Vagus Nerve Exercises To Rewire Your Brain From Anxiety
Whole Body Revolution
Sukie Baxter
describes in his video Lecture
As
In this video Lecture I show you three vagus nerve exercises to rewire your brain from anxiety. I also share what anxiety actually is (and the surprising reason why it’s good for you) as well as what to do when anxiety hits.
Whether you have a diagnosis
of generalized anxiety disorder,
or you're just feeling stressed and overwhelmed,
here's what you need to know about how to rewire your brain
from anxiety.
Anxiety is really just a nervous system state.
Under normal circumstances,
anxiety is essential to protect you, to keep you safe,
and ensure your survival.
But unfortunately, your body can become frozen
in a state of anxiety, even when you're totally safe.
In these instances, your brain believes you're in danger
when you're not.
And lots of things can cause this to happen.
It can result from accidents and injuries, surgeries,
physical pain, chronic stress, emotional shock,
not having your needs met or even trauma.
The thing is most of us can't pinpoint the exact cause
of our chronic anxiety.
And we actually don't need to,
because we can reprogram your brain
to reduce anxiety through the magic of neuroplasticity.
In this video,
I'm going to show you three vagus nerve exercises
that you can use any time
to rewire your brain from anxiety.
- Hey, beautiful humans, I'm Sukie Baxter,
founder of
Whole Body Revolution,
where I help you to rewire yourself
for greater health, happiness, and success.
If you're new here,
make sure you click that subscribe button
and hit the bell to get notified
every time I release a new video,
and anything that I mention in this video,
you can find linked in the description box below.
Let's get into it.
Okay, so I'm going to give you a few exercises
that you can use to reprogram your brain and reduce anxiety.
But before we get into that,
I want to take a quick second to talk about
what anxiety actually is and what causes anxiety.
Most people that I talk to believe their anxiety is coming
from their thoughts,
and most therapies geared toward anxiety relief
focus on changing your thoughts to reduce anxiety symptoms.
Here's the thing. Anxiety is an emotion.
And emotions are not thoughts.
Even though most of us have been taught that this is true.
Emotions are actually the subjective interpretations
of sensory data sent to the brain from inside your body.
And this is called interoception.
Interoception tells your brain when you're safe
and when you're not.
And here's a key point.
Thoughts do not directly cause emotions.
They cause shifts in the internal state of your body
that then change the sensory data sent to your brain,
which in turn shifts your emotional state.
However, there are parts of your biology
that are so ancient,
they predate human language,
and they don't respond to thought-based therapies.
This is where anxiety often persists
even when you've tried mindfulness training, affirmations,
or other brain-based self-help practices.
It's not that these therapies don't work at all,
it's that they can only affect so much of your biology.
I'm gonna tell you what to do about that in just a second.
But first let's talk about what does anxiety feel like.
Most of the time when doctors describe symptoms of anxiety,
they focus on what's going on in your mind.
They talk about anxiety symptoms such as hypervigilance,
an inability to concentrate, maybe racing thoughts,
or a sense of impending doom.
However, anxiety produces physical symptoms as well.
In fact, all emotions do.
This is how you know what emotion you're feeling,
by how your body feels.
Typically, the feeling of anxiety in your body consists
of tightness in your chest, a racing heart,
inability to take a deep breath, maybe sweating, shaking,
trembling, tension in your feet or lower legs, tight hips,
or maybe a clenched jaw.
And the posture of anxiety can vary.
But I've observed in my clients that often
they have a tendency to lean their weight back
to their heels,
as though they were pulling away from something.
Many people lift their toes off the ground
and clench the muscles of their lower legs
as though they were stopping themselves from running away
from a real or perceived threat.
It's very common to see anxious people express tightness
around their eyes and a forward head posture
with rigid neck muscles.
Clenched fists are another frequent symptom.
If these symptoms are chronic and habitual,
we tend to not notice them.
They just become our default posture, how we are,
and how we move through the world.
We don't know we're tight until we try to move in a way
that our bodies don't allow.
And even then we don't typically relate muscle tension
and poor mobility
to chronic and habituated emotional states like anxiety.
We stretch more. We get massages.
And when our muscles don't let go,
after much physical practice,
we give up and we just assume we're getting old, not true.
Muscle tension is dictated by your nervous system,
by your brain.
If we've put you under anesthesia, you'd be so limber
that we could tuck your feet behind your head easily.
Doctors would have to be super careful when moving you
so as not to dislocate a joint.
But when you wake up again,
that tension returns just as it was before.
So if you're wondering,
"What do I do when I feel anxiety?"
I'm going to explain that now.
Plus walk you through three exercises
to reduce anxiety symptoms.
Life is full of challenges, threats, and dangers.
To expect that we'll never have to rise up
to meet these demands is just unrealistic.
And anxiety is a normal part of your stress response.
It tells you when you're safe and when you're not
so that you can mobilize to protect yourself.
But we don't want to get stuck there.
And the way to not get stuck in anxiety is
by helping your autonomic nervous system
to become better at regulating.
One of the ways that we can do this is
through body-based practices
that discharge stress from your nervous system
by sending signals of safety to your brain
through the proprioceptive system.
So that's what we're gonna do right now.
Click like if you're ready to try some vagus nerve exercises
for anxiety relief.
Inspiration for these exercises comes from the book
"Accessing the Healing Power of the Vagus Nerve"
by
Stanley Rosenberg,
which is a great book
if you want to learn more about polyvagal theory
and anxiety.
