July 4, 2023

Unraveling the Power of Breath and Boundaries with Madhur-Nain Webster

Unraveling the Power of Breath and Boundaries with Madhur-Nain Webster

Curious about the mystic world of Kundalini yoga and how it intertwines with mental health? This week, we're serving up a stimulating conversation with Madhur-Nain Webster, a seasoned psychotherapist who has gracefully transitioned from international business marketing to psychotherapy. With 22 years of experience under her belt, Madhur-Nain enlightens us about the profound mental health benefits of breath and chanting meditation, particularly for those who struggle with silencing the chatter within. She also takes us on a journey through the 52-year history of Kundalini yoga, a practice she believes to be accessible to anyone, irrespective of their mental health condition.

Our insightful chat doesn't stop there. Ever thought about the role of boundaries in our lives? Madhur-Nain breaks it down for us - external boundaries as shields against the world, and internal boundaries as our protection against our personal issues. She shares how striking a balance between these two types of boundaries can prevent feelings of isolation or abandonment, and pave the way for genuine, vulnerable connections with others. This profound conversation segues into a sneak peek at Madhur-Nain's upcoming book, Stressless Brain, where we explore the difference between stress and anxiety, and the paramount importance of distinguishing between them for maintaining a healthy mental state.

When it comes to dealing with trauma and coping with grief, self-awareness is key. Madhur-Nain guides us through the power of understanding our own boundaries, doing things that make us feel complete, and the vitality of daily activities like walking or dancing in releasing cortisol and alleviating stress. We also dive into the transformative power of meditation and relaxation techniques, where singing, chanting, and breathing can stimulate the vagus nerve, fostering a deep sense of inner calm.

About our Guest:

"Madhur-Nain Webster is a licensed marriage and family therapist who specializes in the integration of eastern and western philosophies for mental health. For over 20 years, she has empowered clients to connect with themselves and others through mindfulness and psychotherapy interventions. She applies her profound understanding of the importance of open communication at her successful private practice in Napa, California. Her first book, The Stressless Brain (2018), makes a scientific argument for the positive influence meditation has on the psyche; she is currently working on her second book. In addition to releasing over 60 meditation singles, Madhur-Nain maintains international outreach by appearing on podcasts and holding meditation workshops.

Madhur-Nain Webster is a licensed marriage and family therapist who prides herself in adapting different modalities of healing to her clients’ needs. A major component of her therapeutic process involves the integration of eastern and western perspectives by incorporating mindfulness-based stress reduction techniques, such as meditation, with psychotherapy interventions, such as Eye Movement Desensitization & Reprocessing (EMDR), Internal Family System (IFS), and Relational Life Therapy (RLT). A certified amino acid therapist, she also supports the use of natural methods for mental health.

Due to a lifelong experience with, and knowledge of, yogic technology, Madhur-Nain’s therapeutic approach includes empowering clients with the ability of introspection so they can better connect with themselves and others. By developing the skill of self-observation, she believes an individual can understand and accept polarizing thoughts no matter their source. “It is not what happens to you,” she asserts; “it is how you make sense of it.” For over 20 years, she has helped people discover and build their self-trust with excellent results.

Aspiring to reach an international audience, Madhur-Nain has continuously held yoga and meditation workshops worldwide (virtually and in-person), appeared as a guest speaker on numerous podcasts, and released over 60 meditation singles. Her chants include a variety of religious prayers and psychological affirmations, making them an inclusive form of mental health healing. Her first book, The Stressless Brain (2018), is an accessible scientific argument for the positive influence meditation has on the psyche. She is working on her second book with an intended release in 2023.

Madhur-Nain currently runs a successful private practice in Napa, California, where she lives with her husband. In addition to her marriage of 27 years, her greatest accomplishment is being a mother to her two amazing adult sons. Her hobbies include traveling and expressing her creativity through clothing and jewelry design.”

https://www.madhurnain.com/

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Transcript
Heather Hester:

Welcome back to Just Breathe. I am really happy you are here today that you have chosen just to spend a little time whether you are on a walk or getting some chores done or just taking a few moments for yourself. Welcome. I'm really happy you're here. And I'm really happy to share today's interview with you with someone who is absolutely certain to just make you feel super calm and give you some really, really wise insight. And certainly some things that you will walk away thinking, Hmm, I'd like to I'd like to try that out. I certainly had a fantastic time interviewing her and talking with her and learning so much from her as well. So just to give you a little background on today's wonderful guest modern Madhur-Nain Webster is a licensed marriage and family therapist who specializes in the integration of eastern and western philosophies for mental health. for over 20 years, she has empowered clients to connect with themselves and others through mindfulness and psychotherapy interventions. She applies her profound understanding of the importance of open communication as her successful private practice in Napa, California. Her first book, The stressless brain makes a scientific argument for the positive influence meditation has on the psyche. She is currently working on her second book. In addition to releasing over 60 Meditation singles, modern man maintains international outreach. By appearing on podcasts and holding meditation workshops. I am really really thrilled to bring this conversation to you today. And I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

