Feel Better, Live More with Dr Rangan Chatterjee - The Hidden Reason You Can't Stop Overthinking, People-Pleasing And Overworking with Dr Nicole LePera #664
Episode Date: June 9, 2026Why do we sometimes react in ways we don’t mean to? Why does criticism land so heavily when others can brush it off? And why, even when life looks good from the outside, do we feel stuck on the insi...de? This week’s guest offers a new perspective on all this – and an optimistic way forward. With nearly 10 million followers on Instagram as The Holistic Psychologist, Dr Nicole LePera has helped countless people see their lifelong patterns through a helpful new lens. She joins me to discuss her fantastic book, Reparenting the Inner Child: The New Science of Our Oldest Wounds and How to Heal Them. At the heart of our conversation is an important idea: we don’t see the world as it is, we see it through the state of our nervous system. Nicole highlights the signs that yours may be calling the shots, such as restlessness, numbness, disproportionate reactions and the constant need to be busy. And she explains how those patterns trace back to a part of us shaped long before we had the language for it: our inner child. We explore how childhood adaptations follow us into adulthood, often without us realising, shaping our relationships, our careers, our sensitivity to criticism, and our self-worth. Nicole walks us through some of the parent archetypes from her book. And we discuss the universal choice every child makes between authenticity and attachment (and what this costs us later). Importantly, this is never about blaming, parent or child – acceptance of the past (rather than approval or forgiveness) is how we begin to change. You’ll be fascinated to hear Nicole explain how trauma from generations before us may still be wired into our bodies, but we can break the cycle. We also discuss why conflict in relationships can be healthy, and why healing is a two-step process: becoming aware, and then making different choices. The best part? You’ll come away from this conversation with the tools for change. Nicole talks us through her practical strategies, including the conscious check-in, the three body anchors, bilateral stimulation, and getting to know yourself through simple, mindful moments. Whether you've spent years exploring attachment and inner-child work, or this is your first therapy session, I know you’ll find something here that stays with you. As Nicole says, healing isn’t about reaching an end point. It’s an ongoing process, available to all of us at any moment that we choose to join in. The Thrive Tour: Transform Your Health and Happiness, a live show: Book Your Tickets https://drchatterjee.com/live Thanks to our sponsors: https://dohealth.co/livemore https://thesleepreset.com/podcast https://hellolingo.com/livemore https://airbnb.co.uk/host Show notes https://drchatterjee.com/664 DISCLAIMER: The content in the podcast and on this webpage is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your doctor or qualified healthcare provider. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have heard on the podcast or on my website.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Before we get into this week's episode, I am really excited to share that I am bringing my
Thrive Tour, Transform Your Health and Happiness, to Canada and Europe this September and November.
It's a live, interactive, uplifting show that over 20,000 people came to last year across the UK and
Australia. I'll be sharing powerful stories, life-changing insights, and simple tools that will inspire you to feel,
better, think clearer, and live with more intention and joy. To get your tickets right now and see
all of the dates and venues, go to Dr.chatterjee.com forward slash live. I really hope that you can
join me. When we are triggered and having that disproportionate response, whether it's the outward
one where we're screaming and yelling and doing things we don't mean, or the inward one where we're
disconnecting, kind of shutting down, going numb, all of that is kind of indicative of this inner child
that's living in our body.
But the moment that an insight is gained and awareness is gained,
it is the moment that change has already begun.
Hey guys, how you doing?
I hope you having a good week so far.
My name is Dr. Rongan Chatterjee,
and this is my podcast, Feel Better, Live More.
Have you ever found yourself reacting in a way that surprises you,
snapping at someone you love or taking criticism extra heart,
Or maybe you can't shake a sense that something's off,
even when life looks fine on paper.
Well, today's conversation is about what's really happening
and what we can do about it.
You'll be pleased to hear that I'm welcoming back a very popular guest,
the clinical psychologist, Dr. Nicole LaPera.
Nicole is known to millions online as the holistic psychologist,
and she's with me to talk about her brand new book,
reparenting the inner child, the new science of our oldest wounds, and how to heal them.
We begin when Nicole's whole framework starts with the nervous system.
She explains the signs that yours might be out of balance, that feeling of being stuck,
the restlessness, the disproportionate reactions, and that constant busyness,
we fool ourselves as productivity.
From there, we go deep into the concept of
the inner child, the part of us shaped in early childhood that's still the root of our adult
feelings and behaviours, even though we might not know it.
What I really appreciate about Nicole's approach is that it's never about blame.
We talk about how even well-intentioned parents leave us with adaptations we carry into childhood.
She explains the different parental archetypes from her book,
the surprising role of epigenetics or inherited trauma,
and how healing comes down to two steps,
becoming aware and then making different choices.
This is a profoundly useful episode
that I'm certain will shift your thinking
even before you finish listening.
As Nicole puts it,
the moment awareness arrives
is the moment change has already begun.
It's really clear to me, Nicole,
that we,
see the world through the state of our nervous systems, what would you say the common signs are
that might indicate someone has a nervous system that is perhaps a little bit out of balance?
I think the first sign that really inspired this whole journey into holistic focus,
obviously grounded in the nervous system, is a kind of feeling of stuckness. No matter kind of
how I'm thinking differently, I can't seem to change those reactions in real time. And I think
beneath the surface when we begin to drop into our bodies, it's a sense of restlessness and agitation,
I think for a lot of us where we feel on edge, we feel uncomfortable in our own skin.
I think many others kind of don't even feel connected to their bodies at all.
They have a sense of numbness or a lack of awareness that they're even living in a body on
the day today.
But I think those are kind of the major science because our nervous system is determining how
grounded we feel, how aware we are of our surroundings, our ability to think clearly
and logically and responsibly about life.
And again, when we're kind of driven by dysregulation,
we lose access to all of that.
Yeah.
I think a lot of the time it also shows up in our relationships, doesn't it?
Often with those really personal and intimate relationships
where we might blow up, you know, get angry, get annoyed,
become overly sensitive to criticism.
All these things also indicate a dysregulated nervous system, don't they?
Yeah, I think the more.
that we are kind of in relationship with others, but the relationship with ourselves include it,
those are, I think, the moments where we kind of notice not only the dysregulation, what I speak of
is the inner child, those moments of the disproportionate reactions where we're saying and doing
things that we don't mean. Again, our intention is to show up as a caring connected individual,
yet we're blowing up or shutting down. And again, I even think it's beyond those moments of
reactivity. I think a lot of us have adapted it. We become an identity. We play a role.
we kind of function in a certain way within our relationships, whether we become the caregiver to
others, the appeaser, and I believe all of that is kind of grounded in these dysregulated moments
beginning in childhood where those were the only way that we have learned to adapt because that was
all that the circumstances allowed at one time, yet our body hasn't updated. We're in a different
context or perhaps in different relationships yet we're still driven to see, believe, and repeat
the same patterns.
For someone who's never come across the term in a child before, or perhaps someone has no
awareness that their childhood experiences might be impacting their adult behaviors and their
adult reactions, how do you get this message across to them if they need convincing?
Yeah, so our inner child is a part of us that was formed in childhood.
that we retain, right? It's what learned safety. It's what learned connection. It's what learned
how to deal with unpredictability, conflict, disconnection, unmet needs. And I think there's a lot of us,
especially well into adulthood, where we either don't want to look back. It feels like it was so far
ago. We don't imagine it's still creating any impact in our daily life. Or if you're like me,
I have very little ability to recall what happened. I can't tell the story necessarily of what was
happening or not happening in my home yet I'm living those reactions. And those are the moments that we
were both kind of just talking about, the kind of disproportionate reactions, the identities that just
don't feel like us, our inability to change, even if we set the intention to do so. All of that is
kind of indicative of this inner child that's living in our body, the sense of urgency, the overwhelming
emotions that quite literally seem to take over no matter what we want to do differently. And I think
many of us. Again, we meet those moments in our daily life or just our daily patterns in general.
Yeah. Okay. So the central idea I feel in much of your work, including your brand new book,
reparenting the inner child, the new science of our oldest wounds and how to heal them,
is that in childhood we undergo certain experiences. Some of those are positive. Some of those perhaps
are not as positive as they could have been.
And we adapt to those situations
and those adaptations can become problematic.
So I want to go back to a passage in the introduction,
if you're new book that I really enjoyed reading.
Before the external world begins to shape our instinct,
we exist in a state where we feel spontaneous and free,
filled with wonder and awe,
connected to our natural inclinations,
creativity and imagination.
But as soon as we begin to explore our environment,
we start picking up cues about how to belong,
and with that awareness comes a slow disconnection
from our natural wholeness.
That's the book in a nutshell.
That's such a powerful message, isn't it?
Yeah.
That's, I think, our human experience.
And these adaptations are beautifully,
evolutionarily driven, they're wiring us to survive those early environments because we need
connection to physiologically sustain life. We're one of the few, if not the only mammal,
that is born so underdeveloped. And this is a newer finding in our field where, I mean, there was a
time where parenting experts, even just a couple decades ago, weren't talking about the immaturity
of the human nervous system, right? This idea that children could just soothe or calm themselves on
their own and the reality of it is that we can't. And our nervous system is being shaped even before
we're physically born into whatever circumstances we're born into. It's actually being shaped by our
ancestors. And again, this is a beautiful adaptation because we live driven by prediction and survival.
And we want to, right, more or less, learn the environment enough so that we can begin to
function in that environment. And in childhood, when relationships are the foundation in which we find
safety and security, though, of course, not all of us do have those relationships.
Those are where those earliest adaptations begin.
And so ideally, right, we not only have present caregivers, we have caregivers that are
grounded and safe in their own bodies.
And I think this explains why the large majority of us are not living or do carry
dysfunctional habits from our childhood, because even if, as was the case for me, I had two
very present caregivers who were very well intentionally doing the best they can, even seemingly
committed to breaking some of the habits of their own childhood, yet without the information,
without the capacity in their own nervous system to be calm, grounded, attuned to a different
developing individual, a child that is not them, many of us are left more so with unmet emotional
needs where the person around us is dysregulated themselves. So no matter how much they very much
want to support us and exploring our environment and venturing out and developing our own
unique self, they're unable to, again, because they're carrying the adaptations that serve them
in their earliest environments. It's basically, I guess, the question for us as children, are we going
to be authentic or are we going to attach? You know, attachment versus authenticity. And as Gabo
Mate will say, whenever a child is faced with that choice, they will choose attachment over
authenticity.
Because attachment is the only way.
As a child, they can't step away from the relationship.
They can't zoom out and understand all of the different reasons and factors which are
contributing to their parents' inability to allow them to be authentic.
All they know.
And again, this is very survival-driven, is they need their parents.
So they will contort themselves.
And, you know, in all of these dysfunctional ways, oftentimes they will idealize the parent
because it's safer to imagine, right, that.
the parent is good and this is, I think, where shame begins to develop in addition to all of these dysfunctional coping habits, in childhood, if we didn't have that present and attuned caregiver, the belief that many of us land on is it's not something that's lacking in my parent, which is always the case.
The child will take full ownership of what is wrong and take it as a meaning that they are unworthy of being themselves.
And so, yes, it comes down to attachment will trump everything.
And even writing a book, right, seemingly about individual development.
