Coming up in this episode, I believe in reincarnation.
Speaker BI believe in a soul.
Speaker BJust think, when this person passes and that soul goes to another human, that next human is going to be so much more evolved, more regulated, because they did all this healing work in this lifetime.
Speaker BDoing this work at any age is important.
Speaker BBut even if you don't get to that full regulation, getting a little bit more each day, each year is still contributing to the greater ether.
Speaker CYou are now listening to the Here.
Speaker AFor the Truth podcast, hosted by Joel Rafidi and youros.
Speaker AAll right, everybody, welcome to the Here for the Truth podcast.
Speaker AI feel so honored to have the introduction duties today.
Speaker AMy name is Yos.
Speaker AI have my co host Joel Radi with me.
Speaker CI love the way you say my name is.
Speaker AWe have a really important episode for you today.
Speaker AWe are bringing Irene Lyon back on for the fourth time.
Speaker AShe is someone who I can confidently say is a nervous system expert.
Speaker AI don't usually love throwing that term around because I feel like everyone throws it around, but we wanted to have Irene back on to have a really important conversation, you know, as somatic work, as nervous system work, as trauma work becomes more popular, what usually happens is you have everyone, not everyone.
Speaker AYou have a lot of people that present themselves in a way that doesn't really align with their actual understanding or training on a subject.
Speaker AAnd so we wanted Irene to come on so we can have a deeper discussion on what trauma healing is, on the misconceptions around it and, you know, what she sees going on, you know, in the online space and in the industry of personal development and healing.
Speaker AAnd so we're really excited to have this conversation and we feel it's really important.
Speaker AAnd I think what happens very often when something starts getting more popular, people jump on the bandwagon and everyone starts throwing, throwing out all the buzzwords in their social media profiles and in the offers.
Speaker AAnd the reality is, you know, does everyone do what they say they do?
Speaker ADo they have the knowledge to back up what they present themselves as?
Speaker ASo anyways, we really hope you enjoy this conversation.
Speaker AWe explore a bunch of different areas and if you really enjoy this episode, please share it, because I think it's one of those episodes that needs listening to as often as possible.
Speaker CAll right, everybody.
Speaker COur guest today is Irene Lyon, a dear friend, nervous system expert, somatic practitioner and educator who stopped thousands of people around the world understand and heal the root causes of chronic stress trauma.
Speaker CWith advanced training in Feldenkrais magic experiencing and neuroplasticity, Irene's work bridges science and soul to restore the body's natural capacity for regulation, resilience and vitality.
Speaker CShe's a fierce advocate for self healing, nervous system education that goes beyond trends and the buzzwords.
Speaker CAnd she dives into the real work of creating lasting change within one's body.
Speaker CThis is her first time for fourth time.
Speaker CJoining us here on Here for the Truth.
Speaker CPrevious episodes were 68, 104 with her partner Seth Lyon, the amazing Seth Lyon.
Speaker CAnd of course 182 with Max Lowen, which was an awesome episode as well.
Speaker CAnd I met Irene in person before your AR and Sophie, which means I'm the best.
Speaker BSo you're the better one.
Speaker CWelcome back.
Speaker AGood to see you.
Speaker BThat's right.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CHow you doing?
Speaker AI'm.
Speaker BI am good.
Speaker BIt has, it's been a full year.
Speaker BIt's been a full 10 years, but this year's been really full.
Speaker BWorking, working, working.
Speaker BSleeping sonning, trying to keep.
Speaker BI'm still building my body back up after all my stuff.
Speaker BYou know, I've talked about that.
Speaker BWe don't need to get into that today.
Speaker BSo working on things with my system.
Speaker BSeth, my husband and I were just loving our new space in the, the sticks of Vancouver.
Speaker BHanging out with llamas that I just saw one was on the highway down our road.
Speaker BWe don't have llamas.
Speaker BWe don't have llamas, by the way.
Speaker BBut you know one of those Facebook community groups where they post like this got out, that got out, someone go get that animal.
Speaker BAnd so it's fun.
Speaker CAmazing, amazing.
Speaker CTo kick this off when you look around, I guess at the nervous system landscape, the nervous system, terrain.
Speaker CToday, obviously the nervous system in general is something that's becoming more popularized.
Speaker CWe're seeing more people use this terminology, more people for it to be able to work with these tools etc and with anything.
Speaker CAs it becomes more popular, it gets more watered down as well.
Speaker CSo I guess give us the 101 from your perspective of what you're seeing in the nervous system world and terrain today.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd also just how much has shifted from when you started this.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo I mean, if I go back to when I first was introduced to the nervous system, it would have been my feldenkrais training in 2001 actually in Sydney, Australia.
Speaker BAnd it just, it blew my mind.
Speaker BAs someone who was trained deeply in physiology, anatomy, exercise science.
Speaker BI grew up in an animal hospital with two parents who were veterinarians.
Speaker BSo I've got, I've had a medical background for a long time.
Speaker BAnd so when I found it in 01.
Speaker BAnd then I started studying Feldenkrais in oh 4.
Speaker BThere hadn't even been any, like popular press books written on neuroplasticity.
Speaker BThe first one that really got that term to the stage was the.
Speaker BOh my goodness, I'm going to forget it.
Speaker BHis second book was the Brain's Way of Healing.
Speaker ANorman Doidge, the Brain that changes itself or something.
Speaker BThank you, Erasmus.
Speaker BSo the brain, yeah, the brain that changes itself.
Speaker BAnd that was like pivotal.
Speaker BBut we knew, like people knew.
Speaker BPeople know people who had strokes or troubles neurologically and they recover.
Speaker BBut you have to work at it, right?
Speaker BYou can't just accept that this is my fate.
Speaker BAnd then, yeah, the system isn't going to improve, but we can recover.
Speaker BWe can rewire so much as humans because we have our higher brain.
Speaker BSo I got into that work in 04.
Speaker BAnd then when I was in private practice, sort of 05 through to 08, I noticed in my practice there were some people that just weren't getting better with really good Feldenkrais work.
Speaker BAnd I had my exercise background and it had to do with trauma.
Speaker BIt had to do with what we call, what I call.
Speaker BI like to really be specific stored survival stress.
Speaker BSo the fight, flight, freeze, the collapse in the physiology.
Speaker BI'm like, why are all these people not getting better with this really good neuroplastic work that can change so much.
Speaker BThat introduced me to Peter Levine's work.
Speaker BSo this was 08.
Speaker BAt that time.
Speaker BPeter's work was just starting to poke its head out of the ground, even though he had been teaching it since the early 90s 80s and his discoveries were in the mid-60s.
Speaker BSo this shows you how long it takes something to get up.
Speaker BAnd then I started studying with him.
Speaker BI went far in that, that that world was assisting with at his classes at the master level.
Speaker BAnd what happened?
Speaker BI was in my private practice and I'm like, God, this isn't enough to work with someone one hour a week.
Speaker BSome of my clients were with me for three, four, five years, no joke.
Speaker BAnd they still like I was doing good work, but there needed to be more that was done when they weren't with me in person.
Speaker BSo that got me into realizing I need to teach the education.
Speaker BSo I started doing workshops.
Speaker BAnd there's a point to this.
Speaker BI'm getting to the question.
Speaker BI started teaching workshops in my office, jam packed with like 50 people.
Speaker BProbably a fire hazard, shouldn't have happened.
Speaker BPowerPoint presentations, talking about what I call the biology of stress, how it works, everything I had been taught in my s E training.
Speaker BI was packing in into like kind of a two hour lecture that then shifted to online.
Speaker BSo when I put stuff online in about 2012, I had a business coach, and this is so funny to me, who said to me, you can't put the word nervous system on your site.
Speaker BWhy?
Speaker BSo nobody knew what it was then.
Speaker BYour assimilation, honest to God, like, it was an unknown thing in the online world.
Speaker BPeople knew meditation because even back then, breathwork and cold plunging and sauna wasn't a thing.
Speaker BCircadian biology wasn't a thing.
Speaker BSo I said, well, and I remember where I was sitting, I was actually sitting in Victoria, British Columbia, at one of Seth's trainings, Se trainings.
Speaker BAnd I said to her, we got to put.
Speaker BI have to.
Speaker BI cannot not put this on the site because this is what my work is about.
Speaker BIt's about the nervous system.
Speaker BShe was very gracious.
Speaker BShe said, you got to go with your gut.
Speaker BI'm like, I'm going to go with my gut.
Speaker BSo fast forward to now, 2025, everyone has the word nervous system on their site.
Speaker BMoney coaches, breath work coaches.
Speaker BI mean, I see it everywhere.
Speaker BAnd then I kind of go, wow, this word has been taken and just sort of bastardized.
Speaker BBecause if you were to ask many of the people who use that word, they could not tell anyone.
Speaker BI'm being.
Speaker BI'm pretty certain what the nervous system is, how it works, what the real branches are, what the polyvagal theory really is, what trauma really is in the system and what it takes to move it out because it isn't just one thing.
Speaker BAnd so oddly at that time, 2012 through 2015, I was just pumping stuff out online because that's when the online course world was just going ballistic.
Speaker BAnd then it really went crazy in 2020, kind of BC before COVID and then.
Speaker BAnd then poof, it's everywhere.
Speaker BSo I take partial responsibility, I think, because my first training, online training was the healing trauma series.
Speaker BI remember the first time that went out, you guys, I think we had 20,000 signups.
Speaker BAnd you guys are in the online world.
Speaker BYou know how hard it is to get 20,000 signups now?
Speaker BYeah, yeah, I was.
Speaker BAnd I look back and I'm like, wow, people were hungry for it.
Speaker BPeople didn't know what it was.
Speaker BSo I think it's out there for good reason because it has to be out there.
Speaker BAnybody I talk to now is like, you're right, the nervous system work is key.
Speaker BAll these other things are really important, but we have to get into that physiology in a really deep way.
Speaker BThe trouble is that it's been hijacked, as I've said.
Speaker BIt's kind of been capitalized on, and a lot of people don't really know what it is or what trauma work is.
Speaker BSo that's my long way of introducing, like, that's kind of the trajectory.
Speaker BAnd here we are now.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThank you for that.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ASo two things.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker AOne, and you could explore this after I say the next thing.
Speaker ABut, like, what, like, what is, like, misunderstood around, like, what trauma healing is?
Speaker AThe other thing I want to say is because, let's say nervous system work and trauma healing has been a bit bastardized and, like Joel said, watered down.
