So many people are stuck in shutdown and they each think that they're alone.
Speaker:They each think they're different or that they're hopeless.
Speaker:And you might be one of those people, but it's not hopeless.
Speaker:And you're not alone.
Speaker:Your shutdown experiences are probably really similar to other people in
Speaker:shutdown, and actually I can prove it.
Speaker:I sent out a shutdown experiences survey to my email list.
Speaker:I got about 75 people that responded to it.
Speaker:Uh, real people.
Speaker:Experiencing real shutdown.
Speaker:This is actually part four of my shutdown experiences survey results.
Speaker:I recommend watching the other three first in this one.
Speaker:I'm going to focus on what they told me are the most helpful resources.
Speaker:I hope you feel validated and less alone after this episode and a big, big
Speaker:thanks to everyone that took the time to complete my shutdown experiences survey.
Speaker:Hey, I'm Justin.
Speaker:I'm a therapist and coach and the creator of the Polyvagal Trauma Relief System.
Speaker:Um, Welcome to Stuck Not Broken, where I teach you how to live with
Speaker:more calm, confidence, and connection without psychobabble or woo woo.
Speaker:Of course, this is not therapy, nor is it intended to be a replacement for therapy.
Speaker:The first survey results that I want to go into are, well, the question
Speaker:is which of these supports have you tried and what was most helpful?
Speaker:So it's two questions that I'm gonna look at together.
Speaker:Those options are Therapy, coaching, informative content like articles
Speaker:and blogs, interactive content like workshops and webinars, group support
Speaker:like forums or flat out support groups, self help tools like apps and journals.
Speaker:religious or spiritual counseling, retreats, structured slash guided
Speaker:substance use like cannabis or MDMA, ayahuasca, that kind of
Speaker:stuff, or I haven't tried anything.
Speaker:And then I also gave people the option to fill in other things
Speaker:that they may have tried out.
Speaker:So out of all those options, the highest that people pick was
Speaker:86 percent informative content.
Speaker:Oh, by the way, respondents could pick as many as they wanted.
Speaker:would like or as many as they've actually tried.
Speaker:It wasn't limited to just one.
Speaker:So 86 percent of people said they've tried out informative content.
Speaker:That makes total sense.
Speaker:They probably, you know, found stuff on YouTube, like my stuff
Speaker:or on Instagram, even like the one minute real kind of things.
Speaker:That's, I would call that informative, potentially informative content,
Speaker:books, blogs, that kind of stuff.
Speaker:That's kind of usually, I think the starting point is we just learn.
Speaker:We're learning, uh, before we, Do anything or put anything into practice,
Speaker:just learning informative content.
Speaker:So 86 percent said that they had tried that.
Speaker:58 percent of respondents said that that was actually the most helpful.
Speaker:It's possible that after just learning or taking in informative
Speaker:content that people just stop there.
Speaker:It's uh, actually I think it's really common.
Speaker:We, we learn, we learn, we learn, but we don't take action on it.
Speaker:74 percent of respondents said they had tried therapy.
Speaker:So, well, my audience is not exactly a general audience.
Speaker:It's people that are actively looking for ways to improve
Speaker:their life or to get unstuck.
Speaker:So, having 3 out of 4 people who have tried therapy, I'm not shocked by that.
Speaker:Of those 74%, about half of them said that that was their most helpful option.
Speaker:Er, most helpful support.
Speaker:I've heard from many people that are in therapy who get some kind of benefit from
Speaker:it or don't get benefit and actually maybe feel re traumatized like that, that's
Speaker:possible that it's definitely within the realm of possibility and they find content
Speaker:like this that they find really helpful.
Speaker:They, they learn about the Polyvagal theory and shutdown state and
Speaker:how to recover, but that, that stuff's not covered in therapy.
Speaker:So it kind of makes sense to me why more people would say that informative
Speaker:content is actually the most helpful because it just makes sense, but
Speaker:they don't know how to implement it.
Speaker:So maybe it's helpful because it normalizes them and validates
Speaker:their experiences, but.
Speaker:what to do with it.
Speaker:That's, that's a different thing.
Speaker:And therapists, well, we're not all trained on, on this kind of somatic
Speaker:and polyvagal theory kind of stuff.
Speaker:At the lowest end, which I think is pretty predictable is retreats at 13
Speaker:percent and guided substance use at 21%.
