Emotional inflammation Discover your triggers and reclaim your equilibrium during anxious times

Lise van Susteren

Book - 2020

"If the news has you feeling anxious or outraged, you're not alone. There is a name for this : emotional inflammation. With Triggered, you'll discover a breakthrough plan for dealing with this modern affliction. General and forensic psychiatrist Dr. Lise Van Susteren joins health journalist Stacey Colino to present a program called RESTORE, which will help you discover your "reactor type" for emotional inflammation and show you how to become more grounded and resilient in turbulent times"--

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Subjects
Genres
Informational works
Self-help publications
Published
Boulder, CO : Sounds True 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Lise van Susteren (author)
Other Authors
Stacey Colino (author)
Physical Description
283 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781683644552
  • Introduction: Living on High Alert
  • Part I. The Age of Hyperreactivity
  • 1. Emotional Inflammation: The Name for How You've Been Feeling
  • 2. What Type of Reactor Are You?
  • 3. The Inflammatory Cascade
  • Part II. The RESTORE Plan: The Science and Solutions Behind Cooling Down
  • 4. Recognize Your Feelings
  • 5. Evaluate Your Triggers
  • 6. Steady Your Body's Natural Rhythms
  • 7. Think Yourself into a Safe Space
  • 8. Obey Your Body
  • 9. Reclaim the Gifts of Nature
  • 10. Exercise Your Power
  • 11. Personalize Your RESTORE Plan
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Glossary
  • Resources
  • Selected Bibliography
  • Index
  • About the Authors
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Psychiatrist Van Susteren (Emotional Resiliency in the Era of Climate Change) and health writer Colino (Count Down) deliver in this cogent guide a plan to help individuals recognize triggers, plan ways to overcome them, and reestablish emotional and physical equilibrium. The authors write that pressures--work stress, gun violence, climate change--put everyone at risk for "emotional inflammation," or biological distress responses to changing demands. To deal with these pressures, the authors recommend the RESTORE plan: recognize feelings, evaluate triggers, steady innate rhythms, obey signals, reclaim the gifts of nature, and exercise one's power. They also offer advice on getting enough quality sleep, stepping away from social media, scheduling downtime, and exploring the natural world. While none of the ideas are groundbreaking, the authors' wide scope and reassuring tone stand out: "The unfortunate truth is this: We have been depriving ourselves of natural remedies that are readily available. While they're not necessarily easy to make habitual, they are simple to initiate." These restorative tactics are great self-care starting points. (May)

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