I remember kind of thinking through, I cannot begin this book without first speaking about
the power and importance of attachment, not only hypothetically, but grounded again in the nervous system.
Yeah.
I think the implications of your work in this book are, you know, quite profound.
I think on an individual level, if there's an adult who comes to,
across your work, there's the possibility for healing ourselves, right? Understanding what adaptations
we've developed and then going through the steps to change things. I certainly feel on my journey,
born to Indian immigrant parents in the UK, academic success was very much prioritised. I took on the
belief as a young boy through no thought of my parents, I might add, that I was only worthy of love,
when I was a straight-A student, or I got top grades.
Once I became aware of that, I was able to see where that came from,
go through the process of perhaps being a bit frustrated,
but then also understanding your parents are human.
It totally makes sense through their lens of coming to a different country,
of facing discrimination, but healing is possible,
because once you understand it,
and I know we're going to get to some of these helpful practices
that you fill your book with,
but you can go back and make peace with what happened,
and there is a new possibility, a new freedom,
a new lightness, a new liberation when you exist in the world,
when you go in and I guess do the work, right?
Absolutely, and I think all of my messaging is,
my intention at least is one of that level of empowerment,
where, I mean, the goal and purpose is,
necessarily even to go back to kiss, blame, because much like you're describing, I think a lot of us had
very well-intentioned parents that were seemingly, right, trying to create a situation where we didn't
have to suffer in the way that they had. Yet again, because of a lack of own capacity, ability,
I think society plays a huge role too, right? We were left with patterns that don't serve us.
And I think being able to expand and say, my parents did the best they can. This was the ways that they were able
to show up and meet my needs.
And at the same time, right, here were the needs that I did not necessarily have met.
Because a lot of us get stuck on one or we get stuck on one of the sides where we feel so bad,
kind of acknowledging our parents' limitations that we're actually doing ourself a disservice
because we still have unmet needs that are probably driving a lot of our daily habits.
And then we are going to continue to betray ourselves, abandon ourselves in ways that, again,
we learned in childhood because we could not see our parents clearly.
And others get stuck on the other side where they're stuck in such anger and resentment and
blame and this idea of, well, I shouldn't have to do anything differently.
My parents should have showed up for me in a different way that then we do limit ourselves
in the ability to have grace, compassion, see our parents for who they are and give ourselves
the possibility to evolve and change into someone different.
Yeah.
I have to acknowledge that there will be some people out there who've had really toxic
childhoods. There might have been physical abuse, emotional abuse. And of course, in those situations,
it doesn't change the reality of what you're talking about, but it may be harder, right? Let's put it
this way, Nicole. To heal, do you feel that someone has to make peace with what happened in their
childhood, or can they heal without doing so? I think it depends on how we're defining make peace.
the way I would define make peace
and I think a way that allows us to move forward
is to accept that it happened.
Peace doesn't need to be mean I feel good about it
nor does peace mean I have to be in relationship
with perhaps the people that abused me or neglected me.
But I think peace, when we look at it
as more of an acceptance that did happen
and it is impacting me now
and here are the ways in which is impacting me now.
I think then we can heal in the sense of
giving myself, because I think what healing then is, in definition, is giving myself the opportunity
to have a new experience. I could not change what happened then, right? I don't have to even feel
positive about what happened then or interact with the people who create it, the circumstances that
caused my abuse, my pain, my suffering. But if I acknowledge that it did happen then, now, or that it's
happening now, let me kind of bring it forward in time, then I give myself the opportunity to kind of
end the story differently, create a new response, again, where there's other
reactions or just identities would have colored how I'm moving forward.
Yeah. I really love that distinction. And I think it's a really challenging topic to talk about.
But I think it comes down to we can't change what has happened. We may wish we were parented
differently. We may wish we had not experienced certain things. And for people who've had
had difficult childhoods, my heart goes out to them. I can't imagine what that must have been like.
And at the same time, if someone does want to move forward in their life and, you know, live these
new possibilities and have that sense of freedom and calm and lightness, I think you're right.
You have to at some point accept that this is what did happen. I don't like it. I wish it hadn't.
but now I'm going to make different choices going forward.
Right.
And I think it's important to have that moment, moments, period of time to be with the grief,
the pain, the anger.
I think that's absolutely part of the journey that is, I think, an uncomfortable piece.
Though then there is the kind of pivot point, right, where I maybe see where the grief,
the anger, the dysfunctional habits are still driving my current circumstances,
and then I give myself a new opportunity to do differently.
Because without that moment, I do think as part of the healing journey, it is really sitting in how I feel about what didn't happen, whether it's anger, whether it's resentment, whether it's loss, because all of those emotions are real.
And I think a lot of us have gotten very savvy at keeping those so kind of contained beneath the surface that we don't even realize how much emotion is still driving our current actions.
Yeah.
when it comes to healing, you have a part in the book, which I completely echo, which is there are two steps to healing.
Number one, becoming aware.
Step number two, making different choices.
And I really do think healing can be looked at that simply, if we sort of zoom out.
In my experience, many people get stuck at step one.
they take this wealth of information that's out these days, podcasts like this one,
you know, online blogs, Instagram pages like yours, and they get insights.
They go, oh my God, that's me, right?
Oh, I get now why this really bothers me or why when I get criticized, I overreact.
And often it does come from our childhoods, but I found people often, they get stuck there.
As we say, they're blaming their parents.
They're blaming their childhood, and that can go on for years.
And I've got to have real sympathy for that, but I don't think that's helpful.
In all your work, either with clients yourself, or I know you have an online community, the self-healer circle, have you found that people get stuck at step one quite a lot?
And if so, how do you help them move on to step two, which is making different choices?
So this is what inspired me to even evolve into a whole whole.
holistic framework because I would work with very wise, very committed clients in my private
practice when I kind of began this journey working more traditionally.
And it didn't seem that no matter how much insight and awareness clients would gain about their
patterns that maybe brought them into the treatment room, they would still come in week after
week and report the same behavior, the same dysfunctional habits in their relationship.
And even outside of being stuck in blame, anger, and resentment, I mean, I am a prototypical person
who was stuck in analysis.
I wanted to be a clinical psychologist.
Why?
Because it felt safer to kind of hover above my lived experience
and try to seek understanding
because it kept me separate
from all of the emotions,
all of the overwhelming sensations
that had been living in my dysregulated body
for quite some time.
Because that's what we're talking about
we need to do to build the bridge into new actions
is as simple as it sounds.
I can imagine people getting so frustrated
when they're like, well, what do I do?
And I'm like, well, you become a,
of the patterns and then you show up newly and you make a new choice. And I know it can imagine it sounds
very frustrating that it's that simple, but building that bridge means shifting into action, right?
Reconnecting with our body that's driving a lot of our reactions or our behavioral patterns.
And for our nervous system, that is challenging. We love the habitual. We love to be able to
predict what happens next. It decreases the uncertainty and the fear that's related to the uncertainty.
it is energetically conservative, right, to not have to think from our very powerful prefrontal cortex
and make new choices, right?
We are able to limit the amount of calories our body is using.
So for a million different reasons, we don't want to do the uncomfortable thing.
And the uncomfortable discomfort begins, even with a healthy choice, the minute we step out
of those patterns to create a new action.
So for me, the minute I stop living in my mind and drop down to my body, I'm already,
immediately now met with all of the discomfort that's been living there for so long.
So what we're really talking about is expanding the capacity of our nervous system to tolerate
newness, not all at once. And I think that's where a lot of us do ourselves a disservice,
especially now with a million pieces of information online and all of these protocols that you can do.
And even from the depths of suffering, I can understand.
Of course you want to have this idea that if I just change my lifestyle from top to bottom,
starting tomorrow that I will find the quickest route to feeling better. But what we're really doing
from a nervous system standpoint is any new choice is going to expand our capacity for discomfort.
The more new choices we tack on, the more uncomfortable we become. And the way our body will work
is we'll get to what I call like the point of no return. The more stress we become, the more we fall
right back on those old habits because they're comforting, they're familiar, even if they're dysfunctional.
Yeah. When I think about these behaviors or the behaviors that we might introduce into our life to, you know, get healthier and, you know, work on our longevity, whatever it might be that we're looking for, I always think it's not about the behavior, it's about what's going on behind the behavior. You know, you can do healthy habits from a really dark place from one of guilt and shame and you don't love yourself. You're punishing yourself through these, you know, these.
choices, and I have done that in the past. Or you can make the same choice, but the energy
behind it is completely different. There's compassion there, there's grace, there's, no, I want to
do this behavior because it supports the person I want to be. It's not about disciplining yourself
or shaming yourself. It's the same behavior, but there's a different energy behind it.
100%. I think what's interesting now is with all of the information out there, all of the health
protocols aimed at health and wellness, I do think that a lot of people are coming at those
behaviors, habits even from a more shameful place, perhaps even from a distracting place, from a very rigid
place. I will always, when people ask, like, do you have a protocol? Is there something you do
every day, non-negotiable? And my answer might surprise people's, no. Because my, my
body feels different every day, right? The thing that kind of helped me feel supported on one day
where I have high energy might not be the thing that makes me feel supported the next day. So it's,
can I, right, drop in and understand the why, the intention for what's driving the behavior? And in my
opinion, at least, can I allow my body's needs, which for a lot of us change over time, over seasons,
as we age? And so can I reconnect with that kind of level of flexibility? Yeah. I can't,
I couldn't agree with you more. I personally don't, whether
like the word protocol, I realized over the last year. So it's a very popular term in online health and
wellness. And I get it. Some people respond well to it, right? I'm just saying personally, for me,
there's a rigidity to a protocol that I don't think is helpful long term. Now, let me just clarify
what I mean by that. Let's say you're stuck and you're lost and you have no motivation and you don't
know where to turn. I reckon in the short term of protocol,
actually might be helpful because it gives you some rigidity. It takes you out of the stuckness
and gives you something to follow. But what I've seen in my clinical practice, Nicole, is that the
people who heal in the long term, not just for a few weeks or months, at some point, the plan
starts becoming my plan for them, and it starts to become their plan. Right. Right. So they take the
guidance that I may have given them, but over time they've started to listen to themselves and
figure out, you know what? Actually, yeah, I think 70% of that works well for me, but that 30%
it's not the right approach to me. I feel better when I do it this way. I've always loved that.
And I think, as you're saying, I think that's one of the missing pieces when people are trying to
make these changes. They're latching on to the latest protocol from the latest influencer online
that they follow.
And as I say, it can be helpful for a short time.
But then at some point, you've got to start tuning into yourself and asking yourself,
is this the right approach for me?
Yeah, I 100% agree.
And I think some of us resist structure and protocols, again, because of the learning that
happened in childhood where maybe we have, as I call it, an over-permissive parent,
where we had no boundaries, no limits.
So now even the suggestion, right, that there's a protocol out there that could be helpful,
feels restrictive, controlling.
You're not going to tell me what to do.
So I think in some scenarios, right, that particular person, right, could benefit from some
level of structure in their life, kind of an internal motivation, learning how to do something
even when we don't necessarily want to or where it feels controlling or because, again,
in childhood, without those limits, right, it does feel very restrictive to have someone tell me
what to do. But my goal is always much like yours, is not to, even though I do give someone of a
structured framework of how to heal, all of my intention with any of the exercises are not to just
listen to me. All of those exercises are kind of redirecting your intention inward, right?
