Learning Self-Regulation Through Self-Attunement

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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 731

  • @noturbo
    @noturbo 2 года назад +2448

    Humans are hard work.

    • @monicacesar
      @monicacesar 2 года назад +7

      :D hahaha . indeed ;)

    • @paranoah1925
      @paranoah1925 2 года назад +143

      Actually, we are very simple - we just need unconditional love and acceptance from our family and our 'tribe' as kids. It ia sad that most of us don't get that

    • @wendi2819
      @wendi2819 2 года назад +6

      Indeed, we are. Ha!

    • @wendi2819
      @wendi2819 2 года назад +10

      @@paranoah1925 wonder why after 100's of years, parenting isn't begun at kindergarten. I wish I'd of known I would end up doing so many things I said I'd never do. Or overcompensate and still wound.

    • @be_conscious.be_free
      @be_conscious.be_free 2 года назад +37

      @@paranoah1925 In my opinion it really isnt that simple, but I do wish it was. Most parents didn't/don't parent consciously and many carry trauma that needs to be healed. By not healing it, we then project it onto our kids, especially if we arent conscious of it. The problem isnt kids not being loved or validated, the problem is parents with emotional wounding/inherited dysfunction that failed to heal prior to having kids. It's how generational trauma gets passed down throughout the family. Hurt people, hurt people. Healing is not simple or easy, which is probably why alot of people choose not to do it. My dad never experienced love with his narcissistic mother and therefore was unable to show me love. Ironically he saw alot of himself in me and it made him mad, which he of course then took out on me. Had he healed his wounds, it would have been different but he wasnt and isnt a conscious or self aware person. Someone else is always to blame in his eyes. I wasn't conscious or aware either, until about 3 years ago when I started healing from childhood ptsd.
      Humans really are complicated because most of us have emotional baggage and wounding that we have to heal, which clouds our judgement and alters our perception. 💙

  • @pr23487
    @pr23487 10 месяцев назад +624

    It’s amazing how far ahead people are in life when they have a secure attachment style to their parents. They handle stress better.

    • @tomasmichl4702
      @tomasmichl4702 9 месяцев назад

      Check out Gary Vee, he is the most secured attached person

    • @meowraiu2
      @meowraiu2 9 месяцев назад +6

      truly.

    • @gladiammgtow4092
      @gladiammgtow4092 9 месяцев назад +5

      💯

    • @PassionateFlower
      @PassionateFlower 6 месяцев назад +39

      It's amazing how unfair it is. I hate how much securely attached people completely take their innate stability for granted and it they go through an external crisis (job loss, divorce) they just "pop" out of their "depressive episode" after 8 months as a middle age adult then go back to "normal" with all their support systems and original self esteem reinstated. Like as if they just got pneumonia.
      It's kind of sickening to listen to secure attachment people yammer on about how they finally "popped" out of their sadness and felt like their old self again. And for me, there was never a "self" to begin with. I'm just angry and bitter about it.

    • @century66s
      @century66s 6 месяцев назад +14

      @@PassionateFlower Ms. Preibe is offering a way out of thie delima. I feel fortionate now at 77 years old that if I do the work I will have succeeded in life. i have been in and out of homelessness and finally ten years ago I applied what what she is suggesting without knowing it. All of it sounds resonable to me now..

  • @lisaariottiart
    @lisaariottiart Год назад +263

    This woman articulates like a BOSS

  • @Thysta
    @Thysta Год назад +791

    A lot of these issues come from enmeshment. When parents are traumatized and weak, they fear everything in life and trying to "teach" this to kids. Now, all of my childhood, I knew that I had a very different approach towards life, but my families overbearing made me dissociate. My family members literally fear everything. Going abroad, getting on a plane, doing a simple work, going to club with friends. They are superscared. And if you are a child, believing mother "wants good" (maybe partially true), you may either internalize these or these may exist as a "fog" in your head. If you are a sensitive person, it is literally possible that you have problems with internal emotional regulation because the feelings you are trying to regulate are NOT YOURS.

    • @vksof
      @vksof Год назад +16

      So true

    • @shawndouglas9605
      @shawndouglas9605 Год назад +53

      Literally me right now. Got no boundaries and I'm now learning boundaries and it's tough because it feels wrong but I know it's right for growth.

    • @shea780
      @shea780 Год назад +23

      Someone finally explaining this in a way I couldn’t!

    • @IanuaDiaboli
      @IanuaDiaboli Год назад +14

      Oh my God, you are so spot on.

    • @MissLida
      @MissLida Год назад +19

      Absolutely true! You literally described my family and I deal with so much inner confusion even though Ive been on my own for two years now

  • @LoreMIpsum-vs6dx
    @LoreMIpsum-vs6dx 2 года назад +348

    Wow! I wish people knew how rare and life changing this information is. You could pay $$$$ for therapy for years and not get anything close to this kind of practical information. This is gold folks. Listen to this person.

    • @kristen3606
      @kristen3606 6 месяцев назад +4

      So grateful for her ❤

    • @century66s
      @century66s 3 месяца назад +4

      @@LoreMIpsum-vs6dx yes, take it to heart 25 years psycho therapy could not touch the wisdom of this young lady. Please stay the course...

  • @Oberon44
    @Oberon44 2 года назад +119

    It’s a privilege to be able to “work on yourself.”
    Some people’s days are full of working on other people’s selves, while contorting our own self to be what’s needed.

    • @tiffanycoffee3150
      @tiffanycoffee3150 8 месяцев назад +21

      I think I hear what you are saying. I would say it is a privilege if you would categorize clean drinking water that way. You can't afford not to work on yourself. It is also more difficult to care for others if you have not. Best of luck

    • @BaclibreMa_DocJamal
      @BaclibreMa_DocJamal 2 месяца назад

      Thanks man. A great way to reframe things. ❤

  • @eax2010EA
    @eax2010EA 2 года назад +109

    You know it's a good video when you put it on your watch later list despite having seen it already.

    • @thetuckinlady
      @thetuckinlady 8 месяцев назад +3

      Yup! I keep rewatching her work because it is a goldmine of knowledge and I keep learning new things from the same videos. I was in therapy for two years but it was these videos that helped me find my footing, have a systematic approach to my self-work, and heal from my CPTSD much more effectively.

    • @nao32ka
      @nao32ka 2 месяца назад +1

      Same!!

  • @priyankamohanty6206
    @priyankamohanty6206 2 года назад +543

    Finally someone explaining it in a very logical way rather than just giving out abstract information. Honestly these videos are really helping me out calm down my triggers.

