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Flow Life

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13 contributions to Flow Life
Integration - Wednesday 3/25 at 6 pm PST - Zoom link below
Overthinking. Most of us can relate to this. It is often framed as a bad habit or a lack of discipline. In the book - Stop Overthinking - the author, Nick Trenton offers a more accurate view. Overthinking is not a thinking problem - it's a stress response. From Chapter 1: "There is no aspect of life that anxious overthinking doesn't impact. When you perceive a threat, your HPA axis (hypothalamus, pituitary, adrenals) is stimulated. Your brain triggers a cascade of neurotransmitters and hormones in the body, which then have physical effects - this is the classic fight-or-flight response to prepare the body to survive the perceived threat" The author outlines the consequences of overthinking as mental fatigue, indecision, emotional exhaustion, anxiety, sleep disruption, and a shrinking sense of confidence. Over time, overthinking doesn't lead to better decisions - it leads to paralysis and self-doubt. From a nervous system perspective, overthinking is what happens when the system doesn't feel safe enough to rest, act, or feel. Thinking becomes the primary strategy for control. Overthinking is the mind's attempt to: predict danger, prevent regret, avoid emotional pain, create certainty where there isn't any. The problem is that the mind keeps looping without resolution. Each thought generates another "what if", another scenario, another self-check. Instead of clarity, the system becomes more activated. The mind is working overtime because the body doesn't feel settled enough to move forward. The author highlights that overthinking: reduces trust in your own judgment, creates constant mental noise, keeps you stuck in analysis rather than the experience, and reinforces fear-based decision making. Over time, this trains the nervous system to believe that thinking is safer than acting or feeling. The cost is presence. Life becomes something to mentally manage rather than participate in. This is why telling yourself to "just stop thinking" doesn't work. Your system doesn't feel safe enough to stop.
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Next Integration Call - Tomorrow, Wednesday 3/11 at 6pm pst
Join Zoom Meeting https://us06web.zoom.us/j/3648065492?pwd=APZhhw2iFM2O8a4BGEvza1iPStGqNr.1&omn=85779814254 Meeting ID: 364 806 5492 Passcode: 042494
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Learning the Language of Your Nervous System
One of the most important integration skills is learning how you nervous system communicates with you, and how to respond in ways that are actually supportive. Your nervous system is always sending information. Not in words, but through sensation, impulse, emotion, energy, and timing. Tightness. Fatigue. Restlessness. Numbness. A sudden urge to withdraw or move. These are all messages. Most of us were never taught this language, and most likely, we were taught to override it. Push through or think differently. Be grateful or stay positive. But the nervous system doesn't respond to willpower or mantras. It responds to safety, pacing, and attunement. When we don't understand the signals, we tend to misinterpret them: 1. Activation gets labeled as anxiety that needs to be eliminated. 2. Shutdown gets labeled as laziness or depression. 3. Emotional intensity gets labeled as regression or failure. In reality, these states are adaptive responses - they're the body's way of saying - This is what I can handle right now. Learning the language of your nervous system means shifting from trying to "get rid" of your body's responses to finding out "what is my body asking for?" A tight chest might be asking you to slow down. Restlessness may be a sign your body wants you to move. Feeling numb may be your body asking for attention - in the form of awareness, self-care, or just presence. Integration deepens when we stop trying to force ourselves into a regulated state and instead meet the state that's already here. Regulation emerges when our system feels understood. This is especially important after periods of growth, insight, or healing work. As old patterns loosen, the nervous system often cycles through different states as it reorganizes. The ideal outcome is to be able to stay in relationship with what is happening. When you learn your nervous system cues, you can respond with: containment, pacing, curiosity. And over time, the system learns it doesn't have to escalate to be heard.
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Integration Call 2/25 at 6 pm PST
Changing Your World Starts Inside From Don Miguel Ruiz's Little Book of Wisdom "How do you change your world? The first step is to have the awareness that you create your own world, it's your responsibility. Nobody else is responsible for your creation. Now, in your creation, you have conflict. Most religions, philosophies, and histories say that this conflict is between good and evil - but that's not true. The conflict between good and evil is the result of the real conflict that exists in the human mind: the conflict between the truth and lies. You change your world by believing in truth and taking action based upon this truth." Don Miguel Ruiz asks a simple question: How do you change your world? His answer - start with the awareness that you are creating your own world, moment by moment. That this creation is your responsibility, not because you're to blame, but because it's yours. When we look to place blame for the state of our lives on external sources, we are unwittingly giving away our power to make changes. This idea can land very differently depending on the state of our nervous system. For some it will feel empowering, while others may find it heaving or shaming. That's where context matters. Ruiz challenges the idea that our inner conflict is between good and evil. Instead, he points to the conflict between truth and lies. From a nervous system perspective, many of the "lies" we live by were once necessary. They were beliefs shaped in moments when the body needed protection, predictability, or connection. A nervous system under threat seeks safety, not necessarily truth. Over time, the lies solidify into internal rules, identities, and stories. They organize how we perceive the world - and therefore, how our world looks. You can begin shifting your current reality when you recognize your old beliefs no longer match your current capacity or lived reality. - How does it feel to consider that the state of your life is your responsibility? - If you accept responsibility for your life, what are some small actions you can take to make the changes you want?
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Integration
From Don Miguel Ruiz's Little Book of Wisdom: "Eventually we realize through our awareness that what we learned growing up - about the world, about life, about ourselves - it's not exactly true. This isn't good or bad, right or wrong; it's just the way it is. A time comes when the brain is mature enough that we start doubting, we start challenging our own beliefs. Only then can we start shifting what we believe, expanding the mind so that everything is possible." We start questioning our beliefs when we are intellectually ready, AND when the nervous system has enough safety and capacity to do so. Early beliefs are formed in survival contexts. They helped us make sense of the world when we were dependent, vulnerable, and wired for protection. At the time, those beliefs weren't distortions - they were adaptations. They organized the nervous system around what felt safest, most predictable, or most manageable. As life unfolds, things begin to change. We gain resources, experience support, and slowly, the nervous system no longer needs the same rigid explanations to stay regulated. This is when doubt arises. Questioning beliefs often means the body is no longer constrained by the same limits. The system can tolerate ambiguity, hold more than one perspective, and can allow uncertainty without falling apart. When old frameworks loosen, the nervous system is reorganizing - not just the mind. There can be grief, excitement, fear, or a sense of being unmoored. This is expansion beyond what wa once necessary. *Reflection* What might your nervous system be ready to question? Are there any old beliefs that you once held that now feel limiting?
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Erin Rose
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45points to level up
@erin-rose-5519
It’s me

Active 6h ago
Joined Dec 17, 2025
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