Speaker:Both of these things involve a pretty hefty amount of investment in time,
Speaker:in trust in another and money as well.
Speaker:So that, yeah, it would make total sense why that would be at the lower end.
Speaker:Again, respondents could pick as many categories as they want.
Speaker:So this is really relevant because what I found most interesting out of all this
Speaker:is that the highest number of categories picked were nine and 10 and 20 through
Speaker:almost a quarter, almost one in four people had tried nine or 10 supports.
Speaker:That's a lot.
Speaker:That's a lot.
Speaker:It really struck me.
Speaker:On top of that, almost 41 percent of respondents tried 9 or more.
Speaker:So 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, possibly more.
Speaker:Almost 41 percent of people had tried 9 or more and were still stuck in
Speaker:some noticeable amount of shutdown.
Speaker:That, I thought it was really striking.
Speaker:It also kind of makes sense.
Speaker:Shutdown's not easy, especially if we're not recognizing that it's shutdown.
Speaker:If someone's treating it as like a chemical imbalance and just medicating,
Speaker:medicating, tweaking medications, doing more medication, if their therapist
Speaker:is telling them that you're depressed and this is forever and you just got
Speaker:to manage it with more medication and coping skills and whatnot, then.
Speaker:Yeah, it's, not much is going to change and you might continually
Speaker:seek out, well, what's the thing that's going to help me out?
Speaker:Shutdown is not easy to come out of.
Speaker:It's probably the slowest.
Speaker:It's the furthest down the polyvagal ladder.
Speaker:Maybe that's one reason why.
Speaker:But when we're in shutdown, there's a lot of hopelessness.
Speaker:We feel empty.
Speaker:We feel alone.
Speaker:We don't believe in ourselves.
Speaker:So continually trying the next thing or relying on the next expert
Speaker:these things add up, you know?
Speaker:And I think that might have a lot to do with it And if we don't get results
Speaker:really quickly you might give up and go to the next thing But the reality is that
Speaker:shutdown is it's a long process coming out of shutdown is not easy It is not a quick-
Speaker:obviously, it's not a quick thing.
Speaker:It's not easy.
Speaker:It's a long process and I There is, um, there might be some patience
Speaker:lacking for that and I don't, I don't blame anybody for that whatsoever.
Speaker:On top of that, the signs of coming out of shutdown are
Speaker:increased flight fight activation.
Speaker:So there might be more irritation or frustration or agitation.
Speaker:It's actually a good sign.
Speaker:It's potentially a very good sign as long as you're balancing out with
Speaker:more and more safety activation.
Speaker:That's actually a pretty good sign, but it doesn't feel like that.
Speaker:Someone might see that they are experiencing more agitation of some
Speaker:kind and think, well, this isn't working or it's, I'm doing the wrong thing.
Speaker:But really that returning mobilization is potentially a really good sign.
Speaker:So if they see that they might just jump to the next technique or support
Speaker:trying to fix that or thinking that, well, whatever I'm doing is failing.
Speaker:So I'll try something else.
Speaker:So yeah, 41 percent of people said they had tried nine or more different supports.
Speaker:The next question I asked is, how likely are you to ask for support?
Speaker:And only 9 percent of respondents are likely to ask for support.
Speaker:The vast majority of respondents, 91 percent is unlikely to ask
Speaker:to ask for support in shutdown.
Speaker:This kind of makes sense.
Speaker:We feel very alone and we feel very cut off because while we are cut off, part
Speaker:of shutdown oftentimes is isolation.
Speaker:The body when in shutdown needs to immobilize and solitude might be a
Speaker:really good idea, not isolation, not where you're like locking yourself away
Speaker:in a room in the dark, but solitude where you're maybe going to a lake
Speaker:or a beach or just a walk around the block or just sitting in the backyard.
Speaker:Something where you're immobile and alone, but okay with it, where
Speaker:it's peaceful and relaxing versus, you know, depressing and isolative,
Speaker:like in a room in the dark alone.
Speaker:So it totally makes sense why people would not reach out for support.
Speaker:The reality is that being alone is helpful, but having a couple of
Speaker:supports of people that you trust and are close to is not a bad idea at all.
Speaker:That can help come out of shutdown connecting with others
Speaker:receiving their co regulation.
Speaker:On that note, the next question is do you have people in your life
Speaker:that can provide co regulation?
Speaker:Over half said yes, the other half said no or maybe.