  • @Dd94949
    @Dd94949 2 года назад +261

    As a person who's struggled pretty significantly on both sides of the spectrum, I think of emotional awareness like mindfulness or meditation. Each time we notice how we feel, we build a muscle, and the stronger that muscle gets, our noticing, the more we can increase the gap in our reactivity. And as Heidi says, the next step is what do we do with the feeling? It's also helpful to think of rupture and repair - the better we get at noticing misattunements, especially big ones, points of contention, and making sure we revisit them and resolve them, we build the intimacy muscle in our relationships. The good will. The trust. The bank account gets full and starts collecting interest. And withdrawals, which are inevitable, don't hurt so badly. There is room for mistakes and accidents...and probably even intentional fuck ups.

    • @wendi2819
      @wendi2819 2 года назад +7

      Please pray for me to forgive myself for all the explosive anger I had over 25 years ago now ( at my husband) when I had not had any therapy or help self regulating. I grew up in tension and finally explosive anger. It was my "normal." It still haunts me. He died when I was just 39.

    • @Dd94949
      @Dd94949 2 года назад +10

      @@wendi2819 We're all just trying to live in the present when our bodies are stuck in the past. Love is the hardest thing there is. It completely organizes our lives and yet in many ways is invisible.

    • @raffacasting
      @raffacasting 2 года назад +4

      Intentional fuck ups is king. I do very often. Like: Well, I know that a confrontative talk will open the hell gates now. But I choose the hell doors to open because there is devils to burn.

    • @iamyou111
      @iamyou111 2 года назад +2

      Well said. 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻❤

    • @littlestbroccoli
      @littlestbroccoli Год назад +3

      A very high EQ comment

  • @littlestbroccoli
    @littlestbroccoli Год назад +202

    Speaking as an anxious, if we try to compartmentalize before we've accepted the feeling in our body, it can feel worse because it feels like a parent walking away while we're crying. In working with depression, I've had to spend time specifically to recognize and accept it and welcome it in my body before I can "push through" or be productive, and this has meant that sometimes important things have fallen off or been put down indefinitely. But I think health and not deserting yourself are way more important than external responsibilities, if you've been prioritizing those for too long and muscling yourself through it.

    • @sunnyadams5842
      @sunnyadams5842 Год назад +9

      Boy can I relate. Well said!

    • @goldilocks913
      @goldilocks913 8 месяцев назад +6

      Heidi speaks about the emotional/practical parts of how different styles react and there is a danger that anxious styles place too much emphasis on dealing with emotions which leaves them with more practical problems and vice versa for the avoidant style like myself so I think it really is about balance and being aware of what is going on in each case. Excellent point though , thank you.

    • @littlestbroccoli
      @littlestbroccoli 8 месяцев назад +4

      @@goldilocks913 It's not indulgent and it doesn't take more than a few moments to practice. What takes half a lifetime is learning how to do it in the first place.

    • @jyamaloha2322
      @jyamaloha2322 2 месяца назад

      It’s news to me that not everyone lives in an emotionally structured world. It’s what I see reflected as meaning in all of human art from ancient myths to the Marvel Universe.

  • @cristinahawke
    @cristinahawke 2 года назад +197

    You know what I've been realizing more and more lately, is that anxious/avoidant styles have much more in common with each other than they do with secure attachment. (Rather than a model where secure attachment falls in the middle, like a spectrum.) I am definitely on the anxious side of things, but what's interesting to me in this video is that even though I spend most of my time drowning in and being carried away by my emotions, whenever I do need to get things done or have had enough of it, I use the avoidant strategy of just barreling through. I have very little capacity for finding actual solutions to my negative emotions. This process does take a long time and I discover new things every day. :)

    • @talorix
      @talorix 2 года назад +14

      I relate to this a lot. I am learning to be healthy and secure more and more, but this is an underlying issue for sure

    • @amberkay2
      @amberkay2 2 года назад +15

      Yeah I can relate to this too. I spent so long anxiously attached and was so emotionally turbulent and lately I’ve realized I’ve just completely shut myself off and avoided everything instead bc it’s easier to deal with but still not healthy 😅😢

    • @Hippowdon121
      @Hippowdon121 2 года назад +16

      Yes! It's not at all a spectrum, with anxious on one end and avoidant on the other, with anxious styles needing to become 'more avoidant' etc. I saw that kind of thing written online quite a bit and it's totally wrong. If it is a spectrum, with anxious on one end and avoidant on the other, where are fearful avoidants, who have the wounds of both?
      Anxious and avoidant styles are pretty much the same thing at the end of the day, and that is how fearful avoidants can exist.

    • @peters8080
      @peters8080 Год назад

      @@Hippowdon121 Agreed, do the self test, and most people will elements of both.

    • @TheNinjapancake14
      @TheNinjapancake14 Год назад +5

      I feel like a spectrum is the best way for me to visualize it because these attachments would be secure if they were more regulated, in different ways. A lot of people display all tendencies of each attachment- I think of a pendulum swinging back and forth on the spectrum- not erratically but time to time. An anxious attachment could use traits seen in secure attachment to get through something, or maybe “overshoot” and display avoidant tendencies

  • @MichaelDavis-mw1vs
    @MichaelDavis-mw1vs 7 месяцев назад +21

    Heidi is a gift, a treasure, and her lectures are pure gold for the soul.

  • @MrSharklet
    @MrSharklet 7 месяцев назад +21

    Can we just stop and appreciate how Heidi is the most cheerful and smiling person who talks about CPTSD and other heavy topics on RUclips? It's embodied optimism!

  • @heleneolsenthunem307
    @heleneolsenthunem307 2 года назад +172

    Started doing emotion tracking along side my monthly cycle as well! Now I know almost to the day when I’m going to be sad and the days I’m getting a bunch of good ideas etc. it’s actually quite comical how accurate it can be.

    • @nadiashanel5015
      @nadiashanel5015 2 года назад +10

      Omg I’ve been trying to do this but I keep falling off of tracking mine. It’s so interesting

    • @heleneolsenthunem307
      @heleneolsenthunem307 2 года назад +6

      @@nadiashanel5015 👍🏻 it’s fascinating

    • @rylie483
      @rylie483 Год назад +2

      Do you use a specific app?

    • @heleneolsenthunem307
      @heleneolsenthunem307 Год назад +3

      @@rylie483 I use the app “flo” 😊

    • @AlexisTwoLastNames
      @AlexisTwoLastNames Год назад

      this is annoying lol. i’m sure i will be excited for it once i stop being stubborn abt there being another thing i’m not doing for myself that i could be, but dang does living and not feeling shitty take so much work!!!

  • @LadyRobertaL
    @LadyRobertaL 2 месяца назад +3

    My mom was 16 when she had me. She was adopted into an abusive situation. I learned not to have needs. I learned not to cry. This video has helped me understand so much!! Thank you.

  • @lyndadoerner5341
    @lyndadoerner5341 Месяц назад +2

    You just described my childhood , the caregiver looking at you and smiling and saying, “no, your not sad, your happy!”, 🎯🎯🎯”We don’t talk about our family secrets”, etc., .

