Saturday, July 18, 2026

Triggers Aren’t the Enemy—They’re Messengers From Your Nervous System



We talk a lot about triggers in recovery circles, like they’re some special curse reserved for people with substance use histories, process addictions, or mental health diagnoses. Here’s the raw truth: triggers happen to every single damn person walking this planet. Your neighbor who’s never touched a substance. The coworker who seems to have it all together. The parent scrolling at 2 a.m. because the day felt too heavy. Triggers are not a flaw or a failure—they’re your nervous system doing exactly what it evolved to do: protect you.

I know this in my bones from both sides. As someone with over a decade sober from methamphetamine, I’ve felt the old cravings hit like a freight train during family holidays or right after a win in my business. As a CSAC and recovery coach, I’ve sat with clients whose “triggers” looked like snapping at their kids after a long workday, spiraling into emotional eating, or shutting down in relationships. The neuroscience doesn’t pick favorites. It just responds to perceived threat based on your unique wiring and life experiences.

Why Triggers Happen: Your Brain on Protection Mode

Your nervous system is brilliant at survival, but it’s not always up to date on modern life. When something in the present moment reminds your brain (consciously or not) of past danger, pain, or overwhelm, it sounds the alarm. This is the amygdala and the broader limbic system lighting up, flooding your body with stress hormones like cortisol and adrenaline. Heart races. Shoulders tighten. Thoughts narrow. You’re suddenly in fight, flight, freeze, or fawn mode—whether the “threat” is an actual dangerous situation or your mother-in-law’s passive comment that echoes childhood criticism.

For many of us with trauma or addiction histories, the wiring is extra sensitive. Years of chaos trained the system to stay vigilant. But even without that, life piles on: chronic stress, grief, burnout, neurodivergence, or just being human in a chaotic world. Research in trauma and neuroscience (think polyvagal theory and studies on the autonomic nervous system) shows that everyone experiences these autonomic responses. It’s why a “normal” person might have an outsized emotional outburst after a minor slight or turn to coping mechanisms when loneliness creeps in. Your brain isn’t broken. It’s trying to keep you safe based on old data.

The problem isn’t the trigger. It’s when we react on autopilot—reaching for the old numbing tools, lashing out, or self-sabotaging—without pausing to listen to the message.

Common Triggers in Real Life

Triggers don’t stay neatly in recovery boxes. They show up in everyday moments:

  • Loneliness and isolation — That quiet evening when the house feels too empty and the urge to text an ex or binge whatever numbs you hits hard.
  • Success or positive change — Getting a promotion, hitting a sobriety milestone, or things finally going well—then the fear of “what if I lose this?” kicks in.
  • Family holidays and gatherings — The smells, conversations, or dynamics that drag up old wounds, codependent patterns, or intergenerational stuff.
  • Emotional overload — A stressful workday leading to snapping at loved ones or emotional eating because “I just can’t deal right now.”
  • Body sensations or reminders — Certain songs, places, tones of voice, or even physical states like hunger or tiredness that echo past experiences.
  • Relationship moments — Conflict, intimacy, or vulnerability that feels too close to old abandonment or betrayal.

For some it’s an emotional outburst. For others it’s quietly canceling plans or spiraling into overwork. The point is: this is human. Normalizing it takes away some of the shame that makes everything worse.

Creative, Real-World Ways to Respond Instead of React

The goal isn’t to never get triggered. That’s impossible and sets you up for failure. It’s to notice the messenger, get curious, and choose a response that fits you right now. No workbook or app has the magic formula for your exact nervous system and life. You have to experiment and individualize. Realistic expectations matter: some days the tools will land beautifully. Other days you’ll react anyway—and that’s data, not defeat. Progress is progress.

Here are some outside-the-box, realistic experiments. Try one or tweak it until it feels like yours:

  • The “Name It to Tame It” Voice Note — When you feel the surge, pull out your phone and voice-note the sensation like you’re describing it to a curious friend: “My chest is tight, I want to yell, this reminds me of…” Talking it out (even alone) engages the thinking brain and can calm the alarm system. Make it funny or dramatic if that helps.
  • Opposite Action with a Sensory Twist — Feel like isolating? Do a tiny “connection snack”—send one meme to a safe person or pet the dog while naming three things you can see/hear/feel. Craving a numbing behavior? Pair it with a sensory reset: hold ice, blast a specific song and move your body weirdly, or step outside for two minutes no matter the weather.
  • Body-Led “Future Self” Check-In — Place a hand on your chest or stomach. Ask: “What does the protective part of me need right now?” Then imagine your future self texting you advice. This bridges the nervous system gap and makes the response feel personal.
  • Trigger Detective Journal (Messy Version) — Keep it simple and ugly. After a trigger, jot: What happened? What old story or sensation came up? What did I do? What would feel 5% better next time? No perfect sentences required. Over time you’ll spot patterns unique to you.
  • The Absurdity Ritual — When a trigger feels ridiculous (success panic, holiday rage), do something deliberately silly for 60 seconds—sing the trigger thought in opera voice, draw it as a cartoon villain, or text a trusted person the weirdest version of what’s happening. Humor creates distance without dismissal.
  • Micro-Boundary or “Pause and Name” Practice — For family or relationship triggers, practice tiny versions first: “I need five minutes” instead of exploding or people-pleasing. Or simply name it out loud: “This is my nervous system talking, not the full truth.”

The key? Individualize ruthlessly. What works for your neurodivergent brain or rural Northwoods life might look nothing like the generic advice in a book. Test shit. Track what actually shifts your nervous system even a little. Have realistic expectations—some triggers will always pack a punch, and that’s okay. The win is getting a little more choice over time.

Triggers as the Call to Adventure

In the Hero’s Journey, the trigger is the “call to adventure.” It disrupts the ordinary world and pulls you into the unknown. It’s uncomfortable as hell. But refusing the call keeps you stuck in the same patterns. Answering it—listening to the messenger, experimenting with responses, building belonging and safety—leads to growth, resilience, and a deeper sense of self.

Your nervous system isn’t the enemy. It’s an overprotective ally with outdated information. The work is updating the map, one honest, personalized experiment at a time.

Triggers will keep coming. That’s life. But you get to decide what they mean and how you meet them.

Progress is progress.

What trigger has been knocking lately, and what’s one tiny experiment you could try? Drop it in the comments—let’s normalize this and share what actually works in real life.

If you’re ready for support that blends lived experience, clinical insight, and real customization to your nervous system and life, book an intro call at ProgressIsProgressLLC.com. First one’s on me. You’ve got this—one messenger at a time.

— Belle

No comments:

Post a Comment

Triggers Aren’t the Enemy—They’re Messengers From Your Nervous System

We talk a lot about triggers in recovery circles, like they’re some special curse reserved for people with substance use histories, process...