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Therapist Uncensored Podcast

Increase Your Cool By Managing Your Ventral Vagal System (19)

Therapist Uncensored Podcast

Sue Marriott LCSW, CGP & Ann Kelley PhD

Social Sciences, Society & Culture, Science, Relationships, Education, Self-improvement

4.71.5K Ratings

🗓️ 24 January 2017

⏱️ 35 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In Part II of our exploration of polyvagal theory, with psychotherapists and co-hosts of this podcast, Ann Kelley, Patty Olwell and Sue Marriott we talk about strategies to help us engage our ventral vagal or social engagement system to calm our nervous system. We review how our nervous system appraises safety and danger. Then they discuss how to harness the knowledge and make it usable in real life. Polyvagal Theory Revisited Stephen Porges developed polyvagal theory, which explains our nervous system’s response to stress or danger. It describes a three part hierarchical system. The first, the ventral vagal is described in the podcast as a safety system or green zone. The second is activation. This is the sympathetic nervous system getting us ready for fight or flight. In the podcast described as an activated red zone. The third system is the dorsal vagal, which is immobilization or freeze. In the podcast described as an immobilized red zone. How Does Polyvagal Theory Work? The theory describes how we assess stress or danger based on cues in the environment. If we begin to sense stress our sympathetic or activation system begins to kick in. Then we attempt to engage our ventral vegal or social engagement system (the green zone). If that doesn’t work, the threat persists or intensifies we employ our activation system. We get ready to take action. Our heart rate increases to prepare us for fight or flight. Then if the threat is too large or we can’t escape the system of last resort, the dorsal vagal takes over. How Understanding Polyvagal Theory Can Help Me Regulate Stress Today most of us are not chasing saber-toothed tigers through the jungle. So the stressors and dangers we face are often interpersonal. We can often because of our own personal histories misread the environmental cues. If we walk into a party and don’t see a familiar face our sympathetic nervous system can get activated. If we understand from polyvagal theory that we have a social engagement system and that engaging it will calm us down, we then have strategies that we can use. We can look for a friendly face and start a conversation. We can find someone we know at the party and make contact. This understanding gives us choices when we want to calm ourselves or help our children, partners or friends calm their nervous systems. Important Concepts Vagus Nerve – 10th cranial nerve and part of the parasympathetic nervous system. Has two branches and acts as a brake on the sympathetic nervous system. Ventral Vagal – The newer myelinated branch of the vagus that developed in mammals. Controls the social engagement system. Dorsal Vagal- More primitive unmyelinated branch of the vagus nerve. Acts as a Sympathetic Nervous System – part of the autonomic nervous system that controls activation. Parasympathetic Nervous System – part of the autonomic nervous system that inhibits the sympathetic nervous system Neuroception – Porges term that describes how our nervous system assesses whether people or places are safe, dangerous or life threatening RESOURCES: Additional resources for this episode: Stephen W. Porges -The Polyvagal Theory: Neurophysiological Foundations of Emotions, Attachment, Communication, and Self-regulation These and other resources have been collected for you on our Resources page! Tweet See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to Therapists Uncensored, a podcast where therapists freely speak their minds about real life matters. Welcome back to Therapagos Unsensored.

0:17.0

This is episode 19 and we are going to continue our discussion on the Polyvago Theory,

0:22.0

which in short is a discussion about how our bodies

0:25.2

can sometimes get the best of us when we feel extremely upset or threatened.

0:29.5

Now this is a continuation for episode 18 but no worries if you haven't had time to hear that episode.

0:36.5

This one's designed to stand alone and is focusing on more of the practical aspects of the theory.

0:43.4

But as you listen, if you find yourself interested in wanting to know more, go back to episode

0:47.8

18 and listen from there.

0:51.2

Right, so super fast summary.

0:53.1

The most important things from the episode before was the, again, this is Stephen Porches and the

1:00.0

title of the book, The Pollyvagel Theory, right?

1:03.2

We'll just leave it there.

1:04.4

Yeah, of course, it's going to be on our show notes.

1:05.9

There's also a clinical applications book that's really awesome.

1:08.6

That's a more recent one.

1:09.6

But the gist of it is, and the one thing

1:11.2

that we're going to be really digging into this episode is the safety

1:15.5

system which is the Vegas nerve, the ventral vagal nerve, which is the social engagement system.

1:23.0

And what we called it last time was the green zone,

1:26.0

just to make it really easy.

1:28.0

It's where we want to live, it's where we want to hang out,

1:31.0

and it's when we are disarmed.

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