Settle and Source Sourel

The Search For The Old Way

settleandsource Season 1 Episode 8

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The Search for the Old Ways

If something in the first episode stayed with you this week, you may have noticed a pull. A restlessness. A particular kind of discomfort that arrives right around the time the old ritual used to happen.

This episode sits with that discomfort, honestly, not to fix it, but because it deserves to be named clearly and with compassion.

There is a real discomfort that comes with interrupting something automatic, something the body has relied on for years to mark an ending, soften an edge, bring a little ease into a day that asked a great deal. For some, this shows up as irritability, small things landing harder than usual. For others, restlessness in the evening hours, the body looking for something it cannot quite name. For some, it shows up socially, a glass in everyone else's hand while theirs stays empty.

And for some, there may be something closer to grief. A strange mourning for a ritual that, even while it was not serving them, still held a place in their life.

This episode explains what is actually happening beneath this discomfort, why a nervous system that has relied on something external to bring its noise down does not simply return to neutral when that thing is removed, but instead enters a restless search for the thing it has learned to expect.

A craving, this episode suggests, is not proof of failure. It is old wiring doing what old wiring does, asking for the thing it learned to expect, and it can be present, fully present, without being obeyed.

This episode offers a brief practice for naming discomfort when it arises, rather than fighting it or feeding it, and closes with a gentle look ahead to what Sunday's reflection will offer.

If you find yourself wanting something to return to between these reflections, in the actual moment a habit like this one takes hold, I also built an app called Settle and Source. It offers a ninety-second guided practice for exactly the kind of moment this essay has been describing, the gap between noticing an urge and knowing what to do with it. It is not a replacement for anything here, simply another door, in case it is the right one for you. https://settleandsource.com

Settle and Source: The Podcast is created by Angela M. Carter, founder of Trauma Release Centre and a trained IFS therapist with over thirty years of clinical experience.

Each episode is a Sourel: a short voiced reflection set to sound. Designed for the small pauses of a full life.

Find Angela and more of her work at www.traumareleasecentre.com.

If today’s reflection landed for you, share it with someone who needs it. That’s how a quiet message travels in a loud world.

SPEAKER_00

Welcome. I'm glad you're here. This is the clearing. A special month-long companion for anyone choosing to put alcohol down this July, even just for a little while, to see what is on the other side of the habit. You don't have to have this figured out. You don't have to do dry July perfectly. You simply have to be curious about what might shift if you let your body and your mind have a little more space this month. Each week, we'll walk through something different together. What it feels like to break a pattern. What happens as the fog begins to lift? What it means to maintain something you have started to value. Settling. This one is for you. If you sat with Tuesday's reflection, you may have noticed something this week. A pull of restlessness. A particular kind of discomfort that arrives right around the time the old ritual used to happen. I want to spend some time with that today. Not to fix it. Just to name it clearly. Because it deserves to be named. There is a real discomfort that comes with interrupting something automatic. Something the body has relied on for years to mark an ending, to soften an edge, to bring a little ease into a day that asked a great deal of you. When that thing is no longer there, the body often notices the gap before the mind has fully caught up. For some of you, this shows up as irritability, a shorter fuse than usual, small things landing harder than they normally would. For others, it shows up as restlessness, a kind of fidgeting unease in the evening hours, as though the body is looking for something and cannot quite name what. For some, it shows up socially. A gathering that used to feel easy now feels strangely effortful. A glass in everyone else's hand while yours stays empty can bring up a particular kind of self-consciousness, a sense of being slightly outside the easy rhythm of the room, even among people who love you and could not care less what you are drinking. And for some of you, there may be something closer to grief, a strange kind of mourning for a ritual that, even while it may not have been serving you, still held a place in your life, still marked time, still felt in its own complicated way, like a small companion at the end of a long day. That grief is allowed to be here. You are not required to feel only relief this month. You are allowed to feel the loss of something familiar at the very same time. You are choosing something different. Both of those things can be true together without contradiction. Here is something worth understanding about what is actually happening underneath all of this. When a nervous system has relied on something external to bring its noise down quickly, removing that thing does not simply return the system to neutral straightaway. There is often a period where the system searches restlessly for the thing it has learned to expect. This searching can feel uncomfortable, even though nothing dangerous is actually happening. This is the body adjusting, not the body failing. The searching itself is evidence that something is shifting, that an old pathway is being asked to quiet down while a different one slowly becomes available again. For many people, the most difficult moments are not the cravings themselves, but the meaning we attach to them. A craving can feel like proof that something is wrong, that the choice being made is too hard, that perhaps this was not the right month to attempt this after all. I want to offer a different way of holding that moment. A craving is not proof of failure. It is simply old wiring, doing what old wiring does, asking for the thing it learned to expect. It can be present, fully present, without being obeyed. Its presence does not require your agreement. There's a particular kind of strength in feeling the pull and not following it. Not the strength of gritted teeth and white knuckles, but something quieter. A willingness to stay present with discomfort without needing to immediately resolve it or push it away. I'd like to offer you something small for today. When discomfort arrives this evening, in whatever form it takes, restlessness, irritability, the ache of missing something familiar. Try simply naming it, even quietly, even just in your own mind. This is the searching. This is old wiring asking for something it used to get easily. I do not have to give you that, and I am still safe. You do not need to resolve the discomfort, you only need to let it be there, named and witnessed, rather than fought or fed. This is not a small thing you are doing. Every day you allow this discomfort to simply exist without acting on it. You are quietly teaching your own nervous system something new, that the noise can rise and fall again on its own, without needing rescue from outside itself. On Sunday, we will sit together with something gentler, an invitation rather than an explanation. The smallest possible step towards something steadier. Until then, be patient with yourself. What you are doing this week is not small. Even on the days it feels invisible. That's the end of today's sorrow. Whatever shifted, whatever didn't, let it be there. You don't have to understand it yet. You are exactly where you need to be in this process. The clearing continues three times a week throughout July. If this found you at the right moment, share it with another woman who might be doing this with you. Even quietly. Even on her own. Until the next one. Take good care of yourself.