Speaker:So it's interesting that Half said, yes, I have people in life in my life
Speaker:that can provide co regulation, but the vast majority of those people
Speaker:are not willing to ask for it.
Speaker:And that makes sense.
Speaker:Of course, if you're going to say, you know, call someone up and say, Hey,
Speaker:can you provide me with co regulation?
Speaker:That's, they're not going to get it.
Speaker:Probably.
Speaker:You're going to feel weird doing that probably, but can you
Speaker:reconnect with someone in your life?
Speaker:Can you meet up with someone for lunch?
Speaker:Can you just call and hear their voice and say, Hey, I just want to check
Speaker:in with you, see how you're doing, or I miss you or something like that.
Speaker:Like, yeah, I think it's possible.
Speaker:But yeah, calling someone and asking for co regulation is probably not
Speaker:gonna, probably not gonna go well.
Speaker:Over half said yes, the other half said no or maybe.
Speaker:The next question is how likely are you to receive co regulation from a safe other?
Speaker:About 25 percent said that they are likely to receive co regulation from another.
Speaker:But that leaves, which is good, but that leaves 75 percent of respondents
Speaker:that will not or might receive co regulation from a safe other.
Speaker:So, more people can receive it than ask for it, which I think is something, and
Speaker:it does make actually a lot of sense.
Speaker:And, and no matter what defensive state we're in, usually we can
Speaker:receive some level of co regulation whether we're aware of it or not.
Speaker:But asking for it, putting yourself out there, risking vulnerability,
Speaker:that is a much taller order.
Speaker:The next thing I asked was what experiences have you had
Speaker:with non professional supports?
Speaker:And then after that I asked for what experiences have you
Speaker:had with professional supports?
Speaker:I'm going to summarize the responses because I got a lot and then I'm
Speaker:going to read three or four from each category in the words of the respondent.
Speaker:So, the summary of what experiences have you had with non professional supports,
Speaker:the summary is Many of my respondents found support from friends, partners,
Speaker:or peers helpful, especially those who understand trauma and co regulation.
Speaker:So if you know someone who has this knowledge, that's
Speaker:going to be more helpful.
Speaker:How many of us have that?
Speaker:Well, in this audience, maybe there's a higher number than
Speaker:in the general population.
Speaker:The next thing about the next summary from non professional supports is that
Speaker:some people prefer handling their shutdown on their own first through activities
Speaker:like movement, dance, or yoga before reaching out to others makes total sense.
Speaker:And actually, I think this is a really good idea using or receiving co regulation
Speaker:from others is great, but having that solitude to yourself might be the first
Speaker:step actually might be a really good idea.
Speaker:Solitude again is not isolation.
Speaker:Isolation is dark room cutting out the world.
Speaker:Binging on your phone.
Speaker:Solitude is I'm going to be by myself, give myself permission to feel all
Speaker:my feelings or wherever it comes up in the present moment, and then dance
Speaker:and then, uh, journal about it or, and then, uh, do some yoga, stretch out.
Speaker:Like that's what solitude is.
Speaker:I'm going to go somewhere safe, like a beach, if you have access
Speaker:to it, and just sit and be and think and feel that solitude.
Speaker:The next summary point here is that resources like books and
Speaker:courses and online communities provide valuable insights.
Speaker:So it helps them to learn.
Speaker:This helps them, just that top down learning helps them manage their
Speaker:defensive activation or their shutdown.
Speaker:The next piece is that romantic partners can offer comfort, but their responses
Speaker:can either help or worsen depending on the romantic partner's stability.
Speaker:So if you have someone who's, has a lot of access to their safety state
Speaker:and can co regulate, that's going to be more comforting than, than
Speaker:someone who doesn't, obviously, right?
Speaker:Alright, four quotes from people who are, uh, Sharing about
Speaker:their non professional support.
Speaker:Helene, who's been shut down between 11 and 30 years says, One of my best
Speaker:resources today are a couple of friends who are doing this work as well.
Speaker:We support each other and create the safe space and offer co regulation.
Speaker:So powerful.
Speaker:Carol who's been in shutdown for three to six months says
Speaker:she does a bit of online yoga.
Speaker:Short and to the point a bit of online yoga.
Speaker:A, who's been in shutdown for 31 to 40 years, says meditation techniques,
Speaker:for example, R A I N, and my UDS Unstuck in Defensive States course,
Speaker:the hardest thing is remembering slash thinking to use them in the moment.