So let's get started.
For this first exercise,
you can sit in a comfortable position,
either on the floor or in a chair, if that's better for you.
And all you're going to do is
simply bring your right hand to the top of your head,
and
tip your right ear towards your right shoulder.
So you're going to be side bent to the right.
And then what you're gonna do is just shift your eyes only.
So your head's gonna stay in this position,
and your eyes only are going to go up and towards the left.
So they're going to move towards the left side
of your vision.
And we're just gonna hold this for 30 seconds.
And just keep your head in that same position.
There's no need to strain.
You may notice a sigh or a swallow or a breath
that's a little bit deeper than your other ones.
And go ahead and release that.
And now we're just gonna do exactly the same thing
on the other side.
So take a quick break if you need to.
And then when you're ready,
you're gonna bring your left hand to the top of your head,
bring your left ear towards your left shoulder.
Get a little side bend in there,
and then move your eyes upward and towards the right.
And we're just gonna hold this again for 30 seconds.
And this is helping us to break up
these habitual patterns of tension
and to shift out of an activated state
when we're a little bit more calm,
a little bit more present.
And then go ahead and release that.
Now if you don't notice a sigh or a swallow,
you can certainly hold that for longer.
30 seconds is the minimum,
but you can definitely do a minute or even longer than that.
For the next exercise,
we're gonna do a very similar movement,
but we're gonna take it a little bit deeper.
So that was really focused on breaking up any tension
in your neck and relaxing all the neck muscles.
We're gonna bring it down into your rib cage.
So your vagus nerve actually goes, it's a cranial nerve,
and it goes down your neck and into your torso
and comes all the way down into your viscera.
So we're gonna do a little bit of movement in your rib cage
to help break up the tension there.
So you're going to do a similar thing with your hands.
So right hand to the top of your head,
but then you're gonna take your left hand
and reach around to put it on your side
on your rib cage here.
And then what you're gonna do is
as you bring your head down,
so your right ear goes towards your right shoulder.
You're gonna make that bend a little bit deeper.
So you're gonna bend through your rib cage.
You're using your left hand to pull your ribs away.
So you should feel them closing underneath your hand
and your whole spine will bend into a C shape.
And then we're just gonna do the same thing with our eyes.
You're gonna bring them up into the left.
And again, we'll hold this for 30 seconds.
Again, don't strain.
There's no reason to be an overachiever.
So if this is uncomfortable for you,
make the movement smaller.
And then go ahead and release that.
And you may notice your breathing is a little bit easier.
You might feel a little more calm.
If you have some emotions come up, sometimes that'll happen.
If you need to take a break, go ahead and do that.
With these exercises, less is actually more.
I really base a lot of my work
on a concept called titration,
which is a word that comes from chemistry.
It's something that chemists will use to mix two substances
that when you pour them together in large quantities,
you have maybe half a cup of this one
and half a cup of that one,
and you just pour them together, they don't mix.
But if you do it drop by drop by drop,
then they'll start to blend and mix together.
So the same is true for these exercises.
Large doses can be hard for your system to integrate.
Whereas little drops can help make cumulative changes
that over time are much more impactful.
So if you need to take a break, take a break.
If that was enough for you, that's totally fine.
If you're ready to continue, we're gonna do the other side.
So you're gonna bring your left hand
up to the top of your head.
Side bend your left ear to your left shoulder.
Your right hand goes onto the left side of your rib cage.
And you're going to create that nice C shape
through your ribs.
And then your vision is going to go up and to the right.
Your eyes are going to go up to the right.
Remembering that it's okay to make this a small movement.
Particularly if you have had any injuries to your ribs.
If you've had surgeries,
heart surgeries where ribs have been cracked,
abdominal surgeries, any kind of trauma,
physical trauma to your torso.
And of course any emotional trauma.
If this needs to be a smaller movement, that's totally fine.
Go ahead and release that.
And really, when I'm doing exercises for myself,
I don't count repetitions, and I don't count time.
I wait until I feel a shift in my body,
but it's great when you're starting out
to have a set amount of time so that you kind of know
when you're starting and when you're gonna end.
That can make it feel a bit safer,
especially if it's unfamiliar.
But if you want to just hang out there
until you feel like your body has a shift, that's also fine.
For this next exercise, you're going to want to find a place
where you can lie face down comfortably.
So a yoga mat is a great thing to use,
or if you have a carpet that's comfortable,
you can lie on that.
So on your stomach, what you're gonna do
is you're going to bring your elbows under your shoulders,
hands flat on the floor.
And your shoulders should be supported by your elbows.
And what you're going to do is turn
and look over your shoulder, and you're lifting your head
using the muscles along the side of your neck here.
And we're just gonna hold this one again for 30 seconds.
And this will really help to reset your SCM muscle,
or your sternocleidomastoid,
which is that thick muscle along the side of your neck.
That can get really tight.
A lot of people who have migraines
have a lot of tension in this muscle,
so it can be helpful for migraines or tension headaches.
And then go ahead and release that.
And then we're just gonna do the same thing
to the other side.
So go ahead and come up with your
elbows under your shoulders.
You're gonna turn your head to the right.
You're gonna lift your head
and look over your right shoulder.
And we're gonna hold it for 30 seconds.
And go ahead and release.
#VagusNerveExercises #PolyvagalTheory #AnxietyRelief #SukieBaxter
Note: this content is for informational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice, or as a substitute for the medical advice of a physician.
Comments
Post a Comment