@rsramuj1: #answer

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Wednesday 27 July 2022 12:25:15 GMT
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When you’re emotionally flooded, the part of your brain that helps you pause, plan, and regulate isn’t fully in charge. That means reasoning, planning, and logic are temporarily weakened. Trying to “think your way out” of that state often makes it worse. ADHD is strongly linked to regulation challenges, especially under stress. The faster intervention point is the body. Somatic regulation works because the nervous system responds to physiological signals of safety before it responds to cognitive reassurance. Try: • Physiological sigh breathing (two short inhales, one long slow exhale) • Temperature shift (cool water on wrists or neck) • Deep pressure (press feet into the floor, squeeze hands together) • Orienting (slowly name five things you see) The sequence matters. Calm the body → restore regulation → thinking improves. You do not calm your thoughts first. You calm your nervous system and your thoughts follow. Disclaimer: Sharing these thoughts with you for learning and reflection. This is not medical advice. Every ADHD brain is unique, so if something here resonates with you, bring it up with a trusted medical professional who knows your story.                                        🔎 Suggested Studies for Further Reading Barkley, R. A. (2015). Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: A Handbook for Diagnosis and Treatment. Discusses emotional regulation as a core impairment domain in ADHD. Skirrow, C., & Asherson, P. (2013). Emotional lability in adults with ADHD. Explores rapid emotional activation and regulatory difficulties in ADHD. Noble, D. J., et al. (2018). The physiological sigh: Neural mechanisms of respiration and emotional regulation. Examines how slow exhalation patterns influence autonomic regulation.                                                     #ADHD #EmotionalRegulation #NervousSystem #ADHDSupport #SelfRegulation
When you’re emotionally flooded, the part of your brain that helps you pause, plan, and regulate isn’t fully in charge. That means reasoning, planning, and logic are temporarily weakened. Trying to “think your way out” of that state often makes it worse. ADHD is strongly linked to regulation challenges, especially under stress. The faster intervention point is the body. Somatic regulation works because the nervous system responds to physiological signals of safety before it responds to cognitive reassurance. Try: • Physiological sigh breathing (two short inhales, one long slow exhale) • Temperature shift (cool water on wrists or neck) • Deep pressure (press feet into the floor, squeeze hands together) • Orienting (slowly name five things you see) The sequence matters. Calm the body → restore regulation → thinking improves. You do not calm your thoughts first. You calm your nervous system and your thoughts follow. Disclaimer: Sharing these thoughts with you for learning and reflection. This is not medical advice. Every ADHD brain is unique, so if something here resonates with you, bring it up with a trusted medical professional who knows your story. 🔎 Suggested Studies for Further Reading Barkley, R. A. (2015). Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: A Handbook for Diagnosis and Treatment. Discusses emotional regulation as a core impairment domain in ADHD. Skirrow, C., & Asherson, P. (2013). Emotional lability in adults with ADHD. Explores rapid emotional activation and regulatory difficulties in ADHD. Noble, D. J., et al. (2018). The physiological sigh: Neural mechanisms of respiration and emotional regulation. Examines how slow exhalation patterns influence autonomic regulation. #ADHD #EmotionalRegulation #NervousSystem #ADHDSupport #SelfRegulation

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