The Feeling Expert

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Elyce Gordon, MS,LCMHC,NCC
A Psycho-Spiritual Approach To Healing

Mental Health Services: Anxiety • Depression • Trauma
Certified Level 3 Internal Family Services (IFS) Therapist
Certified International Integral Sound Healing Therapist

Information contained on this site is for educational purposes and is not intended as a substitute for treatment or consultation with a mental health professional or consultant.

Sound healing isn’t just about relaxation. It can also create a safe container for emotional release.Sometimes grief, an...
04/02/2026

Sound healing isn’t just about relaxation. It can also create a safe container for emotional release.

Sometimes grief, anger, sadness, or even stress sits in the body longer than we realize. We may think we’ve “moved on,” but the emotions are still there, just beneath the surface.

That’s one of the reasons sound healing can be so powerful.

The vibrations, tones, and supportive environment can help soften what feels stuck. Instead of forcing emotions to be processed, sound can invite them to rise gently giving the nervous system a chance to feel, release, and reset.

For many people, that looks like:

• feeling unexpectedly emotional during or after a session,
• noticing a deep sense of relief,
• or simply realizing they feel lighter than before.

Sound healing doesn’t replace therapy or other forms of support, but it can be a beautiful complement to emotional healing work.

Sometimes the body just needs a safe space to let go.

There are things your mind has decided you are not ready to know. And it is very, very good at keeping you from finding ...
04/01/2026

There are things your mind has decided you are not ready to know. And it is very, very good at keeping you from finding out. That is the system working exactly as designed in order to protect you.

We tend to think of defenses as negative things. Denial. Repression. Dissociation. Big psychological words for big psychological events. But most of the time, defense is so quiet you never even catch it.

It is not noticing something that is right in front of you. It is getting to the edge of a difficult thought and suddenly remembering something you need to do. It is being able to talk about painful things with complete calm and zero feeling, because understanding something in your head means you NEVER have to feel it in your body.
It is never quite letting yoourself put two and two together.

At some point in your life, not knowing something was genuinely safer than knowing it.

Maybe the truth about your family was too much to for you to hold. Maybe recognizing what was happening to you would have left you with nowhere to go. So your mind learned to look away and avoid it. To redirect. To stay just busy enough that the thing underneath never quite had room to surface or let you feel it.

That was how you survived.

The problem is that those same defenses do not turn off when the danger passes. They just keep on doing what they do. And unfortunately, they keep you at a distance from the very awareness that could actually change things.

Because you cannot heal what you cannot see.

This isn't about ripping away every protection your system has created. It is about deciding to start getting curious. To just become more aware and notice when you go blank in a conversation. To notice what you reach for when something uncomfortable starts to surface. To gently ask yourself what you might be working very hard not to know. That is how healing begins.

Every pattern you have developed in your life, people-pleasing, shutting down, overworking, avoiding, controlling, over-...
03/31/2026

Every pattern you have developed in your life, people-pleasing, shutting down, overworking, avoiding, controlling, over-explaining, began as an adaptation. They were your mind and body working together to find the best balance they could between what was driving you and what felt safe.

Your system learned how to help you survive, stay connected, avoid conflict, protect yourself, or hold it all together in the best way it knew how.

That matters. Because so many people look at these patterns and think,
“What is wrong with me?”
But the better question is,
“What did this help me do?”

The issue isn't adapting, it's some of the adaptations were built for an environment you no longer live in, and they kept running anyway.

Psychologist Sandor Rado believed therapy should help people become more self-reliant, aware of what is no longer working, and able to move toward a better way of living.

He also believed the mind and body cannot be separated. Your body is not just carrying symptoms. It is carrying history. How you feel physically shapes how you think. How you think shapes how your body responds. They are always affecting each other.

What stays with me most about his work is this: he did not see people as damaged. He saw them as adapting. There is something deeply compassionate in that.

And therapy is not about erasing your adaptations or judging the ways you learned to cope. It is about understanding them with enough honesty and care that you can begin to choose what serves you now.

The goals of therapy, in that view, are to help a person become more self-reliant, create a better adaptation, and restore confidence and hope.

• To become more connected to yourself.
• To build trust in your own capacity.
• To notice what no longer fits.
• To create new ways of responding that are not just about survival, but about living.

