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Short Answer
You can start by take deep, slow breaths for 30 seconds. inhale slowly through your nose, hold the breath for a few seconds, and exhale slowly through your mouth..
What This Means
You feel a sharp, constant knot in your stomach that feels like someone is digging through the layers of your gut. Your heart races and you can't catch your breath. You clench your jaw tightly, as if trying to hold back the pain. It's like being stuck in an elevator with no air.
Your nervous system has developed this pattern to protect you from perceived threats within your body. When you feel uncomfortable or unsafe, your brain triggers a fight-or-flight response, causing physical symptoms as your muscles tense and your heart rate increases. This mechanism evolved to keep you safe by preparing you to react quickly.
Why This Happens
If your discomfort in your body persists or worsens over time, if it interferes with your daily life, or if you feel overwhelmed by the sensations. It's important to talk to someone who can provide a safe space for you to express your feelings and get the help you need.
If this resonates, you don't have to figure this out alone. The Nervous System Reset program provides structured guidance for completing your stress cycle and finding calm.
What Can Help
- Grounding techniques — Physical presence practices that anchor you in the present moment
- Breath regulation — Slow, intentional breathing to shift nervous system state
- Cognitive reframing — Examining thoughts and challenging catastrophic thinking
- Somatic awareness — Noticing bodily sensations without judgment
- Professional support — Therapy when patterns are persistent or overwhelming
When to Seek Support
This content draws on psychological research and trauma-informed care.
If these experiences are interfering with your daily functioning, relationships, or sense of safety, working with a trauma-informed therapist can provide personalized tools and a container for processing that may not be possible alone.
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Start Your Reset →Research References
This content draws on psychological research and trauma-informed care.