  • @levalas91
    @levalas91 2 года назад +46

    After investing ~ 1200€ in courses and books, this (free) video just absolutely blew my mind. No one ever told me, that I am lacking the "finding a solution"-part. Crazy. Thank you a lot!

    • @elenar.4669
      @elenar.4669 2 года назад +8

      I would say after spending 1200€ on research you definitely don't lack the drive to "find a solution" 😊

    • @tomasmichl4702
      @tomasmichl4702 9 месяцев назад +3

      Why therapist dont mention this? For much money they do not teach the basics

    • @sydneygesualdi7162
      @sydneygesualdi7162 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@tomasmichl4702 Bc a lot of therapists aren't good. Really good ones are hard to find

  • @edwardgreacen1833
    @edwardgreacen1833 2 года назад +81

    Maybe this is what they mean when they encourage me to practice "mindfulness." Heidi's example of a baby experiencing sadness with a parent who doesn't connect - that really strikes a deep chord with me. No wonder I don't handle my emotions well! My parents were immature/narcissistic - they never connected with their kids' emotionally. Great stuff! So this is why I feel "out of touch." DUH!

    • @notaburneraccount
      @notaburneraccount Год назад +1

      Yeah, that was a helpful example. It clicked for me as a former early ed teacher 😅

  • @deberebor
    @deberebor 6 месяцев назад +18

    I never doubted my parents loved me. I never doubted my self worth in the world. So, one might ask why I am so dysregulated: the answer is in this video. Neither of my parents enacted any attunement during times that were extremely frightening. This one thing is enough to create a lifetime of misery, even when those other two things are operating properly in the family. So here I am at 67 now figuring out that this is the source of some of my problems. And I'm realizing that my parents most likely also experienced the same lack of attunement from their parents.

  • @josephmbimbi
    @josephmbimbi Год назад +57

    (non-native speaker)
    This channel is pure gold. I just discovered it, it allows me to put words and understanding on my experiences, and that helps A LOT.
    Thank you for your content

  • @isaacstamper7798
    @isaacstamper7798 2 года назад +312

    Your channel is a fucking goldmine

    • @monicacesar
      @monicacesar 2 года назад +8

      Agreed! :D Bless her kind soul

    • @trafficcontrol2420
      @trafficcontrol2420 2 года назад +4

      She doesn't even know!

    • @andreac647
      @andreac647 2 года назад +6

      Yes, I'm so grateful I found her channel, I knew about attachment theory before but Heidi's videos really help me understand how it actually works and how it shows up in my life.

    • @ChristianM16
      @ChristianM16 2 года назад +3

      With all seriousness. You’re right!!!

    • @cicisunGemini
      @cicisunGemini 2 года назад +1

      Exactly!

  • @frappalina
    @frappalina Год назад +27

    I noticed that affirmations truly help me in maintaining self regulation. Also keeping a kind inner talk is very fruitful

    • @tieshaspann1869
      @tieshaspann1869 10 месяцев назад

      Affirmations is a big part of my life and healing. Very powerful.

    • @kerrycross9022
      @kerrycross9022 6 месяцев назад +2

      I agree, not sure if you've heard of Dr Amen, he talks about removing ANTS (automatic negative thoughts) but writing and reflecting on 'what went well today' at the end of everyday. It's helped me so much!

  • @cptswann
    @cptswann 2 года назад +96

    The way you explain these concepts helps me get on board with the idea of parenting myself. I am so resentful for needing to do this. I find your straightforward, down to the nitty gritty insights very worthwhile. Thank you

    • @charoncross6696
      @charoncross6696 2 года назад +15

      “Forgiveness is giving up all hope of a better past.” 🙂

    • @notaburneraccount
      @notaburneraccount Год назад +8

      Same here. I'm doing internal family systems in therapy and it's so hard trying to "reparent" myself. I resent my parents for leaving my siblings and I. I'm trying to tap into the nurturing part of myself that I know I have - I worked as a teacher in early ed - and learning to stop feeling like I don't deserve love, compassion, and attention.

    • @gg.6633
      @gg.6633 Год назад +3

      Yes!!!! I can relate to feeling resentful for having to do this!

    • @manderly109
      @manderly109 Месяц назад

      @@gg.6633 me too :( I know my parents had their own issues, it just sucks that a lot of these problems could’ve been prevented

  • @karenearle-browne6789
    @karenearle-browne6789 2 года назад +52

    I love that she speaks so respectful and affirming about these matters. Also solution based. I love it!!

  • @nensipanchal6086
    @nensipanchal6086 2 месяца назад +2

    I have been seeing her videos since last two days , I must say the depth of content she is bringing is just amazing. The quality of content and her explanation power is remarkable.

  • @cygnelle1232
    @cygnelle1232 2 года назад +24

    I don't know if any other anxiously attached folks relate, but from my experience... I also invalidate my own emotions, even if I feel them very strongly. I don't think it's only the avoidant people who do that. It's just that my invalidation takes the form of, "I know I'm not 'supposed' to be feeling this way, but (for whatever reason) I can't tolerate the idea of repressing it. So the only alternative is to have it take over and feel even more ashamed of it." Whereas it seems for the avoidant folks, it's "I 'shouldn't' be feeling this way, so I'm not going to acknowledge it. I won't let on that I'm feeling this to anyone else, sometimes not even to myself." Yes, absolutely, we anxious/preoccupied people do have a solution deficit as opposed to an acknowledgement deficit. But I honestly think there's self-invalidation on both ends of the spectrum. We just handle that invalidation in polar opposite ways. Does that make sense? Any other anxiously attached person relate to this?

    • @ahmedmusa5103
      @ahmedmusa5103 9 месяцев назад +1

      This makes a lot of sense

    • @jasmine-ruff-puff9951
      @jasmine-ruff-puff9951 5 месяцев назад

      100% right

    • @Bellachris75
      @Bellachris75 4 месяца назад +2

      I totally relate to this. I am anxious and for me, is not an “I’m not gonna acknowledge it” or “pretend it didn’t happen”. It’s more me sitting down with the feeling like “Why are you feeling like this? There is literally no reason to, there isn’t anything that has happened nor changed.” “You need to stop right now, this isn’t going to bring you anything good” or just a desperate “stop, stop, stop” as the feeling just takes over.

  • @pitbullsmascaradogrescue8615
    @pitbullsmascaradogrescue8615 10 месяцев назад +9

    I have been in therapy off and on for 20 years. I’m just learning about attachment styles. You are the first person to explain the depth of it. I have such a better of understanding how to heal myself v

  • @MehdiElAlaoui
    @MehdiElAlaoui Год назад +16

    I believe that this is the most important video I've ever watched in my life. Thank you so much for this content. it's life changing. this video is not to be watched only once, It's to rewatch multiple times throught the healing journey. it is very dense with information that a lot of us have not learned early on. thank you again, and keep up!