You mentioned these overly permissive, I think was it an overly permissive parent? And I want to
talk you about this. It's towards the start of the book here, when in the section on emotionally immature
parents. And you almost go through different archetypes of certain parents. And I never really come
across that before. Can you talk to some of the common ones? Like, for example, the status orientated
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So much like we've both been, I think, describing in our childhood, a status-oriented parent
as a parent who is kind of more driven by performance, right, presenting ourselves in a particular
way, sometimes even looking in a particular way.
Can I just pause you then, a goal in a minute?
Because I think it's a key point here.
I just want to make sure we're keeping in mind, which is it could also have been our
interpretation.
Do you know what I mean?
Certainly something I've found in my life is that, as I said before, about my parents,
that I honestly feel my parents were fantastic, but I took on the belief that I was only loved
when I achieved certain things. Do you see what I mean? There's a sort of difference, right?
Right. And I think some of this is, again, going to the parents' ability too,
and how they communicate, right, this unconditional love. And again, I think this goes back to
imagining the circumstances of my parents as well, who came from an immigrant household, right? They
did not learn how to, even though inside, they felt that unconditional love driven, again, by
societal factors, by the reality that there are certain aspects of achievement that afford
most humans around the world some level of security, financial, even kind of emotional security,
relational security. That's real. So I think a lot of us are dealing with what you're beautifully
describing, which is a mismatch between an inner desire and the outward presentation, which is, again,
driven by the environment, by culture, by beliefs, by their own past and ancestors and
ways that they've learned to communicate certain emotional feelings. But again, if that was the
circumstances in childhood, which was very much, I know for a fact, much like you, I was wired both
directly and indirectly. I would bring home the 96. I'd get asked why it wasn't 100.
Or, right, when I was not kind of doing well, as I did very clearly at softball when I was saying
in dance class and I wasn't in the front of the line, right? My mom was a little less interesting.
She came to still my recitals, but it didn't light her up as much.
So sometimes it's direct, and other times it's this indirect messaging.
But again, it came from a very well-intentioned place.
They thought that academic achievement would result in successful college, successful, right, financials, future.
And it did.
And it did.
I mean, and there's also a little bit of status-oriented in terms of appearance.
My mom, coming from a very traditional, older generation, where women looked a particular
traditional way which secured them the marriage and the financial security again at a time where
not many women had that on their own right there was all these versions of messaging that weren't
inherent to who I was but how I was presenting myself all very well-intentioned I do know both of my
parents my mother who is also no longer here she will have been at five years in May very well
intention right the I think the internal unconditional love was there but because they were
functioning in a society, right? They were driven to teach me, again, through direct and indirect messaging,
that my worth only depended on how I was presenting myself in the world and more so how the world
was reacting to my presentation. Yeah, it is beautifully poor. And I guess if I think about my own
parenting, I've always tried to make sure my children know that I love them, irrespective of any
achievement, right? It doesn't mean I don't want them to achieve.
achieve or do well, but I want them to know that my love for them is not dependent on that.
And at some point what gets this, I was flicking through your Instagram this morning.
And one of your recent posts was that all parents traumatized their children.
Okay, so we'll come back to that in a short moment.
Let's go back to these different parent archetypes, right?
So you had started to describe the status-orientated parent before I sort of, you know,
briefly interrupted you.
Let's go back to that.
So what does the status-oriented parent look like?
And what does that do to us as children?
So again, it's this focus on appearance, performance, right, kind of a way of being in the world,
even a hierarchical, right, idea of what is better or less than.
A lot of times we might even hear that direct, indirect messages.
We're compared to our siblings, our peers, again, where we are absorbing these messages,
and then we are modifying the parts in which we should.
show other people and then the parts in which we feel shameful, messy, imperfect, and we don't show.
And that, again, drives our reactions in certain times where we become so hypersensitive to even
any perceived criticism, even if it's not criticism, it's helpful feedback, someone else's perspective.
We take it personally, right?
We kind of embody these identities around it.
But I want to go back to what you're saying because you're sharing such wisdom when you're
describing even your parenting.
Right.
a lot of these habits we've developed.
So for me, right, and I think you, this drive to succeed, if I'm honest, and I oftentimes
people will say, what's the goal of all this?
How do I know when I'm healed?
Is it never doing that again?
I could make a case that, at least for me personally, I don't want to lose my drive.
I don't want to lose my passion.
It helps me show up and make the impact that I want to make on the world.
What I want to, though, do is, just like you're beautifully teaching your kids, I want to feel
worthy, regardless of if I'm performing in a moment. I want to give myself the ability to rest to say
no, if that's what I need, not to just overstep my boundaries and have to show up in a particular way,
because that's what's desired or required of me. So I think, and what I'm describing here is kind of where I
build to in the book, which is this process of integration, where our past becomes a part of us,
it doesn't drive us though anymore. So I'm expanding and I'm saying, right, discipline, passion, drive, drive,
motivation, all of that is important to me, but I don't have to be driven, so to speak,
by those aspects of me to avoid shame and unworthiness as I had been for so long.
Yeah, it's not the behavior, it's what's behind the behavior.
So when you allow yourself choice, flexibility, right, the ability to say no, to rest
in a moment, not to, again, have to feel like I have to hide the messy parts of myself
to give myself the opportunity to make a mistake every now and again.
That's how we learn.
That's how we grow.
in feedback from another person, even if it feels immediately like criticism. So I want to be able
to do all of those things and choose which part or which action, right, I'm going to live from
or respond to in the moment. Yeah. It's kind of interesting. You mentioned criticism there,
and that's come up a few times in this conversation. I used to be hypersensitive to criticism.
Not that long ago, I would say, you know, relatively in the context of my life, it doesn't
tend to bother me anymore. And my belief is that criticism only really bothers us to the extent that
we believe it to be true. And I guess one of the things that I found really helpful was asking
myself the question, why does this comment bother you? Why? Oh, you know, this reminds me of
what happened when I was at school. Oh, this reminds you something mom said to me, whatever it might be.
And again, going to that two-step path to healing, number one, becoming aware, and then moving to the second stage, which is make a different choice.
Actually, you know what? I don't need to let that bother me. That's useful feedback for me that I can use to change my behaviour going forward.
Certainly that's been my experience with getting better at dealing with criticism.
Is this something you've ever struggled with? And if so, Nicole, how did you get through it?
Oh, I mean, I've had my fear of criticism and feedback almost would have prevented me from posting online in the very early stages of this.
I had a very real concern of what will people think, right?
As I'm coming up with this new, not new, but like I'm integrating this holistic model and I want to start to speak of it.
I was very clear and concerned about being misinterpreted, right, being told by either colleagues in my field that I very much esteem that I was now talking about the body and nervous system and nutrition and who am I.
to talk about that. What role does that play? And so that almost prevented me from, as Lolly,
my partner was kind of urging me to go online from even wanting to. In the beginning stages,
there was a lot of fear about what I would post. I would have always kind of a kind of like a running
therapist in my head where I would run something in my head before I said it out loud and always
worry how will someone, this person, that type of person take what I'm saying. And I wasn't really
able to be in a full flow state when I was speaking or creating or delivering content in any way
because that fear was so real, right? And it's the fear of, right, not only being seen as less
than perfect, not wording something, not talking to something that I'm allowed to be speaking
to, but it's a fear that I think a lot of us human share, which is being misinterpreted, right?
Not being fully seen for my intention or for the desire that I'm creating or sending in the message
itself. And that's a very core fear, right? Again, it's very socially driven. We, to some extent,
shame and all of that was restrictive behaviors where we don't want to speak or say something that
we really mean to be true is driven by our need to be socially accepted. Again, originating
in childhood, very much a social emotion. It keeps us operating within the bounds of society. And when
we feel like we're being ostracized or being told that we are not a part of this group,
it very much is a not only emotional pain, a physiological pain.
How did you manage that, though, Nicole?
Because as I've already mentioned, if you look at your platforms today online, they are huge.
Okay.
You cannot post on Instagram without, I say, a minimum of 30,000 people, you know, engaging with your posts and sometimes hundreds of thousands, okay?
it is inconceivable that every comment is going to be positive.
You've already shared that you had a fear before you started posting.
Now the reality is that you do post and have done for many years.
How have you dealt with criticism and pushback?
So to get me to a place now where I learn how to navigate feedback,
I had to live the experience.
I had to go and get all different types of criticism
from all different types of people.
and again, this is very nervous system body driven,
teach myself and in the embodiment that I will be okay, right?
Teach myself through boundaries, right,
through knowing where I'm at in terms of my capacity
when I'm not eating well, not sleeping well,
overstress for whatever reason is not the time to go
into the places that I know, right,
are going to have most likely the negative comments.
But of course, sometimes I'm always surprised
that when a piece of content goes up
and sometimes I know when it's going to be a little bit more, you know,
controversial and I'm like prepared for what could come back and feedback. And other times,
I'm completely blindsided because even in my community that has very aligned individuals,
more or less, we are all subjective, right? We're all going to view and hear and consume a piece of
content through everything that we've been talking about. Our past experiences, our beliefs. So you can never
fully anticipate what's going to get criticism or not. And I am. So while I've learned how to live the
experience, create boundaries, right, kind of take
my own accountability when I'm putting myself in an environment or, you know, in something
stressful when I don't have the limits to do it, that by no means means to turn off, right, access
to feedback because that's how I've been able to learn from my community, hear what's important,
hear ways towards certain topics in a way that, to my, you know, best intention will land and
not just kind of create resistance in the audience, though I also understand that that's an unrealistic
expectation to have the idea that everything or that my work is going to be everything for everyone. So
between the practical applications of boundaries, really understanding myself and my limits,
but also making sure that I'm getting comfortable, right, with entrusted communities, my team,
my personal life, that I still allow myself to practice hearing the harder versions of feedback
and to teach my body that while it might feel, you know, kind of end of life in that moment and
my body goes into a nervous system reaction that I can teach myself that I'm okay. I can get through it.
I can regulate my body. These connections will still maintain. The community will still be there.
And it's just been quite literally living that experience over the past however many years it's been.
Though, again, there are still moments where, you know, I have to hold myself accountable and know when I'm at my limit and, you know,
where to go for feedback that can feel more helpful than just kind of really tearing down.
Yeah. It reminds you of something you say to.
towards the end of the book, that healing is non-linear.
There is no finish line to cross,
which I think is absolutely beautiful
and a very important message for us all to sit with.
But you can apply that to what I've just said about chrysism
or what you've just said, which is we can do the work,
we can get to a really good place,
and then sometimes we might fall into old patterns.
And I think, as you just mentioned yourself,
and certainly for me, if I find myself,
starting to take criticism personally,
it's a reminder now to go,
oh, what's going on in your life?
Oh, maybe you're working too hard.
Maybe you've had a few sleep-deprived nights.
Maybe you need to rest a little bit more.
It's a signal that basically I'm taking on too much.
So in many ways, it's a beautiful signal.
It's like, oh, criticism's always going to be out there.
I think for all of us as human beings,
especially if you're doing something
where you are putting your voice out there,
it is naive to think you're not going to get criticism of some sort.
The question is, how much are you going to let that criticism bother you and affect you?
