Written by Julie Telgenhoff
Last month, I wrote an article called “The Healthy Depression,” describing a profound, low-level grief that can arise when we become aware of how disconnected, artificial, and morally inverted modern society has become. This form of depression does not come from a chemical imbalance or personal failure. It can emerge from seeing clearly and feeling the weight of what we are actually witnessing.
That awareness, however, can become difficult to carry. Once we recognize the machinery surrounding us such as the manipulation, distraction, digital overstimulation, social disconnection, and constant pressure to ignore our own inner knowing, it becomes nearly impossible to go back to sleep. Yet remaining awake without learning how to regulate the body can eventually lead to exhaustion, anxiety, numbness, or complete burnout.
True change requires more than recognizing that something is wrong. It requires deep reflection, moral authenticity, and radical personal accountability. It also requires learning how to remain present with the discomfort of awareness without allowing it to consume us.
When we see the matrix clearly, the nervous system may interpret the surrounding madness as an ongoing threat. The body can become trapped in survival mode, moving between hyperarousal, anger, fear, exhaustion, and emotional shutdown. Even when there is no immediate physical danger in the room, the body continues responding as though it must fight, flee, freeze, or remain constantly vigilant.
Regulation is not about convincing ourselves that society is healthy or pretending that everything is fine. It is the practice of reminding the body that we are safe in this particular moment. It shifts us from sympathetic survival mode into a state of anchored presence, where we can observe what is happening without losing ourselves inside it.
The goal is not to numb the healthy discomfort of awareness. The goal is to build the physical and emotional capacity to hold it.
Here are six practical, somatic exercises that can help regulate the nervous system while allowing us to remain conscious, discerning, and fully present.
- The Practice: Take a deep breath in through your nose, follow it immediately with a quick, secondary "sharp" sniff to max out the lungs, then release it with a long, deep, resonant "Voooooo" sound from your belly until you are completely out of air. Repeat 3 times.
- The Physiology: The rapid double-inhalation pops open collapsed alveoli in the lungs, instantly dropping carbon dioxide levels in the blood. The deep vocal vibration triggers the vagal brake, physically calming the heart and lowering blood pressure. These two techniques trigger the parasympathetic nervous system, shifting the body out of a panic response and into a state where reflection is possible.
- The Practice: Close your mouth, relax your jaw, and inhale deeply through your nose. As you exhale, let out a sustained, low-pitched "Mmmmm" hum. Focus your attention on feeling the physical vibration in your throat, chest, and skull. Repeat for 2 to 3 minutes.
- The Physiology: The vagus nerve runs directly past the vocal cords and larynx. The physical vibration of humming stimulates this nerve, which instantly fires up the parasympathetic nervous system to lower your heart rate and blood pressure. Additionally, humming significantly increases the production of nitric oxide in the nasal passages, which dilates blood vessels and increases oxygen flow, clearing mental fog and soothing the body.
- The Practice: Let your eyes wander slowly around your space without an agenda. Notice three specific, boring objects (e.g., a doorknob, a rug on the floor, the color of a chair). Realize your neck is free to move and move it.
- The Physiology: Hyperarousal causes tunnel vision. Intentionally scanning your environment and moving your neck signals to the brainstem that there are no immediate physical predators in the room, dropping your baseline stress.
- The Practice: Sit quietly and scan your body. Where does the sadness or frustration live? Is it a tightness in your chest? A knot in your throat? A weight in your stomach? Focus your attention on that exact spot and breathe into it, saying to yourself, "I can feel this tension, and I am safe enough to let it sit here right now."
- The Physiology: This builds "interoceptive capacity" which is the ability to tolerate uncomfortable internal bodily states. By witnessing the physical sensation instead of running to a distraction, you digest the emotion rather than storing it as trauma.
- The Practice: Splash cool water on your face or hold a cool cloth over your forehead and cheeks for 15 to 20 seconds. Breathe slowly while doing this. Dry off, and proceed.
- The Physiology: Cold water on the face stimulates the trigeminal nerve, which instantly activates the "mammalian dive reflex." This biological trigger bypasses your conscious thoughts to rapidly lower your heart rate, constrict peripheral blood vessels, and shift your entire system out of a high-stress state into immediate physiological calm
- The Practice: Establish a daily, zero input window. No screens, no books, no podcasts. Sit with your hands flat on a wooden table, or walk outside and look at the sky or trees. Feel the hard ground beneath your feet.
- The Physiology: This removes the external neural overload. It forces the brain to calibrate to the slow, organic rhythms of nature rather than the hyper-fast, dopamine driven rhythms of the digital grid. It creates the actual container for "true elderhood" to form.
The healthy depression is not something we must immediately silence, medicate, distract ourselves from, or transform into forced positivity. It may be the part of us that still remembers what genuine human connection, integrity, purpose, and natural living are supposed to feel like.
But awareness without regulation can become its own prison. When the nervous system remains in a constant state of alarm, we lose the ability to think clearly, listen inwardly, and respond with intention. We become easier to exhaust, provoke, manipulate, and overwhelm.
These practices do not remove the realities we are witnessing. They help us remain steady enough to face them. They create a small space between what is happening around us and what happens inside us. Within that space, we regain choice.
Learning to regulate the nervous system is not an act of surrender to an artificial world. It is an act of self-possession. It allows us to feel grief without becoming hopeless, recognize manipulation without becoming consumed by it, and remain awake without destroying our own health.
We do not need to stop caring in order to survive. We need to become grounded enough to care without collapsing.
Perhaps that is the deeper purpose of the healthy depression. It interrupts the distractions, exposes what no longer feels true, and invites us to become more honest about how we are living. When we can sit with that discomfort instead of running from it, it can become more than grief. It can become discernment, direction, and the beginning of genuine inner change.
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