  • @Dolphin369
    @Dolphin369 10 месяцев назад +6

    Thank you for this video, it was very informative. I am 41 and just starting to understand and practice this
    It is one of those pieces that connects together the rest of the jigsaw that I was building. It brings together my spiritual practice, psychotherapy practice (I am a trainee), my shadow work, inner child work, mindfulness, my values (honesty, compassion, empathy, kindness, integrity, parenting!)
    That missing piece for me was true self-care / self-attunement. To truly be with, nurture, and care for myself. I had a very insecure/ anxious attachment, and I didn’t know what I didn’t know!
    With self- attunement I am cultivating the capacity to be in presence with whatever is arising. I am no longer dissociating and abandoning myself. I am fully in my body, knowing that I can soothe and regulate myself when difficult emotions arise. I feel like I’m finally transitioning to adulthood!
    My whole nervous system has calmed, I’m out of fight/flight mode. I feel peace within for the first time in my life.

  • @royalrayel8036
    @royalrayel8036 Год назад +12

    I’m been discovering this in my personal life experience. And when I watch these videos I’m given so much terminology to express how I’m trying to pivot my relationship with myself. I feel confirmed!
    I’m Currently in the thick of
    Trying to stay consistent with this practice so that it becomes a pattern and not just a series of
    Moments.

  • @notaburneraccount
    @notaburneraccount Год назад +15

    My therapist and I are doing IFS and I'm still trying to understand it better. The term self attunement and how you explained it helped me better understand what my therapist was talking about. Thank you.

  • @tygrallure6895
    @tygrallure6895 Год назад +4

    This makes so much sense. Sometimes I just want to feel the feelings... If that makes sense. I don't want to tell myself that I shouldn't be feeling that way. Or that I have to hurry up and stop feeling that way.
    I do get now though that sometimes sitting in that is what causes me to sink further.

  • @gfd7469
    @gfd7469 2 года назад +23

    This information changes everything for me. It makes so much sense and I have begun implementing these strategies. I feel hopeful that I will once and for all know what to do about my anxious attachment feelings and I can finally see the light at the end of the tunnel. Something that I have not been able to glean after many years of therapy @ $225/hour. My mind is blown, I can't believe how well laid out this information was and that it was free on RUclips. THANK YOU SO MUCH!!!!!!

    • @joca9110
      @joca9110 2 года назад +6

      Never found a therapist that was really useful to me. Most of them are old school and don’t know this

  • @CORI177
    @CORI177 7 месяцев назад +4

    Thank you so much for posting these. I've been paying for online therapy and I know they mean the best but sometimes just trying to get to what I need to find is expensive and time-consuming. I love the way you speak and your voice cadence and I feel just very seen and calmed in a way, even if I still don't know what to do to fix myself I appreciate so much you making these beautiful videos with amazing articulation and I just really appreciate what you're putting into the world to help people through their inner mazes that no one asked for. Thank you ❤

  • @LaisCordiolli
    @LaisCordiolli 7 месяцев назад +19

    Bad parenting gives us A LOT of work to do as adults. Omg.

    • @loraborealis2551
      @loraborealis2551 5 месяцев назад

      She isn't talking about "bad" parents. She's talking about parents who were doing what they thought was best and missed the mark.

  • @mariamichael4416
    @mariamichael4416 Год назад +5

    It’s mind blowing. Where were you all my life I was struggling I still do self-regulation I didn’t even know the right term until recently. Yeah, really amazes me. I am deeply from my heart and soul grateful to you. I am so happy to find your channel I want so many therapies and not find anybody could help me instead, they were telling me I was depressed that they put me in depression medication, here you are telling me exactly what I need to change my life. I am 50 years old woman. I hope it’s not too late for me. My heart is shattered that I raise to kids without knowing what I was doing, basically blind leading the blind, God have mercy on me, I just don’t know thank you thank you. You are awesome.💕💕🌷

  • @tcggggg
    @tcggggg 7 месяцев назад +1

    This is all so new to me, im used to living in a low grade depression 24/7 and never cared to modulate or try to live depression free. Now when I feel an uncomfortable feeling I try to investigate the why and its been working well so far 💯 with tangible consequences such as being able to continue doing my work instead of pausing and scrolling etc. thank you for all you do fr

  • @majastuni7972
    @majastuni7972 2 года назад +29

    The whole video was an aha-moment to me! I find it so specifically explained and well illustrated. Now I finally know how it looks like when caring for myself through various emotions. No one has told or showed me this before. My therapist expected me to do it, but how could I know what it looks like if I had never seen it before conciously.
    Thank you a lot for your video!

  • @shannonjones5943
    @shannonjones5943 11 месяцев назад +2

    just walking in to my house today, the sun was shining so brightly and I instantly thought - that's about at the top of my list of things that will make me feel better!🌄

  • @dubsax1668
    @dubsax1668 4 месяца назад +1

    SO GRATEFUL for you Heidi. The understanding you share is giving me hope.
    And I really struggle with hopelessness. I wake up overwhelmed by hopeless every morning.
    I need all the help I can get. So, again thank you.

    • @jyamaloha2322
      @jyamaloha2322 2 месяца назад

      I hear and relate. You’re not alone and the fact that you’re seeking understanding through these vids is self-attuned and a big step towards healing. ❤

  • @UnicornUniverse333
    @UnicornUniverse333 2 года назад +16

    As a disabled audhd the self parenting for years I've done, I'm 38, I still feel psychologically dilapidated. I'm also recovering from a terrible illness that was never properly diagnosed, 5+ years now. Been healing by laying on acupressure mats for years now. Still recovering. This information should have been taught to us from childhood. When I was still young and unburdened. I hope I can calm down enough to not still be so overwhelmed to implement everything

    • @eilysian_
      @eilysian_ Год назад +3

      I’m proud of you & the work you’re doing is inspiring to others reading like me. Hope you’re having a good day and happy new year 🤍

    • @TheMakeupMavenn
      @TheMakeupMavenn Год назад +1

      Sending you courage, and will
      Power to achieve whatever you need to feel empowered

  • @AmberDrysdale
    @AmberDrysdale 2 года назад +13

    I pendulum between anxious and avoidant. I always thought I was was secure type since I didn’t fully connect to either and had a good sense of feeling what my emotion is and often can create and take steps to guide myself to a more balanced place or am able to address the causation head on and implement solutions to move me through different feeling states until I’ve successfully changed my trajectory forward. Both acknowledge my emotion, identify then take action in a desired direction.
    My pendulum extremes are getting very stuck in emotion, trapped, no one is coming to my aid or even notices to the opposite extreme where I push it down, suck it up, any emotion is overreacting and barrel through disregarding how i feel internally to externally meet a goal.
    However the way you describe it allows me to take notice of when I’m not in Attunement with myself. Take pause. Check in with my body and strategize accordingly without arbitrarily choosing a method (usually to meet other peoples needs or expectations). I think this will help me show up healthier in response to my feelings and needs and to individualize my actions by listening to what I truly need in the moment. And understand if it’s something I can change in my environment vs doing the internal work.
    Great job explaining this in a practical way.