And can you use that criticism as a teaching moment?
You do write in the book a little bit about triggers.
And I'd love you to explain, you know, what is a trigger the way you see things?
This is beyond just criticism, right?
Moments of dysregulation are, I will always, our triggers can be our teachers, right?
those indicate that something deeper is happening.
And on a physiological level,
what is happening in our body when we are triggered
and having that disproportionate response,
whether it's the outward one
where we're screaming and yelling
and doing things we don't mean
or the inward one where we're disconnecting,
kind of shutting down, going numb,
it's something we are being flooded, right,
with emotion, with nervous system dysregulation.
We're seeing threat or old experience
in the present moment.
So I always like to explain that,
because I think those are the most shameful moments where once our body comes down, we have a new
perspective where like, why did I say or do that thing that I didn't necessarily mean or didn't align?
And the why, again, is all driven by our body, by the chemicals, the hormones, the dysregulation
in our nervous system that is taking over and shifting us from the ground, it, logical, the responsive,
how we want to show up and instead dropping us right back into all these instincts that we have been talking about.
Yeah. Sometimes if you think about how much our childhoods affect us in our adult bodies, it's amazing that anyone gets on, right?
Really, because we don't see the world as it is. We see the world as we are, right? And often this is really brought home to us when we get involved in an intimate relationship, right? Because then you often have two unheeled inner child who then come together because they're in love and they,
They might choose to get married.
And then suddenly you realize, oh, many aspects of our personalities are just children, right?
We haven't tended to that inner child that perhaps needed certain things that he or she didn't get when they were younger, right?
So it does make us think about how much of the division in the world is driven by dysregulated nervous system.
As far as I'm concerned, I think all of it, right, because when we are in survival mode, right,
which when our nervous system is activated, however kind of that looks to you, the fight, the
flee, the shutdown response, right, through all those behavioral adaptations, what is
quite literally happening in our body is our focus is narrowing to ourself, right?
This idea of a lot of talk is happening now.
Let me put it that way around this concept of narcissism, right, this self-focused.
I believe that it exists quite literally on.
a spectrum. And the more activated and dysregulated we are, the more we are fighting for our
survival in terms of our nervous system, the more unable we are to see or care about another's
perspective once needs, emotions in any given situation, even if it's our closest loved one, even
if it's our child, the person that we want to, right, be there to support in a different way,
everything is narrowing. Our literally eyes turn inward. We get very black and white in the way
that we think, I'm right, you're wrong, we can be very combative, and that's when we can act,
in my opinion, at least very hurtful to other people. I think that driving division, conflict,
war, right, everything in between where we feel like we have to fight someone else because that is
what our nervous system is doing. It's not seeing you as a separate, unique individual that's
worthy and deserving of love. Even if I disagree, I lose the ability in my body to care, to expand
to a different perspective, to take in feedback, to do everything that I think we are inherently
able to do as compassionate social creatures. We become driven to survive in the moment at all cost.
Yeah. In the book, you make the case that constant busyness, which is something that many
people struggle with, is a sign of a dysregulated nervous system and can be thought of as a
survival strategy. Can you explain?
So keeping ourselves busy, right, on like on a surface sense of things, it keeps our attention
somewhere.
It keeps us moving in action.
If we look beneath the surface at what that behavior is doing, it's keeping our attention outward,
not inward on us, right?
It's keeping us moving for a lot of us who never had safety and security, the ability to
just, as I kind of intro of the book, just be in childhood, rest, feel at ease, right?
Stillness, solitude.
I mean, there was a time where I lived in the busiest city in the world, New York City.
I thought I would live and die in a city where there was constant noise, constant stimulation.
While I loved snowboarding, I would go to the mountains and snowboard.
I had to have a television on at night because the sound of solitude, of silence, of not having all of my days planned,
whether it was with things I wanted to achieve or even plans with friends, the minute my body was needing or had the opportunity to stop, what was I met with?
the agitation, the overwhelming sensations that busyness was protected me from. So I think
busyness becomes an outward manifestation of a kind of dysregulated nervous system, the energy inside
that's being translated to attentional focus outside and to doing, again, because we didn't
learn, it didn't feel safe to stop, not to do. We didn't feel enough maybe when we were,
some of us even got very direct messaging on to avoid, right, sitting, it's lazy, it's this,
it's that. And so we don't have that, whether it was kind of very direct in that matter or
indirect, because in stillness meant waiting for the next explosion. Or maybe in your childhood,
there was never a moment of quiet. There was always yelling on predictability. So now your nervous
system registers peace, ease as so unfamiliar, right, that it's to be avoided because it's going
back to that moment where it wasn't safe or it wasn't possible even.
Yeah. You write about this.
right at the start of your book, don't you? How in your childhoods, you were always kept busy. You were
always scheduled, right? So the question that for me is, was there already an existing
dysregulating nervous system that was managed through scheduling you? Or was it that
that over-scheduling if your childhood has resulted in you not knowing how to be still?
I think that I, like many of us, I was born with a dysregulated nervous system.
Again, what we're talking about when I bring up even ancestors is epigenetics, right?
The passing on not necessarily of our DNA changing, but how our DNA is functioning.
And so I think that the large majority of us who came from, right, insecure ancestral experiences,
whether they were displaced by war, immigrated to a new country, there was abuse in the relational family
in the kind of societal experience, we now know that right development begins in utero.
That's when our brain begins to form.
And so all of us who come from those families or even just those immediate environments where
we have to think about what was happening in my mother's life as she was carrying me,
how much stress was in the home, how much cortisol, right, was crossing the placenta.
And so I have an idea of all of the stress that was in my home that came from my ancestors
that was even around my pregnancy.
So when my mom died, I was at my mother's funeral and one of my aunts came up to me and shared with me laughing a story of so I was unplanned.
My mom was 42 when I was born and my dad was 45 and I had an older sister who was 15 and a brother who was 18.
There was no plans to have a pregnancy that lay in life.
And so when my mom started to have symptoms of morning sickness, she disclosed to this aunt that she was very close with a concern that she had stomach cancer, very, you know, on brand for my family because we had a lot of health-related issues.
my older sister included, had, or especially, I should say my mom with chronic illness,
but my sister with a lot of acute illnesses in her early childhood.
So she would have never, right, thought, oh, this is pregnancy symptoms.
She immediately went to stomach cancer.
Long story short, she went to the doctor and was diagnosed with pregnancy with me.
Right, but I think about those early weeks or however long it took my mom to get the diagnosis
of pregnancy and how much cortisol and fear and worry of that I was stomach cancer was
impacting my development.
So again, whether it was acute in my family, but for me, it goes back ancestors of, you know, a family who just had a lot of insecurity in a lot of ways.
Studies will now show that there are children, many of us, who are born with hypersensitive amygdalas, limbic systems, nervous systems, where we are experiencing seeing and experiencing stress where perhaps there isn't and having an overreaction to it.
So as I intro the book, right, that from the moment I was born, I was quote unquote, bouncing.
off the walls, right? All of this overwhelming energy without a calm environment. I lived in a city
in addition to having stuff inside the home. There was noises outside the home. There was sirens.
There was crime that was a very real risk so much so that when I went to high school, some of my friends
from the suburbs weren't allowed to come to my home. So all of this stress in my environment
was manifesting in, as in childhood, were just emotion, were just movement. So I started to bounce
off the walls and my family, I think from a very well-intentioned manner, we're trying to help
me direct my energy. We're trying to help themselves deal with me and all of my energy. And again,
we're setting me up to succeed. If they could find the thing I was good at and invest in the thing
I was good at, academics, ultimately in athletics, right, then I would have the success in life.
But this is the case for a lot of us where development, ancestral epigenetic changes.
And this is why for a long time when I would learn in the field that, well, wait a minute,
brains look different. So is it nature or nurture? And now epigenetics really marries the two.
It says, yes, brains are going to be functioning and wired differently for some of us from
in utero development. Again, because these early adaptations to stress will change the way our brain
functions because at one time when there was stress everywhere, it benefits us to be wired and
prepare for stress around every corner. And it, of course, can be changed because we can rewire
ourself at any age. But to simply answer your question, I think I was born with that hypersensitive
nervous system. Some of us call us highly sensitive kids. I think that's, again, this dysregulation
that both of us are describing. Along that line of thought then, it's not only that it's our
childhoods that are affecting our adult behaviors, it's our ancestors' lives. What were the adaptations
they needed to survive in the environments in which they used to live.
I guess food would be an obvious thing, right?
I think you write about this in the book, right?
So explain how food helps us see this through a different lens.
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So we've just made this a bit more concrete even.
So women are born with all of the eggs that they will ever have.
So the egg that developed, like all of us as humans or went into our development, was actually created in the womb of our grandmother, right?
As our mother was in her own gestation period.
So to make this concrete for people, like quite literally a part of us was living back then.
So that is, again, impacting our environment.
And from a very evolutionary standpoint.
That's mad, isn't it?
That's crazy.
And also, too, to make a clear sperm also very much plays a role where men in the health and their lifestyle choices.
and the sperm that would eventually go to create you, right, does begin the impact, I should say,
begins before conception. So to be clear, both genders, right, everyone is playing a role. But, again,
women and the fact that their eggs are kind of, that's it. And that begins so early. And again,
from a very evolutionary standpoint, it makes total sense. Right? If we were born to the same village
where more or less circumstances did say the same, why wouldn't that be beneficial? And so what I cite
is a very fascinating study. It's called the Dutch Hunger Study.
And so they investigated during the Netherlands several years ago, decades ago, there was a very severe famine.
And so much so that there was like no food was available.
And if it was, it had very limited nutritional content.
And what they found was that women who were pregnant during this time when, of course, they, you know, kind of their ability, they, I'm going to really simplify this.
Their body changed in terms of the way they utilized energy, held onto fat, not being sure of when the next meal would come, made complete sense that their body did.
that. What they then saw in the children that were born to these women was the same sort of changes,
where their body, the way it used energy, the way it held onto fat, and then over time,
if there was no intervention, they would begin to evidence some physical diseases, high blood
pressure, cancer, a million different other things that would kind of be then the impact of
very beautiful changes. Because if food is unpredictable, scarce, absent at all, these changes
helped that person survive. And then they're carried on for generations, assuming that that child is
born, the offspring is born to the same environment. Of course, now things have changed. We have airplanes.
We fly to different geographical locations, right? Society changes very quickly where scarcity in one
generation can change to another, yet we are still operating from a body that is wired for that early
environment. Just to kind of bring the hope into that study, they then found that the offspring who, right,
had access to nutrition, who had healthier lifestyles, were able to change kind of the way their
bodies, the epigenetics of the way their own system function that if they were to then have
children, they would almost reverse in a very simple way the changes that had happened to
prepare them to survive.
But again, all of this is grounded in very beautiful adaptations, what was needed.
Our lives have changed.
And this is why a lot of us are carrying wired into us.
Even now, right, some of us hold on to fat differently.
We process things differently.
or we have these unspoken traumas
where we're not living in a world of scarcity,
but yet we're still wired to see lack
instead of the abundance that perhaps is available,
whether it's physical stuff, money, or emotional scarcity,
again, because this began generations before us
when that was the lived experience.
Yeah.
That's the opportunity, isn't it?
For all of us.
