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.

When someone has experienced relational trauma, neglect, inconsistency, or emotional unpredictability, certain parts bec...
05/24/2026

When someone has experienced relational trauma, neglect, inconsistency, or emotional unpredictability, certain parts become highly attuned to signs of danger in relationships.

So when a person’s tone shifts, when they go quiet, when their energy feels different, your system doesn’t pause to assess the present moment. It reacts to the past.

Your brain asks one urgent question:
“Am I about to be hurt?”

The logical part of the brain that helps with perspective and reasoning steps aside. The survival system takes over. That’s when panic, shame, or self-blame rush in before you’ve had a chance to think.

The nervous system shifts into survival mode. That’s why reactions can feel sudden, emotional, and hard to control.
It’s not about now. It’s about back then and its happening again in your nervous system. They are the result of parts of the system being activated by cues that once signaled threat.

At the core of these reactions are exiled parts: younger, vulnerable parts that carry memories of rejection, shame, abandonment, or emotional harm.

These exiles hold the emotional pain that was too overwhelming to process at the time it occurred.

The first step isn’t correcting the thought or calming the feeling.
It’s recognizing what’s happening. The work is not to eliminate these parts, it’s to help them trust that safety no longer depends on constant vigilance.

When you can say, “This is a trauma response, and its a part of me stepping into protect me,” something shifts. You begin to learn how to feel safe, even when triggered.

Your brain is wired to complete patterns and resolve narratives. It's called the Zeigarnik Effect. Incomplete tasks and ...
05/23/2026

Your brain is wired to complete patterns and resolve narratives. It's called the Zeigarnik Effect. Incomplete tasks and unresolved situations stay more active in your memory than completed ones.

When something ends without resolution, your brain treats it like an open file that hasn't been saved. It keeps running in the background, using mental energy, demanding attention. Your brain keeps circling back because it's trying to make sense of something that doesn't make sense yet.

Unresolved situations register as threats. Your nervous system interprets "unfinished" as "unsafe." It stays on alert, scanning for information, trying to make sense of the confusion. This chronic low-level activation contributes to anxiety, hypervigilance, and difficulty relaxing.

To protect yourself from feeling this way again, you avoid anything that resembles the unresolved situation. New opportunities, new relationships, vulnerable conversations. You stay away because your brain still has the old wound marked as "danger: unresolved."

Decide what the experience taught you. Find meaning, not to justify what happened, but to integrate it into your story. "This taught me I'm resilient. This showed me what I don't want. This reminded me my worth isn't determined by someone else's choices."

Some stories don't get neat endings. Some people never give you the apology, explanation, or acknowledgment you deserve. Some situations end messily and stay messy.

Give yourself permission to stop searching for answers. Your brain will resist because it wants resolution. Tell it: "We're not getting more information. This is all we have. It's time to close the file."

Closure isn't about getting the other person to validate your experience or admit they were wrong. Closure is about your brain being able to file the experience as "complete" so it can stop actively processing it.

Triangulation is a manipulation tactic where one person (your mother) creates conflict or competition between two or mor...
05/22/2026

Triangulation is a manipulation tactic where one person (your mother) creates conflict or competition between two or more people to maintain power and control.

She positions herself in the center, pulling strings, controlling narratives, and ensuring no one gets too close to each other because if you did, you might compare notes and realize she's been lying to all of you.

Your mom calls you to complain about your sister. Then she calls your sister to complain about you. When you finally talk to each other, you're both confused and hurt because you heard completely different versions of the same story.

Or she tells you, "Your brother thinks you're selfish," but when you confront him, he has no idea what you're talking about.

The way out is direct communication. Talk to your siblings, your dad, your relatives directly. "Mom said you think X about me. Is that true?" Most of the time, you'll find out it was exaggerated or fabricated.

Set boundaries around information sharing. Don't tell her things you don't want repeated. Gray rock when she tries to bait you into drama about others.

Every relationship ruptures ... what determines if it survives is whether you know how to repair.You said something hars...
05/21/2026

Every relationship ruptures ... what determines if it survives is whether you know how to repair.

You said something harsh in an argument. Your partner shut down. Your friend felt dismissed. A conversation went sideways and now there's this tension you can both feel but nobody's addressing.

That's rupture. And it happens in every relationship.

The myth is that healthy relationships don't rupture. That if you were doing it right, you wouldn't hurt each other, wouldn't misunderstand, wouldn't have moments where connection breaks.

But rupture is inevitable. What determines whether a relationship survives—and even strengthens, is whether you know how to repair.