That is what therapy can offer. Not fixing what is broken in you, but helping you work with your own capacity in a new way.

Think about a moment you froze.Maybe it was during an argument and the words just ... disappeared. Maybe someone said so...
03/30/2026

Think about a moment you froze.
Maybe it was during an argument and the words just ... disappeared. Maybe someone said something and you went completely blank. Maybe you were in a situation that felt dangerous or uncomfortable and your body just stopped.

And afterward, you probably judged yourself for it.
• Why didn't I say something?
• Why didn't I stick up for myself?

When your nervous system determines that fighting or running isn't an option in the moment, the system puts on the emergency brake. Your thinking brain just goes offline. That's why Words disappear.

It is one of the oldest survival mechanisms your body has. ... the same one that causes animals to play dead. Your body decided, in that moment, that going still was the safest thing it could do.

However, when the threat passes, you're left holding all that shame about the way you responded.

From the inside, it feels nothing like protection.
It feels like going completely blank. Like the words you had a second ago just vanished. You can hear what's being said to you, but you can't process it. You can't respond. The thoughts are there somewhere, circling, but you can't reach them.

You feel dissociated. Far away from yourself. Like you're watching from behind glass in the room, but completely alone in it.

You feel stuck. And then you feel stupid for being stuck. You want to say something. You want to defend yourself. You want to explain. But nothing comes out and the silence makes it worse.

And your brain is working overtime trying to catch up, trying to make sense of what's happening, trying to form the words, trying to think, but the thinking brain is the very first thing to go offline in freeze.

Understanding why you freeze is the first step to meeting yourself with compassion instead of criticism. And compassion, not willpower, is what actually starts to rewire the response over time.

If you've ever frozen and spent years wondering why you do it, this one's for you. Share it with someone who needs to hear this today.

Here are 5 first steps to begin expanding it:1. Learn your own edges.Before you can expand the window, you have to know ...
03/29/2026

Here are 5 first steps to begin expanding it:
1. Learn your own edges.
Before you can expand the window, you have to know where your edges are. Start noticing what pulls you into overwhelm? What time of day, what kind of interaction, what tone of voice pushes you outside your window? Awareness is the foundation. You can't work with what you can't see.

2. Practice regulation when you're already calm.
Most people try to regulate in the middle of a flood. That's like learning to swim in a riptide. Instead, practice your tools: slow exhales, grounding, orienting, when you're already okay. This trains your nervous system to find the pathway back before it needs to use it under pressure.

3. Seek small doses of discomfort on purpose.
The window expands through small, manageable exposures to discomfort followed by a return to safety. Like a hard conversation you don't avoid. Sit with an uncomfortable feeling for 60 seconds before reaching for your phone. These small stretches will build capacity over time.

4. Build more moments of felt safety.
Your nervous system expands when it gathers evidence that the world is sometimes safe. This means intentionally creating moments of warmth, connection, stillness, and pleasure and actually letting them land. Feel them. Recognize them. Not rushing through them. Not dismissing them. Letting your body register: this is okay. I am okay right now.

5. Repair quickly after rupture.
Every time you get pushed outside your window and find your way back that's a rep. The more you practice returning to regulation, the more your system learns it can survive intensity and recover. Repair, in relationships and within yourself, is where resilience is built.

Expanding your window is about having more room. More room to feel, to choose, and to stay present for your own life.
This is slow work. And it's worth it.

Save this and share it with someone who needs more capacity right now.

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This is one of the most important concepts in trauma healing and many people have never even heard of it.Your window of ...
03/28/2026

This is one of the most important concepts in trauma healing and many people have never even heard of it.

Your window of tolerance is the zone where your nervous system can function. Inside it, you can think clearly, feel your emotions without being overwhelmed, and respond instead of react.

Outside it? Everything gets harder.

When you go too high (hyperarousal):
Anxiety. Panic. Rage. Racing thoughts. Feeling out of control. Overwhelm. The urge to fight or flee.

When you go too low (hypoarousal):
Numbness. Shutdown. Dissociation. Exhaustion. Feeling flat, checked out, or empty. The urge to collapse or disappear.

Trauma narrows your window. Repeated stress, early childhood wounds, and chronic overwhelm can shrink the zone where you feel regulated, making it easier to get pushed out and harder to come back to regulation.