Speaker AI feel like there's this, like, growing, I mean, subtle and maybe certain circles movement of, like, trauma doesn't cause disease.
Speaker AYou know, trauma doesn't impact you.
Speaker AAnd a lot of people who think trauma is just in the event, as opposed to, you know, a very complex physiological, psychological process that's happening, whatever in your body.
Speaker AAnd so it's interesting to hear people talk about that because a lot of people now are talking about how, like, the role the psyche plays in disease, the role trauma plays in disease.
Speaker AAnd it feels like I'm seeing a little bit of this pushback.
Speaker ABut again, this pushback is coming from a place where people do not understand the physiology of the nervous system and what trauma really is.
Speaker ASo if you can speak on that, that would be great.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI didn't realize there was pushback.
Speaker AThere's a little.
Speaker AI mean, it's in our.
Speaker AIn our little world, you know, a few people commenting on it, and I.
Speaker ASo I wanted to bring that up.
Speaker BI wonder if it's the same thing.
Speaker BI'm seeing pushback.
Speaker BI don't know if you call it pushback, but some people are starting to say everyone's doing too many things to try to heal.
Speaker BJust stop everything and just be.
Speaker BAnd I'm like.
Speaker BI'm like, no, no, no, no, no.
Speaker BBecause that's also not good.
Speaker BAnd it's not enough to just be in nature as we know.
Speaker BSeth and I have talked about that.
Speaker AOr the spiritualizing of it as well, where it's like, no, you just need to know that you're source energy and you're good.
Speaker ACool.
Speaker AJust now, go live your life.
Speaker BOh, I wish that were true.
Speaker BThat'd be so easy.
Speaker BWe wouldn't have to be here.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BSo why is it misunderstood?
Speaker BSo, I mean, the.
Speaker BThe basic.
Speaker BThis is a.
Speaker BThat's a loaded question, which I Accept, but it's.
Speaker BWhat's so difficult is we've got this body, this physiology that has a good.
Speaker BSo many systems, right?
Speaker BDigestion, immune, endocrine, muscular, respiratory, cardiovascular, lymphatics, fluid, neural, neural chemistries, biomechanics, inner ear.
Speaker BI mean, and then relationship, how we relate to people, how we relate to the world.
Speaker BSo what I just said is like a quick snapshot of all the things the autonomic nervous system governs.
Speaker BWhen we've had a really significant event that's traumatic.
Speaker BAnd I'm not going to go into all the branches today at all.
Speaker BThat's like on my site, people can watch the branches of the nervous system and what they are.
Speaker BWhen we have an event, that's scary and we don't process, gets stuck in the physiology.
Speaker BBut it's not just in the nervous system.
Speaker BIt's in the skin, the fascia, the bones, the muscles, our breathing patterns, our memories, our sense of safety in the world.
Speaker BThe other thing that complicates it for us humans is that our early traumas, we short it edt, early developmental traumas.
Speaker BThis is anything that occurs in utero to about age three, some people say age five.
Speaker BBut we know the human brain is developing now, I think they say till age 28.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BBut really that first five years of life is so critical.
Speaker BAnd so if there is anything that occurs in that time that renders that child, that infant, either in utero or out of utero, unsafe, put into threat, questioning their own physiology, we then have a situation where that human, I don't know the best word.
Speaker BIt's like they've been tainted.
Speaker BThey haven't, they haven't been given that pure connection, love, nutrition, safety, safe haven, secure attachment, all those words that people throw out that they need.
Speaker BSo that when they do have an event that say harmful or shock, a shocking event like a car accident or an injury, they can bounce back quicker.
Speaker BAnd so right now, what's happening in the west is people don't realize how dysregulated they are in a functional way, going to slow that down.
Speaker BThey don't realize how dis.
Speaker BDisregulated they are in a functional way.
Speaker BWe would call this functional freeze.
Speaker BAnd so they're trying to work on their traumas that they know they have.
Speaker BThey know they have the car accident, they know their mother wasn't there, the father left, there was abuse, there was alcohol, all the things.
Speaker BSo they're trying to get this shaking out, this catharsis, this emotion.
Speaker BThey're trying to work with Their connection, as Joel said, to spirit source.
Speaker BBut what hasn't been addressed is this early imprint of unsafety.
Speaker BAnd there's no shame in it, by the way.
Speaker BLike, I've met very few people that haven't had some form of early developmental trauma.
Speaker BIt's very rare.
Speaker BSo what I'm seeing.
Speaker BYou know what your question you're asked most was what is misunderstood?
Speaker BI would say if I really put one layer down.
Speaker BWhat is misunderstood is how complex we actually are and how we shape shift and change based on different circumstances.
Speaker BAnd we were born into that.
Speaker BYou're at home with your either functional or dysfunctional family.
Speaker BYou then go to your kindergarten.
Speaker BYou go to first grade to second grade.
Speaker BYou get, you know, indoctrinated into that.
Speaker BI know you guys know a lot about that.
Speaker BAnd then you have to fit in, and all the teachers are different, and then you have bullies anyway.
Speaker BSo there's this, like, trajectory from when we come out as humans where very rarely are we given true opportunity to be authentic, but also biological and also learn boundaries and right from wrong.
Speaker BSo what is misunderstood, I think what's misunderstood, if I make it really simple, is the complexity of it and how you cannot rewrite and rewire that stuff in a year.
Speaker BYou can't even do that in three years.
Speaker BI mean, I'm living with a man, Seth, who you both know.
Speaker BWe've been together 14 years now.
Speaker BHe did spiritual work, every type of spiritual work before I met him.
Speaker BHe lived in the woods.
Speaker BHe was living the ideal life in nature.
Speaker BAnd then he got together with me.
Speaker BAnd the poor guy still had complex ptsd, Right.
Speaker BEven though he had that ability to meditate, there was so much stored survival stress, not just in his nervous system, but his entire physiology and the posture, all these things.
Speaker BBut then when he started to work on this, and I'm a similar case, but different, it took years and years and years to do true functional rewiring of the system.
Speaker BBut all the systems.
Speaker BSo remember how I mentioned all those systems?
Speaker BDigestion, immune, endocrine, skeletal muscle.
Speaker BWe want to.
Speaker BI'm using my hands with this.
Speaker BBut if you consider all those, like, little circles lined up, what I find is happening is people are trying to improve one system because they're like, this is the problem system.
Speaker BIt's my digestion, So I gotta fix that.
Speaker BOr let's say, oh, it's my emotions.
Speaker BI've got to fix that.
Speaker BOr I have to release my anger.
Speaker BI got to work on that.
Speaker BBut then all these other systems aren't tended, and Then they don't move forward together.
Speaker BSo what I find is that there's a desire to rush, to be quick, to work on the one system that's off.
Speaker BBut what we have to do is get into that root layer of the nervous system, physiology, growing capacity, so that all these physiological systems and relational systems and environmental systems go together at the same time.
Speaker BBut to bring all those pieces along takes like time.
Speaker BDoes that, does that make sense?
Speaker AYeah, it definitely does.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AIt seems like there's so much managing going on as opposed to actual, you know, healing.
Speaker AThat does take time.
Speaker ALike you said, if I use a.
Speaker BFancy word, often people throw out the term window of tolerance.
Speaker BAnd some, you may know that word.
Speaker BMost people, again, if I go back to those living with say, functional freeze or dysregulation, but it's functional, don't realize that their actual window of tolerance is quite small.
Speaker BIt's like a little cubbyhole window.
Speaker BAnd so building a real window of tolerance is actually pretty boring work, actually.
Speaker BYour wife, I can mention, Sophie, you know, we were just together in training and we were talking about just how her term was sneaky powerful how little tiny bits of connection to the environment, little tiny bits of connection to self tracking just one sensation and then reconnecting to the environment.
Speaker BIt seems so insecurity, inconsequential and like that's nothing.
Speaker BBut Joel, you would know with your, you know, babies and, and little ones, like all it takes is one little connection and you just, you see them shift or they see one thing and they're just.
Speaker BAnd so that like, you know what that is.
Speaker BIt's so small little things make such a big difference.
Speaker BSo if we think of us as adults, that's the level of small detail we actually want to work with.
Speaker BAnd as you said, you're awesome.
Speaker BMost we're trying to manage all these things that are overwhelming or, or, or hard for us.
Speaker BAs opposed to going back to what would we do with a baby, what would we want to provide an infant connection?
Speaker BFood safety.
Speaker BAnd that stuff is, you know, again, back to Joel and your family.
Speaker BIt, it's kind of boring.
Speaker BYou do the same thing every day.
Speaker BThere's variety in there, but when they're infants, they need very basic stuff.
Speaker BAnd so I, I see people wanting to do more extravagant stuff.
Speaker BAnd while there's a time and a place for that, the beginning of the work to go back to what your, your question, what is most misunderstood is how long we need to spend building solid foundations.
Speaker BAnd those foundations that we build are pretty, they're almost invisible.
Speaker BWe don't see them happening.
Speaker BJust like when you're raising a child, you speak to them, you sing to them, you show them words on books.
Speaker BThey don't talk, they don't talk.
Speaker BThey start to make sound.
Speaker BAnd then all of a sudden one day they say a word and it's like, right.
Speaker BBut it's taken years to get to that.
Speaker BIt's ex.
Speaker BThat is the nervous system at work laying down new foundations.
Speaker BSo when we think of our physiology as adults with wounds and dysregulations and dysfunctions, that's the level of care and consistency and repetition and smallness we want to work with and what occurs.
Speaker BAnd my students and clients will say this.
Speaker BI stuck with it.
Speaker BIt seemed really boring.
Speaker BAnd then one day, I actually was able to do this.
Speaker BI actually was able to feel what is a, say, a survival stress attack, a panic attack, and feel it, be with it, not manage it, not try to get rid of it, not try to ignore it.
Speaker BBut I ride that wave of intensity.
Speaker BAnd I came down.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker ABecause this is.
Speaker AThis is the thing I want to get to.
Speaker ABecause it's like, people think that, like, nervous system regulation is like being calm.
Speaker ALike, I'm calm, I need to be calm.
Speaker ALike, now I'm good.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAs opposed to what you talk about often and we've talked about before, is like having that.
Speaker AWell, increasing the window of tolerance, of building greater capacity in that regards.
Speaker ASo if you want to talk more, because that's another buzzword, like nervous system regulation, this is going to help you regulate your nervous system.
Speaker AYou know, you hear that all the time, all across social media and in copy and different programs people are running.
Speaker AAnd yet what is the foundation of that?
