1.

Limbic Resonance: What is It and How to Create It With the People You Love?

No items found.

Limbic resonance is the term used to describe when your feeling brain is lined up with someone else's feeling brain and you feel connected.

If you can master lining up your brain with another person's brain when they are in a feeling state, you can have deep, meaningful connections with them.

Let me show you what limbic resonance is and isn't. So, for example, your spouse comes home and they've had a terrible day. You greet them with, "Hey, how are you?" and they reply, "Honestly, today sucked."

Limbic resonance would look like this: "Oh man, I'm so sorry. You felt it. You modeled back to them that you felt it. You joined in. You didn't try to bat it away, you didn't try to make it better. They felt seen and received."

Limbic dissonance, on the other hand, would be if you responded to your spouse in this scenario by saying, "Well, I mean, at least our taxes are done," This would be backing away from the feeling or trying to change the subject.

Another example of limbic resonance would be if your child sits down and starts crying because the Lego they were building just fell apart. You would respond with, "Aw buddy. I'm so sorry. You're feeling what it feels like to lose something, to work really hard on something and have it fall apart. We all know what that feels like, right?"

Limbic dissonance would be if you responded to your child in this scenario by saying, "Well, next time maybe you'll put your Lego set on a table instead of on the floor and it won't fall apart because it's where I told you to put it."

So, go out and practice lining up your brain with someone else's brain when they are feeling tender, and watch the magic start to happen.

!7maZdGQE

Join the Attachment Nerd Herd

Complete access for $29

Similar to what you just watched

The Role of a Father
00:13

A message to all fathers: keep going with your efforts to connect with your children because they desperately need to see what a healthy, connected, caring male looks like, and it will create a secure attachment that fosters resilience.

View
The Neuroscience of What Harsh Punishment Does to a Child
01:28

Discover why harsh punishments and power and control tactics can create compliance in children through fear and dissociative shutdown, and how these patterns can lead to adult relationships based on power and control or deep self-worth wounds in this eye-opening and insightful video that encourages compassionate limit setting without instilling fear.

View
The Two Paths to Finding Secure Love
00:55

In this video, you'll learn that the path to finding and keeping secure love involves working through past attachments and understanding our learned patterns of love, which can free us to choose partners who truly love us in a different way than we may have been used to.

View