What Is Nervous System Dysregulation? | The Honest Healer
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What Is Nervous System Dysregulation?

The signs, in plain language, and a kinder first step than "just calm down."

Christie Quarton By Christie Quarton · 6 min read · July 2026

You know the feeling. Snapping at someone over something so small it embarrasses you later. Lying awake wired at 1am despite being exhausted all day. Reading the same email four times because your brain simply will not hold the words still. None of that is a mood. It's not a personality quirk either. It's your nervous system stuck in a state it was never designed to hold for this long, and it has a name: dysregulation.

What Dysregulation Actually Means

Your nervous system is supposed to move. Threat shows up, you activate, threat passes, you settle back down. That flow is the whole design. Dysregulation is what happens when that movement gets stuck, when your body stays revved up or shut down long after the thing that triggered it is over. It's less "broken" and more "jammed," like a smoke alarm that keeps going off in a kitchen with no smoke, because it got triggered once too many times and the reset switch stopped working properly.

The practicenext time you catch a reaction that feels bigger than the moment deserves, ask yourself, is this about right now, or is this an old alarm going off again.

The Two Flavors of Stuck

Dysregulation shows up in two main directions, and most people only recognize one of them. There's the loud version, sympathetic overdrive: racing thoughts, irritability, that wired-tired combo that makes rest feel physically impossible. And there's the quiet version, dorsal shutdown: flatness, fog, a strange distance from your own life. Same root problem, opposite presentation. One looks like too much. The other looks like nothing at all, which is exactly why it gets missed the most.

The practicefigure out which direction you default to under pressure. You can't work with a pattern you haven't named.

Why It Sneaks Up on High Achievers Especially

Here's the cruel irony. The exact traits that make someone excellent under pressure, pushing through, staying composed, handling more than most people would, are also the traits that let dysregulation build for years without anyone noticing, including the person it's happening to. You don't collapse. You just quietly become a slightly worse, more exhausted version of yourself, and everyone including you calls it "being busy" instead of what it actually is.

The practiceif you pride yourself on handling a lot, take that as a cue to check in more often, not less. Competence hides dysregulation exceptionally well.

Signs Worth Actually Paying Attention To

A short fuse that wasn't always there. Trouble concentrating on things you used to find easy. A body that feels either wired or numb, rarely anything in between. Sleep that's technically happening but doesn't feel restorative. None of these are character flaws, and none of them mean something is permanently wrong with you. They mean your nervous system has been carrying more than it's had a chance to discharge.

The practicepick one sign from above that's true for you right now and just sit with the honesty of that for a second, no fixing required yet.

Where Regulation Actually Starts

Not with a total life overhaul. With noticing. The single biggest shift is simply catching the state you're in before you're three reactions deep into it. From there, small, repeatable tools, a long exhale, a shake-out, orienting to the room around you, start giving your nervous system practice at coming back down instead of staying stuck at full volume or total shutdown.

The practiceonce today, pause and just name your current state out loud, activated, flat, or fine. That single act of noticing is where every bit of regulation actually begins.

Dysregulation isn't a flaw in you. It's what happens to a nervous system that's been asked to do too much, for too long, without enough chance to reset. The good news is resetting is a skill, and skills can be practiced.

Christie Quarton, founder of The Honest Healer, smiling warmly
About the author Christie Quarton

Christie writes and podcasts on somatic healing, breathwork, and nervous system regulation. She hosts the Be Gentle With Me podcast and wrote I am Safe, a loving guide to gentle healing.

Related reading

Nervous System · 6 min How to Regulate Your Nervous System (Naturally) Small, repeatable practices for calming a stress response — no apps required. Nervous System · 7 min Somatic Exercises for Nervous System Regulation Gentle movement to help stored stress actually leave the body. Nervous System · 9 min Dorsal Vagal Shutdown: What It Is and How to Come Out of It When you've gone numb and flat — what's happening, and how to come back online.
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