Speaker AWhat does it really mean?
Speaker AIt's not just about being calm.
Speaker ALike, there are appropriate responses to situations where you're not calm.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker CThanks for sharing that.
Speaker CThe other thing I'd like to add is, like, someone.
Speaker CI think many people will probably hear what you just said, said and feel like, wow, this is just overwhelming.
Speaker CThis was a lifetime of work.
Speaker CHealing is not instantaneous.
Speaker CNot what I thought it was.
Speaker CHow am I ever going to get on with my life?
Speaker CAm I going to spend years trying to, you know, deal with this and navigate this and maybe can even foster some kind of victim mentality within an individual as well.
Speaker CSo, like, what would you say to someone where it's like, how do I do this work and get on with my life, like, as well?
Speaker ANow a short break from the episode.
Speaker CWhat's up Guys, hope you're enjoying this incredible episode with Irene Lyon.
Speaker CJust quickly, if you love what we're about, if you love these conversations that we're having, then you can take these conversations to the next level with people who have been in our community for a long time, who understand our world, who are excited about living meaningful, purposeful, authentic, whole lives.
Speaker CAnd so you can dive in at Friends of the Truth, which is our online membership community.
Speaker CIt's here for the truth.com forward slash, f o T T.
Speaker CAnd when you become a member, you get five live calls per month, sometimes more.
Speaker CAnd you get an incredible exclusive telegram membership community where we're always interacting, we're always engaged, people are dropping knowledge, sharing insights and really just inspiring one another to be better.
Speaker CAnd this month I want to highlight that we have Tiziano Squ from a previous episode, who is a family constellations expert, coming in to join our members for a live interactive session with those who decide to dive in.
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Speaker CHerefor the truth.comfot back to the episode.
Speaker BI'm going to use an example that parallels this.
Speaker BSo I was in the fitness industry for quite a while, teaching people how to get fit, lose weight, all those things.
Speaker BTrained for marathons.
Speaker BI worked with athletes.
Speaker BYou take someone and anybody who's gotten fit knows this and t taking care of their health and all that, you don't have those shifts happen in a week, right?
Speaker BSo let's say you have to lose 50 pounds, you're diabetic and you have osteoporosis and your diet is terrible and your doctor just said if you don't clean up your system, you're going to die soon.
Speaker BLike being very blatant.
Speaker BBut we know this is a, a common thing, especially in the West.
Speaker BThat person who's given that, you know, almost like if you don't do this, you're going to, it's not going to be good.
Speaker BThey have to have a lot of diligence to go, okay, I'm going to do this the way in which it will stick.
Speaker BAs opposed to the diet fads, right?
Speaker BAs opposed to going and trying to kill my body with CrossFit or something like that.
Speaker BSlow, consistent building.
Speaker BYou can't just go out and do a two hour run.
Speaker BYou have to start with Five minutes of walking, it's true.
Speaker BA couple times a day, and that's going to feel like nothing.
Speaker BAnd then the next month, you might add a little bit more and a little bit more, you might clean up one thing in your diet.
Speaker BBecause again, we've seen when people try to clean up their diet, like all the junk food out, right?
Speaker BOnly healthy, whole foods, and then there's like a relapse.
Speaker BIt's the same with addictions to, say, alcohol.
Speaker BAnd that is like the cold turkey thing works for some people.
Speaker BBut, you know, you can't typically do that when someone's on a heavy narcotic.
Speaker BYou have to taper them off because the system's gotten used to it.
Speaker BSo if we use the example of exercise and getting our body physically fit again, and it doesn't happen overnight, and it certainly doesn't happen in a year.
Speaker BAnybody who's really taken time to rebuild their body, even after, after seeing an injury, it can take years.
Speaker BAnd so the nervous system is the same way.
Speaker BJoel and I think you two know that is what's happened is we've medicalized trauma as a condition that needs to be treated.
Speaker BLike you have an infection and maybe you, maybe you do need to take some antibiotics.
Speaker BYou might need to get that abscess lanced and, you know, stitched up and, and then it's better and it's been treated.
Speaker BWhat's happened is we've seen things like neurological conditions, autoimmune conditions, mental illness.
Speaker BI say that with air quotes because we know it's a physiological illness.
Speaker BIt's not typically a psyche base.
Speaker BThe psyche gets impacted due to the dysregulation of the nervous system.
Speaker BSo we have all of these conditions that have been connected through some pretty good research, the ACE study, to this dysregulation of the system from a very young age.
Speaker BBut because we've labeled them as conditions, syndromes, I think, I think I'm just theorizing here.
Speaker BThe general populace thinks, ah, this is a meta condition.
Speaker BI can treat it with some breath work, meditation.
Speaker BMy doctor told me to go do some breath work.
Speaker BMy doctor told me to go and get some therapy or do some emdr.
Speaker BAnd so people go thinking, okay, I'm just going to do 10 sessions of this thing.
Speaker BJust like someone might come to see me for 10 sessions of somatic experiencing.
Speaker BWe're not going to solve a lifetime of dysregulation in 10 sessions.
Speaker BJust like when I was in my fitness training days, someone who comes to me with severe chronic health condition and Say significantly overweight.
Speaker BWe're not going to get them perfect in 10 personal training sessions.
Speaker BI mean, we know that.
Speaker BSo that's what I would say.
Speaker BI would say we have to see this is not conditions that we're trying to treat.
Speaker BWe're trying to treat an ecosystem, the human body that has been given the wrong information.
Speaker BAnd we have to retrain it to be in that body, which can take time, especially when the body has been not a good place to be in.
Speaker BWe also have to retrain it to connect to the environment, because we live in the environment and typically it was the environment that caused us harm.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BUsually it's people, parents, perpetrators, and then we have to connect the two.
Speaker BAnd often what occurs in a lot of, you know, legit somatic classes, as they leave out the environment and they leave out listening to the body and what it can and cannot handle.
Speaker BAnd so we push, we override.
Speaker BAnd we see that with fitness, if I go back, like, a person will be like, oh, yeah, I'm just gonna go and do five exercise classes a week.
Speaker BI've never done anything in my life.
Speaker BAnd what happens?
Speaker BThey get hurt, they're in pain and then they.
Speaker APain, no gain, Irene.
Speaker ANo pain, no gain.
Speaker BI know.
Speaker BAnd then they don't go back because maybe they, you know, pulled a tendon or maybe, you know, I've done that.
Speaker BI was in fitness, where, you know, you, you do squats so long, long, you go for a hike that you can't even sit on the bloody toilet because your legs are so sore.
Speaker BLike, if so what's happening?
Speaker BI think, I don't think.
Speaker BI know because I've seen it.
Speaker BWe have to change the mentality of what it means to heal trauma.
Speaker BIt's not a thing to be fixed, to be treated.
Speaker BIt really is a lifestyle thing.
Speaker BJust like if someone, say, reaches their goal weight, they get their muscles back, their blood chemistry is better, they don't have pre diabetes, they.
Speaker BAnd then they go, I've reached it, I'm going to stop and I'm going to now not move.
Speaker BI'm going to stop going to the gym, I'm going to stop eating healthy food.
Speaker BIt will revert.
Speaker BNow the difference, though, this is the good news.
Speaker BThe difference with gaining regulation of the nervous system because of the neuroplastic channels and the way the system works, when you do build that foundation and it's strong, it's there.
Speaker BAnd then what happens after that are tweaks and nuances.
Speaker BThen you might have time to work on that arm break that Happened when you were 7 years old in the monkey bars, then you might have time to work on that emotional thing that, you know, you're carrying from when your professor at grad school screamed at you, you know, in front of your peers, and you feel shame because you.
Speaker BYou screwed up.
Speaker BBut that those sort of shock traumas get healed a lot faster when we have a solid foundation and we actually have real window of tolerance.
Speaker BBut it, again, I.
Speaker BI always go back to the exercise example because that just really paints the picture.
Speaker BAnd anybody who's gotten fit, they know, yeah, it takes a lot of work.
Speaker BBut then what occurs is you actually start to feel good when you exercise.
Speaker BYou actually start to feel good when you eat better.
Speaker BAnd so when people get better lifestyle behaviors on board that help their nervous system, they go, you know what?
Speaker BI'm not going to go to that thing, that social gathering that when I come back from, I just feel gross and drained.
Speaker BThat doesn't serve me right.
Speaker BBoundaries start to shift, and I've seen this in my students.
Speaker BLike, they literally start to crave movement, crave healthy food, because the system wants that.
Speaker BI'll stop talking for a moment.
Speaker BTell me if that makes sense.
Speaker ANo, it does make sense.
Speaker AI mean, I think people gain more discernment as they build more capacity within their nervous system.
Speaker AThere's more choices available to them.
Speaker BYeah, well, the world doesn't look like something you have to control anymore.
Speaker BSo when we're.
Speaker BWhen we're stuck in a loop of severe dysregulation and may be functional, and we have a very small window of tolerance, we have to control things.
Speaker BAnd this is why OCD is a classic byproduct of dysregulation.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BI have to control.
Speaker BSame with narcissism.
Speaker BI've got to control everything in my life, even down to my routine.
Speaker BAnd when I buy groceries and what I buy because it.
Speaker BIt gives a sense of ease.
Speaker BThe trouble with that is then if something throws our routine off and we can't do our normal, everyday things that keep us feeling safe, we lose it.
Speaker BWe either shut down more or we get highly activated.
Speaker BWe saw this during COVID right?
Speaker BPeople's routines got thrown off and everybody went crazy.
Speaker BNot everyone, but many people did.
Speaker BIt's legit.
Speaker BWhat occurred there was fear.
Speaker BI can't do exactly what I do every day.
Speaker BSo a big part of gaining real regulation is being able to let go of that control and live in a state of flow.
Speaker BDon't love that word anymore because it's been kind of hijacked too.
Speaker BBut a state of just ease with what comes.
Speaker BAnd it does not mean to go back to your thing about calm.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BIt might mean that we can calm ourselves down, but it.
Speaker BHere's the thing.
Speaker BWe want to be able to bring ourselves out of activation.
Speaker BSo fight flight without needing to do something.
Speaker BThat's what your kids are learning right now, Joel.
Speaker BThey're learning how to find self regulation without needing their blankie or a hug.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BThat is growing real regulation.
Speaker BAnd what people have, I think mistaken regulation with is a state shift in the nervous system.
Speaker BSo they might do the breath work, the cold plunge, the meditation, the qigong, but all these things are good.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BI actually do all those things myself, but as a practice for a therapeutic effect.