Like, if we are able to go in and heal,
it doesn't just impact us.
It also has a potential to swim,
impact future generations.
Yeah.
Right?
It works both ways.
And it's, you know, I think one of the things that many of us feel these days is with all
the awareness that exists out there about trauma and inner child work and the sort of things
you're sharing and other people around the world are sharing, it really does give me hope
that there's an opportunity that this generation can start to heal.
And if this generation can start to heal, it heals.
it heals the wounds of the past
and it perhaps reduces
many of the wounds for the future.
I couldn't agree more.
I think even for those of us like myself
who might not choose to have offspring,
I mean, the work that we're doing
and this could sound lofty to some people
is we're beginning a new way of being
in our current society.
Again, like I said,
I truly believe that division, right,
kind of the hurt people, hurt people saying,
I believe that to be true.
So as we are creating safety, security, healthier relationships, even if we don't choose to pass on the epigenetics, which is completely possible.
I mean, this word cycle breakers is very real.
We are breaking not only behavioral cycles, but physiological cycles of dysregulation and gifting that then to our offspring, our future generations.
But again, even if we choose not to have them, we're changing the world around us.
And I think we're living at a time where a lot of us are feeling very helpless.
We're now met and have accessibility to all of the suffering from around the world.
And I think humans instinctually want to help, want to know how to help people and relieve the
suffering.
And I believe at least this is how we do that.
We change the way we're functioning.
We create safety and security in our interpersonal relationships and our communities, wherever they might be.
And then we're literally changing the signals that are nervous system is sending to the world
around us.
And I always think about my community self-healer circle.
And we have this really cool feature.
And it's much like a Google map, but it's a private one.
And members can drop the pin in, you know, geographical location so they can connect with each other.
And sometimes I go in there and I have chills.
I just see from around the world all these little pins.
And I think about, wow, all of these signals are beginning to shift from dysregulation, from fear, from division to safety, security, acceptance, compassion.
And I have hope, even at a hopeless time.
So I really like to speak to empowerment, not only to change ourselves, again, to change our future,
generations, but to change now what is happening in the world.
Yeah. I love that. You know, I've almost see change as something that we do one person
at a time in the sense that you start changing who you are and how you show up. Well,
everyone who you interact with starts to experience that. And again, it's not to have guilt or
shame around it. It's just to remind ourselves that actually the way we show what matters. And
if you don't like what's going on in the world, you want to change the world, call me naive,
but I feel the best way you change the world is to start by changing yourself.
I couldn't agree more.
And I think it's very common, right?
And a lot of us is we're struggling, say, in relationships, I think throughout this conversation.
It's so natural, right, to see the problem someone else is causing.
Well, if you just showed up differently or did a little this, more of that, right, then I'll just feel
differently.
And of course, that's natural to have that instinct of you change, not me.
And again, I think one of the most difficult realities of life, aside from dealing with the uncertainty of all of it, is the lack of control.
We can't. We can desperately want and wish someone to be different and to have a different experience with them in relationship, whatever the relationship might be.
But it's not going to be demanding, giving them an ultimatum.
Oftentimes I see the word boundaries is misused, in my opinion, to be more of a delivery of a boundary or an ultimatum or a consequence instead of saying exactly what we're agreeing.
no, no, you keep being you, I'm going to change the way I'm showing up.
I'm going to create a boundary or a limit, perhaps, where there once wasn't one.
I'm going to give myself the opportunity to embody safety, security, openness.
And that is then more indirectly the way we create change.
But I want to just say something really quickly about passion and purpose too.
Please.
Because I do think, especially when people see like you and me, they set this expectation that I can't be impactful.
Like we had this idea, I think, at least, that purpose needs to be huge at some.
scale and that if we don't have like something that's more public like you or I have created for
ourselves because this has been our journey that we are not making the impact that you were
beautifully describing. So I just wanted to get a little disclaimer in there or a re kind of
imagining of what purpose can be because purpose looks like whatever is kind of driving us
from inside our unique gifts, our talents. For a lot of us, it is kind of existing only in
our smaller relational circles. But it doesn't mean that's only the impact.
because, again, that goes so much beyond ourselves.
Yeah, I sometimes wonder about all the people out there,
the many millions who are making huge impact that we've never heard off.
Because these are the people who've got their priorities right,
who don't feel the need to constantly be busy or overachieve.
They do prioritize time with their friends and their family.
They're not posting online because they're enjoying their lives, right?
and they're impacting their communities.
And there'll be millions of people around the world
who actually do do that.
Yet we don't see them.
Therefore, we don't celebrate them
and we don't think it's real.
But of course, it is real.
And I would say last years,
I've met people like that.
I go, wow, you just got it.
Maybe you were lucky.
Maybe you had the right parenting,
whatever it might be,
but you're living it.
You're living the life that many people want,
but no one knows about it.
And I think that's a really beautiful thing.
Nicole, could we just go back to the parental archetypes for a moment, right?
We've mentioned two so far, the over-permissive parent and the status-orientated parent.
The critical parent, I imagine, is one that many people might resonate with.
Yeah, so the critical parent is a parent who, as the word says, criticizes shames, right?
Kind of does not allow acceptance and self-expression.
Whatever the parameters may be, some of us are even criticized for sharing emotions, right?
Again, emotions being a newer landscape for people, some of the criticism comes around.
You're too dramatic, right?
You're not enough.
You're not doing the way I need you to or I desire you to show up and do.
And again, this voice that often becomes a critical voice in our mind is informed,
colored, influenced by those early voices, those voices of criticism, of shame.
And again, often it comes from perhaps a very well-intentioned reason with, right,
there's a reason certain aspects are being criticized, to keep belonging for status in the community,
whatever it might be. But whenever we are told directly or indirectly that we are part of us
is shameful, is not enough, right? We are going to then adapt. We're going to show less of that
side. We're going to have a very loud internal critical voice. Some of us might stop showing up at all,
right, because it's too unsafe we've learned to be seen in any way. If every way that we were in
childhood was met with criticism, that then we shrink ourselves. We don't share us, our embodiment,
our perspective, our ideas, because again, we're always anticipating that criticism. Yeah. I mean,
you write beautifully in this section here. Chronic criticism sends the message that the child is
inherently flawed. Over time, children internalize this harsh lens and grow with self-doubt
and a powerful inner critic that mirrors their parents' voice. As adults, they may be
fear failure, overachieve in pursuits of approval, or avoid taking risks altogether.
There's a lot of crossover, isn't there? Between the different parental styles,
some of the traits I feel are quite similar. Would you agree with that?
There's a lot of, and a lot of times when I'm always of two minds when I give archetypes in this way
because I don't ever want people to feel like, oh, I have to find the one parent that I had.
I think, again, we're very complex creatures. There's similarities and differences.
differences in each? I think it's really helpful actually because, you know, having, I think
you've got eight or nine in the book, right? Someone may not identify with the term the status-orientated
parents, but they might identify with the term the critical parent, even though there may be a bit
of crossover. So I think it's quite nice the way you've done that. On the subject of criticism then,
I imagine there's a lot of parents thinking, okay, but of course, one of my jobs as a parent is to help my child be the best they can be.
So if they haven't done something as well as they could have done that thing, what am I meant to do as a parent?
I don't want to come across as critical, but I want to help my child get better.
Are you able to give any guidance to that parent as to how they could have that conversation?
Yeah, I think this intention comes up a lot in the parenting styles, whether it's kind of using criticism to corral or kind of modify behavior using strict boundaries and limits perhaps in another kind of parent to kind of contain behavior all with this idea of, right, I want you to be the best. I want you to be accepted. I want society and your relationships and your perhaps financial security to be intact for you in the future.
And so this idea of how to the way we shape behavior
and to just focus it on this kind of idea of criticism, effort, right?
What are we criticizing?
Are we criticizing the outcome?
Or are we able to see and separate outcome for effort?
Right?
So we might want someone and want a child to, you know, operate in a certain way.
Of course, when we're investigating why it is
and how it relates to how we feel about ourselves
or what society thinks of us.
unpacking all of that. But again, it's effort, right? Because outcome and effort are two separate
things, in my opinion, right? We could have a child who tries very hard and just for whatever reason
is not able to succeed in whatever way or show up, translate that effort into the outcome that we want.
So if we're able to say, right, I want what's best for you at the same time, though, I want you to
honor yourself, be true to who you are, maybe just put in a good effort even if the outcome doesn't
translate to what, because usually we're criticizing outcome instead of the effort that underlies
it. Yeah. One thing I found helpful over the years is to ask my kids what they think. So it would be,
you know, do you think you did your best that, you know, because they often know, right? You ask them.
And then it doesn't become me telling them. It's like, yeah, you know what, actually, I think if I've done
this slightly differently, it would have been better. If I'm completely honest, Nicole,
I feel I've done a lot of inner child work over the years to help me understand my present
and then change my present through deliberate, aware choices. I would say one of the biggest
drives for me to do so was to be a better parent. I didn't want my children to take on the patterns
or some of the patterns that I took on.
And so I've certainly done everything I have been aware of, at least,
and within my capabilities to try and prevent that from happening now.
What will the end result be?
That I can't tell you, but that's certainly been one of my big drives.
I just want to quickly talk about effort and then respond to this
because separating effort as you're doing, right,
did you try your best regardless of the outcome?
Because something I had learned, and this goes back to this kind of fear of failure,
of failing if and when. So in childhood, it was very clear to me very early that there were some
things that, quote, unquote, came naturally to me, right, academics, some versions of athletics.
I was just simply good at. And so I confused for a long time, right, that as needing to be my
guideposts, meaning I would avoid for a very long time things that were hard. Even if I wanted
to do them, if I had to try hard at something, I immediately would tell myself that, oh, this wasn't
for me, it's not what I'm good at, I should avoid this thing. And so until I learned that,
right, effort is, is something that is important to be able to, right, contain, maintain,
give effort to something without aside from the outcome, right? I probably would have allowed
myself to pursue things from a very young age that might have been of more interest to me in adulthood,
but I avoided them because they didn't come easily. I wasn't used to being seen and acknowledge,
and I did not have effort validated because, and I was told a running thing in my family was,
oh, things just come easy to you, Nicole.
So I developed this false belief that if something didn't come easy, that effort was something
on some extent to be avoided.
And so I want to get to the parenting, though, because I think we've been kind of weaving
around this for a long time, which is like a lot of parents do listen.
And I really want to celebrate parents who are listening.
And I don't want ever parents to be heard or any of my work to be heard or taken from a
shaming manner.
And I also want parents to hear that it is unrealistic, as you kind of brought up that post, that you be a perfect parent.
And a lot of parents that are meeting this work are doing so when the children are, you know, already grown or at a certain level of development where the fear then is, well, have I already messed them up?
Is there any kind of undoing this?
Or do I just have to live with shame and maybe hear from my children later of how terrible I was?
And so what I want to make sure I'm putting into words during this conversation is that moments of disconnection, not meeting an expectation, not meeting a child's need or a partner's need into adulthood is part of the human experience.
And so interpersonal research has now shown that conflict, so to speak, disagreement, disconnection, unmet needs are a natural part of a relational experience of being human.
And they're actually, not only is it unrealistic to imagine that that never be a part of our relational journey with our children include it, but that actually, the presence of conflict or disagreement or unmet needs, often which conflict and disagreement stem from, isn't an indicator of the health or the security of a relationship.
