There's a common idea that nervous-system work means being calm all the time. It's wrong, and it can backfire. A healthy system isn't permanently at rest — it activates when you need to run or present or respond to danger, then returns to calm. The skill is the shift, not the stillness.
By Jared Ohman6 min readLast updated June 2026Source: Self-Care, Ch. 2
The problem in chronic stress, trauma, and burnout is not that the nervous system activates. It is that it activates and cannot come back down. The brake fails.
— The Self-Care You Were Never Taught, Ch. 2
SHORT ANSWER
The vagal brake, described by Stephen Porges, is the mechanism by which the myelinated vagus nerve rapidly inhibits or releases its calming influence on the heart — letting you mobilize quickly when needed (exercise, excitement, real threat) and return to calm efficiently when the demand passes. The goal of nervous-system work isn't to stay calm permanently; that's a misconception that can be harmful. The goal is flexibility: a healthy system shifts into activation when appropriate and back to safety afterward. The problem in chronic stress, trauma, and burnout isn't that the system activates — it's that it activates and can't come back down. The brake fails. HRV is the best measure of how well your brake is working.
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The problem
You've been told the goal is to stay calm — so when your heart races before a presentation or you snap awake at 3 a.m., you treat the activation itself as a failure. You try to suppress it, which adds a second layer of stress about being stressed. And the harder you chase permanent calm, the more broken you feel for not achieving it.
But permanent calm was never the goal, and chasing it is fighting your own biology. A nervous system that never activates isn't healthy — it's frozen. The actual skill is the one nobody named for you: activating when you need to, and coming back down when you don't.
The mechanism
Porges describes the vagal brake: the myelinated vagus nerve can rapidly inhibit or release its calming influence on the heart. Release it and you mobilize fast — for exercise, excitement, a real threat. Re-apply it and you return to ventral-vagal safety once the demand passes. A healthy system isn't stuck in calm; it moves between states appropriately and returns to baseline efficiently.
So the dysfunction in chronic stress, trauma, and burnout isn't the activation. It's that the system activates and the brake fails to bring it back — it gets stuck in one gear, whether that's chronic fight-or-flight or chronic shutdown. HRV is the best available read on this: high HRV means a responsive brake that shifts gears smoothly; low HRV means a system jammed in one.
The operating system
STEP 01
Drop the "always calm" goal
Replace it with flexibility. Stop treating every spike of activation as a problem to eliminate. The goal is a system that ramps up appropriately and recovers — not one that never ramps.
Pre-presentation nerves aren't dysregulation. They're the brake releasing on cue, exactly as designed.
STEP 02
Let appropriate activation happen
When a real demand arrives, allow the mobilization — the energy is the point. Suppressing it wastes effort and teaches the system to fear its own activation. Use the energy, then plan to come down.
Channel the activation into the task (the run, the talk) rather than fighting it. It's fuel.
STEP 03
Practice the return
The brake is trained by the come-down. After activation, deliberately re-apply it — a few long exhales, a walk, social connection. You're rehearsing the shift back, which is the part that fails in burnout.
The recovery, not the activation, is the rep that builds the brake.
STEP 04
Build baseline vagal tone
Strengthen the brake over time with the practices that raise HRV: slow breathing, aerobic exercise, sleep, safe relationships. A stronger brake means faster, smoother returns and fewer stuck states.
Eight breaths a minute, regularly, is one of the most direct vagal-tone levers.
STEP 05
Watch for a stuck system
The warning sign isn't activation — it's not coming back. Chronic tension that never resolves, or numbness that never lifts, means the brake is failing. That's the cue to prioritize recovery and, if it persists, seek support.
"I can't relax even when nothing's wrong" is the failing-brake signal, not a personality trait.
The printable: flexibility over calm
Print it. The goal is the shift, not the stillness.
THE VAGAL BRAKE
Flexibility, not constant calm.
THE GOAL
Activate when needed → return to calm efficiently. Move between states.
THE DYSFUNCTION
Not activation — failure to come back down. Stuck in one gear.
TRAIN IT
Practice the return: long exhales, walk, connection. Recovery is the rep.
MEASURE IT
High HRV = responsive brake. Low HRV = stuck system.
WATCH FOR
"Can't relax even when nothing's wrong" = failing brake. Prioritize recovery.
It's the mechanism by which the vagus nerve rapidly applies or releases its calming influence on the heart. Release the brake and you mobilize quickly (for exercise, a presentation, genuine danger); re-apply it and you return to calm. A responsive vagal brake is what lets a nervous system shift gears smoothly rather than getting stuck.
Isn't the goal of self-care to be calm?
No — and believing it is can be harmful. The goal is flexibility, not constant calm. A healthy nervous system activates when you genuinely need it and returns to baseline when the demand passes. Trying to suppress all activation fights your own physiology; the real skill is coming back down efficiently after you've ramped up.
How do I strengthen my vagal brake?
The same practices that raise HRV: slow exhale-emphasized breathing, regular aerobic exercise, adequate sleep, and safe social connection all improve vagal tone and the brake's responsiveness. You're not training yourself to never activate — you're training the system to release and re-apply the brake smoothly.
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SOURCES & CITATIONS▾
All claims on this page are cited in The Self-Care You Were Never Taught, Chapter 2. Primary source:
Porges, S. W. — Polyvagal Theory and the vagal brake (the myelinated vagus's rapid modulation of cardiac state). THF presents polyvagal as a useful clinical map while noting parts remain debated.