Why Some People Calm Your Nervous System Instantly

Tom Foster
March 26, 2026
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co regulation and nervous system

There are some people in whose company something shifts. Not in an obvious, dramatic way. But there is a settling — a chest that loosens, a quieting of the background noise. Around these people you find yourself having ideas. You feel curious. You lead conversations rather than managing your way through them. You feel safe.

And then they leave, or the visit ends, and the unease returns. The pressure. The sense of something squeezing — not hard enough to be acute distress, but present enough to limit everything. The quality of aliveness that was available in those hours or days quietly withdraws, and the question that surfaces is uncomfortable: why can I only feel that with certain people? What does it mean that I can’t access it on my own?

The answer that the inner critic tends to offer is the obvious one: something is wrong with you. You’re too dependent. You can’t function independently. Other people manage to be okay alone.

That answer is wrong. And understanding what is actually happening — both in those moments of rare safety and in the chronic unease of being alone — changes the picture entirely.

What Co-Regulation Actually Is

The nervous system does not operate in isolation from the nervous systems around it. This is not a metaphor. It is a documented neurological reality: the calm, regulated presence of another person has a direct and measurable effect on the state of your own nervous system. Heart rate, breathing, muscle tension, the balance between sympathetic activation and parasympathetic rest — all of these are influenced by the people nearby.

This process is called co-regulation, and it operates throughout the lifespan. It is most visible in infants, who cannot regulate their nervous systems at all without the help of an attuned caregiver — whose heart rate literally synchronizes with their parent’s, whose stress hormones drop in response to being held by a calm adult. But the capacity persists into adulthood. We are social animals whose nervous systems are designed to be influenced by the physiological states of the people around us.

What this means practically is that the experience of feeling safe, creative, curious, and alive in the presence of certain people is not a personality quirk or a sign of emotional dependency. It is the nervous system doing what nervous systems do when they encounter a genuinely safe relational environment: it downregulates. The threat-monitoring that runs continuously in the background — the scanning for danger, the readiness for criticism, the low-level preparation for something to go wrong — becomes less active. And in the space that opens up, other things become available. Ideas. Curiosity. The capacity to lead rather than manage. The full range of what a person can do when they are not spending significant bandwidth on threat detection.

The Symbolic Peg Blocking Life Force

The image of a peg squeezing something that wants to flow freely is a remarkably accurate description of what chronic nervous system activation feels like from the inside.

The unease that sits in the background when alone is not usually acute enough to be called anxiety in the clinical sense. It doesn’t prevent functioning. It doesn’t always announce itself. But it is there, a continuous low-level constriction that limits the range of what feels possible. Curiosity is harder to access. Spontaneous ideas are dampened. The kind of free-flowing engagement with life that would feel natural in safety is inhibited, not by any specific fear, but by the general background state of a nervous system that is chronically running at a mild level of alert.

This state has a specific origin. It was installed by years of living in an environment where the background level of threat was genuinely elevated — where criticism could arrive without warning, where relaxing might mean being caught off guard, where the cost of not monitoring was sometimes real. The nervous system adapted appropriately. It raised its baseline level of vigilance to match the environment it was in.

The tragedy of this adaptation is that it persists long after the threatening environment has been left. The nervous system doesn’t know the environment has changed. It continues running the elevated vigilance because that vigilance was necessary once, and because the signal to lower it — sustained, repeated experience of genuine safety — hasn’t yet accumulated in sufficient quantity to update the default setting.

So the peg remains constricting your life force. Not because something is broken. Because the system is still protecting against a threat that is no longer primary. And in the presence of someone who is genuinely safe, the protection lowers briefly — and the life force that has been constricted flows.

What Rare Safety Reveals

There is something important to extract from the experience of feeling safe with certain people — something beyond the welcome relief of the experience itself.

The capacity for safety is present. The nervous system is not broken in some permanent way that makes peace and creativity and aliveness unavailable. When the right conditions are present, it accesses them. That means the capacity is there. It is conditional, yes — currently dependent on external co-regulation rather than internally generated. But conditional is entirely different from absent.