Welcome to Just Breathe:

Parenting your LGBTQ Teen, the podcast, transforming the conversation around loving and raising an LGBTQ child. My name is Heather Hester and I am so grateful you are here. I want you to take a deep breath. And know that for the time we are together, you are in the safety of the just breathe nets. Whether today's show is an amazing guest or me sharing stories, resources, strategies or lessons I've learned along our journey. I want you to feel like we're just hanging out at a coffee shop having cozy chat. Most of all, I want you to remember that wherever you are on this journey, right now, in this moment in time, you are not alone.

Welcome to Just Breathe:

Welcome back to just free I am so happy you all are here. And I'm really, really happy for this conversation that I get to have with Madhur-Nain. And it is just going to be fascinating, I think for all of us, especially those who are curious about meditation and, and the psychology behind it and how all of this works. So, welcome, welcome to the show. I'm so happy you're here.

Madhur-Nain Webster:

Thank you, Heather. It's great to be here.

Heather Hester:

So, I'd love to start out just kind of with a broad broad question of, you know, who are you and how did you get into this really, really unique work?

Madhur-Nain Webster:

So I'm a psychotherapist of about 22 years and I live in Northern California Napa County. And I love working with people and I actually interestingly enough I was an international business marketing when I first was in college many years ago studying Japanese I spoke fluent German and English and and I just kind of decided it wasn't for me and so like two years in I switched majors and completely when a completely different direction and and it really was round. I really love helping people and supporting people and holding that space and I've been on a journey of doing that ever since. I am a mother and wife of 28 years mother of two sons, 18 and 20. And

Heather Hester:

the good ages.

Madhur-Nain Webster:

Every Age has has a blessing and Thorn.

Heather Hester:

Yes, it is very, very true. Yes, I say that, you know, having teenagers as well, and thinking are so amazing. And they also are just a different level of awesome learning.

Madhur-Nain Webster:

Sure, they're my greatest teacher.

Heather Hester:

Oh, my goodness. I could not agree more. And I think that's such a gift to be able to actually look at them that way. Right? Because I don't know. I mean, I'm, you may be dead, but I didn't always look at it that way. And now that I do, I'm like cash. This is so fascinating. Like, I'm always just kind of fascinated by the way their brains work and how they come up with these thoughts that they have. And Oh, for sure.

Madhur-Nain Webster:

I remember when my older son was four and saying something super wise indeed. And being like, I knew my children were going to surpass me, but age four. Really? Like, I'm gonna have to like step up my game.

Heather Hester:

Oh, my goodness, yes. That I love it. That happens all the time with my both of my daughters. I mean, all of my kids really, but like they to like recently have said things and have done things that I've been like, all they have so far surpassed me and like, emotional intelligence. And just the way that they understand things. I was, I mean lightyears away from that when I was their age. So I always think, Oh, this is like, so great that you are entering the real world like this, you know, I've just so happy. So it is kind of wonderful and fascinating. So, the my one I had so many questions about meditation, because I am I do love to meditate. And I'm always kind of playing with different, whether it's different modalities, or do I sit in a chair? Do I sit in the floor? Do I you know, am I supposed to have thoughts, my net supposed to have thoughts? Is it you know, all these different questions, and, and you do a very specific and teach a very specific kind of meditation, which is from Kundalini yoga, and then that transfers or translates into the meditation. So I'd love if you could talk about that a little bit, because I think that's so interesting. Yeah.

Madhur-Nain Webster:

So Kundalini yoga, and meditation has been very active in the world, if you will, for about 52 years. And it does come out of an organized religion slash cult, like we're in a time you kind of get a group of people can get a little narrow minded and you get culture involved and egos and and control. And yet the idea of the word Kundalini has to do means awakening aware awareness. And actually, Carl Jung and other philosophers brought the concept of Kundalini energy to the west, in, in many, many years, even before this organization grew is the technique as well. And what I really love is that there is there's a couple things, I'm gonna tie in some mental health stuff. And that you know, a lot of people have anxiety and stress and, and let's say you don't have anxiety and stuff, let's say you have a lot of some like functioning depression, which means that you go to work and you go home, and you have a family, but you worry a lot. And that can be like anxiety and depression, depression. And what I love about breath and chanting meditation and movement meditation is that it gives your mind something to do. While you're going into that process of aware of self awareness and mindfulness. For many people with mental health issues, which all of us have to some level, if it's zero, if it's a one or a 10. We all have were on that, that that trajectory or that, you know, space. And what I love about chanting and breath and movement is is that it gives your mind something to do so you kind of get your neuroses out of the way to be able to connect to the the concept and the feeling of being in centeredness.

