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Donna Jackson Nakazawa on dislodging the trauma headspace & making micro-changes

 

Cissy's note: Two more posts from Donna Jackson Nakazawa's Facebook page posts which she has graciously allowed to be shared here on ACEs Connection

Making moment by moment micro-changes to exit a chronically stressed state of anxiety matters now more than ever. Worry and rumination coupled with low action are associated with higher inflammation and weakened immunity -- the very thing we want to avoid right now. We have to actively stack our day with positives to help dampen down our stress-immune response. Bringing in more positive experiences during the day makes a difference - especially at a time when so many of the positives we might usually rely on to bolster us amidst adversity (and boost good stress hormones like oxytocin) emerge from familiar go-tos we can’t go-to now: gathering with friends, hugging loved ones. (Our son is stranded 3,000 miles away right now, sheltering in place alone; I can’t wait to hold him in my arms again.) Tree bathing and blossom bathing (maybe just outside your window, or front door) are simple acts: a few minutes immersing in nature helps to downshift the stress-immune response. The Japanese (my husband and children and I used to live in Japan when our children were little) have this down to a fine art. Forest Bathing (walking in the woods) and Hanami (watching the light and wind play on tree blossoms, while meditating on the transient quality of life and nature) are national pastimes.

 #HelloBrain: Today our stress relief action is a little time spent in Hanami.

Try going outside and stare at the light on the trees or blossoms. Don’t look away. Keep watching how the breeze and light play on each petal. Listen to the sounds. Breathe. Repeat.

Donna Posts on FB















True fact: The left amygdala gets highly active when we try to manage stressful events in our environment by ruminating – dwelling in negative thoughts about oneself, one’s actions, or the actions of others – as opposed to taking action.

That’s a trauma headspace and it’s hard to dislodge.

And yet I've learned, not only for myself, but as a journalist, that those who’ve faced significant adversity also know an extraordinary amount about flourishing in the face of uncertainty.

As a SciComm journalist, I write a lot about how each millisecond of our lives our brain is dancing with cues and messages from the environment, constantly on the lookout for possible new threats, trying to assess whether we are safe or not safe.

If the messages our brain gets tell us that we're under threat our inflammatory stress-response ramps up in ways that can make us more vulnerable to illness. If our brain receives messages that we are safe, that helps to regulate our immune system in ways that help protect us.

Recent neuroscience shows us brain and body respond to emotional stressors and threats as if they ARE biological pathogens, leading to the release of inflammatory cytokines that impair our immune health. (If you want to learn more about this, read my book, The Angel and the Assassin.)

I'm trying to pause throughout my day and ask myself: “Hello Brain: what messages am I sending you right now about whether we are safe, or unsafe?”

Many of us are sending our brain non-stop danger-alert signals (it's hard not to in a pandemic) that up the stress-response at a time when we need our immune system to be tip top.

#HelloBrain: Today, we're putting our hands in the dirt, planting kale, lettuce, broccoli, cauliflower, and violets.

(P.S.: Planting violets with the sun on my face made me think of my grandmother, Donna - we used to plant violets in her yard. The memory filled me with such delight that even when my phone blared with an emergency alert (stay at home), I felt peaceful. My grandmother had a victory garden in WWII, and as I transferred violets into new pots I felt as if she were transferring some of her calm and love and strength to me.)

I'm going to take my small pots of violets and leave them on the porches of my elderly neighbors.

For more, read Donna Jackson Nakazawa's new book, The Angel and the Assassin: The Tiny Brain Cell that Changed the Course of Medicine and follow her on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram

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