Article 01
🧠 Understanding Dissociation & Emotional Overwhelm
Sometimes when a person is triggered, it can feel like something takes over. Reactions happen quickly, automatically, and without much conscious control.
This can be part of what is known as dissociation or emotional overwhelm — a protective response from the nervous system, often shaped by past stress or trauma.
⚡ What Dissociation Can Feel Like
Dissociation is not always obvious. It can show up in different ways:
- Feeling disconnected from thoughts or emotions
- Going "numb" or blank
- Operating on autopilot
- Feeling like you are watching yourself from the outside
- Losing a sense of control in the moment
🧠 Why It Happens
The brain is designed to protect you. When something feels overwhelming or unsafe, it activates fast survival responses:
⚡ Fight
- Anger
- Intensity
- Defensive reaction
🏃 Flight
- Avoidance
- Anxiety
- Withdrawal
🧊 Freeze
- Stuck
- Unable to act
- Paralysis
💤 Shutdown
- Dissociation
- Disconnection
- Emotional numbness
These reactions are not chosen — they happen instinctively. They are the nervous system trying to keep you safe.
⚖️ Expression vs Suppression
When these reactions are held inside, they can build pressure over time. This pressure may eventually come out as emotional explosions.
Talking, expressing, and putting feelings into words can help release that pressure in a safer and more controlled way. Instead of shutting down completely or exploding all at once, there is a middle path: gradual, aware expression.
A Healthier Path
You are not "losing control" — your nervous system is trying to protect you. With awareness and practice, those automatic reactions can gradually become more conscious, more regulated, and more connected.
Article 02
🧑🧠 When a Parent Is Upset — Talking Can Help
When a parent becomes upset or triggered, the instinct is often to either shut down or try to stay completely silent. But in many cases, talking can actually help regulate the nervous system.
Speaking thoughts and emotions out loud engages the thinking part of the brain and can reduce the intensity of emotional reactions.
Why Talking Helps
- It organizes thoughts
- It slows down impulsive reactions
- It brings awareness to feelings
- It shifts the brain toward regulation
⚖️ Talking With Awareness vs Talking Reactively
Not all talking is the same. The intention behind it matters.
✓
Helpful Talking
Slower, aware, naming feelings — keeps communication open while calming the nervous system.
✕
Reactive Talking
Fast, pressured, trying to control or release tension — escalates rather than regulates.
🗣️ Example of Regulating Through Words
"I'm feeling overwhelmed right now."
"I notice I have a lot to say because I'm upset."
"I'm going to slow down for a second."
"Let me think about how I want to say this."
— Aware Expression in Practice
Talking is not the problem
Talking with awareness can become a powerful tool for regulation, connection, and emotional learning. Children begin to understand that emotions can be worked through — not just suppressed or released all at once.
Article 03
🧒 Encouraging Kids to Express — Not Explode
Emotional expression is not the problem. In fact, it is an important skill. Children need space to talk, process, and express what they feel — even when those feelings are intense.
The goal is not to stop children from talking when they are upset. The goal is to guide how that expression happens.
Talking vs Exploding
💬
Healthy Expression
Talking, explaining, naming feelings — even imperfectly. Often safer and more constructive than suppressing or exploding.
💥
Overwhelm
Yelling, shutting down, or losing control — the nervous system has been flooded beyond its current capacity to self-regulate.
🗣️ Modeling Verbal Expression
When adults talk through their feelings without attacking or blaming, they show children how to process emotions safely:
"I feel frustrated because this is hard."
"I have a lot going on in my mind right now."
"I need a moment, but I want to talk about this."
— Adult Modeling Language
⚖️ Guiding Without Shutting Down
👂
Listen first without interruptingLet the child feel fully heard before any guidance or correction.
❤️
Acknowledge what they are feeling"It sounds like you're really frustrated right now."
🐢
Help them slow down if neededGentle pacing, breathing, reducing stimulation in the environment.
🔄
Create space for back-and-forthConversation, not lecture. Questions, not commands.
Article 04
✝️ The Easter Story and the Healing of the Heart
Long ago, in the quiet town of Jerusalem, a man named Jesus walked among the people. He healed the sick, comforted the lonely, and spoke words of hope that reached even the deepest pain in human hearts.
On the first Good Friday, Jesus was crucified. It seemed like darkness had won. His friends were scattered, hearts heavy with grief, unable to reconcile the man they loved with the horror they witnessed.
"But he was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities; the punishment that brought us peace was on him, and by his wounds we are healed."
Isaiah 53:5
Three days later, on Easter morning, the stone was rolled away. The tomb was empty. Jesus appeared to the disciples and said:
"Peace be with you! As the Father has sent me, I am sending you."
John 20:21
Through prayer, scripture, and trust in God's presence, healing begins — sometimes slowly, sometimes in a sudden awareness that God's love is real and tangible.
"He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds."
Psalm 147:3
Easter Promise
The resurrection is more than an event in history — it is a promise. No matter how fragmented or disconnected you feel, God's love reaches into every hidden corner of the heart. You are seen. You are held. You are being made whole.