Rewiring the anxious brain is a central concept in understanding and overcoming anxiety, panic, and worry. The brain possesses neuroplasticity, which is its ability to change itself and its responses based on experience. Anxiety is understood to be created by specific brain areas, primarily the amygdala and the cortex. While anxiety pathways exist naturally, they can be modified through targeted strategies and consistent effort. This involves making changes to the brain’s circuitry, which is composed of billions of connected cells called neurons. By providing the brain with new experiences and cultivating new patterns of thinking, new neural circuits can be built, and existing ones modified, making the brain more resistant to anxiety over time.
Neuroscience helps us understand why certain strategies are effective in managing anxiety. Anxiety involves two main pathways in the brain:
Understanding which pathway primarily drives an individual’s anxiety is key to applying the most effective techniques.
Tools and Techniques for Rewiring the Anxious Brain
Various techniques target these brain pathways to facilitate rewiring:
Techniques Primarily Targeting the Amygdala:
These approaches aim to communicate new information to the amygdala, which learns through associations and experience.
Techniques Primarily Targeting the Cortex:
These methods focus on changing thoughts, images, and interpretations that can initiate or worsen anxiety.
Other Techniques Mentioned:
Several other therapeutic approaches contribute to rewiring the brain and managing anxiety by addressing different aspects of the problem.
The Role of a Havening Therapist in Rewiring the Anxious Brain
A Havening therapist can play an integral role in the process of rewiring the anxious brain, particularly in addressing trauma and its encoded memories in the amygdala. The sources describe Havening Techniques as a powerful tool that directly targets the amygdala, facilitating the depotentiation of traumatically encoded experiences. This is explained neuroscientifically as literally stripping receptors off the surface of neurons in the amygdala, making biological changes that free people.
A Havening therapist is trained in these techniques and uses mindful, psychosensory touch and sensory stimulus to transform the brain. They can guide the client through the process, helping them to access a state where this depotentiation and the creation of new neural pathways occur. One significant advantage highlighted is the ability to work content-free, meaning the client does not need to explicitly describe the traumatic or difficult events, which can prevent re-traumatisation during the healing process.
Crucially, the Havening therapist facilitates a process where the client feels, and is, completely and utterly in control. This contrasts with some traditional approaches like hypnotherapy, which some clients with control issues may avoid. The therapist integrates their neurobiological understanding of amygdala depotentiation and neuroplasticity into how they work with clients, thinking sculpturally about the shape of their neurology and how changes will impact their chemical responses to triggers. The biological change facilitated by Havening is described as being potentially very fast. Beyond targeting specific encoded memories, Havening can also help build the resilience of the client’s “landscape,” reducing overall stress and increasing access to positive emotions. The therapist assists in this process of expanding the perceptual realm beyond fight, flight, or freeze responses.
CPR for the Amygdala
CPR for the Amygdala is presented as a self-healing technique that can be used to calm the nervous system and get back into a resilient zone. While it provides immediate help in moments of emotional hijack, it also has longer-term impacts by changing the electrochemical experience in the brain. This technique proactively heals by depotentiating (reversing the effects of neurons pulling the brain towards fear responses) and deepens resilience. It also helps to build and reinforce the internal locus of control, empowering individuals to take charge of their brain. The source suggests using self-havening touch while imagining taking positive action to create a new neurobiological opportunity. If anxiety arises during this, CPR for the Amygdala should be used to calm down. It enables transcending old survival patterns and developing new, beneficial ones through neuroplasticity.
In summary, a Havening therapist utilises specific neurobiologically-grounded techniques, like Havening and guiding the client in practices like CPR for the Amygdala, to directly target the brain’s fear circuitry. They facilitate a process of changing neural pathways and emotional memories, often without requiring explicit content recall, while ensuring the client remains in control, contributing significantly to the rewiring of the anxious brain and building resilience.
Summary of Rewiring the Anxious Brain
Rewiring the anxious brain leverages the brain’s capacity for neuroplasticity to change its responses to anxiety. Anxiety is understood to involve the amygdala and cortex pathways. Techniques targeting the amygdala, such as exposure therapy, relaxation, exercise, and Havening, aim to modify emotional memories and threat responses through experience and direct neurological intervention. Techniques targeting the cortex, like cognitive restructuring and mindfulness, focus on changing anxious thoughts, interpretations, and awareness. Other approaches such as NLP, SFBT, Hypnotherapy, and Neurofeedback also contribute to this process by addressing subconscious factors, promoting solution-focused thinking, conditioning relaxation responses, or directly altering brainwave patterns. A Havening therapist is particularly integral to this process by facilitating amygdala depotentiation through techniques like Havening and guiding clients in self-practices such as CPR for the Amygdala, enabling effective and controlled healing of trauma and building resilience. The goal is to build new neural pathways that resist anxiety and allow individuals to live more fully according to their values.
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