Heather Hester:

Oh, I love that. Which really, that's one of the biggest things that people who are like, Oh, I know meditation would be great. Eat, but I can't get my mind to be quiet, I can't, I can't be still, right, like whether it's mentally or physically. So this is a really great form of meditation. For someone like that, and really anybody, right? It is anybody

Madhur-Nain Webster:

I mean, if, if you break it all down, I believe that prayer in different religions were was the original meditation. So being in your synagogue or in your church, or in your community center, and reading from a holy scripture as, as a whole congregation out loud, that is a form of meditation, you're tuning into a frequency all together. And that naturally relaxes us. There's actually science, scientific research that shows that when you chant, or read scriptures, or do out loud affirmations, or even talking to tongues, and do all that kind of more stranger, meditation stuff, it actually activates a certain part of the brain, which is the top part of the brain, which is the part of the upper partial part of the brain, and it increases more white matter. And science research has found that white matter helps us to emotionally process what we're going through in that moment. So when you're having a really hard time, I tell people, meditation doesn't have to be like this quiet, serene serenity space with an altar and quietness and the perfect sitting stool or blanket, no, sometimes it might be you doing dishes, and reciting a prayer or a poem out loud, it might be singing a hymn or a chant. And I find that our brains are so incredibly powerful, we're able to do multiple things at once. We can dry live from work and in our heads and all upset, and we don't even know how we got home, because we're so preoccupied with our thoughts. So if you throw in chanting out loud, or singing a prayer, even this, like this little light of mine, I'm gonna let it shine like it seems so simple, and maybe even silly or religious. But it's that idea of when you your mind is, is in like a cycle of just like, and then this happened. And then this happened is always never, when you bring in that frequency. It's like a little bit of it, like a bleep. And then you do enough of the beliefs, your brain starts to rewire how you're processing your trauma drama in the moment.

Heather Hester:

Oh, that's so cool. So it's like a pattern interrupt really, right. So it really could be I mean, whatever. Like, find what works for you.

Madhur-Nain Webster:

100%. And I actually have a very cute story that I share quite frequently when I was driving in the car. And those are the parents listening, when you have your kids in the back and they're having a complete meltdown. And you're driving yours, I just gotta get home, I just got to get home and my older son is having a meltdown. He's screaming, he's yelling, he's probably trying to hit his brother simultaneously, who's the crowd on the other end of this seat in his car seat, and I'm just like, I'm trying to convince him like, just you know, like, chop, chop, you know, stop crying. I'm saying look outside, look at the tree. I'm like, I'm trying to distract. Nothing's working. And I can just feel this, like anxiousness starting to rise in my body. And I just started chanting out loud. And I was just like, I was just chanting. There's an old chant, a Sikh prayer, which is Guru Guru. I gotta get it. I'm not good. And I'm just chanting out loud. And my son's, like, stop chanting. And I said, I'm chanting for myself, to calm down, and it goes totally silent in the car. And he goes, Mama, will you chant for me too. And so it's, it's that piece of, it's like you said, it's interrupting a pattern. And it allows us to go in that frequency. Because being a parent, it's, it's tough. Like, we have so many things happening. And nowadays, like the pressures to be the pressure to be this perfect parent, for our children, all the responsibility to raise these healthy whole individuals is, is tough, like, it's overwhelming, like, no one's perfect. And so I doing something like that you can interrupt the like locked in space that we get in our thoughts, with our partner, with our children, with our parents, with our neighbor, with our co worker, and it's that simple thing. And it's silly at first when people do it, they're gonna be like, Oh, my God, this feels weird, but it does work.

Heather Hester:

That's I mean, you can I now that you're saying it, like, just like this, I can totally see how that works. And just the other thing that I know happens for me and I imagine happens for a lot of people's that, when you are in that space of like, like your example, where you feel yourself like getting more and more anxious, like you feel that. And you, if that continues, you eventually get to a place where everything just kind of goes blank, right. So you completely lose all self awareness all like, awareness. And so being able to do that, like, also kind of reconnect you with self. And that's so huge,

Madhur-Nain Webster:

right? I mean, you know, part of parenting is children want connection, they always, as a child develops, they pull more and more away, which is appropriate. But what happens is, it is our job as parents to keep holding that space. And I tell parents, I do a lot of parenting support. And there's there's five basic needs that every child needs, which is to feel heard, to feel seen, to have boundaries, to have unconditional love, and to feel safe. Those are the five basics mean, like they're big, but they're those are the things a child needs, and none of us get all of them now. And so part of it is like the boundary piece, and and the meditation piece is that piece of who am I and who is my child. And when they're little, we're in like the same orbit. And as they grow and develop, they have to come out of the infrastructure in their own orbit. And then they sometimes don't want to like they have unconscious and conscious reactivity to build in their own orbit and or the parent has unconscious and conscious reactivity of the child pulling away finding their own identity, or you know, their own voice or whatever it is. And so there is that piece of meditation and chanting and breath work and doing that mindful practice. Every day, even three minutes, research has found that three minutes of meditation lowers your blood pressure. So it is meaningful, you don't have to do an hour, you don't have to do 20 minutes. It could be three minutes, it could be one minute. Right? And, and so it's just a piece of life is like not saying but one constant life is change. Right? So meditation brings us to our you know, the source within us ourself, or capital S self. And it allows us to navigate the changes at least easier, as always makes it just a little little bit easier, which can be a lot sometimes.

