Feels Unsteady: How Therapy Helps Process Powerlessness During Times of National Unrest

Feeling anxious or powerless during national unrest is a nervous system response, not a personal failure. Learn how therapy supports emotional regulation, resilience, and grounded action during uncertain times.

When Fear and Powerlessness Take Hold

If you feel tense, distracted, or emotionally drained by what is happening in the world right now, you are not imagining it. Periods of national unrest often activate deep fear, uncertainty, and a sense of powerlessness that can seep into daily life. News cycles, political polarization, economic instability, and social conflict can leave many people feeling overwhelmed and unsafe.

You may notice racing thoughts, difficulty sleeping, irritability, or a constant sense of vigilance. You may feel frozen, hopeless, or emotionally numb. You might ask yourself questions like:

Why do I feel anxious even when I am physically safe?
Why does everything feel out of my control?
Why am I snapping at the people I love?
Why do I feel helpless or shut down instead of motivated?

These reactions are not signs of weakness. They are nervous system responses to prolonged exposure to threat, uncertainty, and collective stress.

Therapy offers a grounded, neuroscience-informed way to process these emotions, restore regulation, and reconnect with a sense of agency during times of national unrest.

Why National Unrest Triggers Feelings of Powerlessness

Powerlessness is one of the most distressing emotional states for the human nervous system. From a biological perspective, the brain is wired to seek predictability, safety, and some degree of control. When those conditions disappear, the nervous system moves into survival mode.

National unrest often includes:

     — Unpredictable political or social events
    — Exposure to distressing media
     — Fear about the future
    — Moral injury or loss of trust in institutions
    — Economic insecurity
    — Social division and conflict

These factors signal danger to the brain, even in the absence of an immediate physical threat. The result is chronic activation of the stress response.

The Neuroscience of Fear and Powerlessness

When the brain perceives threat, the amygdala activates and sends signals to the body to prepare for danger. Stress hormones such as cortisol and adrenaline increase. This is adaptive in short bursts, but during ongoing national unrest, the stress response does not shut off.

Over time, this can lead to:

     — Heightened anxiety
    — Difficulty concentrating
    — Emotional reactivity
    — Sleep disruption
     —
Somatic symptoms such as tension or fatigue
    — Emotional shutdown or numbness

t the same time, the prefrontal cortex, which supports reasoning, perspective, and decision making, becomes less effective under chronic stress. This makes it harder to feel grounded, hopeful, or capable of action.

Powerlessness emerges when the nervous system perceives threat without a clear path to safety or resolution.

Why Powerlessness Often Feels Personal

Even though national unrest is collective, the nervous system experiences it individually. For many people, current events activate older experiences of vulnerability, injustice, or loss of control.

Those with a history of trauma, chronic stress, or attachment wounds may be especially sensitive to these triggers. The body remembers past moments when safety was compromised, and present-day unrest can reactivate those imprints.

This is why some people feel overwhelmed by news that others seem able to ignore. The response is not about logic. It is about nervous system memory.

Common Coping Strategies That Stop Working

During times of unrest, many people try to cope by:

     — Over-consuming news
    — Avoiding information entirely
    — Staying constantly busy
    — Numbing with substances or screens
    — Intellectualizing or minimizing feelings

While understandable, these strategies often increase dysregulation over time. Avoidance can heighten anxiety. Overexposure to media can reinforce fear. Distraction without regulation leaves the nervous system stuck in survival mode.

Therapy offers a different approach, one that works with the body and brain rather than against them.

How Therapy Helps Process Powerlessness

Therapy does not aim to eliminate fear or force optimism. Instead, it helps clients process fear safely, restore regulation, and rebuild a sense of internal agency even when external circumstances feel unstable.

At Embodied Wellness and Recovery, we approach this work through a trauma-informed, neuroscience-based lens.

1. Nervous System Regulation

Therapy helps clients understand how their nervous system is responding to ongoing threat. Through somatic techniques, breathwork, and grounding practices, the body can learn to shift out of chronic survival mode.

Regulation restores access to clarity, emotional flexibility, and choice.

2. Making Meaning of Fear

Fear becomes overwhelming when it feels chaotic or unnamed. Therapy provides space to articulate what feels frightening, what feels out of control, and what values feel threatened.

Naming these experiences engages the prefrontal cortex and reduces limbic overwhelm.

3. Processing Collective Trauma

National unrest can function as a form of collective trauma. Therapy helps differentiate between what is happening now and what belongs to past experiences. This reduces emotional flooding and reactivity.

Approaches such as EMDR can help reprocess distressing images, memories, or beliefs that become activated by current events.

4. Restoring a Sense of Agency

Powerlessness decreases when clients reconnect with what is still within their control. Therapy supports clients in identifying boundaries, values, and meaningful actions that align with their nervous system capacity.

Agency does not require fixing everything. It begins with choice, presence, and alignment.

5. Strengthening Relational Safety

Periods of unrest often strain relationships. Therapy helps clients communicate needs, manage conflict, and seek connection rather than isolation.

Safe relationships are one of the most substantial buffers against fear and despair.

Why This Work Is Especially Important Now

Chronic exposure to national unrest without support can lead to burnout, despair, and emotional exhaustion. Over time, this can impact mental health, physical health, intimacy, and parenting.

Therapy provides a consistent, stabilizing space where the nervous system can settle and integrate what it has been carrying.

This work is not about disengaging from the world. It is about engaging from a regulated, grounded place rather than from fear.

Signs Therapy Is Helping

Clients often notice:

     — Reduced anxiety and hypervigilance
    — Improved sleep and concentration
    — Greater emotional clarity
    — Less reactivity to news or social conflict
    — Improved
communication in relationships
    — A stronger sense of internal steadiness
    — Renewed access to hope and meaning

These shifts reflect
nervous system regulation rather than avoidance.

Reclaiming Groundedness in an Uncertain World

It is possible to care deeply about what is happening in the world without sacrificing your mental health. Therapy helps clients hold awareness and compassion while protecting nervous system capacity.

At Embodied Wellness and Recovery, we help individuals process fear, grief, and powerlessness with respect for the body, the brain, and the complexity of this moment in history.

When the world feels unsteady, tending to your nervous system is not indulgent. It is foundational.

Moving towards Greater Resilience

Feelings of fear, anxiety, and powerlessness during times of national unrest are not signs that something is wrong with you. They are signs that your nervous system is responding to real and ongoing uncertainty.

Therapy offers a path toward regulation, integration, and grounded engagement. Through nervous system support, trauma-informed care, and relational safety, it is possible to move through this moment with greater steadiness and resilience.

At Embodied Wellness and Recovery, we specialize in helping individuals process collective stress and personal trauma so they can remain present, connected, and emotionally resourced during challenging times.

Reach out to schedule a complimentary 20-minute consultation with our team of therapists, trauma specialists, somatic practitioners, or relationship experts, and start working towards integrative, embodied healing today. 



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References

Herman, J. L. (1992). Trauma and recovery: The aftermath of violence from domestic abuse to political terror. Basic Books.

McEwen, B. S., & Akil, H. (2020). Revisiting the stress concept: Implications for affective disorders. Journal of Neuroscience, 40(1), 12–21.

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

van der Kolk, B. A. (2014). The body keeps the score: Brain, mind, and body in the healing of trauma. Viking.

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