Speaker:Absolutely.
Speaker:Learning these things is great, and I think there's some
Speaker:benefit, some top down benefit.
Speaker:But.
Speaker:Yeah, you got to implement, you got to practice this stuff as well.
Speaker:And I really encourage people practice it before the problem.
Speaker:Don't wait until you're like a seven out of 10 shutdown.
Speaker:Practice this stuff
Speaker:when you're at a two out of 10 shutdown or three out of 10 shutdown, or when
Speaker:you have more safety than not practice, be mindful, utilize the skills that
Speaker:you're learning before you need them.
Speaker:And then when you need them, it'll be more accessible.
Speaker:And finally supernova, who's been in shutdown within the past year.
Speaker:said The content and helping me understand why I am like this
Speaker:reduces my shame very significantly.
Speaker:Thank you Supernova for sharing and for my other respondents as well.
Speaker:So that was non professional supports.
Speaker:When it comes to professional supports, I have a summary and then I'll give you
Speaker:three quotes from people who responded.
Speaker:The summary is basically that some people found professional help,
Speaker:especially somatic based therapies and holistic approaches to be effective
Speaker:particularly when they're focused on co regulation, touch, and attunement.
Speaker:I think that's kind of interesting, the touch aspect of it.
Speaker:A couple people said that.
Speaker:But co regulation, as long as you have a safe other, that's gonna be, uh, that's
Speaker:gonna be more helpful than not, obviously.
Speaker:The somatic mindfulness, being aware of your body, I think that's going to be
Speaker:more helpful than, um, thinking you have some sort of illness or disease or you
Speaker:have to like get rid of your feelings.
Speaker:If you can be aware of them compassionately, that actually can
Speaker:help them to soften and alleviate.
Speaker:Several people shared that traditional just talk therapy.
Speaker:partially helped, but they felt like something was missing.
Speaker:And I think that somatic piece is the thing that's missing personally.
Speaker:A few people mentioned that therapy worsened their experience or left them
Speaker:feeling misunderstood or even blamed.
Speaker:They emphasize that finding the right therapist or maybe even the
Speaker:right approach is really important.
Speaker:I would argue the right therapist is more important than the right approach.
Speaker:The right approach, even if you found someone that was Polyvagal informed and
Speaker:really good with somatic stuff, that doesn't mean they're a good fit for you.
Speaker:Uh, so I think the techniques only go so far as the relationship
Speaker:does personally, but having a balance of both would be ideal.
Speaker:A couple of people said that coaching, they actually prefer that over therapy.
Speaker:When coaching is focused on change and education.
Speaker:So really like goals and present moment stuff.
Speaker:And other people said that they have not even allowed professionals to
Speaker:witness their full shutdown state.
Speaker:Like they kind of keep it in check or they hold it back.
Speaker:And of course that leads to them not feeling like it
Speaker:was addressed or recognized.
Speaker:Yeah, I mean, part of this is, you know, how much you bring to the
Speaker:table as far as what you're sharing.
Speaker:The therapist sh or maybe coach, should also be able to recognize what, you
Speaker:know, some experiences of, of shutdown if they're informed in this stuff.
Speaker:If not, then it just looks like depression and they're gonna say it's a chemical
Speaker:imbalance and you know, you gotta cope with this for the rest of your life.
Speaker:Specific quotes from the professional supports, uh, Steph, who's been in
Speaker:shutdown for up to 50 years, says Spiritual psychotherapy has been
Speaker:my guiding star as has been pranic healing slash energy work to literally
Speaker:shift my energy when I cannot.
Speaker:Jessica, in shutdown for up to 30 years, says For about seven years
Speaker:I have had therapy once a week.
Speaker:My therapy is somatic experiencing.
Speaker:And I still laughed at myself because I started with my therapist
Speaker:before I knew any of this stuff.
Speaker:But somatic experiencing and polyvagal kind of go hand in hand.
Speaker:So it works out very well for me.
Speaker:I have found my therapy to be very helpful.
Speaker:I am a huge proponent of coaching, but personally, I think I need more
Speaker:supports or have needed more intense support than what a coach could offer.
Speaker:I am also very limited on time, but if I didn't have therapy, I would
Speaker:certainly do coaching because I think that would be so beneficial and
Speaker:supportive for my growth and recovery.
Speaker:Really happy for Jessica.
