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Some emotional states are easier to notice physically than emotionally.The chest feels heavy before grief is fully ackno...
14/05/2026

Some emotional states are easier to notice physically than emotionally.

The chest feels heavy before grief is fully acknowledged.
The stomach tightens before the mind recognises anxiety.
The shoulders tense before we realise how much pressure we are carrying.

Traditional Chinese Medicine has long explored the relationship between emotions, organs, physical symptoms, and daily rhythms through concepts such as the Chinese Body Clock.

In my latest blog, I explore:

• Why emotions are not experienced only through thought.
• The connection between stress and physical symptoms.
• The Chinese Body Clock and emotional patterns.
• Why body awareness matters.
• How emotions may appear physically before we consciously recognise them.

Link in bio to read the full blog.

It feels easier to suppress feelings than to stay with them. Not because we don’t know what we feel, but because of what...
05/05/2026

It feels easier to suppress feelings than to stay with them. Not because we don’t know what we feel, but because of what feeling actually involves.

Feelings are not only thoughts. They are experienced in the body, and that intensity is often what we move away from. Tightness, pressure, restlessness. It is easier to think about them than to stay with them.

Suppressing them can bring quick relief, but it also interrupts how they are processed. What is not felt doesn’t complete its course. It stays, and it tends to return in other ways.

This is where something small can shift.
Instead of asking “why do I feel like this?”, stay with “what do I feel right now?”.

Not the story. The sensation.

Link in bio for the blog.

A few weeks ago I was diagnosed with ADHD, and since then I have been looking back at many things in my life with a diff...
14/03/2026

A few weeks ago I was diagnosed with ADHD, and since then I have been looking back at many things in my life with a different kind of curiosity.

Things like masking, struggling with small talk, and becoming completely absorbed in deeper conversations suddenly started making more sense.

While learning more about ADHD I also started noticing something interesting. Some aspects of the way the ADHD mind works can actually become strengths.

I like to call them ADHD superpowers.

I wrote about this reflection in my latest blog.

Click the link below to read it.

https://www.selfhealingclinic.com/blog/masking-adhd-and-the-strategies-we-learn-without-realising

In which relationships do you notice yourself becoming over responsible?What do you feel when you consider not stepping ...
30/01/2026

In which relationships do you notice yourself becoming over responsible?
What do you feel when you consider not stepping in or fixing it?
What happens in your body when you imagine leaving it to the other person?
What does your mind say in that moment about you?
Where do you recognise this role from earlier in your life?

I have been thinking about something that came up in a recent conversation.They were describing how often they orient th...
24/01/2026

I have been thinking about something that came up in a recent conversation.

They were describing how often they orient themselves around what other people need. They notice moods, anticipate reactions, and adjust accordingly. Then they paused and said that, over time, they feel invisible in their own decision making. Not unseen in an obvious way, but quietly absent from what they choose or ask for.

That stayed with me.

It made me think about how this shows up in ordinary moments.

Knowing you are tired and still agreeing to one more thing.

Noticing irritation or resentment, then dismissing it as unnecessary.

Sensing discomfort in a conversation and choosing to stay silent to keep things smooth.

Saying yes out of habit, then realising later that you didn’t check in with yourself first.

Prioritising what others might expect, while your own needs remain unspoken.

Feeling drawn towards a change, then immediately listing reasons why it can wait.

Adjusting your response so others feel comfortable, even when it costs you clarity or rest.

There is often a tension here: One movement is towards naming a need or acting differently, another movement redirects attention outward, towards keeping things smooth, avoiding disappointment, or meeting expectations. Both movements operate at the same time, and both are linked to earlier experiences where attention to others mattered more than attention to self.

I wrote a reflection exploring how this pattern develops over time and why it can persist even when awareness is already present.

You can read it in the link in bio

Releasing old emotions from the body often becomes relevant after years spent understanding oneself, managing stress, or...
13/01/2026

Releasing old emotions from the body often becomes relevant after years spent understanding oneself, managing stress, or working through emotional patterns, when insight is present but the body still feels tense or burdened.