  • @sarahkleykamp9656
    @sarahkleykamp9656 2 года назад +15

    I’d never heard of any of this but am in the process of leaving an abusive relationship and have been going down a rabbit hole in searching to understand how I let myself fall into such a damaging life. This video is interesting because as I listened I realized that this is exactly what I did during my adolescent years- just not with an app.

    • @lisaslifestyle
      @lisaslifestyle 2 года назад +1

      I hope you are in a better place now. You deserve to be treated with respect.

  • @ruthwestmoreland6749
    @ruthwestmoreland6749 2 года назад +14

    I had extremely bad back pain for years. Through luck, I discovered that I wasn’t dealing with my friend’s murder. After that, my back pain vanished. Now, when I have that pain, I sit and really try to see what’s going on in my life. Almost always, I’m not dealing with something. (I’m extremely avoidant.)

    • @naomia472
      @naomia472 2 года назад +4

      Yes! As emotional and mental trauma are healed and or become conscious it affects our physical health. It’s crazy how the mind and body are connected. That’s why it’s important to become mentally and emotionally healthy. God bless ❤️😊

  • @Outdoorsy511
    @Outdoorsy511 Год назад +3

    It's ok to acknowledge that feelings, don't stay in it.
    I am anxiously attached, so I resonates with what you are saying. Thank you for giving me the tool to get to the secure part for self soothing and self regulation.

  • @tebosefeane1946
    @tebosefeane1946 2 месяца назад +1

    I loved the video.and also the point you made about how you can acknowledge your emotions and decide to pack them to get back to them later so you can get stuff done. I think that's the part that usually has me feeling like I can't function so giving myself the permission to attend to my needs later is beautiful.thank you

  • @haikuoflife
    @haikuoflife Год назад +4

    Thank you for making these videos available to the public. It helps me understand why I always push away/ignore any negative feelings I have and am learning how to understand how I'm feeling a little more.

  • @nessycyrodiil
    @nessycyrodiil 8 месяцев назад

    Heidi, I started crying halfway through the video. But it was growing pain, finally manifesting itself into the realization of what I'm doing and what I actually need to do. I cannot thank you enough. I'm living a better life thanks to your videos and will continue to learn and expand my skills and knowledge on this, and to, finally, love myself truly.

  • @ultravioletpisces3666
    @ultravioletpisces3666 7 месяцев назад +1

    *Emotions arise in the body before they arise in the conscious mind* it makes me so glad to hear this because I’m so tired of the idea that “our feelings come from out thoughts,” when our feelings actually come first. Correctly identifying an emotion is not thinking it into being!!!

  • @Angel_Chi
    @Angel_Chi Год назад +4

    Watching this again has helped me realise how far I’ve come, thank you for making this help available. Was able to pick up on extra things I had missed the first time such as defining what I’m actually feeling and allowing it and also noticing when the sadness or whatever is no longer helpful and focusing on the solution. Thank you ❤

  • @Wisdomforthehour
    @Wisdomforthehour 11 месяцев назад +1

    I'm working on this now. It's really important and I'm starting to see more grounding in myself. It's very helpful. I don't think people realize how important this is.

  • @anikalee9012
    @anikalee9012 Год назад +2

    My journey in learning emotional regulation is not easy. I haven't learned properly from any book. Only use my little knowledge and inner guidance. Anyway I finally come to have ability to regulate my emotions well. I healed from past trauma. Not just phycology I learn many knowledge ftom Buddhism Law of Attraction Neuroscience and Esther Hicks to have wisdom and tools to be the best parents gor myself.
    Thanks you so much for sharing this I learned a lot from you.

  • @Eternalspring22
    @Eternalspring22 11 месяцев назад +1

    This is very much like NVC teaching. Focusing on your feelings to identify your needs and developing a strategy of satisfying those needs. The feelings need to be recognized or the associated emotions will not allow clear thinking. In a way that's very British. Understanding the mechanics helps us to see various cultural references as helpful in that helpful context. Not understanding the dynamics as Heidi explains them, leads to criticism of every misunderstood tradition. Let me meditate on that for a bit. Thanks you!! I love the clarity of the language used in this explanation.

  • @GlendonGross
    @GlendonGross Месяц назад

    This is such a helpful video. I read "Descartes Error" and learned that many of my emotions are due to the background state of my body. You reminded me of the need to check in with my feelings and not to minimize them if they aren't logical, because they don't have to be. I believe the strategies you discuss in this video are going to help me in the future, to acknowledge my feelings and give myself time to process them without beating myself up about it. Thank you!

  • @KE-xj9vm
    @KE-xj9vm 10 месяцев назад +1

    I had quite an unstable upbringing (parents divorced when I was 5. I had 6 step dads. Moved countries and lived in 17 houses by age of 26) and was fine with it or so I thought. I was pragmatic and confident and capable. Cue in having a couple of kids in my mid 30s and it all caught up with me. I struggle with overwhelm and deregulation, firstly was misdiagnosed with anxiety that turned out to be adhd, symptoms of which I learned to manage well enough but becoming a parent and the hormone changes exacerbated it all so bad that I became dysfunctional and burnt out. Have been doing all sorts of therapy for 3-4 years now, including trauma informed compassionate enquiry and I still struggle with emotional regulation on a daily basis. I overreact and then sob guilt ridden that I’m such a horrible person taking out my frustrations on the people that I love the most.
    Now I realise how true it is, you can’t bottle things up and move on in life, it does get too much at some point.
    I’m so lucky to have a stable and (mostly) understanding husband that came from a great family, and my kids are so so good. And yet I still lose my sh*t.
    Anyway just wanted to say this video really resonated with me and I’ll do the practices recommended as it feels like a piece of the puzzle that I’m working through right now

  • @DS-nh1nx
    @DS-nh1nx Год назад +4

    Heidy, your advice makes me feel more hopeful for the future and more confident in my ability to make the most of my life. You have an amazing talent! I’m so glad I found your videos!

  • @riamendoza4408
    @riamendoza4408 2 года назад +14

    Ive got so much to say but first of all, thank you Heidi for being here to share these concepts that improve our self-care.
    As someone whove been insecurely attached at some point in my life, whove been trying the best to consistently show up as securely attached, i find this very very helpful. I have been taking care of myself as a mother and child but I dont name the feelings that i feel. Id try my best to continously be attuned to myself. Thanks.
    More contents and viewers to come, heidi! Your contents should reach everyone.