Speaker:She found something that works for her.
Speaker:And it really like, it sounds like aligns with what she needs.
Speaker:And yeah, I agree.
Speaker:I agree with, with, uh, with Jessica here that coaching is helpful, but is
Speaker:not for, if you need more, some, you might need more support than that.
Speaker:Coaching is good for present and goal oriented, but crises and, uh,
Speaker:mental, like it's, you know, it's more serious mental health kind of stuff.
Speaker:Like obviously that that's not a coaching thing.
Speaker:So the therapy route and having more intensive supports could be
Speaker:totally appropriate for someone.
Speaker:Coaching is great for someone for the person that's like ready to
Speaker:change for the person that is like they're just sick of it and they're
Speaker:ready to put something into action.
Speaker:Coaching is I like how it's so direct and like we're here to like make
Speaker:steps forward and as long as you have someone who's aligned with that I
Speaker:think coaching can be really effective.
Speaker:I find it really enjoyable personally.
Speaker:Oh, and Jessica, you're right.
Speaker:Yeah, therapy Somatic experiencing and Polyvagal theory.
Speaker:I think definitely do go hand in hand.
Speaker:So thank you so much for my respondents for sharing your experiences of
Speaker:shutdown I think I have one more episode of this Of this series to wrap
Speaker:up the Shutdown Experiences Survey.
Speaker:I'll have that out pretty soon But yeah Thank you for people who responded
Speaker:and I know i'm speaking for the person watching this and the next person
Speaker:watching this as you know thank you for the people who filled this out.
Speaker:And yeah When you get a moment like read some of the comments on youtube is on
Speaker:these shutdown videos a lot of people are in shutdown, stuck in shutdown, and
Speaker:there's also a lot of support for them.
Speaker:It's kind of cool to see the, the love and the support for people, um, and
Speaker:the shared experiences of shutdown.
Speaker:I guess the point is thank you.
Speaker:And I know there's people listening and benefiting from this.
Speaker:So thank you to my respondents.
Speaker:And thank you dear listener for joining me on Stuck Not Broken.
Speaker:If you're ready to take the next steps in compassionately coming out of shutdown,
Speaker:I have the perfect course for you.
Speaker:It's called Shutdown to Stillness, More Inner Peace in Four Weeks.
Speaker:It teaches you how to combine your shutdown state with
Speaker:safety, resulting in stillness.
Speaker:It covers validating, normalizing, and even giving permission for
Speaker:your shutdown to exist with safety.
Speaker:And it not only covers these as far as teaching, but we do light
Speaker:practices, ever so light practices.
Speaker:We lightly practice validation and normalization and even giving your
Speaker:shutdown permission to be present.
Speaker:We feel into safety and we combine that with shutdown resulting in stillness.
Speaker:It's designed specifically for the person who is in shutdown and is starting
Speaker:their process of coming out of shutdown.
Speaker:When we come out of shutdown, the next step is it could be
Speaker:fight activation, flight, fight activation, but fight in particular.
Speaker:But before that, stillness is more likely, or I think is ideal, combining safety with
Speaker:shutdown and stillness, and then accessing the mobilization of flight fight energy.
Speaker:So if we can get someone in stillness, that means that they can then be more
Speaker:curious, open and mindful of returning sympathetic flight fight activation.
Speaker:Shutdown to Stillness is in the Stuck Not Broken Total Access Membership,
Speaker:along with three other courses, a wonderful private community, open
Speaker:Q and A's, a second podcast, and a whole bunch of other stuff as well.
Speaker:Visit justinlmft.
Speaker:com slash total access.
Speaker:If you want to learn more about it, or if you want to join the Stucknaut
Speaker:Collective in the Stuck Not Broken Total Access Membership again, justinlmft.
Speaker:com slash total access.
Speaker:I cannot wait to welcome you into the community.
Speaker:Bye.
Speaker:This podcast is not therapy, not intended to be therapy or
Speaker:be a replacement for therapy.
Speaker:Nothing in this creates or indicates a therapeutic relationship.
Speaker:Please consult with your therapist or seek for one in your area if you are
Speaker:experiencing mental health symptoms.
Speaker:Nothing in this podcast should be construed to be specific life advice.
Speaker:It is for educational and entertainment purposes only.
Speaker:More resources are available in the description of this episode
Speaker:and in the footer of justinlmft.
Speaker:com.