Esther Adams, Psy.D
Strides To Solutions
Your Nervous System Doesn't Have an Off Switch—It Has Transitional Blends
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Your Nervous System Doesn't Have an Off Switch—It Has Transitional Blends

The neuroscience of delayed collapse—and the interventions that actually shorten recovery

The transition from sympathetic survival to parasympathetic collapse isn’t a single threshold—it’s a dynamic integration of threat imminence, internal arousal, and contextual cues processed by your amygdala, PAG, and hypothalamus. This episode synthesizes cutting-edge research on how the nervous system determines when to let go, why some people snap from high-functioning to shutdown while others don’t (hint: vagal tone and ego-resiliency), and what actually happens in your dorsal vagal complex in the hours after threat removal. We’ll cover the cognitive mismatch between returning motivation and delayed executive capacity, the role of relational vs. environmental safety cues, and whether communal relief events synchronize autonomic collapse across populations. Plus: the specific interventions (slow-paced breathing, co-regulation, trauma-informed movement) proven to accelerate recovery.

To read the blog associated with this podcast: https://www.estheradams.com/post/the-day-the-hostages-returned-my-body-let-go-understanding-post-threat-recovery

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