Emily: Welcome, Dr. Janine. To start our conversation, could you share a bit about your background and what initially led you to focus so deeply on the mechanics of the nervous system?
Dr. Janine: Absolutely! For seven years following my clinical psychology doctorate studies, I worked exclusively with veterans treating intense trauma. Yet ironically, the evidence-based treatments I was taught tended to focus on writing or speaking about the trauma over and over again. I intuitively felt off about these verbal modalities and often saw individuals struggle to heal through them, leaving me feeling increasingly constrained and misaligned with traditional clinical psychology.
I could no longer ignore the calling of my soul and dove headfirst into alternative modalities, including the nervous system, energetics, and somatics. Finally, things started to make sense. I transitioned into private practice so I could facilitate true, somatic healing. Regulating the nervous system is always the first stop in a transformational journey, whether someone is healing from chronic illness or mastering mental performance, because it dictates how we communicate, handle our health, and take action on our dreams.
Emily: For those who might be new to this space, could you break down what polyvagal theory is and how it changes our understanding of stress?
Dr. Janine: Polyvagal theory is essentially a more advanced way of explaining the nervous system and trauma compared to conventional medicine. The vagus nerve runs from the brain stem to nearly all major systems in the body, impacting our heart rate, breathing, and digestion. It is constantly informing our biology whether or not we are safe through a subconscious process called neuroception. This tracks perceived safety, not actual safety; when someone has been through trauma, it’s as if they have a faulty fire alarm that goes off violently when there is merely steam from cooking.
The theory also explicitly maps out multiple stress states. This includes the active fight-and-flight response housed in the sympathetic nervous system, as well as the dorsal vagal response — which occurs when we exhaust our active defenses and collapse into freeze and shutdown. By mapping these specific responses, we gain a much clearer biological awareness of our exact stress states in daily life.
Emily: Conventional medicine usually just tells us we are either stressed or relaxed. Why has polyvagal theory become such a leading modality in modern nervous system regulation?
Dr. Janine: Conventional medicine relies on a rigid, binary model: you are either in the parasympathetic "rest and digest" state or the sympathetic "fight or flight" state. The limitations of that old model leave people entirely in the dark regarding the varying levels of physiological stress we experience daily. Polyvagal theory has revolutionized this space by providing a vocabulary to understand exactly when our physiology becomes mobilized for action.
Chronic mobilization is highly similar to leaving a car engine running 24/7 — the body simply cannot sustain that high-alert state for too long without experiencing a physical breakdown. Eventually, an unmitigated fight-or-flight loop forces us to drop into immobilized freeze or shutdown. Polyvagal theory has become the leading paradigm because it provides a precise map of tools to regulate our biology depending on exactly which state we are occupying at any given time.
Emily: What are the real-world consequences when we ignore our nervous system health? How can a dysregulated system actively hold us back from expanding our lives?
Dr. Janine: The nervous system is the absolute baseline of personal transformation because it shapes our physiological frequency and how we literally experience reality. Our biology is constantly responding to our environment based on our conscious and subconscious beliefs, and depending on those deep-seated perceptions, the nervous system can quite literally paralyze us and stop us from taking action.
For example, if someone grew up with a highly critical parent, they often develop a hypervigilant baseline, constantly worrying that they are not good enough. In adulthood, this manifests as self-doubt, imposter syndrome, and an inability to take bold action, often accompanied by chronic digestive issues like IBS. Chronic self-judgment over-activates the stress response for too long, forcing the body into a protective freeze state that paralyzes progress. Because our biology cannot sustain that level of chronic tension, anytime we seek to break through a personal ceiling, we must calibrate our beliefs and our nervous system to safely adapt to that expansion.
Emily: That is an incredible wake-up call. What can participants expect to learn as they walk through this course, and what specific tools do you provide?
Dr. Janine: We will build a foundational understanding of polyvagal theory and see exactly why body-based somatic work is much more effective than traditional talk therapy. Participants will gain absolute clarity on how to track their specific physical, behavioral, mental, and emotional cues to identify their exact internal state in real-time. I am also here to clear up a lot of the inaccurate information surrounding the word trauma online today, replacing the social media trends with accurate, clinical clarity.
Once we establish that deep awareness, we dive into targeted applications. The course provides multiple guided breathwork sequences and step-by-step guidance on how to somatically release stored trauma responses directly from the tissues. We review daily nervous system hygiene, which is a vital lifestyle choice rather than a one-time fix. Ultimately, participants will learn how to spot and halt self-sabotage, uncover the number-one everyday trigger that activates the nervous system, and reprogram the root cause to make lifelong regulation beautifully accessible.
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