What is is the ability to have a different awareness, make space for a different perspective, take accountability and repair on the other side of it.
So I want parents to hear this in direct words, which is it's never too late.
It is so valuable at any time in life to create space to hear maybe difficult feedback from your child.
Maybe it's not exactly as how you remembered it to be, but perhaps your child is going to share an experience that might be upsetting and what is so important.
Or these moments, unavoidable.
You might have an overreaction, whether it's with your child or your partner.
More important is what happens next.
Can I calm down?
can I can I can I have to first calm my body down to be able to expand to hear someone else's
perspective to hear the difficult feedback or the fact that there is a need that has gone
unmet for however long it's been that you've been in this relationship with this person
but can I be calm enough to allow that in can I take accountability can I perhaps say I'm sorry
and again that and when many of us were not modeled that in childhood so this is a skill we need to
learn again all grounded in the body but those are the moments that are going to predict the future
security of the relationship.
Actually, we're talking there, Nicole.
I think I had, at least for me, a penny-dropping moment, which is, we know individually
that it is hard experiences, difficult experiences in life where we grow the most, where we
learn the most about ourselves, right?
If, for example, on an individual level, our life was all plain sailing and nothing
ever went wrong, we wouldn't develop.
or cultivate so many of those important skills that we do through grief, through relationship
problems, through work issues, whatever it might be, that all opportunities to grow and learn
in relationships, if there's never any conflict, if there's never any struggle, then of course,
how is that relationship going to be shaped? Maybe, as you're saying, we need a bit of conflict,
a bit of struggle now and again, maybe that's what helps kind of refine the relationship and sort of
tender, kind of loose parts at the sides and really forge down as to what is the core of this
relationship. Maybe comfort's a good thing if it's managed in the right way.
100%. I mean, if and when, and I get oftentimes, I used to do a lot of couples work when I was
an individual practice. And it could be to some extent a bit concerning, right? If you are of or maybe
existing in a relationship where we always agree. There's never any conflict, right? How,
you're different people. What do you mean? Every single moment of every day, right? You are in
total agreement with perspective, with want me, desire, emotion, even what you want to have for dinner,
right? Again, I operate it for a very long time in that conflict-free model, not because I was
in perfect alignment, but because I wasn't either connected to what it was that I wanted or needed
or how I felt or even what I wanted for dinner.
Or if I had an idea, I would overstep myself to try and please the people around me
because, again, that's how I gained safety in childhood, right?
Attuning myself to how I needed to be to avoid from my mom.
It wasn't outward explosion of emotion.
It was more disconnection.
And to avoid disconnection, which again in childhood is threatening to my survival, physiological
and emotional, I became, and out of the three siblings,
my brother, my sister would joke because I was the golden child, as it was called.
Not because necessarily I was in full agreement, but because I acted like it.
I smiled.
I said, whatever you think, Mom, I never voiced my opinion because I learned through my mom,
not necessarily, again, with explosive behavior, but with a look, with a removal of attention
or warmness or connection or love, I learned very quickly that to maintain that connection,
I carried this into my adulthood to be seemingly conflict-free
only to understand that I wasn't in perfect alignment
with the world around me.
I was too afraid or disconnect it
from my actual perspective,
want need or emotion in any given moment
to feel safe enough to communicate that.
Yeah.
It's so fascinating to hear
and for you to share your own personal experiences
because I think sometimes there might be a tendency
for people to think,
oh, you know, Nicole's got all these followings,
she's written all these books, she's got it all sorted.
And as you often openly share, you know, it's a constant process, as we said before.
You know, healing is non-linear.
There's no end point.
It's part of what it is to be a human being.
At least it's part of what it means to be a conscious, aware human being who's trying to make progress
and, you know, trying to stop these cycles that maybe have been perpetuated for good reason through generations.
we could spend so long, Nicole, talking about childhoods and all the different patterns.
I would like us to talk about some practical things that are possible in terms of what we can
actually do. So healing is a two-step process. Number one, you've got to become aware.
Hopefully, throughout the conversation so far, people have started to become aware of elements
of their childhoods and how it's impacting them as adults. Now let's move on to what they can actually do
and how they can make different choices.
There's a whole selection in the book.
There are just so many.
Do you have a favorite one that you feel you'd like to share
at this point in the conversation?
I want to even just bring awareness into beyond awareness
that you're gaining from a podcast
or in a therapist office or in a good conversation with a loved one.
I want to bring awareness into the lived embodiment in real time.
And what I mean when I say that is learning how to,
as we're going about our day,
and the most foundational tool that I'm always kind of citing going back to,
whether you're in my membership or my books, is in real-time awareness,
meaning, and we are all helped by, right, the phone that we carry around
that we can send an alarm on or the post-it note, you know, near our desk at work,
or even the habit that already exists in our life,
the fact that many of us brush our teeth at least once a day
or have a drink of coffee, whatever it is.
And so awareness is a lived-embodied experience, right?
Not just the awareness that we're talking about, oh, I see my patterns,
but in action in real-time.
rebuilding that connection with my body.
So when that alarm goes off, when that, you know, we walk past the Post-it note or we're at that
kind of habit time where we want to stack another habit onto, awareness exists in the ability
to refocus our attention, not on our to-do list, not on the million needs that maybe our
child has in front of us, but on us and our body.
And it's as simple as I call it a conscious check-in, where we shift the focus, right,
and we begin to explore how my body is feeling in this moment.
And I like to cite kind of three anchors for where we can shift our awareness to because these
happen to be three physiological systems that shift and change as our body increases in stress.
And so they are the tension in our muscles, right?
Even just shifting our focus and noticing a lot of us until someone suggests that we do so are
not aware that we're clenching our jaw, that our shoulders are up to our ears, that are,
we're bracing around our midsection.
All of that tension or on the other side of it, the numbness, the fact that I'm
I can't even feel the fact that I'm in a body that's surrounded by muscles.
Usually both of those are markers of how stress my body has become.
Because as we become stress, naturally energy builds, our muscles become tense
so we can fight or flee the situation at hand.
The more chronic that stresses are overwhelming,
the more some of us then drop to that kind of playing dead end of the spectrum like animals do.
We become numb.
We can't even feel any energy in our muscles to get off the couch,
even if we wanted to.
We call it procrastination, lack of motivation.
But again, it's our nervous system telling us that we're in a stress state.
So our muscles, a great place to refocus that attention, maybe even just doing a quick scan
of your body right now as you're listening and noticing kind of what end of that spectrum you're on.
Or do you feel yourself?
Oh, I'm being held nicely.
I'm at ease.
I'm able to get up if I wanted to, but I don't feel so agitated that I have to get up and do something.
Yeah.
Our breath is also a great marker of something we could shift our focus of attention to because
our body is always breathing.
sometimes our breathing or our breathing shifts
and sometimes what we will notice
is a stress state of breathing
where it's really quick and shallow
indicating we're in that kind of sympathetic,
energized state.
Some of us are holding our breath.
I often drop into my body
and notice, oh, I've been holding my breath for a while.
All of this bracing is shifting my breathing
into a stress state.
And then those systems,
the more stress we become,
impact our heart rate.
So this consciousness and awareness
that I'm talking about
actually in my area,
opinion has to come off of the insightful podcast moment or the moment in therapy where I like can talk
about my pattern. It has to be a lived experience because if in those moments I notice that my body is
stressed, then I could start to ask and explore and get curious if I don't yet know the answer.
What does my body need? Right? If I'm tense, can I relax a bit and create more ease in my muscles?
If I'm holding my breath, right, can I begin to release that restriction and allow my body to breathe or
or if it's so quick, can I slow it down?
Yeah.
Because now we're living the experience of awareness.
We can then drop into our mind, right?
What am I interpreting?
What meaning am I making of the situation
that's creating the impact emotionally in my body, right?
And now we start to build choice with a regulated body, right?
We can now begin to choose to show up in a way that kind of breaks those habits.
Because, again, the first step is awareness so that I can break the habitual reaction.
and then create the new opportunity by saying,
what is it that I need?
Getting curious because I think a lot of us, again,
have the expectation that I just know what I need.
If you've never practiced though connecting with your body,
you might not exactly know what feels good and supportive to you
when you're angry, sad.
You might not even have those words in the moment,
and you're just connecting with the heaviness, the agitation,
and then, right, helping yourself first be in presence
with those sensations and then helping your body to process them.
That was peaceful.
and so many things came up for me as you were talking.
Firstly, this idea that awareness has multiple levels.
It's not just awareness in your mind.
Oh, I understand now how mom and dad doing this with me when I was a kid
has affected me in adulthood.
That's great.
But that's awareness with the mind.
Now you're saying there's also awareness with the body.
And even as you were just describing it,
I let my belly go out and felt, oh,
maybe for the last hour when Nicole, I'd been holding on to tines without realizing it, right?
So that allowed me to soften.
It also reminded me when we were talking about constant busyness as a survival strategy,
and I thought that so many people now are chronically, constantly busy,
and therefore are completely disconnected from their bodies.
They're all stuck in their mind, this task, that's, got to do that,
got to check the WhatsApp.
I've got five minutes to myself,
but instead of being with myself,
I'm going to go on Instagram.
I'm going to go somewhere else.
So constant distraction from our bodies.
The other thought I had, Nicole,
was how many of the times
we read an email
and interpret it as a criticism
or as a reflection of who you are as a human?
But actually, maybe that email was never that.
Maybe it was just the fact
that everything in your body was typed
because you've been accumulating stress
It's the morning. You've not had a break. Perhaps, you know, you've got experience with
clients and people in your online community, but let's say you had a timer that went off once
an hour or once every two hours, and it was just a little gentle. Maybe it was not an aggressive
harsh tone, but a really a warming and maybe like a meditation bell to remind you to go,
oh, what if for the next minute? I just take a few deep breaths and just pay attention to how I'm
feeling. I mean, I imagine if someone did that three times in a morning, three times in an afternoon,
they'd still get the same amount of work done and they'd be so much more present and dare I say
it more productive as they are doing it. 100%. That's kind of the foundation of change and acknowledging
that a minute will be a very long time for a lot of us that aren't used to, right, just being with
ourselves and if we have a lot of dysregulation, right, if our whole life has been busyness
and we're avoiding kind of what's inside of us, it doesn't even have to be, I think a lot of times
when we think about this like moment of awareness, consciousness, meditation, a lot of us call it,
I do think we have this idea that it has to be in silence, right? When that alarm goes off,
I have to shut everything off, I have to close my eyes, I have to sit here and I have to be
comfortable and my thoughts have to be calm. A lot of us, again, we have so much dysregulation
in our body. We're not practiced.
doing that, that is an absolute nightmare.
It's actually not a safe place for us to be,
again, if we're carrying a lot of dysregulation in our body.
So I make the suggestion that we don't even have to be taking this moment in silence, right?
Take the moment of just being in your body when you're drinking a cup of tea, right?
And have that be just the process of sitting there, feeling the warmth in your hands, right?
Drinking tea.
And I'm using this kind of when I began, I was so dysregulated, again, so not used to silence,
there was no safety and stillness for me,
that the most approachable, accessible place
that I was able to be in presence with myself
was in nature.
