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Signs Your Nervous System Is Dysregulated (And What to Do About It)

  • Apr 14
  • 3 min read

 



Most people who come to Continuum Breath Institute do not arrive saying "my nervous system is dysregulated." They arrive saying "I don't know what's wrong with me."

They feel anxious without a clear reason. They are exhausted but cannot sleep. They overreact to small things and then feel ashamed about it. They feel disconnected from their own bodies — present but not really here.

None of this is a character flaw. All of it is the nervous system asking for help.


What Dysregulation Actually Means

The autonomic nervous system has two primary branches. The sympathetic branch activates when threat is perceived — speeding up the heart, tensing the muscles, narrowing attention. The parasympathetic branch governs rest, recovery, digestion, and repair.

In a regulated nervous system, these two branches are in dynamic balance — activating when needed, recovering when the threat has passed. In a dysregulated nervous system, that balance has broken down.

None of this is a personal failure. It is the predictable result of a nervous system that has been asked to run on high alert for too long without adequate recovery.


The Most Common Signs

Hyperactivated Pattern (sympathetic dominance)

• Persistent anxiety or a sense of low-level dread that does not match your circumstances

• Racing thoughts that are difficult to stop, especially at night

• Physical tension in the jaw, shoulders, or chest

• Shallow breathing, often chest-dominant

• Difficulty fully relaxing even when you have time and space

• Startling easily

• Sleep that is light, broken, or hard to initiate


Shutdown Pattern (dorsal vagal withdrawal)

• Persistent fatigue that rest does not resolve

• Emotional flatness — things that should move you do not

• Difficulty feeling motivated or present

• A sense of fog or distance from your own life

• Feeling disconnected from your body


Mixed or Oscillating Pattern

• Swinging between wired and anxious vs. flat and depleted

• Feeling unpredictable to yourself

• Overreacting to stressors and then crashing

• A narrowed window of tolerance — ordinary demands feel disproportionately hard



Why Talking About It Is Not Enough

Many people with dysregulated nervous systems have tried therapy, journaling, positive thinking, and mindfulness apps. Some find these helpful. Many find that they understand their patterns far better than they can change them.


"The nervous system is not in the part of the brain that processes words. To change it, you have to change the body first."

To change a nervous system state you have to change the body first. And the most direct, most accessible, and most extensively researched way to do that is through the breath.

What Actually Helps


For hyperactivated patterns: extended exhale breathing, Bhramari humming breath, and practices that send direct safety signals to the vagus nerve.

For shutdown patterns: gentle activating breath practices, somatic movement that invites the body back online, and slow orienting practices that rebuild the connection between body and mind.


For mixed patterns: rhythm and predictability — coherent breathing, box breathing, and alternating nostril pranayama.

In all cases: consistency over intensity. A ten-minute daily practice done every day for a month does more than an hour-long session once a week.


Find out what your nervous system needs


Take our free quiz — it identifies your type in about 5 minutes and gives you specific breathwork recommendations matched to your pattern.

→ Take the free nervous system quiz

→ Explore the complete 28-day breathwork protocol


Guillaume Jaubert | Continuum Breath Institute, Bloomington Indiana | 617-909-9308 | continuumbreathinstitute.com


 
 
 

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Phone Number: 617-909-9308
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