Speaker BBut to try to use an outside thing and a behavior to grow regulation doesn't happen.
Speaker BSo when someone says, oh, I feel so much more regulated now after doing that breath work session, chances are they feel a shift in activation to more deactivation.
Speaker BBut if they need that session to come down, they're not regulated.
Speaker BIt isn't growing regulation.
Speaker AYeah, it makes sense.
Speaker AYou know, it's like if you're driving and someone cuts you off.
Speaker AI always love bringing up these examples of being cut off.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ALike you can have an initial reaction.
Speaker BAnd you will because you almost die.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ABut then if you're staying in that state for the next 24 hours, there's probably an issue there because the threat left once you didn't get into the accident and you're driving along on the highway and everything is quote unquote fine again.
Speaker BYeah, you take it personally too.
Speaker CBut there is a sense of value in terms of knowing myself, feeling oneself dysregulated, knowing that there's certain tools available to me that can help me regulate and having the self awareness to be like, hang on, let me now prioritize something else.
Speaker CEven though it is, you know, maybe a breath work session or a massage or whatever it might be like what's, what's the value in that?
Speaker CIn this huge value Real quickly though.
Speaker ABut is it, is the use of the language, like helping me regulate?
Speaker AIs that not even like accurate?
Speaker AShould it be another word like it's helped me shift like my state as opposed to, you know, I'm now regulated.
Speaker CBut what, but what about the awareness of what my body needs?
Speaker CLike my system is, you know, like.
Speaker BSo there's two pieces to that.
Speaker BI would, I would replace regulate with resource.
Speaker BSo I'm going to, I need to, I need to take a hot bath because I Need to resource myself.
Speaker BI need to do a bit of breathing to center and reason.
Speaker BIt's a resource.
Speaker BSo you're using a tool, a movement, a practice, a song, you know, Netflix, you know, person, a person, a person, a dog, nature.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BThat is resourcing me and bringing me back into my center and then my system can come down.
Speaker CYeah, right.
Speaker CSo like come even.
Speaker CSo what about like even like classic nervous system resources like self hug, tapping, orienting.
Speaker CYeah, like that's.
Speaker CIs that, that's resourcing as opposed to regulating?
Speaker CIs that.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker BSo this is where again back to your first question.
Speaker BYou're awesome.
Speaker BWas the misunderstanding.
Speaker BSo this is where it's.
Speaker BAgain, I'm going to use the baby as an example because it's the perfect one.
Speaker BLittle one cries, pick up, you figure out what they need.
Speaker BAre they hungry?
Speaker BAre they tired, are they hot, are they cold?
Speaker BDo they not like a person who just walked in the room you attune, you attend to and then they come out of their activation.
Speaker BNow one connection with an infant does not build full self regulation obviously.
Speaker BBut what does build self regulation is that constant co regulation with you or mom or older sister and.
Speaker BAnd then over time I'm using my hands, it's like layering, like it's like baklava.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BLike it's like thin layers.
Speaker BThin layers.
Speaker BAnd that builds and then eventually just like the speaking, all that resourcing, all that attunement, all that co regulation with a human nature, it then creates regulation.
Speaker BAnd what happens is we know when we finally have, well we could say better, more robust regulation when we feel that cry.
Speaker BAnd this will happen with your girls for example, and they know how to be with that discomfort and process it on their own.
Speaker BIt doesn't mean that we won't get frustrated, right.
Speaker BWe won't get anger on the road.
Speaker BBut we can digest the survival physiology, feel it, know what it is, connect to the body, not disconnect.
Speaker BAnd then it recycles as opposed to oh, I'm so stressed, I need to go to that thing.
Speaker BSo to your, to your point, Joel, for someone who doesn't yet have true window of tolerance, that is wide, a wide window and doesn't have better, more robust regulation.
Speaker BYeah, we want them to go to a resource.
Speaker BI always say to people, I would rather you do deep breathing than hit your kid.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BLike it's, it's a no brainer.
Speaker BBut if there's that impulse to want to act out, then that's a sign.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BIf it goes past that, what we would call healthy aggression.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd it goes into kind of rage.
Speaker BIt's like, okay, there still isn't regulation there.
Speaker BWe still need to work on that.
Speaker BBut in the meantime, yeah, I'm going to go into the sauna, I'm going to do some breath work, I'm going to do some qigong.
Speaker BSo this is where there's a lot of contextual nuance.
Speaker BIt can't be black and white because.
Speaker BYeah, in my teachings, I teach resourcing, I teach orienting, I teach containment, I teach movement, I teach sound.
Speaker BAll in service of that person getting better connected to self and the environment.
Speaker BAnd that's what builds the capacity, which then builds the regulation, which then builds the real window of tolerance.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ACan you talk more about healthy aggression?
Speaker AMaybe we've covered.
Speaker AIt is podcast, but it's something that I talk about often.
Speaker AWe bring it up in our group coaching program, Rise heard Sophie and I discuss it.
Speaker AAnd it's something that's helped me because I'm like a Jersey Greek, like, sometimes, you know, And I have my own history of shit that happened to me.
Speaker ABut if I feel disrespected or some injustice, like, there is like a deep rage that can sometimes come.
Speaker ACome inside me.
Speaker AAnd I found like, these exercises, like.
Speaker ALike squeezing arms or like ringing a towel, or even when I'm driving, like, squeezing the freaking steering wheel and letting out some sounds like I go from like a 10, like, ready to, like, explode.
Speaker AAnd I just.
Speaker AYeah, I down regulate, you know, or if that's the right term to use, I downgrade because it's like I'm allowing myself to experience the anger in a.
Speaker AIn a healthy way where I'm not, like, trying to follow someone home and like, punch them in the face because they cut me off or punch someone out in public.
Speaker AIt's just I.
Speaker AI want to experience that.
Speaker AThe experience of being anger, but angry but in a way that's like, not causing damage.
Speaker BI mean, you just said it.
Speaker CI'm glad.
Speaker CI'm glad you mentioned bakava.
Speaker CAnother great Middle Eastern idea that Drake stole.
Speaker AYeah, he was holding on to that.
Speaker AAnother holding on to that joke until he had a moment.
Speaker AIt's like four minutes later.
Speaker BSomething there.
Speaker BSo what's the real history of baklava?
Speaker ARight away, and I was going to say something.
Speaker AI was like, what is.
Speaker ASo he.
Speaker BFirst.
Speaker CYou cut it out for like five seconds, then, oh, I froze.
Speaker CIf you want to repeat it, you can.
Speaker ANo, it's okay.
Speaker AI was just saying I wonder when one of us was going to make a joke about, like, whether or not Bilo was a Greek or.
Speaker AAnyways, back to healthy aggression.
Speaker BNo, you.
Speaker BYou nailed it.
Speaker BThere's not much more to say.
Speaker BThe thing is that we don't suppress it and we don't swallow it, but we want to contain it and move it out.
Speaker BSo in other words, you're right.
Speaker BIf you get that person that cuts you off in traffic and you feel like you'll feel a heat through the body and you'll feel like it's like you want to fight and you want it.
Speaker BAnd of course, you're in this vehicle.
Speaker BSo what a perfect way to feel speed and, you know, slam on the.
Speaker BOr put the gas on.
Speaker BBut of course, that's not very social in a healthy way.
Speaker BSo you squeeze the steering wheel, you let that roar out.
Speaker BYeah, because trust me, I've done that.
Speaker BI'll, like, shake it.
Speaker BBut the key is that you want it to go through the whole system.
Speaker BYou don't want to.
Speaker BYou don't want to suppress it now.
Speaker BYeah, you're right.
Speaker BIf you were to be like, I got to keep that in, then you're right.
Speaker BYou might.
Speaker BSomething else might happen later.
Speaker BYou might snap at your wife later for no reason.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BYou might snap at your kids later for no reason.
Speaker BSo it's these unresolved sensorial, emotional, behavioral responses.
Speaker BBecause anger is an emotion, but it's really a survival strategy.
Speaker BIt's fighting, right?
Speaker BIt's the fight of the fight.
Speaker BFlight, freeze.
Speaker BSomeone just does something to me that's not good.
Speaker BI need to fight them.
Speaker BI need to kill them.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BAnd so if we think of the amount of times a human as a child, as a toddler, as a.
Speaker BAs an infant, as a teenager, wanted to express healthy aggression because it starts in infancy when they start pulling hair and hounding.
Speaker BAnd that's.
Speaker BThat's not because they're angry.
Speaker BIt's because they're feeling their life force energy, right?
Speaker BThey're.
Speaker BThey're feeling, I, I'm strong.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd how they're met by their primary caregiver with that strength will determine how that sets in their system.
Speaker BSo when your little baby starts pulling, we want to, like, play with them and encourage that strength in a healthy way.
Speaker BBut often what occurs, I never saw this, but Peter Levine would say, oh, yeah, mothers that don't have comfort with their own aggression and strength, when their baby starts to do that, they actually will punish the baby.
Speaker BThey'll put the baby down, they'll disconnect from the baby because they think this Baby is trying to hurt them.
Speaker BAnd that, again, shows how little, not little, but how disconnected we are with our own physiology.
Speaker BSo, yeah, we want to move it out.
Speaker BIt's, it's.
Speaker BAnd then it, it's not something.
Speaker BIt's not as easy as just saying to something, someone, okay, you've got anger issues.
Speaker BYou've got stored anger.
Speaker BTake a towel and squeeze it.
Speaker BYeah, we can do that, but we have to connect.
Speaker BAnd I teach this intensively in my courses.
Speaker BWe have to teach the internal connection.
Speaker BThe fire has to get brought up organically.
Speaker BAnd then we move the.
Speaker BThe squeeze, the punch, the stomp.
Speaker BBut what often occurs is in a lot of, we could say retreats, where they're trying to be cathartic and screaming and hitting things is.
Speaker BThey're missing the foundation of sensing the internal physiology.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BOtherwise it's just a good movement.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BThere's nothing wrong with boxing and getting physical.
Speaker BThat's good.
Speaker BAnd often people mistake a healing because they feel better, because they got their endorphins going and they got the blood flowing.
Speaker BBut then they find out in a month later, oh, I'm still snapping at my wife.
Speaker BI'm still snapping at my husband.
Speaker BWhy am I still irritated by everything that occurs, that doesn't go my way?
Speaker BIt's like, ah, you didn't really work on that deep anger.
Speaker BYou just got the movement of anger out.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BWell, not the.