What Rupture Looks Like:
A misunderstanding that creates distance. Words said in anger that land harder than intended. Needs that go unmet and turn into resentment. A boundary crossed. Trust broken. Attention withdrawn. Someone feeling unseen, unheard, or misunderstood.

Rupture doesn't have to be explosive. Sometimes it's quiet, just a slow drift, a series of small disconnections that pile up until you're sitting across from someone you love and feeling completely alone.

When ruptures don't get repaired, resentment builds. Small hurts turn into big wounds because they never get acknowledged. You start keeping score. You develop protective walls.

Repair creates safety. It shows that mistakes don't mean the end. That you can hurt each other and still choose each other. That conflict isn't catastrophic—it's just part of being human with another human.

Real repair sounds like:
"I hurt you. I see that now. I'm sorry."
"What I said was out of line. You didn't deserve that."

Repair requires you to sit with your own discomfort. To let go of the need to be right. care more about the relationship than about protecting your ego.

What Emotional Intelligence Actually Looks Like:You notice when you're getting activated and you pause instead of reacti...
05/20/2026

What Emotional Intelligence Actually Looks Like:

You notice when you're getting activated and you pause instead of reacting. You can name your emotions with specificity, not just "fine" or "bad" but "overwhelmed," "disappointed," "scared."

You recognize when someone else is struggling even when they say they're fine. You can sit with discomfort without needing to fix it immediately. You take accountability when you've hurt someone. You ask for what you need instead of expecting people to read your mind.

The world isn't going to slow down. Technology isn't going to create less miscommunication. Stress isn't going to decrease.

The people who can navigate emotions, their own and others', are the ones who will maintain their relationships, their sanity, and their sense of self.

You're responsible for recognizing when you're dysregulated and doing something about it. For knowing when you need to step away, breathe, move your body, or ask for help. For understanding that your irritability isn't about your partner, it's about your nervous system being overloaded.

Emotional intelligence isn't about being "nice" or "sensitive." It's about being awake to the emotional reality that's always operating underneath the surface.

And right now, that's survival.

You've been snapping at people over nothing. Your sleep is a mess. You can't focus. Small things that wouldn't normally ...
05/19/2026

You've been snapping at people over nothing. Your sleep is a mess. You can't focus. Small things that wouldn't normally bother you feel overwhelming.And you keep thinking: What's wrong with me? Why can't I handle basic life anymore?

When you're constantly stressed, whether it's work deadlines, relationship tension, or financial pressure, your sympathetic nervous system gets stuck in "fight or flight" mode. Your body thinks it's in danger all the time. You can't relax because your system never gets the signal that the threat has passed.

Whether it's emotional, physical, or psychological, trauma leaves a lasting imprint on your nervous system. Your body remembers what happened even when your conscious mind has moved on. Certain triggers can throw you right back into survival mode without warning.

How Dysregulation Shows Up:

You overreact to small things. You feel numb or disconnected. You can't make decisions. Your body feels tense all the time. You're either wired and can't settle or so exhausted you can barely function. You snap at people you love. Simple tasks feel impossible.

Toxic positivity teaches you that your real feelings are wrong. That pain should be hidden. That struggling means failin...
05/18/2026

Toxic positivity teaches you that your real feelings are wrong. That pain should be hidden. That struggling means failing. It creates shame around normal human emotions.

When you can't express what you're actually feeling, you can't process it. And unprocessed emotions don't disappear—they get stored in your body. They show up as anxiety, physical tension, relationship problems, and disconnection from yourself.

Real support doesn't rush you to the bright side. It sits with you in the dark and says, "This is really hard. I'm here."

Real healing doesn't require you to be grateful for your trauma or find the lesson in your pain. It lets you be angry, devastated, or terrified without needing to perform optimism.

Toxic positivity isn't just annoying, it's actually harmful. It shames people for having normal human emotions. It dismisses real pain. And it prevents the kind of honest processing that leads to actual healing.

You're allowed to feel what you feel. You're allowed to struggle without having to package it in gratitude. You're allowed to be human, messy, contradictory, in pain.
Real positivity holds space for the full range of human experience. Toxic positivity demands you pretend half of it doesn't exist.

How This Actually Changes Your Day:When you repeat these in the morning, out loud, not just in your head, you're giving ...
05/17/2026

How This Actually Changes Your Day:
When you repeat these in the morning, out loud, not just in your head, you're giving your nervous system new scripts to pull from when stress hits.

So when your boss emails at 9pm, instead of immediately jumping into "I have to respond right now" panic, your brain remembers: "I am in control of how I respond."

