12. March 2026
When Your Mind Won’t Slow Down in Survival Mode
By Jenny Kuemmel | Momma Drama & Trauma
I feel quieter on the outside now.
Not because life suddenly became easy.
But because I started paying attention to what my body was doing while I was healing.
For a long time, I thought the hardest part of healing was emotional.
But what I’m learning is that so much of it lives in the body — in breath, in tension, in the way your mind keeps racing even when nothing is technically “wrong.”
This is the moment I began choosing calm over bracing.
And everything shifted from there.
What I Started Noticing
For me, survival mode shows up first in my thoughts.
They race.
They scan.
They prepare.
They try to solve things that haven’t even happened yet.
My mind stays busy even when my house is quiet.
Even when my body is tired.
Even when nothing is wrong in that exact moment.
For a long time, I thought this was just my personality.
But it wasn’t.
It was my nervous system staying alert long after the danger was gone.
The Moment It Clicked
I didn’t realize how long my body had been living this way until I laid on Dr. Kristi’s table and was told to release.
To breathe.
To soften.
To let it out.
And suddenly I could feel it.
The heaviness.
The tension.
The tightness in my chest.
That was the moment I realized how much I had been carrying inside my body, without even knowing it.
My body wasn’t anxious.
It was braced.
And it was tired.
The Emotional Truth
There is a special kind of exhaustion that comes from living in survival mode for too long.
It’s not the kind sleep fixes.
It’s not the kind rest alone touches.
It lives deeper than that.
It’s the tired that lives in your breath.
In your shoulders.
In your jaw.
In your reactions.
And realizing that made me sad.
Because I could see how long I had been pouring from an empty cup.
Bone dry.
With nothing left to give myself.
That’s hard to admit.
But it’s also where healing really began.
Lately, I’ve started noticing something else.
Even when I’m laying in bed at night, in a quiet house, in a moment that should feel safe, my body is still tense.
My shoulders are lifted.
My jaw is tight.
My breath is shallow.
And I have to gently remind myself, “You’re okay. You’re not in survival anymore. You are safe right now.”
Sometimes I place my hand on my chest.
Sometimes I take a slow breath.
Sometimes I just lie there and let my body catch up to the present moment.
That’s when I realize how deeply survival lived inside me and how intentionally I now have to teach my body something new.
A Gentle Understanding
Survival mode isn’t just fear or stress.
It’s your nervous system staying on high alert after a long season of emotional overload, trauma or exhaustion.
It can look like:
• Racing thoughts
• Shallow breathing
• Tight shoulders or jaw
• Reactivity
• Feeling tired but unable to truly rest
Your body learned how to protect you.
And now, it is learning how to soften.
Solutions & Gentle Guidance — Softening Survival Mode
Here are some of the gentle ways I’m learning to bring my body back into calm:
• Place one hand on your chest and breathe slowly for one minute
• Unclench your jaw and drop your shoulders intentionally
• Step outside and feel your feet on the ground
• Pause for one breath before responding
• Create one quiet moment in your day just to sit and breathe
• Reduce multitasking when you can
• Speak kindly to your body instead of pushing it
Small shifts.
Big healing.
Recommeded Support
Book
The Body Keeps the Score by Bessel van der Kolk
Articles
• What Is the Fight, Flight, Freeze Response
• How Trauma Lives in the Body
• Nervous System Regulation for Beginners
Final Thoughts
If your mind won’t slow down, your body may still be protecting you.
That doesn’t mean you’re broken.
It means your nervous system is learning safety again.
You are allowed to soften.
You are allowed to breathe.
And you are allowed to feel at home inside your body again.
As Always
You are strong.
You are worthy.
And your story matters.
Until next time, take care of you. 💗