This happens because emotions are not held only as thoughts. They are carried through bodily responses and nervous system patterns that develop in response to specific situations. When the body starts an emotional reaction but needs to restrain it in order to remain functional or safe, the physiological response doesn’t fully settle. The body can continue to carry this unfinished activation even after the original situation has passed.

Letting go doesn’t involve removing emotions or trying to feel differently. It involves allowing the body to recognise that certain responses are no longer required and to release them gradually, as the present moment no longer demands the same level of protection or control.

This process is physical as well as psychological. It relies on awareness, pacing, and attention to bodily sensation rather than analysis or effort.

I explore this in more depth in the blog. Click the link in bio to read it.

Childhood roles stay with us because they once kept us safe. These roles helped you make sense of your environment and g...
17/12/2025

Childhood roles stay with us because they once kept us safe.

These roles helped you make sense of your environment and gave you a way to belong. As an adult, you may still carry these patterns without noticing how much they guide your behaviour. They can help you feel capable and reliable, yet they can also ask you to hold more than you have capacity for.

Healing is not about rejecting these parts of yourself. It is about seeing them clearly and deciding which ones you still want to carry. When you recognise the role you once played, you have more room to choose what supports you now rather than what supported you then.

Which childhood role feels most familiar to you today?

As the cycle breaker, this person starts questioning the familiar rhythm in the family and brings in new ways of thinkin...
03/12/2025

As the cycle breaker, this person starts questioning the familiar rhythm in the family and brings in new ways of thinking and behaving. They may start to prioritise their well being, set clearer boundaries, and communicate with more openness. These shifts can feel unsettling for relatives who are used to the old patterns and may not understand why things are changing.

Family systems often run on habits and beliefs that no one ever names. When someone starts to grow in a different direction, the system reacts because the balance that kept everything predictable starts to shift. Some family members who have not stepped into their own healing may feel triggered, defensive, or even resentful. It can seem as though their identity is being challenged, even when that isn’t the intention.

There are times when the family is not ready or willing to look at their own wounds, and that is part of their journey. Each person has their own timing. The cycle breaker is not acting against the family. They are choosing a path that supports their emotional health and the life they want to live.

While moving through this period, it helps to hold compassion for yourself and for the people who don’t understand your choices yet. Feeling like the outsider can be painful, especially when you are the first to change. Remembering that everyone is on their own path can bring some softness to the moments that feel heavy. Patience and communication can create small openings for understanding, even if the process is slow.

Although it may be difficult, it is important to recognise that each family member will decide for themselves how and when they want to engage with this kind of growth. The cycle breaker continues with care, knowing that their healing is an act of honesty and self respect, and that change often starts with one person choosing a different way of living.

You learnt to take care of everyone long before you learnt how to take care of yourself. That is why it still feels easi...
27/11/2025

You learnt to take care of everyone long before you learnt how to take care of yourself.

That is why it still feels easier to monitor the room than to check what you need.

You didn’t choose to become responsible for everything. You learnt that this was the safest way to prevent situations from escalating.

Your system carries those patterns forward, even though you are no longer in those earlier environments. It reacts quickly because it wants to keep you safe, and that can make stepping back feel unfamiliar.

It’s completely fine to take a step away.
It’s completely fine to say no.
It’s completely fine to let others manage what belongs to them.

A gentle reminder that you don’t have to hold what isn’t yours.

Emotions are immediate, instinctive responses that arise quickly and can be felt physically, like a rush of joy, or a st...
26/10/2025

Emotions are immediate, instinctive responses that arise quickly and can be felt physically, like a rush of joy, or a startle from a loud noise. They signal that something matters, preparing the body to act and communicate.

Feelings develop as conscious interpretations of these emotional signals. They add context, influenced by past experiences, personal beliefs, and meaning. For example, the same surge of anxiety could be interpreted as worry, anticipation, or fear depending on individual experiences.

Moods are longer-lasting states that colour daily life, often without a specific trigger. A restless, irritable mood after poor sleep, or calm contentment following a walk, shows how moods influence thoughts, perceptions, and responses over hours or days.

Click the link in bio to read more.

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