  • @jenniferzuiff8517
    @jenniferzuiff8517 Год назад +4

    One of the BEST videos on this topic and the attachment styles I’ve ever seen. You’re incredible at explaining and breaking all of this down. I can relate to ALL of what you talked about. Thank you 🙏

  • @Yourlovebugboo
    @Yourlovebugboo Год назад +1

    I was fumbling around this morning feeling scattered and accidentally clicked on this while listening to another video. I took it as the universe telling me to slow down and meditate. I didn’t know I needed this but this was exactly what I needed . So perfect , thank you! I feel amazing and clear

  • @keddy5627
    @keddy5627 Год назад +4

    Thank you, Heidi! Your channel came up on my feed at an uncannily critical point in the struggle to move beyond a set of feelings and behaviors that have been with me all of my adulthood. 🙏🏽

  • @observer7418
    @observer7418 7 месяцев назад

    Brilliant. That makes a lot of sense. It's like accidentally being taught to disconnect with the self rather than be aware of the self. And to be ashamed of the self at that.

  • @kholo_thelabel
    @kholo_thelabel Год назад +3

    This is one of the BEST videos I’ve seen on understanding oneself in relation to how you were parented. Thank you so much, I really needed this to understand my own nature (anxious with overflowing emotions). 🙏🏽

  • @bcalhoun100
    @bcalhoun100 7 месяцев назад

    This was SUPER helpful. The part that stood out to me the most was quickly mentioned and it’s when we make emotional decisions and end up in loops, we tend to try and think our way out of it when we actually need to act. That’s when a wise friend comes in handy and I need more of those.

  • @FairMaidenOfPeace
    @FairMaidenOfPeace 6 месяцев назад +2

    You are a BRILLIANT guide. THANK YOU.

  • @laurenkeane3168
    @laurenkeane3168 5 месяцев назад

    “Those who lean a little more anxious, might assume there is nothing they can do to change their feelings so once a feeling is happening they might think that the only option they have is to let it run its natural course and they might almost feel like they’re at the mercy of their emotions when they come up.”
    As an anxious preoccupied, I feel so seen right now. That’s exactly how it feels.

  • @MR-pg6ru
    @MR-pg6ru Год назад +2

    I love you Heidi! You are amazing ❤ I am an relationship coach specializing in attachment theory and you are top notch. I’ve learned even more from you and man are you freakin brilliant! Thank you! ❤

  • @jessicalinger7689
    @jessicalinger7689 11 месяцев назад +1

    I think I can think or feel my way out of but actually I need to act my way out of.... Thank you for sharing your wisdom! You are helping me so much! I am anxious and parenting an emotional three year old and trying not to get triggered constantly by his outbursts.

  • @John1960Video
    @John1960Video Год назад +1

    Thank you! At 73 years old, it’s never too late!

  • @lucyshirisia2051
    @lucyshirisia2051 Год назад +5

    Heidi, you are amazing!!! Keep doing what you do best, teaching us how to heal ❤

  • @123Polopen321
    @123Polopen321 6 месяцев назад +1

    I'd love to hear more about the compartmentalization you were talking about to have time to both feel your feelings and get tasks done. Schoolwork was miserable for me in college, but I felt the need to push my feelings down and continue to work anyway. I think it's interesting when the tasks that you're doing, no matter how beneficial they could be in the long run, could also be the trigger or source of the uncomfortable feelings coming up. It's difficult for me to pull those two things apart from each other and work on both, it gets me so overwhelmed!

  • @talorix
    @talorix 2 года назад +6

    I am loving these series. Learning these concepts now that my body budget is finally ready to accept it (as an anxiously attached person, I truncate it a lot), it is so useful and nurturing.
    Thanks Heidi ✨

  • @wittynamegohere
    @wittynamegohere 3 месяца назад

    Thank you for validating me and what's going on with me internally. This information is incredibly helpful for me.

  • @seanrobertson1937
    @seanrobertson1937 11 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you so much for taking to time to create these videos on your channel. I've actually recently found your channel as of like a week ago and I've learned alot about myself and ways I handle emotion and attachment. You explain with such great detail too and are very relatable. Thanks again Heidi!

  • @reneemontalvo6538
    @reneemontalvo6538 Год назад +1

    This is the most helpful video I've seen on this subject. It takes many of the ideas and condenses it all into one place. I also appreciate your sharing your own personal struggles, helps to normalize these things for me. Thank you!

  • @gabrielle7540
    @gabrielle7540 25 дней назад

    15:33 oh that’s gold. Cause I really will dwell mentally while simultaneously knowing nothing is wrong in the moment and my body actually feels fine

  • @ChristineNavarroTV
    @ChristineNavarroTV 2 года назад +5

    This was a very well-articulated video. Thank you for covering all the angles you did. That is what we need - clear articulations of what we are experiencing inside. Often, we can be left with a sense of, “I knew that” (to some degree), but we weren’t able to as concisely translate our internal process into concise thoughts…for complete exposure and shedding of light onto something that once was in the shadows, no longer renders any power to that which wasn’t fully visible prior. Once something is fully understood, it can be dismantled, and we become more powerful and knowledgeable of it, than it was over you, very literally speaking…like a puzzle or Rubik’s Cube that once was a huge challenge to solve, becomes effortless to resolve once you learn the patterns and get the keys, and what happens in relationships when someone is extremely mysterious to us that pulls is in emotionally, then the mystery dissipates once you’ve really gotten to know them (FYI - the “magic” behind celebrities…don’t get sucked into the hype). “Magic” no longer is magic once it’s become normalized (such as smart phones, or any other previously inconceivable technology). It’s our unquenchable thirst for attaining more, more of the unknown, and what we are not, yet - it’s how we’re built, the evolutionary process built right into us to guarantee the perpetuation of life.
    One thing though, to be said about parents mirroring their baby - mirroring doesn’t necessarily have to come in the form of facial mirroring, or doesn’t necessarily have to be present all the time. It can be in the form of vocal tone a parent echoes. And if a baby has cried a number of times, and the parent is used to it, they may not mirror the baby at all, and just be a pure space holder for their baby to experience and let go of those emotional states, holding a smile while remaining in full empathy with the child. Emotions don’t always need to be articulated, as a child develops their own understanding of emotions, and begin to learn and interpret emotions on their own.
    Also, these techniques are as valuable to practice while in the midst of not only experiencing negative emotions, but positively-charged emotions triggered by external sources, such as when we derive highs from external approval, and build (internal chemical) dependencies on these external stimuli. That’s often the other end of the spectrum we’re kind of blinded to. That’s the magic behind marketing after all, to trigger insecurities and to provide products to feed our desires for external approval and external markers of “success”, to feel we’re somehow balancing those feelings of insecurity, when what we really need to do is come back to center, in balance toward neutrality…not endlessly teeter between the polar extremes. And it’s not about “erasing” your sense of self, but re-examining what has shaped your sense of self thus far. It’s not about emulating a Buddhist monk, but to find your own center.
    Thinking out loud while I write - hopefully this can be of help to some.