Speaker BBut not the connection to the emotion and the initial harm.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BOf feeling threatened and feeling helpless.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd a lot of that, like, big movements, cathartic stuff just feels a lot faster than doing something more subtle like, like squeezing a towel and then.
Speaker ABut then for a little bit, and then coming back to your inner life, like what's happening in your body, then going back to it and then coming back.
Speaker AYou know, I think that back and forth process is what's important.
Speaker AAnd I'm very blessed that, you know, I have a wife that knows this work, play with that, because, you know, we can support one another.
Speaker AI mean, there are times where, like, you know, we're driving together and she's the one, like, would you like to grab the steering wheel?
Speaker AOr like, I'm with her and I kind of give her my wrist and I like, would you like to squeeze my wrist?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AOn my forearm?
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker AOver here.
Speaker AAnd it's just been.
Speaker AIt's just really cool to have that experience and then to notice it, to like, come back and like, what feels differently than, you know, three, 10 seconds ago, you know, and to kind of have that that intrapersonal relationship with sensation and the nuance of my being is, has been a gift.
Speaker CWhat is the relationship?
Speaker CAnd I know your Osmos has a lot to say on this as well between, like, say, psychological shadow work from a Jungian perspective and the nervous system.
Speaker BYeah, I mean, they intertwine.
Speaker BI'm not studied in Jung, but I've definitely come across more of his teachings really the last two years.
Speaker BAnd the shadow work is there.
Speaker BIt's the part of us that hasn't been able to express those fight, flight, flee, freeze, shut down urges.
Speaker BAnd so, you know, we can say it's the, the dark side of us that wants to kill, that wants to scream, that wants to rage, and we have to bring the body into it.
Speaker BAnd so I think that's where, again, you know, Peter, for example, Levine has deep respect for Jung and Freud.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BBut then the other people that came onto the scene, like William Reich, that talked about the body and the armoring of the body and the tissues, and then Ida Rolf coming in like, you've got to break the fascia up and then Feldenkrais, you've got to teach the movement.
Speaker BYou know, this is, this is the part that I think if we go back to the macro, why people are so confused is they're trying to pick one method.
Speaker BAnd I'm going to just work on this method.
Speaker BI'm just going to do psychoanalysis, dreamwork, for example.
Speaker BNothing wrong with that.
Speaker BBut if it's not getting integrated into the physiology and these core unconscious survival mechanisms, the, the technical word is the implicit memory that's stored in the body, the stored procedural memory, if that isn't getting tapped into, that desire to punch or run or to feel the collapse, we're so smart, we can therapize the shit out of ourselves, like just over and over and over again and analyze.
Speaker BBut it's got to connect to the survival strategies that never got to be executed.
Speaker BAnd so I think a great psychoanalyst in conjunction with a somatic practitioner who's good in connection with a good movement practice of say, tai chi, qigong, Feldenkrais, understanding breath, understanding healthy food, like toxin removal, it all has to come together.
Speaker BAnd I think what has occurred is.
Speaker BI just got this question the other day because I did a series of stories on why it isn't enough to just feel our emotions, it's not just enough to be cathartic.
Speaker BSomeone said, well, are you saying then that se somatic experiencing isn't enough to heal trauma?
Speaker BAnd I kind of said, well, it Depends.
Speaker BDepends if that person has early trauma, because that model doesn't work with early trauma.
Speaker BIt depends if that person has a neurological issue due to something from birth.
Speaker BThey might need a Feldenkrais practitioner in conjunction with that.
Speaker BAnd so I think this sort of umbrella of these methodologies are being treated too individually and they have to blend together.
Speaker BThis is why, you know, Peter, he didn't just develop se, because it just came.
Speaker BIt's like he had been studying Freud and Jung and Wright and he was a Rolfer, he was a body worker.
Speaker BHe wasn't a psychologist.
Speaker BPeople think he's a psychiatrist.
Speaker BIt's so funny.
Speaker BIt's like, no, no, no.
Speaker BThat man was a biophysicist and a body worker doing breath work in Berkeley.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd a lot of the high level somatic teachers have a lineage of bodywork.
Speaker BKathy Kane wrote the book on ortho bionomy.
Speaker BYou know, my instructor, Steve Hoskinson didn't come from bodywork, but he was into aikido, right.
Speaker BMartial art arts.
Speaker BAnd so anyway, that's a long way of saying Joel, it's all valid.
Speaker BIt comes down to can the person, the person's working with, do they have enough skill and repertoire to do more than one thing?
Speaker BAnd what I'm seeing, because there's so many people being pumped out through the SE trainings and I went through the training, it was a great training, but I came in with so much information in my body and in my brain before that training, so I could integrate what was occurring.
Speaker BA lot of people are going to that training with no body work experience, no movement experience.
Speaker BThey don't know the muscles.
Speaker BAnd then they watch Peter do a demo with the trapezius muscle muscles and the scalenes and the skeleton.
Speaker BAnd everybody's confused because they haven't been taught about that physiology and that anatomy.
Speaker BAnd then they leave thinking they know what to do with a client, but they actually don't know what to do.
Speaker BYeah, that's a, that's a very quick example of.
Speaker BI think the issue we're seeing right now is people think that our profession is a profession.
Speaker BIt is not a profession yet.
Speaker BIt's the beginning of a profession.
Speaker BJust like medicine or I always use the example of surgery.
Speaker BYou know, surgery is a miracle.
Speaker BIt saves lives.
Speaker BYou know, I wouldn't be walking if it wasn't for orthopedic surgery with my, my injuries.
Speaker BBut that didn't get created in a hundred years.
Speaker BIt didn't.
Speaker BIf you go back to the history of medicine, it was pretty archaic and pretty bad at the beginning.
Speaker BAnd it got.
Speaker BIt got developed.
Speaker BIt got developed with people talking, people researching, people experimenting, people dying.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BOops.
Speaker BShouldn't have done that.
Speaker BSo we're in that right now with the somatic stuff and the nervous system stuff and the neuroplasticity stuff.
Speaker BWe're kind of swimming in the sea of newness.
Speaker BAnd everybody is thinking, oh, I'm that expert, because I've done one course.
Speaker BYou might know a little bit.
Speaker BBut the other thing I've learned, this is where the surgery example doesn't actually translate.
Speaker BYou can have a surgeon who is so good at their work, but they're completely dysregulated.
Speaker BIf you've ever had a surgeon with a bad bedside manner and no connection, it doesn't matter.
Speaker BAs long as they know how to fix the internal, you're golden, right?
Speaker BWith doing somatic nervous system.
Speaker BI call it scientific work.
Speaker BThe person offering the work or guiding the.
Speaker BThe person who's coming to see them has to be fully in their body and regulated, at least more than the person coming to them.
Speaker BBecause it's your somatic physiology, your body that tells you what to do with the person you're working with.
Speaker BYou cannot have a list of, okay, I'm going to orient them and then I'm going to get them to do a vu sound.
Speaker BAnd then I'm going to get them to squeeze when it looks like they're getting a little activated.
Speaker BYou can't think through somatic work.
Speaker BYou have to know what to do internally, but you also have to have this theory.
Speaker BIt's a very complex system doing this higher level of work with people.
Speaker BAnd it's hard to describe it.
Speaker BAnd what I think is happening, I don't think.
Speaker BI know.
Speaker BAnd I know your osmos.
Speaker BYou were in some trainings where you saw the dysregulation and what was going on.
Speaker BI don't think most people understand that they're not regulated because they have the tools to calm themselves down.
Speaker BThey have the resources.
Speaker BBut yeah, I'll stop.
Speaker BI want to make sure I'm making sense.
Speaker BAnd if you have any pieces, because it's.
Speaker BWe're in a really interesting time.
Speaker BI kind of call it the Wild West.
Speaker AIt is the wild, wild West.
Speaker AIt is new, like you said, it's so new.
Speaker ALike it's.
Speaker AIt's wild.
Speaker AAnd I.
Speaker AI'm really grateful that I was.
Speaker AI have a history of body work.
Speaker ABefore I did the three year with.
Speaker AI didn't get my.
Speaker AI didn't get my scp.
Speaker ALabel because I didn't follow through with hours and things like that.
Speaker ABut it definitely was a benefit to have that understanding of the body and the felt sense of receiving tons of body work and giving lots of body work and.
Speaker AAs opposed to, you know, just coming in without that.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker AI want to ask you this because a lot of the cathartic stuff, like, for me, I like really deep body work.
Speaker AI like going into the pain that transforms.
Speaker BI have a bruise on my arm right now from cupping the other day.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd it comes from a school of, like, looking at the body as a shadow.
Speaker AYou know, I love psychology.
Speaker AYou brought up names of people that have been a influence to me, whether it's like, Lauen Young.
Speaker AAnd so, you know, I think for a lot of this stuff, you have to have a certain level of capacity built within you to do this more, quote, unquote, intense work you do.
Speaker ALike, I've been someone again, it's been a process for sure, getting to it.
Speaker ABut, like, when I'm working with a practitioner, they're.
Speaker AThey're crushing me to a degree.
Speaker ABut I'm, like, sitting.
Speaker AI'm, like, with it.
Speaker AI'm.
Speaker AI'm.
Speaker AI feel like I'm there with the pain.
Speaker AI'm.
Speaker AAnd so is transformational.
Speaker AIt has been transformational for me.
Speaker AIt has caused such a deep impact in how I relate to self and others by doing that kind of deeper, cathartic work.
Speaker ABut I think I had to build to get to that place.
Speaker AWhat do you say about that?
Speaker BAbsolutely.
Speaker BIt.
Speaker BIt.
Speaker BAgain, there's nothing wrong with really deep cathartic work.
Speaker BRolfing work, fascia work, even emotional work.
Speaker BLike, getting to this place of, like, crying and grieving so bad that your stomach is retching and you've just got snot, like, all over your face and you're red and you're just in it.
Speaker BBut you're in it and you're fully involved in it.
Speaker BAnd it's not scary getting to that level of being able to reach, because when you get to that, if I use that example of, like, retching and crying, like, you have to be in your guts, like, to use chakras and.
Speaker BAnd diaphragms.
Speaker BLike, you've got to be in the pelvic, in the root, but in the sacral, in the solar plexus, in the heart and the throat, all those energy channels, all those osteopathic diaphragm levels, which is more my form of work, have to be open, because if one is closed, there's gonna it's like a little, it's not gonna go through.