This is why small things can feel huge.
Why you can go from feeling fine to being flooded in seconds.
Why you feel like you're "too sensitive" or "too much."
What's happening is your window got smaller.

The goal of healing isn't to never get triggered or feel overwhelmed.
The goal is to widen your window so you have more capacity, more choice, and more access to yourself when things get hard.

It is possible to expand your window. It can happen with the right support and practice.

Follow for more

Which “emotional type” feels most like you?(And be honest… you might rotate between a few depending on the day.)Most of ...
03/28/2026

Which “emotional type” feels most like you?
(And be honest… you might rotate between a few depending on the day.)

Most of us weren’t taught emotional skills ... we were taught emotional strategies.

Some of us learned to stay steady and contained or we learned to feel everything out loud. Some of us learned to think our way through life and some learned to sense everyone else before we sensed ourselves.

None of these are “wrong.” They’re adaptations we had to make. They were how your system learned to stay safe, seen, or in control.

Here’s why this matters: Your emotional style shapes how you handle stress, communicate under pressure, and show up in relationships, especially when you’re triggered.

A few common patterns:

• The Rock: calm on the outside… carrying a tired nervous system underneath.
• The Gusher: big feelings, fast processing, deep need for connection and reassurance.
• The Empath: highly attuned to everyone else, often disconnected from your own needs.
• The Intellectual: can explain feelings perfectly, but struggles to actually feel them.

The goal isn’t to label yourself. It’s to recognize your pattern with less judgment and more curiosity, so your emotions become information to you, and to not show up as a problem.

In short: your emotional type is a map. It helps you understand your stress response, your needs, and what regulation actually looks like for you, this way you can respond with more choice and less autopilot.

Your turn: Which one sounds most like you right now?
Drop it in the comments and save this for the next hard day.

When you live in constant urgency, your body starts acting like the threat is ongoing. Even when you’re sitting at your ...
03/26/2026

When you live in constant urgency, your body starts acting like the threat is ongoing. Even when you’re sitting at your desk or folding laundry, your system stays in “prepare, manage, handle, fix” mode. You might not feel panicked. You might just feel tense and driven.

When your nervous system is activated, your brain is less interested in creativity and long-term thinking. It wants quick answers. It wants certainty. It wants relief.

That’s why constant urgency often leads to:
• indecision (you overthink because you don’t want to choose wrong)
• impulsive decisions (you choose quickly just to end the discomfort)
• decision fatigue (everything feels harder than it should)
• black-and-white thinking (“This is terrible,” “This is never going to work,” “I have to fix it now”)

You may feel like you’re thinking all day, but it’s a narrow kind of thinking. It’s survival thinking, not strategic thinking.

When your nervous system is under pressure, your tolerance is lower. Your ability to listen deeply is reduced because your system is already busy scanning for what needs to happen next. Even when you love someone, you can come across as short, distracted, or impatient.

It’s because your body is acting like there’s no room for anything extra, including emotions.

So you start feeling overwhelmed faster. You start saying “I can’t” more often, not because you’re incapable, but because your system is already maxed out.

When you feel guilty for having needs, your brain is usually running old rules like “I’m a burden” or “If I ask, I’ll be...
03/25/2026

When you feel guilty for having needs, your brain is usually running old rules like “I’m a burden” or “If I ask, I’ll be rejected.” Those automatic thoughts create anxiety, and the guilt pushes you to apologize, over-explain, or shrink—so you feel temporary relief. The problem is that relief reinforces the belief, so the guilt keeps coming back.

CBT breaks that loop in three ways:

Awareness:
You learn to catch the guilt thought early and name what’s happening instead of automatically obeying it.

Reality-testing:
You examine the thought for distortions and compare it to actual evidence, which loosens the grip of shame-based beliefs.

New learning through action:
You practice small, safe “behavior experiments” (like making a request without apologizing). When the feared outcome doesn’t happen, or you handle it, you teach your nervous system that having needs is not dangerous and you are safe.

Over time, CBT helps guilt shift from “I am wrong” to “I’m having an old fear response,” and that’s what makes real change possible.

