Cyndi Collen Cyndi Collen

The Vital Role of Social Health

Social health refers to the quality of our relationships and our sense of community. It's more than just having friends or family; it's about feeling connected, supported, and valued in meaningful ways. Social connectedness is essential for our emotional and psychological well-being, and it can also significantly impact physical health. Research shows that these connections are not merely beneficial but are as essential as other basic needs.

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Cyndi Collen Cyndi Collen

The Perfect Day: A Side Effect of Mindfulness

Perfect blue skies, perfect warmth from the sun, perfect visual experience, perfect level of strength and energy, perfect companionship with new friends from morning through night and being mindful of this day, right before bed, as I laid down on the grass and gazed up into the perfect star-filled clear sky to bring the full day of experiences into my heart center - mind, body and spirit.

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Cyndi Collen Cyndi Collen

Polyvagal and Attachment Theory in Therapy

Your ‘danger detection system’ picks up external and internal cues that the vagus nerve determines are a ‘perceived threat’ and then the vagus nerve re-routes internal resources to help you protect from a perceived threat to your survival. Bringing polyvagal theory into therapy helps you to learn how to be grateful for anxiety.

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Cyndi Collen Cyndi Collen

Benefits of Deprescribing

SSRIs can be helpful, even life-saving, for some. But for many others, their negative side effects and lack of efficacy leave clients feeling stuck - staying on them doesn’t make them feel better but when they try to get off they feel worse.

Mona Adamszek, psychiatric nurse practitioner, specializes in ‘deprescribing’, the process of slowly titrating along with lifestyle changes to help you get through the withdrawal symptoms. Adding nutritional and nutraceutical changes, with guidance from Cyndi, can make this process easier.

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Cyndi Collen Cyndi Collen

New Year, New You? Try Easing Into the New Year

Reflecting with compassion and no judgment during January and February can prepare you for the real goals that will show up all by themselves in the spring. These goals or deeply held desires are like spring bulbs that need to hibernate during the winter and then will pop up, briefly, with the change in weather that aligns with the spring equinox. The concepts of what you are needing, desiring, or yearning for are within you but need time, rest, and nurturing before they bloom into ideas and goals.

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