So I would take myself, not put on,
even though thank you for listening to this podcast,
not put on a podcast,
like not walk with like sound,
but just take myself on.
I happen to now live very gratefully, thankfully,
on a lake.
So for me, right,
when I'm in the natural world,
and it's not that I'm closing my eyes
and I'm turning out stimulation
and I'm now with all of the overwhelming thoughts in my mind
because that's, again,
and what happens when our body is stressed,
I'm giving myself somewhere to focus, right?
I'm looking at the water.
You know, I'm hearing the sound in the trees, right?
That's another place that kind of can be a foundation
for a lot of us to begin this practice of presence and awareness.
Because, again, if we had this expectation that we turn off the lights,
we turn down the sound, we close our eyes,
and now we're met with all of this overwhelming sensations in our body
and the racing thoughts in our mind,
that we're probably not going to continue that practice.
So I'm giving permission to build a bridge of this conscious practice wherever it feels most approachable
because you're doing so much more kind of internally and you're building again that muscle,
the safety of how to learn and increase your capacity to be with more and more uncomfortable sensations.
And you're not able to do that right away, nor is it safe for a lot of us to do that right away.
Yeah. I really appreciate how you sort of highlighted that that awareness can be as simple as
drinking that cup of coffee in the morning
whilst paying attention.
Right.
That's what we're talking about, right?
We're talking about paying attention.
Instead of slurping it down whilst emailing,
just pay attention to the whole process,
the warmth, the joy of the coffee on your tongue
and the enjoyment, whatever it might be.
Recently I was on a meditation retreat,
and one of the guys who I was on the retreat with
was sharing with me how,
he used to overdrink alcohol and caffeine and all sorts of stuff.
But he still enjoys coffee, but he's limited it to one a day,
but he has a criteria around it, which is, I can only have one,
but when I have that one, I cannot be doing anything else.
And really, he's talking about I'm going to be present with that coffee.
And he says, that's all he needs now.
He doesn't need five or six cups.
He needs one cup where he's fully present, and he's not doing other stuff.
And he's lucky he lives on a, you know, he says he's got a balcony where he lives,
so he'll go out to the balcony, enjoy the warmth, really savour the taste, and look out.
And I think sometimes when we talk about these behaviours that we want to change,
we're always talking about the what, you know, well, how many cups of coffee should I drink?
What is enough?
rather than the how.
Well, what if the reason you need four cups of coffee
is because you're not present with the first cup?
What would your caffeine requirement be like
if you were able to be fully present with that first cup?
The other thought I had, Nicole, was when you sort of about the lake,
you expressed gratitude for living somewhere
where you have access to a lake.
I had a few years ago a patient who lived right in the center of a city.
And we would talk about nature and the benefits,
And he said, man, I don't have time.
There's no nature around.
And you know how I helped him?
I basically recommended he listen to five minutes of nature sounds on his phone each morning.
I am not kidding you.
That was life-changing.
This is a guy in his 20s.
He wasn't connected to nature, but he'd put on bird sounds or the wave, the ocean,
the sounds of the ocean, first thing in the morning.
And little by little, that started to change how he saw himself, how he showed up in the world.
So, yes, if you're lucky to live in nature,
or near beautiful nature, great.
If you don't, you can still access nature, can't you?
100%.
I think there's actually studies that show the regulating benefits
of the sounds of nature.
And so I'm even describing this practice
that I did begin in a city.
I did not have immediate access.
I was not living in a lake that I was now,
though I was walking.
And I would take the route that took me through
the very tiny city park
and kind of find the green spaces.
But again, if you're completely limited
and that's unavailable.
And there's incredible research out there that talks about nature sounds, certain even sound
frequencies that can really help our body regulate.
But again, I think what we're talking about here is not just plugging in the nature sounds
and being on our cell phone and lost in our mind.
We're talking about listening to the birds in that moment or even just the fact that we're
walking, you know, through the earth in any given moment and just being present to our body
moving through time and through space.
And I always try to be really accessible with these tools because,
the reality is life is busy. And a lot of these habits are driving our life and these practices
don't feel safe. And we're never going to change, make new choices, unless we find a way to approach it
in a way that feels feasible, not only practically, but in terms of creating a new habit, which for a lot of
us is so counter to these small, small moments of presence, but they can go an incredible long way.
So much so that when asked, like, well, what is your routine? First thing you do in the morning.
And the first thing I do in the morning every morning is I have a cup of coffee. I don't. I'm not.
on my phone. Oftentimes my partner is there. We have a few moments to connect. We'll maybe go outside.
And thankfully, I live in a place where there's sunshine now first thing in the morning. So I just
hit my skin and I taste my coffee. It's just presence. There's not a structure. There's not an
activity. It's just being in my body in that day and building that foundation then to carry me
through the day where I remember then at lunchtime, for instance, to tune into what is my body
feeling like today? Is it hungry? Is it hungry for a certain thing in particular? Can I taste the
food I'm eating instead of contorting myself and trying to be on my phone and eat food at the
same time. And so then we can build that habit into more parts of our day once we just create
the foundational presence at any part of our day. Yeah. I think there's a lot to be said for doing
one thing at a time. The simplest thing, the most obvious thing, but the thing that is getting
lost from society, we're always multitasking. We're always catching up as we do something else,
try for a week of just doing one thing at a time. And even that will bring a degree of presence to your life
that will have profound benefits. In terms of more practical things that we can do, and I want to
emphasize that in the book, there are so many wonderful practical exercises like, you know,
writing a letter to your inner child. I think there's an attachment timeline. There's so many
people are going to find things in there for them that really appeal to them.
Walking, of course, is one of the best things we can do.
You posted a few days ago on Instagram.
Walking as therapy, the natural bilateral eye movement,
the sun on your skin, if it's sunny,
and the activation off your frontal lobe helps you process emotions.
You'll see everything differently after a walk
because your body just made sense of what your brain could hint.
I love that.
Walking is a great opportunity, too, to have both connection with ourselves, difficult conversation.
There's a lot of research.
There's this one therapist, I forget her name now, where she would walk with clients,
not like having to immediately look in someone's eyes, the bilateral stimulation of the eye movement,
the kind of regulating nature of just movement in general allowed and facilitate it,
the possibility kind of going back to the couples or the relational stuff with conflict, right?
It allowed those conversations to be more approachable.
And bilateral stimulation, the eye movement that naturally happens when neither we're walking
or even back to the phones, being turned inward on such a small screen is naturally signaling
stress to our body because that's what, as I described earlier, our eyes will do, right?
When we have to find the threaded hand and keep our eyes on them to make sure that we're safe,
now all of us are doing that all day long with a phone.
So whether we're getting out in a walk and just letting our eyes,
fall on the horizon, not looking at our phone when we're walking if we can avoid that habit,
but even just looking up from our phone throughout the day and just like scanning our room,
right? Anytime we're moving our eyes, this is what EMDR, a very, I think, very helpful therapy
for a lot of trauma. And I talk about in the book ways to bilaterally stimulate through, right,
the butterfly hold where we're literally crossing our arms and kind of rhythmically right and left
kind of tapping, even just across our midsection, pulling our left leg up and our right arm up.
Anytime we're bilaterally stimulating our eyes or our body, what we're doing is we're reintegrating
the right and the left hemisphere of our brain. If I'm going to simplify it, the right is feeling,
sensation, emotion, instinct. The left is logic, story, narrative, meaning. And when trauma happens,
that connection, that bridge kind of disintegrates. Those hemispheres, again, I'm really simplifying it,
don't communicate as effectively. So we feel things that we can't put into words or we can talk
about things, but we don't have the feeling. So these moments, in addition to just kind of calming
our body into that parasympathetic state, are actually doing a great service for our integration,
where we can over time, because what healing is, is aligning, emotion, intention, feeling,
action, right? And being able to then live in that coherence. But if and when trauma happened to any
point in our life, that bridge is broken. And so we can, though, rebuild those connections through
these bilateral stimulations throughout the day. A lot of what you're asking us to do or suggesting
we might want to do is reconnect with our bodies. The cold and cold plunges are a way that many
people have started to reconnect with their bodies. But I don't think you believe that they're for everyone,
do you? So I think that they can be greatly helpful if our nervous system has the capacity.
capacity, cold will stress our body out.
Our blood vessels constrict.
Our muscles become tense, right?
Sounds like the stress response
that I was describing earlier.
So I discovered cold therapy very early on in my journey,
but I was in such a dysregulated, overwhelmed body
that it felt near intolerable.
And I had since learned that actually,
that was my body sending a signal
that I should not be tolerating it to that degree.
I don't need to be in the 40-degree cold plunge, right?
I can turn my shower if I want to,
experiment with slight cold because cold can be not only physically beneficial, right, stimulating our
body, kind of our blood vessels, getting our blood running.
Mentally, it can kind of clear our mind, but it can help our nervous system become more
flexible, assuming that it can, it has that capacity.
So for a lot of us, again, if we are completely overwhelmed or in that shut down state,
diving into the coldest water will only overstress our own.
already overstressed system. So we can experiment with cold, but I would call it cool would be a
great place to start. The goal would be really to resource our body, learn how to downshift in that
parasympathetic state, slowing our movements, deep breathing, right, really grounding our attention
in the kind of check in with senses in a given moment. What can I see, touch, taste, all those things,
right? Learning how to calm our body so that then when we want to kind of increase the level of cold,
so to speak, we're not just going to send ourselves right back into old habits.
Yeah.
It just really highlights the importance of individuality, right?
And of course, cold has been life changing for so many people.
And at the same time, it's not for everyone, at least not for everyone at the same part of their journey.
And I think this is one of the things I just see around so much online is people want to know good or bad.
Is cold good or is it bad?
Well, it depends.
It's fasting good.
It's like, well, it depends.
For some people, it's life change.
For other people, it's very toxic, right?
And I feel certainly that's what I try and do on this podcast
and have them for many years is to try and showcase the nuance that exists,
that context matters for every single piece of health advice.
Context matters.
And too often that context is removed online.
Yeah, I couldn't agree more.
And so often, too, when I get asked and even think about, of course, I want to be of impact.
And I know one book, right, is hopefully going to be in many individual hands.
So it's always an interesting kind of internal exercise in, right, how do I translate something,
which is very much what I try to do in this book, right, mapping this idea of the different aspects of development onto a reparenting journey so that hopefully more readers than not can kind of see where they might not have had needs met in childhood and then kind of know where to begin.
but I'm always hesitant of doing that, though the question I often get asked is very similar.
Like, what's the protocol?
What do I need to do?
And I think a lot of times I frustrate people because I always go back to, well, your body will tell you.
Build that connection, right?
Learn how to tune into your own internal signals, whether it's your physical needs or that deeper sense of intuition.
And rebuild the trust, right, through habits, through discipline, through, right, working through discomfort
and learning that we can tolerate difficult things and branching out to create even more.
habits, but I can't give you the exact answer. I can give you like a schematic, so to speak,
a general roadmap, but I wouldn't want to give it to you because I don't know you. I don't
live in your body. You're so uniquely different. I want to give you the tools to reconnect with
your own inner knowing. And that's always my goal. Yeah. No, I love that. And I echo it so,
so much. Nicole, I just want to move away from you, but for just a moment. I really enjoy reading
the posts on your Instagram page.