This distinction matters enormously for how the situation is understood. A nervous system that cannot access safety under any conditions is a different problem from a nervous system that can access safety under specific conditions and hasn’t yet learned to carry that safety internally. The first would suggest something fundamentally damaged. The second suggests something that was never built — not because of any inherent deficiency but because the developmental environment didn’t provide what was needed to build it.

Self-regulation — the ability to access a settled, safe internal state without relying on another person’s presence to provide it — is built gradually in childhood through thousands of co-regulatory experiences with attuned caregivers. The child’s nervous system is repeatedly brought into a regulated state by a calm, present adult, and through that repetition, the nervous system internalizes the capacity. It learns, at a level below conscious thought, that it can settle. It develops something like an internal memory of what settled feels like and how to return to it.

When this process is disrupted — when caregivers are inconsistent, critical, frightening, or simply not present in the way that supports genuine co-regulation — the internal capacity doesn’t build in the same way. The child grows into an adult who can access safety relationally but struggles to generate it alone. Not because they are broken but because the developmental scaffolding for self-regulation was incomplete.

*Here is a simple tool you can use to calm your nervous system while alone.

reset your nervous system

What Those Specific People Provided

It’s worth looking carefully at what the experiences with safe people actually contained, because that specificity is useful.

The quality that stands out is not that anything particular was done or said. It’s something more fundamental: being in the presence of a person whose nervous system was itself regulated, who communicated no threat, who required nothing specific from the interaction in order for it to be okay. A person around whom it was safe to simply be — to have ideas, to lead, to be curious, to be whatever came naturally without monitoring or managing.

The chest peace that comes in those moments — that full-on sensation of being at rest — is the nervous system’s recognition of genuine safety. Not evaluated safety, not reasoned safety, but the pre-conscious physiological response to a relational environment that is registering as genuinely benign. The threat-monitoring lowers. The constriction releases. The bandwidth that was allocated to vigilance becomes available for living.

The creativity and leadership that emerges in those moments is not a special quality that only appears in certain company. It is the natural expression of a nervous system that is no longer spending most of its resources on protection. Ideas that were always there become accessible. The capacity to lead, which requires a certain forward momentum and comfort with uncertainty, becomes available when the baseline anxiety is lower. What looks like a different person in those moments is actually the same person — just with the peg loosened and not constricting the life force.

relaxed nervous system state

The Work That Follows From This

Understanding co-regulation and self-regulation as a developmental sequence rather than a fixed personality trait opens up a different relationship to the chronic unease.

The unease is not who you are. It is the current default state of a nervous system that didn’t get enough of what it needed during the developmental window when self-regulation is built. That state can change — not through deciding to be less anxious, but through the gradual accumulation of the kind of co-regulatory experiences that were missing: enough repetitions of genuine safety, over enough time, with consistent enough sources, that the nervous system begins to internalize what it has only been borrowing from others.

Therapy provides one consistent source. Safe relationships provide another. And over time, with enough of these experiences, something shifts in the baseline. Not all at once. Not permanently after a single safe interaction. But incrementally, the nervous system’s default prediction about what the relational world contains begins to update. The gap between alone-state and safe-people-state begins to narrow, not because the safe-people-state becomes less available but because the alone-state begins to carry some of what was previously only accessible in company.

Here is an interesting way I found to help to relax the nervous system when alone.

The distinction between co-regulation and self-regulation — and the developmental history that shapes how readily each is available — is a central focus in trauma-informed therapy. Working with a therapist who provides a genuinely safe relational environment is itself part of how self-regulation capacity gets built for people whose early experiences didn’t provide sufficient foundation.

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Tom Foster

Writer and Researcher on Narcissistic Abuse Recovery Survivor of parental narcissistic abuse and scapegoat family dynamics, Personal experience recovering from complex trauma (CPTSD), Bachelor of Laws (LL.B.), Independent researcher on narcissistic abuse and trauma recovery

The content on this website is based on personal experience and research into narcissistic abuse and trauma recovery. It is not a substitute for professional psychological or medical advice.

Areas of Expertise: Narcissistic abuse recovery, Family scapegoating dynamics, Complex trauma (CPTSD), Nervous system recovery after psychological abuse, Psychological patterns in abusive family systems, Personal healing tools and recovery frameworks
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The content on this website is based on personal experience and research into narcissistic abuse and trauma recovery. It is not a substitute for professional psychological or medical advice.