How It Works
The brain kicks into high gear during a stress or trauma event.
Our attention narrows, enabling quick, directed thinking to evaluate danger and make rapid decisions.
Our brain ignores irrelevant information in order to conserve resources
After the stress or trauma event and/or if the stress is ongoing, these changes in the brain can have lingering impact.
Memories can be fragmented, difficult to retrieve, very vivid or blacked out
Learning new information can be challenging as it requires memory “updating”, which is limited
“Brain fog”, forgetfulness and inattention can occur because our brain is occupied with the stressor
Cognitive-emotional overload is expressed as shock, confusion, indecision
How to Use
Identify your brain symptoms of stress. Identify the implications and possible management strategies. For example: if you are struggling to listen, to follow directions (learn new information), slow down, try 5 Finger Breathing or Trace 8 Breathing, let your body help your brain. If your thoughts are racing or you are hypervigilant ( hyper-alert, scanning for stressors), use grounding skills 5-4-3-2-1 Grounding or Look Around.
When to Use - Signs of Stress/Trauma
Use to promote self/other stress assessment. The earlier we identify symptoms of stress, the earlier we can activate healthy coping.
Use when experiencing any brain symptoms of stress.
What It Can Do
increase brain awareness, helping to differentiate between stressed state and resting state
learning brain symptoms of stress normalizes experience – taking it from “what’s wrong with me” to “this is a normal response to stress”
eliminate stigma by understanding the brain’s normal response to stress
promote support seeking behavior
promote recovery from stressor using healthy coping skills