And I noted down a couple
which really caught my interest this morning.
So can I just read a couple out to you
and get your comments?
One was to do with emotionally immature mothers.
And so this is, I think, quite a provocative post
for some people.
Emotionally healthy mothers
want their daughters to shine,
but some emotionally immature mothers
see their daughter as a thing.
threats. What does that mean? So again, emotional maturity. This is not, I'm not speaking from a
derogatory standpoint. I'm speaking from the evolution of everything we've been talking about with
ability to be grounded in my perspective, expand here, another, see kind of who I am and my child
even as being someone who's uniquely different. And so when parents, as many of ours have had,
they have not had access to the tools and resources they need. So they begin to, right,
develop a certain sense of immaturity where they can't expand, honor that a child, even if they look
the same and you want them to so desperately be the same, that they're a different, unique human.
They don't have perhaps the ability to tolerate conflict and disagreement and difference and
understand that, right, there's going to be a different expression that doesn't necessarily have to be
a reflection on me and my parenting. So in absence of being able, for the parent to have just
been comfortable, right, being who they are and find that value from within as we've been
talking about throughout this conversation, they will then project onto a child, right?
They'll project a sense of similarity.
Well, you must be exactly who I am.
They'll project a desire for a certain presentation and or they will become, if they don't
have self-trust and self-security and self-esteem of their own, they could either want
their child to succeed to reflect positively on them and their own.
parenting or they could equally feel threatened, right, by the validation that my child is getting,
by the attention that my child is getting. Sometimes it gets very complicated, right, where a child
is getting more attention from the co-parent than the parent wants and things get really kind of
confused. And then indirectly and directly, there's a sense of I'm threatened and it can turn
into a jealousy, a overfocus on looks, a parent who's trying to win in a certain circumstance,
and again, all of that messaging going to the child about kind of who they are and how they
have to show up to be accepted by that parent.
And all of that reminds us and highlights the importance of reparenting the inner child,
because if that emotionally immature mother was able to do that, no matter where they are in their
life, that can change. And for the daughter of the emotionally immature parents, who maybe grew up
with that, again, reparenting the inner child is important. It's important for both, right, to be
able to move on. Another one that caught my eye was this one. The art of letting someone be in a bad mood
will completely change your life. Why? So I think that goes back to, again, one of the parents that we didn't
necessarily talk about earlier, but this, the idea of what I'm going to describe the
reactive parent, right? At a time, monitoring someone's moods was probably the safest thing
that we could do, right? Sensing any shift in tone, in energy, in presentation in any way,
at one time, if there was predictability, if there was explosive behavior, even if, again,
the behavior was a kind of shut down disconnection, sensing those changes that hypervigital
being more attuned to someone else's shifts kept us safe because what we could modify how we showed up
we could be a little less of this a little more of that maintain the connection and the safety whatever was
available and so a lot of us carry that hypervigilance into adulthood where we're always maybe not even
conscious that we're doing it I know I struggle anytime I sense a shift and my partner Lolly she becomes a little
quiet or her mood's a little snippy even if has nothing to do with me she answers me in a short way
because she's stressed out about work or thinking about something different or is just tired,
overwhelmed herself, needs a minute.
Again, in childhood, what's being queued up for me and activated is those shifts meant something,
right?
For me, they meant disconnection.
So I then have a tendency to ask a million times, are you okay?
What's wrong?
Are you okay?
What's wrong?
Is something wrong?
Did I upset you?
Or in my mind, right, I'm imagining that I was the cause of that shift.
So learning, right, the habit I have.
that self-monitoring, not self of others, kept me safe because at one time it was what I needed
to do to maintain the connections and attention that was available. But now it has created not only a
meaning where I will always assume that anyone in a bad mood around me is because of something
I did or did not do. And I will assign, right, that responsibility of I've upset you, right?
Because that's what I learned in childhood, right? Me, my emotions, my energy, right, would cause stress or
upset in the home. So I continue to assign that meaning. And the reality often is, is,
that's not the case. There's many different reasons. And even if it is upset with me,
I have to break that kind of immediate connection between upset with me equals disconnection
from me. Upset with me equals you're abandoning me. Obset with me equals you're rejecting me, right?
Everything that I learned from those more implicit, unspoken messages in childhood comes alive in those
moment. So learning, seeing the habit that we have, to not allow someone to be upset or in a
bad mood, trying to micromanage, solve the problem, make them feel better. Sometimes I do it
through humor. I'm going to try and be funny and make sure you're laughing and having a good time
with me. All of that is this inner child who's so desperate to make you feel okay so that I can
feel connected and safe. Yeah. I think so many people will resonate with that as they listen.
I think the one to maybe close this conversation on is something you posted, I think just a few days ago now,
but really speaks to the new book and all the potential that is within it for us if we choose to go there.
And this was your post.
You heal your inner child when someone compliments you and you say nothing but thank you.
when you don't apologize for crying,
when someone asks you what you're doing today,
and you say, relaxing.
That's such a beautiful post,
and as I say,
gives us a sense of the possibility that's out there for us.
Why do you think that those very simple things
signal to us that we,
are quite far along on our healing journey.
So when you allow yourself to hear and accept a compliment,
you're allowing yourself to be seen.
I still struggle with this.
The minute someone says something nice about me,
I feel like I have to reflect something very nice about them right back.
It's hard for me to allow myself to be seen.
Outside of what I'm doing or how I'm performing, right,
just someone to see me or experience me and say something nice.
the ability to allow ourselves to emote, to cry, to have an emotion, right?
So many of us.
And I think sometimes it becomes second nature where we're saying, I'm sorry.
And I watch it oftentimes, too, a lot on TV shows.
I love reality TV.
I learn a lot about human nature in addition to online, which is a prolific example or evidence
or stream of examples to give.
But we are so instinctual with having an emotion and immediately saying, I'm sorry,
instead of just allowing ourselves to not only be in our emotion, but allowing someone else to be in our emotion with us.
So, right, allowing ourselves to be seen, allowing ourselves to be complimented.
And then the ability to, again, a theme throughout this conference, just be, rest to tune into when I need a moment to just allow myself to be in my own presence, to lay down on the couch, not to have a day that's kind of curated and planned.
And I think, again, all of these are markers of our ability to be calm, to be regulated, to be at peace,
with ourself, through rest, through the experience of emotions will be always a part of our journey.
The goal to healing is not to be devoid of emotions.
They contain incredibly important information.
They allow us to feel connected to the world around us.
That's what so many of us are looking for, not to be, not to have our problem solved or be told
that we shouldn't feel this way, just to have someone sit down next to us and say, I understand.
I understand why you would even feel that way.
and to allow ourselves to be seen and all of our positive, include it,
the ability to accept and to be with a compliment.
I think all of those are, again, markers of the entire theme of this conversation in my work
is of our nervous system regulation, our health, our true health and our true wellness.
Well, let's see how you're doing with accepting a compliment.
I think your work over the last few years,
your public-facing work has had such a profound impact on so.
many people. I've enjoyed reading your posts. I know from many of my team, many of my friends,
they have found so much wisdom from reading what you have to share. And I think this latest book,
Reparming to the Inner Child, the new science of our oldest wounds and how to heal them,
is going to be such a helpful and life-changing read for so many people. So I want to say thank you
for all the work you've done and thank you for writing it. Thank you. I will practice just breathing
into that. Thank you.
Yeah, and as well as the book, Nicole, you obviously post on all the social media platforms under the name The Holistic Psychologist.
You also have this membership community.
What do people get if they sign up for that?
So the membership community, Self-Hiller Circle, it's global so you can join from around the world.
It's virtual.
We join together every month.
We've released a new topic.
Next month we're doing covert narcissism.
So we have workshops with myself and outside presenters that come in, workbooks to give us kind of the tools to work through the journey.
We have a new addition, which is incredible of nine different therapists-led groups to really kind of capitalize on the connection piece.
I think a large reason why people join the circle is, of course, to learn, to have a library of tools, resources, meditations, ways to translate insight into action.
Though I think many more join for the community.
When you join, you get much like it's now on our own private app.
So it's not affiliated with any social media platforms.
So I like to think about it like a Facebook because every member gets a profile page and can interact with other members by putting up posts, responding to other members' posts, DMing, the members map to connect with people in their area.
And so a lot of these conversations, of course, the social media platforms will always be part of what we at the holistic psychologists do.
It is actually our way to continue to, you know, give back and have impact and understand that not everyone has the money, though, thank you.
if you ever buy any of my books and join my membership.
Of course, it allows these social media platforms
to put out the free and accessible resources
and conversations of the beautiful community
that will always exist, hopefully, on those platforms
and to gain those resources there.
But the circle is really for the people
who want it a little bit deeper of a dive,
a little bit more of a safer space,
as we were kind of joking earlier.
So often I get people who are in my DMs
because they want to put up a comment or respond to something,
but they're so afraid that someone that they know
might see or hear.
So it's really been created out of the desire
as something I said earlier.
The belief I think that a lot of us have,
the shame we feel,
feeling alone in our reactions,
our struggles.
And so the community,
I think,
for a lot of people,
has become a safe space
to feel less alone.
Yeah,
I love that, Nicole.
You're clearly doing so much work
to help so many people.
To finish up this conversation,
I want us to think about
the person who is listening
and throughout this conversation, they've really gained a lot of insight
as to why they behave in the manner in which they do.
Some people, though, will take that insight,
and I believe they'll think it's too late for me.
I lash out.
I people please.
I overreact.
I overwork.
If they say to you, Nicole, this is,
been me for several decades, is it too late for me to change? What do you say to them?
I would want to acknowledge that they're already starting to change the ability to gain insight,
right, to see ourselves in a way, hopefully. The reason why I'm always laboring, the evolution,
the science, right, the dynamics is to hopefully allow the criticism and shame to expand into
grace and compassion for oneself. But the moment of awareness, in my opinion is the beginning,
of change. So I want to acknowledge that listener that you are already in the action of creating
a new opportunity. Now the goal, right, is to, as we've been talking about throughout,
translate the insight that you've gained from listening to this podcast. And again,
thank you for tuning in, but to your daily experience. Not the traditional sense of insight that
you and I have been talking about, but the lived experience. Because every moment that we tune
into ourselves is a moment where we give ourselves the opportunity to shift our body into a state
that will allow us to show up differently, though.
I don't want it to be lost on people that the moment that an insight is gained and awareness
is gained, right, hopefully, again, even if there's that voice of criticism or fear or worry
that it's too long, it's too late, it's overdue.
I've messed up all these people and I've hurt people in my life is really the moment we can
give ourselves the opportunity to, with a bit of understanding of why we've adapted in that
way, maybe allow in the possibility of feeling grace and compassion in a future moment,
but it is the moment that change has already begun.
Yeah, beautiful.
Nicole, thank you for all the work that you do.
Thank you for writing this new book.
And thank you for coming back on the podcast.
This has been such an honor.
Thank you for having me and for all the work
and beautiful embodiment that you are putting out into the world too.
Really hope you enjoyed that conversation.
Do you have a think about one thing you can take away and apply in your own life?
And also, one thing you could teach to someone else.
Remember, when you teach someone else and not only helps them,
it also helps you learn and retain the information.
Now, before you go, I just wanted to let you know about something I'm really excited about.
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