Notes from Within:
REFLECTIONS ON HEALING, SPIRIT, AND THE BODY
Why Rest Feels So Hard: It’s Not You… It’s Your Nervous System (and Our Culture)
Rest doesn’t feel hard because you’re doing it wrong. For many people, slowing down activates anxiety, tension, or restlessness because the nervous system never learned that rest was safe. In a culture that rewards urgency and constant stimulation, choosing stillness can feel unfamiliar — and even threatening.
The Ego Isn’t the Enemy, But It Sure Is Loud
A trauma-informed reflection on how the ego protects, blocks intuition, and shapes our inner world and how we can meet it with compassion instead of fear.
When ADHD Isn’t ADHD: The Quiet Mimicry of Anxiety and Trauma
Many clients wonder if their struggles with focus, restlessness, or racing thoughts are ADHD. While that may be true, these same symptoms can also stem from anxiety shaped by trauma. In this post, therapist Mallory Tedrick explores the overlaps between ADHD and trauma-related anxiety, and why compassion and curiosity are key to understanding what’s really happening beneath the surface.
The Roundness of Healing: The Soul’s Language
Healing is rarely linear it’s a round, unfolding process of remembering who we are. In this reflection on spiritual integration therapy, Mallory Tedrick, LPCC, explores how the language of the soul can guide trauma healing beyond words. Through somatic awareness, mindfulness, and holistic practices, she invites clients to connect body, mind, and spirit to rediscover meaning after anxiety, depression, or PTSD. This approach to holistic trauma therapy honors both the science of psychology and the mystery of the sacred within.
The Roundedness of Healing: Attuning to Emotion Through Embodied Practice
There’s often that moment in sessions when words begin to falter.
The pauses, the searching for language, and the slumping of the shoulders. The breath shortens and gaze shifts.
And I know: the body is speaking.
I’ve come to trust that the body often knows before the mind does. It holds stories, signals, and truths that language can’t always reach. That’s why embodiment and emotional attunement are central to my integrative approach. They’re not add-ons…they are the bridge.
The Roundedness of Healing: Education as Repair
When clients begin their “healing” journey, many arrive carrying stories or beliefs about themselves that were never fully named, let alone understood. They’ve felt:
“too much” or “too sensitive” or “not enough”
What they didn’t know was that their nervous system was simply doing its best to protect them.
This is where education becomes repair.
The Roundedness of Healing Where Wholeness Begins: My Integrative Foundation in Trauma-Informed Care
We live in a world that often asks us to either compartmentalize or detach. To detach our body from mind, emotion from logic, and healing from daily life.
Pause and allow that to sink in.
Having experienced this large ask myself, I continued to find myself returning repeatedly to the roundedness. The wholeness. The quiet truth that healing is not linear, and it’s never just one thing.
Hypnotherapy Unveiled: A Gentle Path Back to Yourself
I’ve heard it all.
“Are you going to swing a pocket watch and say, ‘You are getting sleeeeepy?”
“Will I end up doing something embarrassing?”
“What if I forget everything I say?”
When I share that I use hypnotherapy in my mental health therapy practice, people often picture stage shows or someone clucking like a chicken. The word “hypno” tends to stir up confusion or fear. But here’s the truth: hypnotherapy is one of the most misunderstood and deeply powerful tools I’ve ever worked with (personally and professionally).
The Autonomic Nervous System: your body’s internal smoke alarm
Your nervous system is a beautifully complex thing—broken down into two main branches, then more branches within those branches, and so on. But when we talk about nervous system healing, we are focusing in on a “sub-branch” called the autonomic nervous system (ANS).
Its job? To constantly scan your environment for cues of safety or danger (remember that smoke detector I talked about last week)? And depending on what it detects, it activates one of two modes. Cue…your sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems.
The smoke alarm that wouldn’t stay silent
Imagine a smoke alarm in a cozy little house. When the house was first built, the alarm was perfectly calibrated. It knew the difference between danger and safety. It only went off if there was real smoke or fire—an actual threat. It was designed to protect, not panic.
But over time, things began to happen in that house. A candle left burning too long. Times when someone forgot to turn off the stove, or the wiring sparked in the walls. One day, a real fire broke out—it was terrifying, and it left a deep mark.
After that, the alarm changed. It became hypersensitive.
Toast too brown? Alarm activated.
A hot shower with steam? Alarm activated.
Lighting birthday candles? Alarm activated.
Even when there was no real danger, the alarm screamed. It wasn’t broken. It had simply learned. Learned that danger can come from the small, ordinary things. Learned that safety is unpredictable. And now, it was trying to protect at all costs.
trauma is my jam
Last week I shared some thoughts on a word that gets thrown around often—healing. But let’s pause for a moment and ask: healing from what? To really understand what healing means, we have to look at the root of the pain. And for many of us, that root is trauma.
Over the next several weeks, I’ll be reflecting on trauma—specifically the how and why of its imprint on the body. Because trauma doesn’t just live in our stories or our minds. It lives in our bodies.
Welcome: Who I Am, How I Got Here, and Why This Work Matters
I’m not exactly sure what this post will become, but I am trusting that this is the right place to start. So—welcome. It means a lot that you’re reading this.
I’m a Licensed Independent Social Worker and Clinical Psychotherapist, but those words only scratch the surface of who I am and what I do. I work with clients who are ready to go deep—not just into the roots of their anxiety or depression, but into their soul. Into a blueprint they can feel but haven’t yet fully accessed—or perhaps lost touch with along the way.
My work is body-based, trauma-informed, and soul-centered.