When your friend vents for the third time this week and you feel the exhaustion creeping in, you remember: "I release the need to fix other people's emotions."

When everything feels chaotic and your brain says you don't deserve rest until it's handled, you remember: "I deserve to feel peace, no matter the situation."

These affirmations don't erase the stress. They change your relationship to it.
You stop letting external chaos dictate your internal state. You stop carrying emotional weight that was never yours to hold. You start moving through your day from a place of groundedness instead of constant reaction.

Notice what shifts. Notice when the old pattern tries to run and this new voice interrupts it. Notice how different it feels to choose your response instead of being hijacked by everyone else's energy.
Your nervous system is listening. Give it something new to work with.

These six patterns are actually trapping you in loops that prevent growth, connection, and peace.1. Negative ThinkingYou...
05/16/2026

These six patterns are actually trapping you in loops that prevent growth, connection, and peace.

1. Negative Thinking
Your brain defaults to worst-case scenarios. Everything you do gets filtered through a lens of "what's wrong with this." It's actually a protection mechanism, if you expect the worst, you won't be blindsided. Except now you're living in a permanent state of bracing for impact.

2. Catastrophizing
One small thing goes wrong and your brain jumps to total disaster. Your partner seems distant, the relationship is over. You make a mistake at work, you're getting fired. Your mind prepares you for the worst outcome so you'll be ready. But keeps you in a state of anxiety about things that haven't happened and probably won't.

3. Comparison
You measure your worth against everyone around you. Their success feels like your failure. Their happiness highlights what you're lacking. Comparison keeps you focused outward when the work is always internal.

4. Self-Doubt
You second-guess every decision. You question whether you're qualified, capable, or deserving. But there's a difference between healthy discernment and the constant erosion of your own confidence.

5. Perfectionism
There's always one more thing to fix, improve, or refine before you can relax. Your mind convinced you that perfection equals safety—if you do everything right, you can't be criticized or rejected.

6. Overthinking
You analyze everything to death. Every conversation gets replayed. Every decision gets examined from forty angles. Your mind believes that if you think about it enough, you'll find the "right" answer and avoid making a mistake. But overthinking leads to paralysis.

These patterns all developed as survival strategies. Your mind learned them in situations where they genuinely helped you cope, prepare, or protect yourself.Negative thinking kept you alert to danger. Catastrophizing helped you prepare for abandonment or loss.

Comparison taught you what behavior kept you safe or loved. Self-doubt prevented you from taking risks that felt too scary. Perfectionism meant you couldn't be criticized. Overthinking gave you the illusion of control.

Someone upsets you and you immediately go numb. You can't articulate what's wrong even when you want to. You need hours ...
05/15/2026

Someone upsets you and you immediately go numb. You can't articulate what's wrong even when you want to. You need hours or days to process before you can talk about it. You'd rather disappear than have a confrontation. Conflict feels so unsafe that your brain just... shuts off. You say "I'm fine" when you're falling apart inside because words won't come.

Going silent when you're hurt is a survival strategy. Your body learned that speaking up was dangerous, so it developed a different response: retreat.

Even though withdrawal protected you once, it's probably hurting your relationships now. Because the people in your life can't read your mind. They don't know you're shutting down, not shutting them out. They don't know you need time to find words, not space to punish them.

Your bank account is lower than you want it to be. Your body hurts. A relationship that mattered ended badly. You're dea...
05/14/2026

Your bank account is lower than you want it to be. Your body hurts. A relationship that mattered ended badly. You're dealing with something you never thought you'd have to face.

And in the middle of all of it, someone tells you to "stay positive" or "just trust the process."

But here's what they don't tell you: You can accept reality without surrendering to it.
You can acknowledge that things are hard right now and still know, deep in your bones, that this moment doesn't define your worth. That these circumstances are something you're moving through, not something you are.

This isn't about toxic positivity. This isn't about pretending everything's fine when it's not. This is about finding inner peace in the middle of actual chaos.

• You can say: "My health is struggling right now. I'm in pain. And I'm still whole."
• You can say: "This relationship didn't work out. I'm grieving. And I'm still worthy of love."
• You can say: "Money is tight. I'm stressed about it. And my value isn't measured by my bank account."
• You can say: "I'm going through something really hard. And I'm not broken."

Resilience isn't about being unshaken. It's about letting yourself feel the shake and staying rooted anyway.

It's processing the pain without letting the pain become your identity. It's sitting with the discomfort of uncertainty without needing to control every outcome. It's knowing that you're allowed to be struggling and still be okay at the same time.

Acceptance doesn't mean giving up. It means stopping the fight against what is.

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