Discover how to rewire your brain's stress response and reclaim your peace. We explore practical, biology-backed tools to manage the mental load and transform the beautiful mess of motherhood into a journey of thriving.

Overstimulation isn't a sign that you are a weak mom or that you don't love your kids; it is a biological limit where your sensory input exceeds what your nervous system can process, not a character flaw.
This feeling is often a result of the "mental load," which keeps the brain's amygdala on high alert. When you are constantly scanning for threats or tracking endless family details, your body stays in an accelerated survival mode with a higher heart rate and muscle tension. Overstimulation occurs when the sensory input from noise, physical demands, and emotional labor exceeds what your nervous system can biologically process, which is a physical limit rather than a character flaw.
When you are in a "fight-or-flight" spiral, the thinking part of your brain often goes offline, so you must use "bottom-up" somatic tools to signal safety to your body. Techniques like "Orienting"—slowly scanning the room to prove to your brain there are no physical predators—or the "Butterfly Hug," which involves rhythmic tapping on your shoulders, can break the survival loop. Other physical "hacks" include the "Cold Water Reset" to trigger the diving reflex or focusing on a long exhale to activate the vagus nerve.
"Naming it to Tame it" is the practice of labeling your internal emotions, such as saying, "I am noticing a lot of anger in my body." This simple act shifts brain activity from the emotional centers to the thinking centers, creating a sense of "decentering" where you observe the storm rather than being consumed by it. This shift helps move you out of a shame spiral and into a state of self-compassion, which is physiologically necessary for a regulated nervous system.
The script suggests shifting the definition of self-care from extra tasks to "micro-moments" of regulation woven into your existing routine. This includes "anchor points" like feeling the water on your skin while washing your hands, softening your jaw by five percent while feeding the baby, or pushing your feet into the floor for grounding while standing in the kitchen. These twenty-second resets prevent your baseline stress from climbing too high without requiring you to step away from your responsibilities.
Children often "sync up" with their parents' nervous systems through a process called co-regulation. If a parent acts as a steady "Wi-Fi router" by staying regulated, children can tether to that calm signal to find their own stability. Furthermore, by practicing these tools, parents break generational patterns of reacting to stress, modeling for their children how to handle big emotions and how to perform "repair" when mistakes are made.
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From Columbia University alumni built in San Francisco