Speaker BAnd if you've ever had body work and then you get a headache afterwards, like this is a common thing, that's usually a sign that there's something that was blocked and the energy and the fluids have gotten stuck.
Speaker BAnd usually it's top of the head, right?
Speaker BYou get all this great work on your shoulders and neck or pelvis and then you're like, you're like sore in your head and it's because that hasn't been opened.
Speaker BSo to go back to what you said about capacity and the person, the person doing the work again, I have a high standard for my students.
Speaker BLike they need to be not just in their emotions and sensations, but be ready for when a client screams at them or has a rage of like fight energy come out because they finally unlocked the desire to kill, you know, the person who was raping them.
Speaker BAnd if, if the person sitting on the other side, the, the practitioner is afraid of their own life force energy, they're going to crumble.
Speaker BAnd then the person who's, I need to kill that person, right?
Speaker BThe person who's all of a sudden feeling this organic energy of fight energy is going to see the therapist be afraid you've destroyed the session.
Speaker BYeah, you're right.
Speaker BAnd, and then that person goes into shame.
Speaker BI shouldn't have been angry.
Speaker BI'm so sorry.
Speaker BAnd what occurs is you start to take care of your therapist and the moment that happens, and I don't like to call it therapist practitioner.
Speaker BAnd so that's where the level of, of deep body knowledge that a true, again I'm calling it scientific practitioner.
Speaker BThat's what I'm training people to be.
Speaker BWe could call them somatic practitioners.
Speaker BThe level of nuance and integration and openness and sensei and sensitivity is so important.
Speaker BLike you need to be able to pick up a baby and soothe it and know exactly what it needs, but also be able to roar like a lion and then come down and be articulate with your talk and connect and like, you know, make a ham sandwich and just chill out at the end of the day, right?
Speaker BThere needs to be this ability to have this is window of tolerance.
Speaker BAnd a really good practitioner can have all those things.
Speaker BThey can just sit and talk, as Joel said about the shadow, you know, side of things, hatred towards the world, towards government, pollution, all the things, but then come back to the body and not get stuck in the awfulizing, but then also be able to, you know, give touch that's calm and connected so that's sort of my speech on.
Speaker AYeah, I want to add.
Speaker AI want to say something.
Speaker AYeah, I want to.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker AI want to say something real quick because I love that you said that about the practitioner having the capacity.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ABecause in.
Speaker AIn my first foray, I guess, into deeper personal development work.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AI don't know.
Speaker AIn my 20s, I was trained in a system called voice dialogue, the psychology of selves and the aware egos.
Speaker AIt's by psychologists, doctors Hal and Sidra Stone.
Speaker AAnyways, it's.
Speaker AIt's a form of parts work and it's where you're dialoguing with different people and they move into different parts of the room and embody different parts of them.
Speaker AAnd they always used to say that if you haven't as the.
Speaker AAs the facilitator, if you haven't embodied a certain part that they're going into, it's going to be much more challenging because you almost want to induct it in yourself to allow it to come further out in the person you're with.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd so.
Speaker AYeah, because I can only imagine, like, if someone steps into like the killer part of them and then the person facilitating is like, couldn't even go there.
Speaker AI mean, you're.
Speaker AThe person's gonna know that.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd it's this.
Speaker AThe session isn't going to go as deep and then they're not going to be able to embody it fully.
Speaker AAnd so it's like, I mean, all.
Speaker CThis is about safety, right?
Speaker CIt's all about safety.
Speaker CLike the person going there needs to feel safe in the space that they're allowed to go there and that they can go there.
Speaker CWhether it's, you know, your example with the nervous system practitioner or with the password practitioner.
Speaker CI want to ask what role do the people that you primarily hang around with play in the state of your nervous system?
Speaker CBecause I think about my journey personally, and I wouldn't say I've done a tons of intentional specific guided nervous system work.
Speaker CI've done some and stuff.
Speaker CBut I feel like, for example, say when your ass.
Speaker CMos and I first met, and probably even now to some degree, Erasmus had done a fair bit of this work I'd say is definitely back in 2021, a lot more regulated than I would have been for sure.
Speaker CAnd I feel like just through relationship with your osmosis, my nervous system in a sense has evolved or morphed and has, you know, become more expanded in some capacity.
Speaker CAnd then I think also like rearing children, you know, like the.
Speaker CWhat kind of nervous system you model to those kids obviously has a large impact as well.
Speaker CSo I just wonder if you can speak on that in some capacity and like, what you witness, what you observe through other people, through the people you're primarily, primarily around, like, what impact that has in, I guess, how your nervous system is.
Speaker BIt's a huge impact.
Speaker BSo I'll answer this question kind of going backwards.
Speaker BThe people that I've witnessed who don't get better stay with dysfunctional and toxic partners, full stop.
Speaker BYeah, I saw that also when I was assisting in SE practitioners who had.
Speaker BUsually it was the women because it's more women, girls in the SE world.
Speaker BIt's changing.
Speaker BBut you could sense this kind of sadness in some of the practitioners who were assisting because their husbands weren't into the work.
Speaker BThey would say, oh, they support me.
Speaker BThey don't mind me coming here.
Speaker BBut it was more of a support from a financial point of view, a time management management point of view.
Speaker BYeah, you can go away and have fun with your friends and your colleagues.
Speaker BI'll take care of the kids, I'll do all the things.
Speaker BBut they're not supporting it at a physiological, energetic level.
Speaker BAnd I actually think that a lot of the folks who I have seen in the circuit, and maybe I'll go to hell for saying this, but like, they stay in that circuit and volunteer their time for free over and over again because they're in a field that is supportive of their physiology when they're in that SE training and it's the only place they can get it because they're not getting it at home.
Speaker BSo I just wanted to put that out there for the record, because I have again seen the practitioners who don't have a really solid environment at home and have their partner doing this work with them like you guys can do it doesn't create full regulation in that practitioner.
Speaker BThere's always going to be a little bit of them that is not quite able to let it loose when they're at home.
Speaker BAnd that isn't going to breed full regulation if you're having to constantly monitor your emotions, your sounds, you make gas that you pass, you know, being grumpy and not having the person take it personally.
Speaker BSo to go back to what you said, Joel, I mean, yeah, you are more regulated than when I met you a while ago.
Speaker BAnd that's great.
Speaker BAnd I, I thank you for saying that.
Speaker BAnd it's because you two have such a solid relationship.
Speaker BThere's safety in being able to talk and connect and have fun and, and be in family life, you know, together.
Speaker BSo that is going to build.
Speaker BJust like your little girls are going to build their regulation, because you and Alyssa are there like solid rocks, showing them consistency.
Speaker BAnd so for you two, there's consistency.
Speaker BYou've been doing this consistently for many years, so that.
Speaker BThat builds what we call CO regulation.
Speaker BAnd it is at the nervous system level, it's harnessing that part of our vagus nerve that sees another person and sees that they're safe and sees that they're kind and they're not going to freak out when we don't agree with them.
Speaker BBecause I'm sure you two have had disagreements, I would hope, right.
Speaker BAbout things.
Speaker BThat's life.
Speaker CMainly over backgammon.
Speaker BTotally.
Speaker BWell, I understand that.
Speaker BWhy do you keep killing me?
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker ABut I have the crown right now.
Speaker AI have the trophy.
Speaker AI just want to let everyone know.
Speaker AWe'll see how this happens.
Speaker BWe'll have to play one day.
Speaker BIt's my favorite game too.
Speaker AOh, amazing.
Speaker BBut that's what I'm saying is, like, Seth and I can play backgammon and, like, take the piss out of each other, but it's in.
Speaker BIt's in connection.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BAnd so you're completely right.
Speaker BHaving good connection is essential.
Speaker BAnd feeling that safety, because you mentioned safety, Joel, and another person is huge.
Speaker BWhat I would say is that safety is often the last thing to come on board at the nervous system level.
Speaker BAnd a lot of people will say, oh, I need to create a safe space, or this workshop is a safe space.
Speaker BYou can have the space as safe as as possible, boarded up with, you know, steel, whatever, guards outside in a moat and dragons.
Speaker BAnd someone who has got dysregulation won't.
Speaker BWon't even know that that's there because it's cellular.
Speaker BAnd so building that cellular safety has to happen internally.
Speaker BThe practitioner or the facilitators say of.
Speaker BLet's talk about a group workshop can make sure that as many things are good.
Speaker BSo that there is that containment and that's running workshops is a whole other topic in itself.
Speaker BBecause.
Speaker BJust because you say it's a safe space, typically, I'll be really honest, when I hear people say, oh, yeah, I'm creating a safe space for this workshop.
Speaker BIt's like a red flag.
Speaker BIt just.
Speaker BIt just is.
Speaker BI would never say I create a safe space at my workshops.
Speaker BI would say I show up with my team and people who I know are regulated.
Speaker BAnd we have a plan, we have a system, we have boundaries.
Speaker BAnd that implies that we're thinking of safety.
Speaker BBut, you know, Sophie can confirm.
Speaker BI've never said, you know, when we go into group, we're creating a safe space.
Speaker BWe're just creating a regulated space and how that student interprets that they'll feel when, you know, we start on time, we come back on time, we give them food.
Speaker BWhen we say we were going to give them food, we say we're going to have a break.
Speaker BWhen we say we're going to have a break, it's the action that creates the safety.
Speaker BJust like the kids need that routine, right.
Speaker BIt keeps them in check.
Speaker BAnd then you might deviate a little bit and then it kind of puts a little bit of a jiggle in the system, but you don't want it to jiggle so far off that then they're like, what's just happened?
Speaker BAnd then you come back.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo when you really compare bringing up children and the need for their consistency, routine, safety, nurture to adult trauma work, it, it, it just aligns so beautifully, I think, because that's what we're trying to create.
Speaker BWe're trying to create that regulation that never got created, typically.
Speaker CYeah, that was super valuable.
Speaker CThank you so much.
Speaker CAnd like, you mean, you mentioned, like, people start doing this work and then all of a sudden the way they view their relationships changes.
Speaker CYou know, more dissonance is created within the household, et cetera.
Speaker CAnd to me, like, that's kind of synonymous with any genuine self work.
Speaker CAnd it's kind of what real reality creation is.
Speaker CLike.
Speaker CYou do this work, you change on a cellular level, you know, on a psychic level, then the reality has no choice but to kind of morph in order to match what you're kind of resonating outwards into the world, unless it doesn't.
Speaker BAnd then that's when you have to change your environment.
Speaker BSo I guess that would be, you know.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BIf you're.
