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Emotional Safety Begins Within

Emotional Safety Begins Within: How Self-Talk Shapes Self-Confidence

Emotional safety does not begin in our relationships with others.
It begins within our heart and our mind.

It begins in the way we speak to ourselves.

Before we feel confident in the world, before we trust our decisions or feel anchored in who we are, our nervous system needs to feel safe. And that sense of safety is shaped, or quietly eroded, moment by moment by our inner dialogue.  Before we feel grounded in who we are, we need to feel emotionally safe inside our own minds. Self-talk is the constant conversation happening beneath our awareness. It interprets our experiences, narrates our mistakes, and quietly teaches our nervous system what to expect from life. When that inner voice is critical, dismissive, or dishonest, the body stays on alert. When it is kind, clear, and supportive, the body begins to settle.

Emotional safety and self-confidence are deeply connected. And one of the most powerful ways to strengthen both is by becoming intentional about how we communicate with ourselves.

Thoughts and the Central Nervous System

Every thought you think sends a signal through your central nervous system.

Critical or fear-based thoughts activate the sympathetic nervous system, the part responsible for fight, flight, or freeze or fawn. This can show up as anxiety, tension, irritability, racing thoughts, insomnia or emotional exhaustion. When the nervous system stays in this state for too long, self-confidence erodes. It becomes harder to trust yourself, make decisions, or feel grounded.

Supportive, honest thoughts activate the parasympathetic nervous system, the state of rest, regulation, and repair. This is where clarity lives. This is where intuition becomes accessible. This is where confidence can grow.

Your body does not distinguish between an external threat and an internal one. Harsh self-talk is experienced by the nervous system as danger.

That is why emotional safety begins with awareness.

1. Awareness: Noticing the Thoughts That Frequent Your Mind

You cannot change what you are not aware of.

Most self-talk runs automatically. Thoughts like:

I should be over this by now.

  • Why am I like this?
  • I’ll deal with it later.
  • I’m not doing enough.

These thoughts may feel factual, but they are often conditioned patterns shaped by past experiences, expectations, and survival strategies.

Awareness means gently noticing:

  • What thoughts repeat most often?
  • What emotional tone do they carry?
  • What happens in your body when they arise?

Do your shoulders tighten?
Does your breath become shallow?
Does your energy drop?

This awareness alone can begin to calm the nervous system. When you observe rather than react, you create a pause. And that pause is where emotional safety begins.

2. Curiosity: Where Did These Thoughts Come From?

Once you notice your self-talk, the next step is curiosity, not judgment.

Instead of asking, What’s wrong with me for thinking this?
Ask. Where did I learn this voice?

Many thought patterns originate from:

  • Childhood conditioning
  • Past relationships
  • Cultural or spiritual expectations
  • Times when honesty felt unsafe

That critical voice may have once protected you. It may have helped you avoid conflict, stay alert, or meet expectations. But what once supported survival may now be undermining confidence.

Curiosity signals safety to the nervous system. It shifts you out of self-attack and into self-understanding. When the body senses curiosity instead of criticism, it softens.

And a softened nervous system is more open to change.

3. Pausing to Listen: The Advantage of Calm and Clarity

You cannot hear your thoughts clearly when your nervous system is dysregulated.

When you’re anxious or overwhelmed, thoughts feel louder, faster, and more convincing. That’s why calming the body comes before changing the mind.

Pausing may look like:

  • Taking three slow breaths
  • Placing a hand on your chest or belly
  • Sitting quietly for 30 seconds
  • Squeeze and release your muscles

This pause activates the parasympathetic nervous system. As the body settles, clarity returns.

Clarity allows you to listen, not just to the thought itself, but to what’s underneath it. Often beneath self-criticism is fear, fatigue, or an unmet need.

When you become calm enough to listen, you move from reaction to response. And response is where your power lives.

4. Capturing the Thought: Creating Space and Choice

Once you are aware and calm enough to listen, the next step is to capture the thought.

Capturing a thought means naming it.

Instead of:
I’m failing.

You say:
I’m noticing the thought that I’m failing.

This simple shift creates space between you and the thought. You are no longer fused with it, you are observing it.

This matters deeply for the nervous system. It reminds your body that thoughts are not commands or truths they are experiences that can be examined.

Capturing thoughts restores agency. It gives you back choice.

5. Recognizing Your Power to Change Your Thoughts

Here is the truth many people were never taught:

You may not control the first thought that appears but you do have power over what happens next.

When you capture a thought, you can respond to it.

This is where self-confidence begins to rebuild.

Responding does not mean arguing with the thought or forcing positivity. It means offering yourself grace.

6. Replacing the Thought With Grace Toward Yourself

Graceful self-talk supports nervous system regulation. It communicates safety, patience, and support.

For example:

  • I should be stronger than this becomes
    This is hard, and I’m allowed to take my time.
  • I don’t trust myself becomes
    I’m rebuilding trust one choice at a time.
  • I’m failing becomes
    I’m learning, and learning takes courage.

Grace does not deny reality. It meets reality with compassion.

When your nervous system feels safe, your mind becomes more flexible. When your mind is flexible, confidence grows naturally.

How Emotional Safety Builds Self-Confidence

Self-confidence is not created by pushing harder or silencing doubt. It is built through repeated experiences of inner safety.

Each time you:

  • Notice a thought
  • Get curious about its origin
  • Pause to calm your body
  • Capture the thought
  • Respond with grace

You teach your nervous system a new message:
I am safe with myself.

Over time, this changes everything. How you make decisions, how you trust your intuition, how you relate to others, and how you move through the world.

A Gentle Reminder

Changing self-talk is not about perfection. It’s about orientation—turning toward yourself instead of away.

There will be days when the old voice is loud. That doesn’t mean you’re falling back. It means your nervous system is asking for care.