    • @Polina-hn7hu
      @Polina-hn7hu Год назад +1

      U should get ur own channel! Thank u for much needed insights..😊

    • @ChristineNavarroTV
      @ChristineNavarroTV Год назад

      @@Polina-hn7hu Thank you. I’m glad it was helpful to you. 🙏🏽

  • @dlg2411
    @dlg2411 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you, Heidi. You've made the issue so clear and helpful. I'm going to watch this video a few more times. It doesn't really matter if I can figure out whether I'm anxious or avoidant because healthy works on balancing both sides.

  • @xannaz9226
    @xannaz9226 2 года назад +1

    Love the example of how insecure attached and avoid attached folks respond to emotions.

  • @weifongcheng3705
    @weifongcheng3705 Год назад +68

    🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
    00:13 🧘‍♂️ Self-regulation is about managing emotions appropriately in different contexts, not suppressing them.
    01:23 🧠 True self-care involves understanding your needs and consistently meeting them, akin to how a parent cares for a child.
    03:15 🤝 Attunement is tuning into someone's emotional state and responding empathetically, much like how a parent responds to a child's needs.
    04:52 💔 Unattuned parenting in childhood can lead to confusion about one's emotions and difficulty attuning to oneself as an adult.
    06:16 🔄 Avoidant individuals tend to invalidate their feelings, while anxious individuals might feel powerless against their emotions.
    08:37 🤝 Emotional self-attunement involves accurately recognizing and naming emotions as they arise, leading to better understanding.
    10:30 🧘‍♀️ Emotional self-attunement doesn't mean always acting on feelings but acknowledging and logging them for later reflection.
    12:20 🔄 Balance between acknowledging and acting on emotions helps avoid both getting lost in them and suppressing them.
    13:58 🤖 Developing emotional self-regulation requires treating oneself as a caring and attuned parent, offering solutions to emotional states.
    15:52 🔄 Emotional self-regulation through self-attunement takes time, involves skill-building, and aids in creating a secure internal foundation.
    Made with HARPA AI

    • @kamkamilka
      @kamkamilka Год назад +4

      I found myself making notes during this video for the first time in my all-time-youtube-experience. After that I went to comments below and found your navigation keys. They helped ME A LOT to go deeper and understand the information. THANK YOU VERY MUCH!!!

  • @century66s
    @century66s 6 месяцев назад

    the body keeps the score. Now i know what to use in the evaluation of my stages of life. Thank you Ms. Priebe.

  • @Cheshireagusta
    @Cheshireagusta 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you Heidi Priebe. This is such an important piece. I needed to hear this. Love all your vids. Yep one year later your vids are still out here doing a lot of heavy lifting. Thank you again. You pack every vid with information and you present so clearly and in such an engaging yet matter of fact voice! You make a difference.

  • @onepetalleft
    @onepetalleft 9 дней назад

    Wow. This made so many things click that I think my therapist has been trying to communicate to me for months. Like up until now, I haven't understood that balance Heidi described towards the end - that securely attached folks do recognize and accept their feelings, but that they recognize when it's no longer a productive processing (which, how long does that skill take to develop, I wonder), and then they take steps to ACT their way out of it rather than think, feel, or process their way out of it. But then they still plan to check in with the feeling later.
    This feels super logical and doable to me, and I wonder why no one ever explained it to me like this before.

  • @hexoson
    @hexoson 3 месяца назад +1

    I know this video is a little old, but it rings true for me. I recently discovered I have a lot of signs of being an anxious attacher. I didn't know since I've never dated before (I'm a 22-year-old guy) or had any type of sexual activity, so I never really had the opportunity to expose myself to any triggers. I was probably an avoidant attacher throughout my childhood, but now that I've matured a bit and feel more in-tune with other's, and my own, emotions, I tend to overshare my feelings since I don't know what a real relationship, platonic or romantic, really looks like. I'm thinking about speaking to a therapist to try to uncover the specifics of what led me to this point. This is something that I've only just realized the past few months and it's been really hard coping with the intense emotions and stimulus my body feels during my panic attacks. I don't feel really that anxious when someone tells me their problems and feelings, I honestly feel pretty good about being understanding and attuned to other's emotions. It's only when I try to share MY feelings that my brain just goes haywire lol. I'm working on trying to stay present in the moment during those episodes though, focusing on getting important stuff done, then making a plan-of-attack after I've had time to decompress so I don't make any stupid decisions.
    The best tip I have for those with anxious attachment issues is to stay grounded. Don't let your emotions control your actions, regardless of how strong they are. Don't disregard them obviously, but really try to distract yourself so you can stay present in the moment and give your brain and body the time and space it needs to recover. Only once you're in a stable position should you try to decide how you will act on those emotions.

  • @MarkLeach-jb6bn
    @MarkLeach-jb6bn 3 месяца назад

    Wow, just wow. So concise and clearly explained. I'm really excited by the tools that you have provided to begin navigating out my anxious self. I'm in a relationship with a fearfully avoidant (it seems like it anyway), so I am struggling. I lost myself and have become less secure than before the relationship. If I dont heal myself, then I won't be much good for any relationship, romantic, my children or with myself. Thank you.

  • @Irmilivi
    @Irmilivi Год назад +1

    All the statements in this video were useful without being repetitive, wow, thanks so much!!!

  • @Hallelujur
    @Hallelujur 2 года назад +6

    This was so powerful for me. Thank you, Heidi! Especially this part 11:00-11:55 is going to be so helpful for me and my family. 🥰

  • @lilyneva
    @lilyneva Год назад +10

    Dear Heidi,
    how are you doing? It’s been a minute. I hope you are doing so well. I wanted to let you know I am thinking about you and that I am sharing your videos in the DBT treatment program I am participating in. They are invaluable.
    Yesterday I was able to explain something to someone and I can’t describe how it felt to me when in his eyes I could see that he understood something that before he hadn’t. His relief and hopefulness were so moving. I get emotional every time I think about it. I don’t think I have ever been able to help someone like that before, and I was able to because you are making these videos and inspiring me more than I can say.
    Your gift of being able to clarify, explain, synthesize, etc. these complex topics is something invaluable that I am so happy you are willing to share. Learning from these videos and ‘having you’ in my life is, again, invaluable.
    Thank you.

    • @freshliving4199
      @freshliving4199 11 месяцев назад

      Broken cannot fix broken.
      Both you and Heidi are basing your advice/comments on the wrong foundation.
      Emotions.
      Anything built on emotions will only lead you deeper into despair.
      The day that you come out of this hell hole is the day that you transcend emotions.
      Basically day 1 in your life of true freedom.