Speaker BAnd this is what it comes down to, being with someone who challenges you is different than someone who's toxic or abusive.
Speaker BSo granted, you know, the people you're around are good, decent people that want the best for you, then.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BWhat I've seen is that, I mean, we have such amazing stories.
Speaker BJoel, to piggyback on what you just said, where adults, people that have adult children, so do the work.
Speaker BSo these are people in their 60s, 70s, are doing this work and they don't tell their children that they're doing this work because they keep it for themselves.
Speaker BAnd then they'll notice that their children or their son or daughter spontaneously calls them and has A different tone.
Speaker BOr they start saying, oh, I just came across this nervous system stuff.
Speaker BI thought I'd maybe work on some of my stuff.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd the parent is just dumbfounded because they kept.
Speaker BIt just shows that that field, that quantum field is there, rippling.
Speaker BAnd, you know, the other day we were talking about an older client that Seth has.
Speaker BAnd, you know, this person is just so dedicated to healing.
Speaker BAnd a lot of people would think, what's the point?
Speaker BYou're like, old, you know, you've got all these chronic issues.
Speaker BIt's like, just be comfortable and live your life.
Speaker BBut someone said, someone who we know who has a more Buddhist mentality said, no, it's so good.
Speaker BThis person is so dedicated.
Speaker BAnd this is all they're doing with all their savings.
Speaker BYou know, they don't have kids, they don't have a partner.
Speaker BI believe in reincarnation.
Speaker BI believe in a soul.
Speaker BAnd this friend of ours who's got a more Buddhist mentality said, just think, when this person passes and that soul goes to another human, that other, that next human is going to be so, so much better off, if we want to call it that.
Speaker BThey're going to be more evolved, more regulated because they did all this healing work in this lifetime.
Speaker BSo for those that believe in the, you know, the continuation of soul, doing this work, even at any age is important.
Speaker BBut also, even if it's just a little bit, even if you don't get to that full regulation, getting a little bit more each day, each year is still contributing to the greater ether.
Speaker CYeah, it's interesting because when we consider nervous system work, we think mainly in terms of physiology and biology.
Speaker CAnd then when you think of, you know, our primary audience would definitely agree with you as all goes on, but it's like, has that changed one's consciousness as well?
Speaker CWhen, when, when, when you do this work?
Speaker CAnd is there really a distinction in terms of doing this work to, you know, build greater capacity within one's biology and physiology?
Speaker CBut your consciousness itself shifts as well, for sure.
Speaker BYour consciousness, um, I don't know how we would define it these days, but if I go more biological, of course, the, the brain, the thinking, the cognition, the creation, the creativity changes.
Speaker BIt becomes more sustainable.
Speaker BBecause a lot of people will say, well, there's tons of creatives who are fully screwed up and dysregulated.
Speaker BJust look at rock stars and, you know, who don't survive very long, but, but they also don't survive very long.
Speaker BTheir creativity has a.
Speaker BHas a shelf life.
Speaker BSo what I've Seen in my students is their natural, authentic creativity just pops up.
Speaker BAnd then they start to realize the personality that they have has been a mask.
Speaker BAnd they're like, that's actually not me.
Speaker BI'm not that person.
Speaker BI'm this person.
Speaker BAnd then from there, I think then that human who is then living more authentically again.
Speaker BAnother word that's kind of misused, but let's just say for the sake of nervous system regulation, full cognition, clear in mind of what has to do that's gonna ping out into the ether, our consciousness, and we're gonna find others, or it's gonna contribute to the global consciousness.
Speaker BAnd this idea that we can shift the.
Speaker BI'm a.
Speaker BI'm a full belief that the individual has to shape the collective.
Speaker BThat's just how I see it.
Speaker BI think that the collective wants that individual shift.
Speaker BBut you can take a room of a hundred people and teach them, say, my courses, and only a certain percentage will really figure it out at the beginning.
Speaker BAnd then there's another level of, okay, let's try again.
Speaker BLet's try again.
Speaker BBut there is something about this deep level of.
Speaker BLevel of work where you can't force a person because they have to integrate it.
Speaker BIf you don't integrate, you can do all the practices of orienting and healthy aggression that Erasmus was saying, and.
Speaker BBut you have to bring it into life, which comes back to relationship and who's around us, and can the people around us help foster that?
Speaker BAnd are they interested?
Speaker BIt sucks when your partner doesn't want to be interested in this stuff.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYou know, I was married before Seth, and, you know, really lovely guy.
Speaker BWe had a lot of fun.
Speaker BWe're in the outdoor world.
Speaker BBut as I started to become more interested in neuroplasticity in the body and sensations and emotions and healing trauma, it just.
Speaker BIt didn't.
Speaker BIt didn't match.
Speaker BAnd that's okay, right?
Speaker BIt didn't match.
Speaker BHe went off and is doing stuff with another person, and they're living a great life, and I'm living my great life.
Speaker BIt just didn't match.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AWhat.
Speaker AWhat are things.
Speaker APeople that are listening to this, like, what should.
Speaker AWhat should they look for when they're wanting to work with a practitioner?
Speaker ABecause they're going to be exposed to this all the time.
Speaker AThey're going to be on Facebook and Instagram is going to have someone there with a picture of themselves with, like, a thunderbolt shining, like, shining outside their third eye talking, don't do that.
Speaker BDon't go there.
Speaker BThey.
Speaker CThey just need to look for the Irene lion certified badge.
Speaker CRight?
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah, eventually.
Speaker AWell, of course, you know, I guess people can go, you know, to your work.
Speaker AYou have, you know, your nervous system tune up, I think that's what it's called.
Speaker AAnd then you have, you have your SPS practitioner training.
Speaker ABut like, just generally speaking, like, what are red flags potentially to look for?
Speaker BYep.
Speaker BI did a video on this a while ago called I think how to Find a Good Somatic Practitioner.
Speaker BAnd you want to ask for credentials.
Speaker BNow that does not mean just because someone has credentials, because I've seen this, does not mean they are a good practitioner.
Speaker BSo that, but that's the first thing is some form of training that is not just, in my opinion, again, just the sea training isn't, is not enough.
Speaker BThere needs to be something either before or after that.
Speaker BI, I know a lot of people who are psychotherapists who do amazing se work.
Speaker BI know a lot of people who are yoga practitioners who do amazing se work.
Speaker BSo you gotta just ask, what is your.
Speaker BWhat, what have you done?
Speaker BThe thing that I'm also seeing happening, you guys, is people will so sad.
Speaker BThey'll have done an online summit where Peter or say Bessel Vanderkolk or Stephen Porges is presenting and then they'll say on their site that they've studied with these people.
Speaker BFirst of all, you can't study with Stephen Porges because he's a researcher, he's not a practitioner.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo again, that's something to be very careful of.
Speaker BLike, what did you do?
Speaker BIf they just say influenced by sc, influenced by Feldenkrais, that does not necessarily mean they have training.
Speaker BSo that's the first thing.
Speaker BThe second thing, or maybe this is the rest of it, you want to like the person.
Speaker BSo when you, when you talk to them on the phone or you meet them on Zoom, or you meet them in person, you have to have an affinity.
Speaker BLike, I could hang out with this person for more than an hour.
Speaker BIf you feel it unbearable to be in the same energy field, then that's not going to work.
Speaker BAnd it goes with the practitioner.
Speaker BIf a practitioner is working with someone and they just don't.
Speaker BI mean, it's terrible, but it's true.
Speaker BLike, you have to know, you have to have a little interest in their development.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd, and some people clash and that's okay.
Speaker BAnd that's where you say, you know, I think someone else might be a better fit.
Speaker BSo you got to like the person to a certain degree and feel like you could hang out with them.
Speaker BBecause if you're going to.
Speaker BTo work with someone because you know you're unsafe inside, you know you have dysregulation, you're not going to feel safe with the person immediately.
Speaker BSo you got to like them enough to hang out with them.
Speaker BWhat I tend to ask 10 people tell people to ask, ask them if they're still doing their work, are you doing anything?
Speaker BAnd this is maybe private, and maybe a practitioner won't want to divulge this information, but it's kind of like a prenup.
Speaker BLike, if someone doesn't want to sign a prenup, then there's like some suspicion.
Speaker BLike with marriage, it's like, why?
Speaker BWhy?
Speaker BWhat are you going to take from me if we break up kind of thing.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo the ability to say, like, what are you, just out of curiosity, what are you doing?
Speaker BLike, to continue your own education, your development, the health of a person is important.
Speaker BLike, you want to sense that the person takes care of themselves.
Speaker BThat's, that's my judgment.
Speaker BLike, I want to work with someone who's healthier than me or has more skill than me in the thing that they're doing.
Speaker BThose are the big ones.
Speaker BThose are the big ones.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI have another.
Speaker BLike I said, I've got a video.
Speaker BPeople just look up how to find a good somatic practitioner.
Speaker BI think there's a few other points.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYou have so much, you have so much knowledge that you give out for free, you know, on your YouTube and Instagram.
Speaker ASo again, anyone who's watching this that has videos.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThat hasn't been exposed to Irene throughout the podcast, and this may be the first time you're listening to this one.
Speaker AYou can go back to previous episodes we've had with her, but also find her on social media, Instagram, YouTube, etc, and, you know, get the knowledge and start, you know, contemplating and start thinking about how this relates to you.
Speaker AAnd I get it.
Speaker AThere's financial considerations and just like jump right into, you know, a program.
Speaker ABut, like, you know, we have information, like, at our fingertips, and then we can take that information and start applying it to our own lives.
Speaker AAnd so in this world today, it's like, if we have issues we're dealing with, like, there is support.
Speaker AAnd so like, the, the excuses are like, come on.
Speaker ALike, we're living in such an amazing time now that we, we can take in stuff.
Speaker ABut again, it's not just informational.
Speaker BYeah, okay.
Speaker COr, or, or just hire chatgpt as your nervous practitioner.
Speaker BDo you want to know story?
Speaker AYeah, let's get into this and then.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BSo two things.
Speaker BFirst of all, I think you're right.
Speaker BYou're awesome.
Speaker BThere's so much information out there.
Speaker BI know from surveying.
Speaker BMy people, like, who follow, they're confused.
Speaker BThey're really confused about what to choose because there's so many things to choose from, so that's valid.
Speaker BThe second thing would be before we get into chatgpt, is people will know if they should do this work or not.
Speaker BAnd here's the thing.
Speaker BI'm gonna.
Speaker BThis is gonna sound odd coming from me.
