This was a great question from a recent Unstuck Academy q and a,
Speaker:asking about ventral bagel safety activation, and enforcing boundaries.
Speaker:I wanted to share with you, and I'm really curious what you think about it.
Speaker:Hey, I'm Justin since I'm a therapist and coach who helps you live more
Speaker:calmly, confidently and connected without psychobabble or woo woo.
Speaker:Welcome to Stuck Not Broken.
Speaker:This is of course not therapy and, uh, is not meant to replace therapy.
Speaker:Oh, and I removed as much of the students' audio as I could, and I replaced it
Speaker:with, uh, AI versions of their voices.
Speaker:Can you discuss the importance of the ventral vagal safety
Speaker:state in setting boundaries?
Speaker:It seems there is a balance between safety but also flight and fight sympathetic?
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Boundaries with ventral vagal activation.
Speaker:You're dead on with that.
Speaker:When we enforce a boundary, there is some flight fight activation.
Speaker:I would lean more toward the fight activation.
Speaker:Not angry, not lashing out, not name calling.
Speaker:That, I mean, yeah, that's, it's a boundary I suppose.
Speaker:But that would be, uh, without or with less ventral, vagal activation.
Speaker:And so ideally we wanna have as much grounding as much
Speaker:anchoring and safety as we can.
Speaker:I, I think it's totally okay for boundaries to come across as
Speaker:strong, like a very clear, no.
Speaker:A very strong, no.
Speaker:Maybe even a raised voice, no if needed.
Speaker:Some people situationally might need that.
Speaker:So, but you, you could do that from a, a, a strong anchoring in your
Speaker:ventral vagal state- safety state.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So ideally what kind of needs to happen is that we feel that activation.
Speaker:In, in the moment, we feel that spike of whatever, it's, there's a
Speaker:surge of wanting to get outta here.
Speaker:And now it changed into some irritation that I, this person's not picking up
Speaker:on my cues and they're stamping all- trampling all over my, uh, whatever my
Speaker:boundary or my values or what, whatever.
Speaker:So, probably once we get more to that, like fight activation, that's
Speaker:where we would say, uh, put in some sort of like, I'm not okay with that.
Speaker:Or flight activation could be, I hear you.
Speaker:I don't need to be a part of this.
Speaker:I'm gonna leave now.
Speaker:So, but that does require that we, we feel and embrace it rather than f- feeling it
Speaker:unconsciously and then reacting to it.
Speaker:So we really have to have this like net to capture, metaphorically, to capture that
Speaker:activation and inward, and it's hard in the moment, but in the moment we would say
Speaker:to ourselves something like, it's there.
Speaker:I have every right to feel this way, and I can, I can come from compassion.
Speaker:That can come from assuming this person doesn't know any better maybe.
Speaker:But all that takes a strong anchoring and safety state.
Speaker:So ideally, when we're in these situations.
Speaker:We would have familiarity with what the defensive activation feels like
Speaker:in the first place, so that when it's there, it's not overwhelming.
Speaker:Ideally, when we're in these situations, we'd already have a pretty good
Speaker:amount of safety in our system because we've practiced feeling safety and so
Speaker:having the right balance, those two things can equal noticing it, acting
Speaker:on it, and forcing a boundary and following through with it as well.
Speaker:Okay, so I don't think there's like, here's the answer to setting
Speaker:a boundary in the moment when you're feeling it and you didn't expect it.
Speaker:Like that's the hardest.
Speaker:It's really comes, always, comes down to proactively practicing
Speaker:these things ahead of time.
Speaker:And I think that means proactively practicing safety, but also
Speaker:proactively remembering, feeling into mentally rehearsing defense.
Speaker:One of those options.
Speaker:So if, if one knows that I typically feel freeze when I'm in any social
Speaker:situation, but maybe one that's more, um, uh, not triggering challenging.
Speaker:I, I know I typically feel this way in social situations, so when I'm not in
Speaker:that situation, lemme practice safety and then feel into my freeze activation
Speaker:that I know is gonna happen anyway.
Speaker:So let's just kind of feel into it.
Speaker:Um, that's.
Speaker:That's a generally approachable way, as long as you have enough safety.
Speaker:But you can also say, I, I know I feel this often.
Speaker:I felt in the past, I'm gonna feel it again in the future.
Speaker:So let me anchor into safety and then remember what it feels
Speaker:like to be in that situation.
Speaker:Maybe even remember a specific incident, let it be there.
Speaker:And then pendulate it with safety.
Speaker:And that's all stage three stuff.
Speaker:And a third option, which is very challenging, is the option of, I
Speaker:know I'm gonna feel this anyway.
Speaker:Let me imagine a scenario where I feel this, and then do the pendulation.
Speaker:So all those act as, um, buffers or inno, what's the word?
Speaker:Inoculator.
Speaker:Inoculations to a real life scenario in the future.
Speaker:So, in relationships where a boundary is needed, then the
Speaker:safety state is important to stay connected and enforce the boundary.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:So the ventral part piece of it, it could look like that.
Speaker:Behavioral wise- that's what it could look like.
Speaker:Internally, the ventral activation could show up as a deep
Speaker:compassion for the person and.
Speaker:You smile and you say, look, you sound ridiculous.
Speaker:I love you, but no, I can't go there with you.
Speaker:You know that that would be a really, you know, soft way to approach it.
Speaker:Lots of compassion.
Speaker:It's not easy to do, uh, but ventral could also be a connection with yourself.
Speaker:Let's, let's stick with the other person.
Speaker:It could be a connection with the other person where you do say
Speaker:like, look, this is inappropriate.
Speaker:I care about you.
Speaker:I know you have the best intentions, but I think you're way off base and
Speaker:I, I can't go down this path with you.