Most people think procrastination means you don’t care. But if you’re reading this, you probably care a lot. You care so...
03/24/2026

Most people think procrastination means you don’t care. But if you’re reading this, you probably care a lot. You care so much that starting feels loaded. High stakes. Like once you begin, you’ll be judged, exposed, disappointed, or trapped.

So you delay. And then you hate yourself for delaying. And then you delay more.

That’s the procrastination loop. It’s kind of sneaky because initially it gives you that short-term relief. But really its long-term pain.

You know what you want to do matters. The importance of it creates pressure. Your body registers pressure as threat: tight chest, tension, restlessness, dread.

Your mind tries to predict outcomes:
“What if I do it wrong?”
“What if it’s not good enough?”

Here comes the self-talk:
“Why are you like this?”
“You always wait until the last minute.”

Your body wants the discomfort to stop. So you unconsciously reach for something that gives instant relief:
scrolling, snacks, cleaning, busywork ...

You make a deal with yourself:
“I’ll start in 10 minutes.”
“After one more episode.”
“When I feel more motivated.”

Eventually the deadline gets close enough that urgency overrides avoidance. You surge into action with stress energy, often at night, last minute, fueled by adrenaline.

Once it’s over, you feel relief… and then the shame hits:
“Why do I always do this?”
“I’m such a mess.”
“I can’t trust myself.”

Why we get pulled back in even when we want to take action

Because procrastination gives you something your nervous system is craving: immediate reduction of discomfort.

Starting the task brings uncertainty, vulnerability, and the possibility of failure. Avoiding it gives you a temporary sense of control. Your brain rewards that relief, so it becomes a learned pathway.

The way out isn’t to “be more disciplined.” It’s to change the starting experience.

So instead of fighting your inner critic, one of the most helpful things you can do is map it. Because once you understa...
03/23/2026

So instead of fighting your inner critic, one of the most helpful things you can do is map it. Because once you understand what the critic is protecting you from, it starts to soften.

Step 1: Identify the critic (without arguing with it). The critic often shows up as:
• harsh self-talk (“What is wrong with you?”)
• perfection pressure (“Do more. Be better.”)
• comparison (“Everyone else has it together.”)
• future fear (“If you mess this up, you’ll regret it.”)

Before you challenge it, just name it:
“My critic is here.” That alone creates a little space.

Step 2: Map the critic’s job
Ask a few simple questions: like you want to get to know a nervous system strategy, not trying to diagnose yourself.
• When do you show up most?
• What do you say on repeat?
• What are you trying to prevent?

At this point you’re just trying to understand its logic.

Step 3: Find the fear under the protection. Most critics are terrified of something like:
• being rejected or abandoned
• being humiliated
• being powerless

Step 4: Notice the cost. Critics often protect you from outer pain by creating inner pain. They can motivate, yes… but they also create:
• anxiety and burnout
• procrastination (because nothing feels good enough)
• shame spirals after mistakes

Mapping helps you see: this part is trying hard, but the method is costly.

Step 5: Offer a new job (not a shutdown). Once you understand the fear, you can shift your approach:

“Thank you for trying to protect me. I get what you’re afraid of.
What I need now is support, not attacks. Can you help me prepare, plan, or stay focused, without shaming me?”

That’s how change happens in parts work.

There’s a difference between “avoiding” people out of fear … and choosing distance because your body is reacting.We’ve b...
03/22/2026

There’s a difference between “avoiding” people out of fear … and choosing distance because your body is reacting.

We’ve been taught that being mature means staying available, staying polite, staying open, no matter how someone affects us. But your nervous system doesn’t care about appearances. It cares about safety.

If you consistently feel:
• tense before you see someone
• drained after you talk to them
• like you have to over-explain or walk on eggshells
• ashamed, second-guessed, or smaller in their presence
• pulled into drama, urgency, or emotional chaos

that’s data from your system. And it’s okay to recognize and respond to the data.

Normalizing “avoiding” people who aren’t good for your health is really about normalizing self-protection.

If your body goes into threat mode around someone repeatedly, that relationship is not neutral for you.

You don’t owe access to people who destabilize you.

You can wish someone well and still keep your distance.
You can care about someone and still say, “Not at the cost of my health.”

And if you’re practicing this for the first time, expect discomfort. People who benefited from your over-availability will call your boundaries “selfish.” That doesn’t mean you have done anything wrong. It means the dynamic is changing and they feel it.

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