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🌿 Blog Post #18

 

Soothe – Finding Calm After the Storm

 

For many survivors, chaos became normal. You learned to read moods before words, to tense your shoulders before the shouting started, to shrink so you wouldn’t be noticed.

Now that the storm is over, peace can feel strange — even scary. Your body may not know what calm feels like yet.

 

But soothing yourself is not weakness. It’s the process of reclaiming peace — one gentle moment at a time.

 

⸻

 

💜 What It Really Means to Soothe

 

To soothe is to meet your pain with softness instead of judgment. It’s the small, sacred act of saying, “I am safe now. I can breathe again.”

 

Soothing doesn’t mean you’ve forgotten what happened. It means you’re learning to respond to your pain differently — to comfort it instead of relive it.

You’re teaching your mind and body that survival is no longer the goal — living is.

 

⸻

 

🌸 The Science of Soothing

 

After abuse, the nervous system stays in “fight, flight, or freeze.” This constant alert state drains your energy, clouds your thinking, and makes rest feel unsafe.

Soothing activates your parasympathetic nervous system — the body’s natural “rest and repair” mode.

Over time, gentle self-soothing signals to your brain: “I’m no longer in danger.”

 

Healing doesn’t always come from loud breakthroughs — sometimes it comes from quiet consistency.

 

⸻

 

🌷 Simple Ways to Soothe Yourself

 

Try weaving small moments of comfort into your day. Healing thrives on repetition and intention.

 

1. Soothe with Breath

 

Close your eyes. Inhale peace for 4 counts. Exhale tension for 6.

Imagine your breath as light — filling your body with calm and washing away fear.

 

2. Soothe with Touch

 

Wrap yourself in your favorite blanket. Hold a warm mug. Feel your heartbeat.

Physical warmth calms the nervous system, reminding you that you are here, now, and safe.

 

3. Soothe with Movement

 

Gentle motion releases built-up adrenaline. Stretch slowly, take a mindful walk, or dance freely to your favorite song.

Your body holds your story — movement helps it release the chapters that hurt.

 

4. Soothe with Sound

 

Play music that feels like peace. Rain, ocean waves, piano, or affirmations.

Your nervous system learns safety through rhythm — let the sounds you choose tell your body it’s okay.

 

5. Soothe with Ritual

 

Create a nightly ritual: journaling, lighting a candle, or whispering your favorite affirmation.

Routine becomes reassurance. Over time, it tells your body: “We’re safe enough to rest now.”

 

⸻

 

🌼 Emotional Soothing vs. Escaping

 

True soothing is not about avoiding your feelings — it’s about caring for them.

When you soothe, you’re saying to your inner self: “I see your pain, and I’ll hold it gently.”

Escaping, on the other hand, pushes emotions down or hides from them.

Healing comes when you balance both — allowing space to feel while choosing methods that comfort, not numb.

 

⸻

 

🌻 Soothe Through Connection

 

Soothing doesn’t always happen in solitude. Sometimes healing comes from being witnessed, from being around people or spaces that exhale safety.

• Sit beside someone who makes you laugh softly.

• Let a pet rest in your lap and feel their heartbeat steady yours.

• Step outside into sunlight, or let the rain wash over your hands.

• Find communities — like survivor circles or online support spaces — where your story doesn’t need translation.

 

Each connection is a reminder that peace is not lonely — it’s shared.

 

⸻

 

🌙 Creating a “Soothe Space” at Home

 

Make one small corner of your world sacred.

It doesn’t have to be fancy — maybe a candle, a journal, a healing crystal, or a cozy chair by the window.

Let it be your safe space to breathe, cry, reflect, or simply be.

Every time you visit it, you reinforce a new message to your nervous system:

“Peace lives here now.”

 

⸻

 

💫 Closing Reflection

 

Healing isn’t only about the moments of strength — it’s about the moments of softness.

It’s about learning to be gentle with yourself after years of surviving the opposite.

 

💜 You have survived the storm. Now, let yourself soothe the sea within.

Every deep breath, every quiet moment, every act of comfort is a love letter to your healing self.

With love,

Jennie and Jessica

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