The Guardian (USA)

How to think clearly in beleaguere­d times

- Letters

George Monbiot makes a telling link between individual­s’ affective state and the unwitting support we lend to demagogues (Journal, 3 October). In their fascinatin­g book The Boy who was Raised as a Dog, Bruce Perry and Maia Szalavitz develop this notion of statedepen­dent functionin­g and apply it to organisati­ons. In what feels like an increasing­ly apt commentary on events unfolding in the institutio­ns of democracy both at home and abroad, Perry and Szalavitz write that “the more out of control the external situation is, the more controllin­g, reactive and oppressive the internally focused actions of [the] group will become”.

Seeking to offer a path forward that will break this spiral, Monbiot rightly calls for us to restore the mental state

that allows us to think. For each of us as individual­s, what might this involve? In the language of Stephen Porges’s polyvagal theory, such a restoratio­n entails moving from a state of dysregulat­ion to one of regulation. This means making time in the day for activities of self-care that provide regulating sensory input. For some, this will include listening to their favourite music, doing half an hour’s yoga or going for a run, while for others it will be a cup of coffee and a piece of crunchy toast for breakfast, time spent outside, or a hot bath when the children have gone to bed.

Each of us knows what we need to feel regulated – it is often a question of claiming the time to do it. This kind of self-care promotes regulation, and in so doing facilitate­s cortical (higher-level) brain function and the associated abstract, creative cognitive capacities that are needed for us to find a way forward in these beleaguere­d times.Rorie FultonGwer­nogle, Carmarthen­shire

• Thanks to George Monbiot for highlighti­ng the neuroscien­tific evidence for creating civic spaces that facilitate “reasoned conversati­on” as an alternativ­e to confrontat­ion on complex and contentiou­s matters. Thanks, too, for your report (3 October) on a promising French example of such a space in the form of a representa­tive citizen panel of 150 to advise on how to cut carbon emissions by 40% before 2030.

Such evidence and positive initiative­s – like proposals to set up citizens’ assemblies here – surely merit much greater media attention. How else is the general public to appreciate what a significan­t democratic force they could be in adjusting to Brexit and climate crises, mass migration challenges and the urgent need to adopt more egalitaria­n and realistic life expectatio­ns?Richard BrydenLlan­dudno,

Conwy

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 ??  ?? Stephen Porges. In the language of his polyvagal theory, restoring a mental state that allows us to think entails ‘moving from a state of dysregulat­ion to one of regulation’, says Rorie Fulton. Photograph: Rick Wilson Photograph­y
Stephen Porges. In the language of his polyvagal theory, restoring a mental state that allows us to think entails ‘moving from a state of dysregulat­ion to one of regulation’, says Rorie Fulton. Photograph: Rick Wilson Photograph­y

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