Speaker:That's a little more firmer, but it still comes from enough
Speaker:ventral activation to remember like, I do care about this person.
Speaker:And, um, I also, and this is where the.
Speaker:I think it's a more interesting piece of it, which is the connection with yourself.
Speaker:And I think that takes a lot of ventral activation too.
Speaker:So ventral the safety activation is connection with others, self, environment.
Speaker:So part of the puzzle here is like, no, I connected to myself.
Speaker:I know what I feel.
Speaker:I feel it.
Speaker:I feel that activation.
Speaker:It makes sense, it's why it's there and I can let it be there.
Speaker:And um, I'm also connected to my values, the one I believe, or what I know or what
Speaker:I like- I'm connected to that, to that.
Speaker:And I'm also connected to a, a value of mine, which is I can't
Speaker:compromise, um, certain things.
Speaker:Like it's just more morally I can't do that.
Speaker:And so all that is a very strong foundation.
Speaker:I think that comes from ventral, but also probably some fight, fight
Speaker:activation too 'cause there's, there's empowerment there, right?
Speaker:So behaviorally that could come across more compassionately and soft.
Speaker:It might come across a little more toward the firm no.
Speaker:You know, but once we're lashing out and name calling and stuff, that would
Speaker:be behaviorally more probably suggest there's less ventral activation.
Speaker:It seems like if I am telling the story through my fight lens, I would probably
Speaker:have expectations that the other person is going to come back at me in some way.
Speaker:Challenge me.
Speaker:But in ventral, you don't read the future through a distorted lens.
Speaker:Well, yeah, that, that's the tricky part of the distorted lens
Speaker:because when we're in sympathetic, we know this is gonna happen.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:They are gonna say this, and they're a jerk, you know, but when
Speaker:we have enough ventral activation, we can still see the future, quote
Speaker:unquote, see the future in quotes.
Speaker:Like, I, this is going to happen.
Speaker:This person, I know this person, and they're realistically going to lash out.
Speaker:Like that's, we've spent enough time with someone where we know, and dammit,
Speaker:I can't do this anymore and I'm gonna embrace the fact that they're gonna
Speaker:do this and I'm gonna hold my ground and if they cross a certain boundary,
Speaker:then I'm gonna leave or whatever.
Speaker:Uh, but that's telling the future in a sense.
Speaker:But it's also very much grounded in reality versus flight, fight, freeze,
Speaker:shutdown telling the future, which is more fear driven; defense, more
Speaker:dysregulated, driven thought and like in the moment, that is really hard
Speaker:to parse out and maybe unrealistic.
Speaker:So ahead of time, that might be the best time to know what's
Speaker:gonna happen realistically.
Speaker:Then anchoring into the safety state enables a kind of,
Speaker:"to thine own self be true."
Speaker:Yeah, I, I think that the, actually the, the piece that
Speaker:you brought up, the knowing.
Speaker:Actual knowing.
Speaker:Not the dysregulated assuming, but like, I know, I know what's gonna happen.
Speaker:I know this person, I know their behavior and I know how they're likely to react
Speaker:and damn it, here I am, I, I am firmly aware of how I feel and what I know
Speaker:to be true or morally what I will or will not do, and I don't control them.
Speaker:I think that's, that's actually a big part of, is knowing I, I don't
Speaker:control them, but I realistically know how they're gonna react.
Speaker:But I, I. I have no choice but to live up to what I know is right or wrong maybe, or
Speaker:what, uh, line I will or will not cross.
Speaker:And that's, I'm firmly planted like a, a tree deeply rooted in the ground in this.
Speaker:That's different than stubbornness too.
Speaker:There's a lot of like parsing, but that's, I'm not talking about stubbornness.
Speaker:I'm talking about like value driven, principles, morality, like, I just
Speaker:can't do this thing that they're asking me to, or however it shows up.
Speaker:And then letting the chips fall where they may because you're
Speaker:solidly rooted within yourself.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:knowing that I don't control them, they're likely gonna do whatever it
Speaker:is, and the, the results, if they enact that are potentially disastrous for
Speaker:them or people around them that there might be some level of I, whatever
Speaker:happens, happens, I, I can't control it.
Speaker:I'll do the best I can.
Speaker:I'll, you know, look out for those.
Speaker:I love, depending on the situation, I'll look out for myself, but
Speaker:this outcome is outta my control.
Speaker:And if, if they are going to make disastrous decisions,
Speaker:I, I just can't control that.
Speaker:Thanks so much for joining me on Stuck Not Broken.
Speaker:I hope you learned a bit about the importance of your safety
Speaker:state and creating or enforcing boundaries with those who need it.
Speaker:No, it's not easy.
Speaker:Some relationships are easier to hold the boundary with than others.
Speaker:Ultimately, I think it comes down to a strong enough connection within yourself,
Speaker:the ability to feel your sympathetic states and to turn it into empowerment.
Speaker:And also understanding that the other person is gonna make their own
Speaker:choices and they need to live with the consequences of those choices.
Speaker:And that you don't control the outcome of those choices, or at least, uh, you
Speaker:maybe should not try to impose your control on the outcome of their choices.
Speaker:But, uh, what do you think?
Speaker:If you're interested in joining me in a future live q and a, I would love
Speaker:to see you in the Unstucking Academy.
Speaker:Not only are there q and As and other live events to answer your
Speaker:questions, but there's also clear coursework that's grounded in the
Speaker:Polyvagal Theory primary sources.
Speaker:You'll also join a private community that's limited to 150 students, and
Speaker:these are people that are just like you, so you're not gonna be alone.
Speaker:You can learn more through the link in the description.
Speaker:I hope to see you within the Unstucking Academy.