Speaker BNot everybody is meant to do deep nervous system work in their lifetime.
Speaker BAnd the reason I say that is if the support around them cannot provide support for their releases and their activations and the rage that might come out and the need to, like, go on disability for a while while they heal a chronic illness.
Speaker BLike, for some I've seen, it might have been better that they stayed in functional freeze and just was really good with their food, nutrition, and exercise.
Speaker BI know that sounds odd, but you need to have space and you need to have time to unpack some of these things.
Speaker BYou know, it's hard when you've got three kids.
Speaker BYou know, I.
Speaker BI look at the amount of time I and Seth have spent healing our stuff.
Speaker BIt's like, I'm like, I don't know how I could have done this if I had children.
Speaker BAnd it would be really difficult.
Speaker BIt can still happen, but it just might take a little longer.
Speaker BSo that's the other thing is not everyone is going to be primed in this lifetime to go to this level of regulation.
Speaker BAnd that's okay.
Speaker BThat's okay.
Speaker BBut if there's like a hell, no Irene, I want to do this, then listen to that.
Speaker BThe other red flag.
Speaker BI got to say it, because I'm seeing a lot of this in addition to, like, the unicorn thing.
Speaker BLight coming out of their heads.
Speaker BBe very careful of women who use their sexuality to promote themselves.
Speaker BI'm pretty modest in how I dress.
Speaker BYeah, of course.
Speaker BI've got some makeup on.
Speaker BI brush my hair.
Speaker BYou know, I've got a little jewelry, but I'm not.
Speaker ABrush your hair.
Speaker BI know, I know, I know.
Speaker ALet me say that.
Speaker ATelepathic, bro.
Speaker BBut there you'll.
Speaker BYou'll tell when you see someone if they're just, like, laying on a white bed kind of half naked, like, maybe not, you know?
Speaker BAnd it's very common these days to see a lot of dudes with their shirts off promoting their stuff.
Speaker BAnd it's like, yeah, take your shirt off next Time for the truth.
Speaker BAgain, again, again.
Speaker BAnd some people, like, oh, Irene, they're just expressing themselves.
Speaker BI'm like, I get it.
Speaker BBut part of doing this work really well is being sacred neutral.
Speaker BYou don't need the fancy flash to do this good work.
Speaker BYou just need to show up with your.
Speaker BWith your own regulation.
Speaker BSo the ChatGPT thing, a student of ours who's in SBSM, and I don't rec.
Speaker BI do not recommend this for people that don't have capacity.
Speaker BI don't know how ChatGPT works, but she asked it to give her a somatic session or something like that.
Speaker BAnd I was pretty impressed at what it spat out.
Speaker BSome of the language I use was in there.
Speaker BLike, I swear to God, my blog posts were in there.
Speaker BSome of Peter's stuff was in there.
Speaker BPolyvagal stuff was in there.
Speaker BBecause a lot of his books are digital, like Tracking and Touching and Pendulum.
Speaker BLike, all those words were in there.
Speaker BAnd it helped her.
Speaker BBut she also had three years of SPSM experience.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd so you take someone who doesn't even know how to sense their breathing or the environment, and that can go sideways really quickly.
Speaker AThere's got to be, like, a baseline.
Speaker BThat's my opinion.
Speaker AA baseline.
Speaker AAnd then being able to utilize some of these tools, you know, maybe like I talked about before, even just, like, you know, doing deep forms of body work.
Speaker ALike there.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ALike a little baseline there.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker ABut, yeah, I remember there was, like, a year ago, I just looked up some stuff at ChatGPT.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd I shared it with Sophie, and she's like, whoa, this is kind of like, you know, it's.
Speaker AIt's not bad in terms of the information and the knowledge it's presenting.
Speaker ABut again, like you said, you know, how do you interact with that?
Speaker AWhat is your interstate and what tools do you already have at your disposal?
Speaker AIt's.
Speaker AI mean, it's just.
Speaker CIt's just a more specific Internet.
Speaker CIt's just like you're Googling more specifically.
Speaker BIt's not really AI.
Speaker BIt's a sophisticated search engine.
Speaker BI mean, that's the thing that's funny.
Speaker BIt is not intelligence in a sentient way.
Speaker BIt's still code.
Speaker BIt's just more sophisticated.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI think.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AIrene.
Speaker BThanks, boys.
Speaker AThank you so much.
Speaker AThank you so much for coming on.
Speaker AI have such respect for you.
Speaker AI love the conversations that we have.
Speaker AI love the work that you're doing in the world.
Speaker BThank you.
Speaker AI'm so grateful that my wife does this work.
Speaker AI love that she works with you and trains with you, like, it's amazing.
Speaker AAnd, and I love, you know, we're here for the truth.
Speaker AAnd so having these kinds of conversations is important.
Speaker AIs important.
Speaker AWe're not a cookie cutter podcast.
Speaker AWe're not into cookie cutter healing work.
Speaker AWe're not into things for.
Speaker AFor the masses.
Speaker AYou know that that's always a red flag for me where, like, these things get super, super popular.
Speaker AThey're so simple because the complexity isn't honored and people want the simple.
Speaker AThey don't want to go to dance with the nuance and the complexity because that brings up a lot of stuff internally that they probably don't have the capacity for.
Speaker AOf course they have capacity for simple.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd I'll say there's nothing wrong with that.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BIf that's where a person is at, that's fine.
Speaker BBut like you said, you know, you two.
Speaker BAnd thank you for having me on again.
Speaker BI'm.
Speaker BI'm about the complex.
Speaker BI'm not about making it complex to teach.
Speaker BLike, I teach in a very basic way, but I don't dumb down anything.
Speaker BI expect a lot from my students, especially the students in training, and they'll say that, but I'm seeing the results like I'm seeing what is being created by having very strong constraints, very strong, you know, prerequisites.
Speaker BJust because I.
Speaker BWe don't need another thousand se practitioners who can't be in their bodies.
Speaker BIt's just.
Speaker BI hate to say it, but I don't think Peter would have wanted that either.
Speaker BAnd it's kind of occurring.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BThank you for letting me speak my tr.
Speaker BMy truth on this.
Speaker BIt's just not so much my truth as my experience.
Speaker CExactly right.
Speaker BIt's my experience.
Speaker BSo thank you guys so much.
Speaker CYeah, nice.
Speaker CThank you.
Speaker ATo get into.
Speaker AAlso on my truth.
Speaker APeople are so triggered by.
Speaker BI know, I know.
Speaker AWhich is.
Speaker AThere's so much nuance to that and, and we can get into whatever.
Speaker AAnother time, but.
Speaker BTime.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CIrene, just.
Speaker CJust quickly.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CObviously, you know, we have our group coaching program, Rise above the Herd, and we've integrated the nervous system into self development, which I feel like many people haven't really done.
Speaker CBut, you know, the somatic piece has always been really important to us.
Speaker CWe're in the process of, like, relaunching this in a kind of new format.
Speaker CAnd Sophie is obviously a central part of this, as always.
Speaker CWould you recommend Sophie as someone that people can send towards for nervous system work?
Speaker BFuck.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BShe had a.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BNo, I mean, she's, she's, she's trained.
Speaker BShe's she's learning, she's skilled, she's attuned, of course.
Speaker CI mean, nah, she's, yeah, she's been amazing and like everyone that's interacted with her through our programs has been like.
Speaker CAbsolutely.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CChanged as a result of those interactions.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker BYou don't need me.
Speaker BShe's.
Speaker BShe's exactly what you need.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker AThanks, Irene.
Speaker BI appreciate it.
Speaker CAppreciate, appreciate you sharing your knowledge and appreciate how generous you are in all matters.
Speaker CAnd that's, that's the thing about it as well.
Speaker CLike, the more that you do this work, it's also like a greater recognition of the abundance all around us.
Speaker CLike, I feel like scarcity is very much so caught in the nervous system as well.
Speaker CWhen we're constricted, when we're dysregulated and you've realized how much really is available to you, the more expanded that you become.
Speaker BDefinitely.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AThat said, for those that do want to work with you.
Speaker CYeah, working.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker APoint them in the direction, which is.
Speaker AI know your website, Irene line.com.
Speaker BIt'S just my name, no s dot com.
Speaker BBut yeah, if people want to begin, there's two courses.
Speaker BOne is the 21 day nervous system tune up.
Speaker BThat's like a starter course.
Speaker BBut I.
Speaker BWhat I truly recommend is sbsm.
Speaker BSmart Body, Smart Mind because that gets into working with early trauma, working with the body, working with all these osteopathic, diaphragmatic, healthy aggression, toxic shame.
Speaker BFeldenkrais is in there.
Speaker BIt is.
Speaker BI mean, I'll, I'll put it out there.
Speaker BIt is the gold standard in terms of online courses.
Speaker BIt was the first ever online course out there and we're going into our 18th round in September 2025.
Speaker BSo amazing.
Speaker BIt stood the test of time.
Speaker BAnd we have done one scientific study, like at a real neuroscience lab out of the University of Victoria.
Speaker BSo we took our students through a segment of SBSM and there was statistically positive results.
Speaker BSo we're probably the only online course that's actually been put through that test, that scientific test and rigor.
Speaker BSo that's cool.
Speaker BI don't talk about it that much.
Speaker BI probably should, but I'm also.
Speaker BI left academia.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BI left it because I couldn't stand it.
Speaker BSo it was a big deal for me to go back into academia to let my product, my curriculum be tested.
Speaker BBut that was cool.
Speaker BIt was like sometimes a little validation is, is nice.
Speaker COh, totally.
Speaker CAnd I cannot recommend highly enough for people to go and explore Irene's work, especially if you resonate with this conversation that just took place.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CThank you so much for listening.
Speaker CWe'll see you next time.
Speaker BBye.
Speaker CAnd that wraps up today's journey.
Speaker CBut, hey, the truth train doesn't stop here.
Speaker CEvery Friday, we drop little nuggets of wisdom straight to your inbox.
Speaker CWe're talking mind expanding ideas, heart opening perspectives, and the kind of content that hopefully makes you go, whoa, I never thought of it that way.
Speaker COur Friday drops like having coffee with that friend who always blows your mind.
Speaker CExcept this friend shows up right on schedule and never asks to borrow money.
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Speaker CSo if you're ready to make your Fridays a little more truthful, a little more inspiring, and a whole lot more awesome, your future self will thank you for this one.
Speaker CSee you next time.
Speaker CAnd remember, we're always here for the truth, and we're always here for you.