  • @lellymapommscymbillnos336
    @lellymapommscymbillnos336 5 месяцев назад +1

    My childhood experience of attunement is different to the ones outlined here, so I'm not sure which direction to move forward.
    My primary caregiver was very *sensitive* to my emotions, but reacted to them in an inconsistent way: sometimes I was supported, sometimes she demanded that I stop feeling an emotion (because it was causing her discomfort). If I did not meet those demands, I was criticised, rejected, mocked, and/or verbally/physically abused. Of course, it's impossible to just "stop feeling" an emotion, and choosing not to express the emotion was not even safe as my caregiver was so sensitive that she would sniff it out like a hunting dog. So my only option was to actively *conceal* my emotions: hiding them, lying about them, deliberately expressing a different emotion instead to "throw her off the scent", etc.
    As an adult, now that I've healed some of my repression and have actual access to my emotions every day (yay 🎉), I frequently struggle with a sense of terror after recognising a negative emotion in myself, and get the urge to conceal it in order to protect myself. This happens even when I am alone.
    My automatic response to this terror is to keep myself in a numbed-out, dissociated, rigidly un-expressive state. Deep breathing and embodiment exercises can bring me out of this, but I then embody the terror: my body involuntarily "spasms" and twitches around, and I make loud agonised/terrified sounds. Dealing with this and caring for myself afterwards takes a lot of energy and time, and I can only do it while I am completely alone and in a private space, so it's not a suitable solution a lot of the time.
    I essentially have a massive fear of my emotions being recognised, which is an essential part of attunement...any ideas as to how to learn self-attunement while navigating this? 😅

  • @violaceousorchid
    @violaceousorchid Год назад +2

    I think I used to be more avoidant and after somatic trauma release therapy became anxious. I think there were missing pieces for me to heal from. Thank you so much for making this easily digestible and tangible 💕

    • @ultravioletpisces3666
      @ultravioletpisces3666 7 месяцев назад

      You solved step one (identify) and now you’re on step 2 (sooth)

  • @LXSeaV
    @LXSeaV 10 месяцев назад

    The free therapy I need! Thank you. I'm tired of watching videos about what's wrong with everyone else ;). Time to dig down a bit on myself. I've paid for therapy but stopped because you hit a limit with some therapists because you know you're not working on whatever the real issue is. I feel like this is an issue for me. It's frustrating how long it takes me to even know how I really feel. I feel like it can take me days to get real about what's really going on. Until then there's this part of me that tells me everything is fine. Then I hit a wall where it becomes super obvious I'm not fine and then I have to come to terms with it. I at least know how to do that, but I wish I could get there faster.

  • @anne8nOtrn
    @anne8nOtrn Год назад +1

    my aha moment is about the fact that I try to avoid and supress my negative feelings because I believe that I have to compromise as I tell myself that there is no alternative.
    The alternative would be for me to say that I do not like the situation I am in (college,"friends", family) and that I will search for a way to be happy in that place . If this is not possible, I will have to find the courage and leave.
    The courage to leave would get me alone and lonely, but it is better to be alone than to be supressing your real self in the sake of others expectations.

  • @_so_ya_
    @_so_ya_ 2 года назад +1

    I love the easy to digest way you explain something I can overcomplicate.
    I know I had loving parents, who did their best, and I'm learning that I can learn attunement as an adult. My self-parenting style is inspired by my actual parents, which has been quite frustrating, yet after watching this video, I feel hopeful that I will become more confident and understanding with myself as I continue this process. Thank you!

  • @Mukundwa
    @Mukundwa 11 месяцев назад

    Absolutely balling from the realisations that I didn't receive atunement or co regulation from my mother. Feeling capable of giving this to myself though. Thanks so much for this transformative video

  • @droemelt
    @droemelt Год назад +1

    I believe I suffer from insecure, anxious attachment issues, so I’ve been trying to learn more about it. I sometimes view Everything as black or white, and can make rather extreme judgments rather quickly. This video has me questioning how my neglect of sunshine, exercise diet and bedtime habits might trigger this type of thinking, because there are other times, where I am able to pause and work in the gray space. Throughout my life I’ve struggled with self-worth issues in spite of a fair amount of career success. You scored big points with me when I noticed the book SIX PILLARS OF SELF-ESTEEM on your bookshelf, one of my go to Bibles when I need to re-calibrate and recognize where I might’ve drifted off course. it is crazy how our childhood experiences can have such a long term influence upon our lives, even decades after they occur…thk you

  • @carolina7902
    @carolina7902 2 года назад +4

    I didn’t even know about attunement! I appreciate this video so much! I always deflect as a solution instead of integrating lol

  • @TopShootX14
    @TopShootX14 7 месяцев назад

    You're a god sent. Thank you so much for making these videos and our lives better.

  • @stevemiller8895
    @stevemiller8895 2 года назад +1

    If I'm feeling sad I know it is my wounded inner child who has been triggered by a circumstance and it is an opportunity for me to engage and acknowledge my wounded inner child's issue and then I as a parent to my inner child express love and acceptance and reassurance and value to my woundedness as I am experiencing the emotions and feelings and every time I am in tears fully connected telling my wounded inner child that I understand and everything is going to be okay and when I say these things knowing that I have acknowledged and accepted and given value and esteem to my woundedness it is as if my woundedness is suddenly healed and I am back to normal completely self-regulated and ready to move on with my day within a few minutes. Because the most important thing to me in my life is my relationship with God in Christ for Jesus said I and the father are one and that scripture means so much to me in my relationship with myself as I place such a great importance as a father to my inner child and by my inner child understanding this , Whenever there is a problem I put everything down and I deal with it immediately that expresses to my inner child the value that I put upon him and there by I walk this Earth a little more confidently knowing that I value my self more than any other and now that comes out in my actions in how I treat others as I treat myself.

  • @commecicommeca9944
    @commecicommeca9944 11 месяцев назад +2

    4:55 the observing self vs. the experiing self
    5:29 avoidant attachment styles bias (taking own feelings not serious enough, disconnected from emotions) vs anxious attachment style bias (taking feelings "too" serious, fell like they are at the mercy of their feelings)

    • @commecicommeca9944
      @commecicommeca9944 11 месяцев назад +1

      7:48 anxious attachment style bias in detail

    • @commecicommeca9944
      @commecicommeca9944 11 месяцев назад +1

      10:42 loving, caring, attuned adult

    • @commecicommeca9944
      @commecicommeca9944 11 месяцев назад +1

      10:42 not getting lost in our stories

    • @commecicommeca9944
      @commecicommeca9944 11 месяцев назад +1

      10:42 checking with the body foremost - not the mind

    • @commecicommeca9944
      @commecicommeca9944 10 месяцев назад +1

      7:48 avoidant: missing the attunement piece.
      Anxious: missing the solution piece

  • @alexandershestakov2293
    @alexandershestakov2293 2 года назад +5

    Heidi, thank you so much!
    I'm new here and just realized that I'm an ENFP. Your videos are incredibly helpful! Thank you for the work you do!

  • @cup_o_TMarie
    @cup_o_TMarie Год назад +1

    THANK YOU for all of this & especially the Dailyo suggestion 👏👏👏
    I’ve tried several mood/journal apps & this is by FAR my favorite🤩