Emotional safety is the foundation upon which self-confidence is built. And emotional safety begins with how you speak to yourself.

You don’t need to become someone new.
Gently start to become kinder and clearer with the wonderful woman you already are.

If you would like support with a few methods to help you with this, Rose and I are here to be of assistance.   You can join our free webinar “Make Peace with Your Past”. Download the Belief Blossoms e-book and/or book a free Heartbreak Freedom Session to have someone who cares listen.  Every month we offer an Online PureBioenergy Healing Therapy to calm your mind, align your head and your heart, and balance your body.  You are not alone.

That is where healing and confidence begin.

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Ask for Help

As we come to the close of the year, and the change to a new season, let’s pause and consider some elements we can incorporate to make the next year of our lives better.

Stress, as Rose shared in the last post affects all of us.  When kept in check, it can be a great motivator. A deadline is a good thing. Without a deadline or a finish by date, many projects may go uncompleted.

Here in the Northern Hemisphere the seasons also motivate us to get things completed.  When working with nature, spring is the time to plant.  Summer sunshine creates the growth, and fall is the time to harvest the crop. As winter approaches, we prepare for the cold temperatures and barren earth, a time to rest.

Traditionally the Christmas Season consisted of Advent, the 4 weeks of spiritual and physical preparation, for Christmas Day and the 12 days til January 6th.  Bringing light into the home with Christmas lights during the darkest time of the year is lovely and can be one of the nicest elements of Christmas.  Putting up the Christmas lights and seeing them glow into to the night is truly a delight. It was highly ranked on our recent poll.

The food planning, cooking, baking, cleaning, and decorating is fun, albeit time consuming. The bulk of the preparation of shopping, gift wrapping, card writing, meal planning, cookie making, cleaning, decorating, party planning still falls primarily to the women of the home. The bustle of it can be fun and invigorating. Keeping the balance of it all from toppling us like a Jenga tower is the trick.

Christmas decorations in stores and that commercial push to purchase starts in October. Even our email in box is subject to ads.  This can exert pressure on us. Sometimes by the time December 25th arrives, the feeling of overwhelm is so big the joy gets squashed like the sweet potatoes.  When we add in crowded grocery stores, unstable weather, unstable personalities, and over-sugared, tired tiny tots, it is easy to understand how some people can feel more like the Grinch, than little Cindy Lou Who. (Fah-who foris, dah-who doris, Welcome Christmas, Christmas Day)

As we gather together with family and friends to celebrate, laugh, and love the time we share, here are a few timely tips to make the season bright.

One way to offset that feeling of overwhelm is to focus only on what matters to you. Make a list. A list of what matters to YOU. Write your list, check it twice. Sharing with a friend is nice.

Choose what items matter most to you.   If baking is not your passion, buy the cookies or pies.

ASK FOR HELP  

Remember that friend? A task becomes a pleasure when shared with a friend.

Be specific in your ask.  Remember the line, “ask and you will receive”?  

In order to receive what will be most beneficial to you, be very specific. (Think the children’s letter to Santa… they know exactly what they want, emulate that enthusiasm). Never assume anyone can read your mind. Clearly and precisely ask for what you need.

Ask your son -in- law to help with the dishes.  Ask your daughters to bring desserts or salads or both.

Delegate before the guests arrive so the family knows their roles. Kids take pride in taking coats and offering beverages.  Give age-appropriate jobs to the little ones. It gives them confidence, pride and encourages responsibility. Be sure to thank them for their contribution to making the day special and tell them you are proud of them.

Shopping:  If you hate shopping, pass the mantel to the one who loves to shop.  Most teenage girls really like being at the mall.  Volunteer hours are a part of the high school curriculum so ask a volunteer to help you with this task.  Got a tech-savvy 20-year-old?  They know Amazon like the back of their hand.

Remember that part of the fun of finding the perfect gift can be an after Christmas outing with your loved ones. Do an activity together. Rose likes to take her family skiing. I like hiking in the woods. Seeing the light festival in neighbouring towns that are on ‘til January is a fun night out.  Taking your grandkids for an afternoon can be the nicest gift for their mom so she gets a nap, or a chance to read that book.  These are low cost, but high value gift ideas that will be remembered for years.

Snow shoveling of sidewalks and driveways can also be volunteer hour credits. Of course, you can pay the kids a small gratuity.

Ask your creative child, friend, or spouse, to help you with the wrapping. Put some music on, pour your beverage of choice, clear the counter or the floor and cut, wrap, ribbon, bow and bag your presents with abandon.   

If you are out and need help with parcels, packages, groceries ask the clerk for help. A recent back injury prevented me from lifting heavy items. I was pleasantly surprised with the enthusiasm I received from staff at a local store to carry my parcels to my car. He was happy to be asked.

Giving someone the opportunity to do something kind, increases that person’s dopamine. Dopamine is one of our feel-good hormones.  It counter acts cortisol a stress hormone. Witnessing an act of kindness improves a person’s immunity by 20 percent. (Holt School of Natural Healing Reflexology Manual).

Plan to give yourself time for you. It can be the greatest gift you give to your family.

  • A warm bath.
  • Time to do your nails.
  • A walk outside before the people arrive.
  • Pet the dog or caress the cat.  
  • Pause.
  • Let the joy of the reason for the Season fill you.
  • Breath in. Hold it. Exhale.  Reset your body rhythm. 

Our expectation of perfection is an illusion.  Have fun.  If something breaks, laugh it off.  If all else fails, put on the Grinch and dance.  Moving our bodies is a great way to shift stress out and happiness in.

Maybe Christmas he thought, doesn’t come from a store, Maybe Christmas perhaps means a little bit more. May the love of Christmas on this Holy Night, fill your heart and home with God’s pure light.