334. Our Polyvagal World with Stephen & Seth Porges
Dec 20, 2023
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Stephen and Seth Porges discuss Polyvagal Theory, safety, and trauma interventions, exploring the impact of feeling safe on physical and mental well-being. They debunk freeze response misconceptions, delve into breath's role in safety, and discuss hormonal influences on mood. The podcast also explores thrill-seeking behavior, the science of safety, and the significance of understanding our nervous system's activation for health.
Feeling safe is vital for mental and physical well-being, affecting our body's functions and behaviors.
Polyvagal theory helps individuals understand and regulate their bodily responses, offering ways to decode physiological reactions.
Thrilling experiences like roller coasters allow exploration of defensive systems in a safe environment, fostering bonding and trust.
Deep dives
Importance of Feeling Safe and its Impact on Health
Feeling safe is crucial to our mental and physical health and happiness. Our body operates differently when we feel safe compared to when we feel threatened or traumatized. Safety is not just about physical safety, but also about how our nervous system interprets its surroundings as safe. When we feel safe, our body prioritizes health, growth, restoration, and social behavior.
Role of Polyvagal Theory in Understanding Safety and Trauma
Polyvagal theory emphasizes the importance of the autonomic state as the intervening variable between stimulus and response. The theory helps individuals understand their bodily feelings and how to regulate their reactions. It provides a language to decode physiological responses and helps recognize the impacts of traumatic experiences on the autonomic nervous system.
Practical Applications of Polyvagal Theory in Therapy
Polyvagal theory can be practically applied in therapy to help individuals regulate their responses. Strategies like extending the duration of phrases, practicing slow exhalation, and exploring auditory hypersensitivity can aid in managing anxiety and stress. The theory offers insights into how to navigate social interactions and activate feelings of safety.
Engaging in Safe Thrills and the Role of Defensive Systems
Seeking out experiences like roller coasters, horror films, and haunted houses allows individuals to explore their defensive systems in a safe context. Engaging in thrilling experiences enables the exercise of defensive mobilization fear systems without actual danger. Participation in such activities can build trust in physiological reactions within a secure environment.
Family Bonding through Scary Experiences and Predictable Context
Engaging in scary and thrilling activities as a family can foster bonding through shared experiences. Roller coasters, haunted houses, and horror movies provide a space for exploring defensive systems in a fun and safe setting. These activities create social bonds and shared memories within a predictable and secure family unit.
Since we were introduced to Polyvagal Theory by Stephen Porges in the early nineties, the concept has revolutionized our understanding of the connection between safety and well-being and transformed trauma interventions and therapeutic interactions, inspiring researchers and clinicians to approach things in new ways. Here to enlighten us through real-world examples and themes from their book, Our Polyvagal World: How Safety and Trauma Change Us, are father and son, Stephen and Seth Porges. Tune in to gain a whole new outlook on what our body does based on how safe we feel and learn practical ways in which we can help one another feel safe.
Listen and Learn:
What is polyvagal theory?
What effects does it have on our physical and mental well-being to live in a world where signals of threat are all around us?
The science of safety
What role does cognition play in polyvagal theory?
Clearing up misconceptions about our freeze response to life-threatening or traumatic events
Breath, the vagus nerve, and feeling safe—and whether there's even an ideal way to breathe to stimulate or activate those feelings of safety
Are hormonal changes impacting the vagus nerve, and is that why we experience mood changes during puberty and menopause?
What makes us seek out the thrill of being scared?
Resources:
For more insight on polyvagal theory, visit Stephen and Seph’s websites
Stephen W. Porges, Ph.D. is a Distinguished University Scientist at Indiana University where he is the founding director of the Traumatic Stress Research Consortium. He is Professor of Psychiatry at the University of North Carolina, and Professor Emeritus at both the University of Illinois at Chicago and the University of Maryland. He lives in Atlantic Beach, Florida.
Seth Porges is a journalist and filmmaker. He directed the critically acclaimed documentary Class Action Park (HBO Max). He lives in Atlantic Beach, Florida, and Brooklyn, New York.