We are now working with KIDS, TEENS & YOUNG ADULTS. Click to learn more about our LGPC therapist Rae Buchanan

We are now also offering Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT). Click to learn more about DBT and schedule your next session

We are now ACCEPTING new clients and offering complementary therapist-matching consultation call to find your best match for therapy.

All our therapists are licensed in MD. Meet our therapists that are licensed to practice outside of MD.

Susan Stork, CST, will not be accepting NEW individuals + couples until Spring of 2025.

parasympathetic nervous system

{{ Yawning }} every creature that has a spine YAWNS

yawning cat.jpg

Yawning is a built-in repair circuit which triggers the Parasympathetic Nervous System, which calms everything down in your body.

We most associate yawning with boredom or being sleepy, but new research suggests it can be good for your health - by cooling down your brain.

Yawning is particularly useful when your body is stressed, injured, or ill. If you’ve got a headache, try yawn “surfing”– where you literally try to yawn over and over–in most situations, your headache will ease up.

Scientists at Princeton University found a big yawn can regulate the temperature of the brain and prevent over-heating. Stress activates the sympathetic nervous system, which increase blood pressure. Yawning activates the parasympathetic nervous system, which attenuates the sympathetic nervous system, reduces stress, and lowers the risk for high blood pressure.

Because #yawning disturbs your current sympathetic tone and forces the parasympathetic nervous system to act in order to restore your body to a resting state because yawning discharges STRESS from the body.

Feeling stressed or drained? Make an effort to yawn as a self-care strategy to help your blood pressure!


Be well and #bmore #aware#Baltimore!

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📷: Borna Bevanda via: @unsplash @bbevanda