Seeds →
Sprouts →
We can live out what we want to see in the world
True diplomacy = safety
We have to decide what work is ours.
The world we build will need a greater focus on care
Saying no is saying yes to your work, to what you need and what you want.
Sometimes curiosity doesn’t feel safe; just opening the news…
Life provides some cruel limits
Overwhelm shuts us down
Example - we’re not here to service the machine
Curiosity just requires that you turn your head an inch
Load more
⊝ Shoots →
1 — Creativity & Curiosity
1 — Creativity & Curiosity
2 — Making & Art
2 — Making & Art
3 — Mental & Emotional Well-being
3 — Mental & Emotional Well-being
4 — Physical Health
4 — Physical Health
5 — Intentional Living
5 — Intentional Living
6 — Writing & Reading
6 — Writing & Reading
7 — Teaching
7 — Teaching
8 — Nervous system
8 — Nervous system
9 — Interactions
9 — Interactions
The autonomic nervous system has 2 branches of response, but polyvagal theory expands that to 3 potential hierarchal responses.
The autonomic nervous system is in charge of the sympathetic and parasympathetic branches. The sympathetic branch is focused on danger and mobilizes through a fight or flight response. The parasympathetic branch is focused on restoring calm by lowering defenses and regulating.
Polyvagal theory offers an expanded understanding of the parasympathetic branch with two different responses: engagement and shut-down. The preference is to be in ventral vagal which is marked by safety, connection, and social engagement. But when danger presents, the sympathetic fight or flight response activates. In cases where that doesn’t work, the autonomic nervous system will further shift down in to dorsal vagal or shut-down mode.
Within the expanded theory, the nervous system operates in a predictable hierarchy of response:
- ventral vagal – connection
- sympathetic – fight and flight
- dorsal vagal – disconnection, shut-down