Apr 16, 2026

There’s a quiet system running your life that you rarely think about, but it shapes how you feel, how you think, how you relate to others, and how you respond to stress. It’s your nervous system. And at its core, it’s doing one thing over and over again:
Asking: Am I safe right now?
Many people grow up interpreting their inner experiences as personal or pathologized issues:
“Why am I so anxious?”
“Why can’t I relax?”
“Why do I shut down like this?”
But frameworks like Polyvagal Theory (developed by Stephen Porges) offer a fundamentally different perspective:
Your responses are not random.
They are organized, biological, and adaptive.
Your nervous system is constantly scanning both your environment and your internal state. Based on what it detects, it shifts you into different modes of functioning. Not because something is wrong with you, but because something is happening for you.
This is where your system lands when it detects enough safety. In this state:
- Your body is regulated
- Your breathing is steady
- Your heart rate is balanced
- Your mind is clear and flexible
But the most important feature isn’t just calm, it’s connection. You can:
- Engage with others
- Think creatively
- Learn and integrate new information
- Feel present in your life
This is the state where growth happens. Where relationships deepen. Where you feel like yourself. Safety, here, doesn’t mean everything is perfect. It means your system believes: I can handle this.
When your nervous system detects challenge or potential threat, it shifts gears. This is your mobilization system. In this state:
- Your energy increases
- Your attention narrows
- Your reaction time improves
- Your body prepares for action
This is where you feel:
- Stress
- Anxiety
- Urgency
- Restlessness
It’s easy to pathologize this state, but it’s actually essential. This is what helps you:
- Meet deadlines
- Respond quickly
- Protect yourself
- Take action when it matters
The problem isn’t activation, the problem is getting stuck there. When your system doesn’t return to safety, activation becomes chronic:
- Your thoughts race
- Your body stays tense
- Rest becomes difficult
- You feel “on” all the time.
When stress becomes too much, especially when it feels inescapable, your system doesn’t keep pushing. It downshifts. This is your conservation response, in this state:
- Your energy drops
- Your thinking slows
- Your body reduces output
You might feel:
- Exhausted
- Numb or disconnected
- Unmotivated
- Foggy or mentally distant
Your system is protecting you by conserving resources.
If activation says: “Do something now.”
Shutdown says: “We don’t have the capacity.”
These states are not permanent, they are dynamic. You might:
- Start your day feeling calm and grounded
- Become stressed during a class, meeting, or conversation
- Later feel completely drained and checked out
This is tate shifting: your nervous system adapting in real time.
One of the most important insights from Polyvagal Theory is this: No state is inherently wrong.
Each one serves a purpose:
- Activation helps you act
- Shutdown helps you conserve
- Connection helps you live fully
The issue arises when:
- Activation continues without relief
- Shutdown persists without recovery
- Your system can’t return to regulation
Resilience is often misunderstood as being calm all the time. But biologically, that’s not realistic, or even desirable. Resilience is flexibility.
It’s the ability to:
- Move into activation when needed
- Come out of it when the moment passes
- Avoid getting stuck in shutdown
- Return to a grounded, connected state
In other words:
- It’s not about avoiding stress.
- It’s about recovering from it.
When you start to see your experiences through this lens, something shifts. Instead of asking:
“What’s wrong with me?”
You begin to ask: “What is my nervous system responding to right now?”
And that question changes everything, because it replaces judgment with understanding.
And understanding is what allows change.