Heather Hester:

It really can. Oh my goodness. And I think just that helping to reconnect, reconnect, right, and get kind of grounded and be like, Okay, this is what's going on instead of like, floating and frenetic and right. And I think, you know, going back just a little bit what I, I love those, the five. And I know, for me, personally, the boundaries was the most difficult. And a big reason is because I never learned what boundaries were. I never learned how to set them. And so I was kind of learning at the same time I was teaching my kids. And I was also like, I, you know, what I was taught was that we're here to essentially like program our kids and put them into the world, right? Well. We all know that now. But if you're trying to do that, like the whole that kind of blows up everything else, right. And so you're feeling like all this panic and stress because your child is doing what they're supposed to be doing by like doing the separation, and trying to like, create their own orbit. I love that visual Thank you, and, and just kind of step into their own. And if we don't have a good understanding of boundaries, and we don't have a good understanding of what our purpose is as a parent, then that's really hard to give them the space to be able to do that. And to know what they're doing.

Madhur-Nain Webster:

Yeah, right. Yeah, I mean, interestingly, we actually all have to boundaries. And this comes out of the work of Terry real relational life therapy, which is a couples technique, but I do it with my family therapy as well with parents and children and adult children and parents, and it's like an orange peel. So the orange peel has the orange part on the outside and as the white peel on the inside, those are two boundaries and we all humans have two boundaries. We have the inner one, and then we have an outer one. And so the outer or boundary, which is what most of us talk about in our culture, which is your to standing too close to me or you're you're impacting me or you don't, you know, I don't want to go or I don't want to be with you, these are all these external boundaries, which an external boundary is us protecting ourselves from the world. An internal boundary is us protecting the world from our stuff. Oh, so if you think about parenting, is, it is our responsibility as best as we can. I mean, it does go through our DNA to some extent, that's not a whole conversation, but it's keeping our neuroses and not dumping them on our children. And that is an internal boundary, an external boundary would be the, you know, maybe an external boundary is like, and they can go up and down, they don't have to always be up. But like boundaries are not always you don't always, if you have your boundaries up all the time, you'd be alone, right have to know you got to learn how to like, Oh, my internal boundaries up but my outside boundaries down, I want to engage, but I'm going to, you know, I'm going to hold like, like when I'm in a bad mood, and my child wants to hug. If I have both boundaries up, then that child is going to feel abandoned, they're going to feel like you're not there for them, they're going to feel like they don't understand they're going to wonder, like, what did I do if not, depending on the age of the child. But sometimes you have to lower your outside boundary, which is you're allowing the child just because you're you're there, you're their boundary, to some extent, you're their security, but you're holding an internal boundary that you're not dumping your energy, or, Oh, my God, did you know what your dad did, or your mom did or what grandma, like you're holding that in that you don't put that on your child. So that would be outside boundary down inside boundary up. But let's say you're with your partner, and you're having a hard, you know, hard conversation, you want them a little bit down, but also up when they're, if they're reactive, get put your boundary up, but still have your internet down so that you can still be vulnerable and connect. And it's complicated,

Heather Hester:

is complicated. But I think it's one of those things that is so good to know, and to understand. Because I mean, just like everything, once you understand it, and you can conceptualize it, then you can actually do it. And not successfully all the time, but at least right like, yeah, no. And I mean, I think it's your tools that are available to you, right? So if you don't know that they're there, or if you don't know what you're feeling, right. You might be feeling all these things and like having it you know, just an innate feeling that Oh, I, I should be doing this, or I shouldn't be doing this, but not really understanding why

Madhur-Nain Webster:

or what to do. What to change it correct. No, this is not healthy. But I just don't know what else to do. And you may not even know know that intellectually or cognitively. It's just a feeling, right? Yeah.

Heather Hester:

It's a lot of that, like, I feel it here, or I feel it, you know, in the gut, and you're like, I just can't articulate it. And so, so very helpful. Now you have your second addition of your first book, stressful, the stressful brain,

Madhur-Nain Webster:

stressless, brain, restless brain.

Heather Hester:

Not stressful, we're going to take the stress out of the brain. Second Edition is coming very, very soon do you talk about this in part of,

Madhur-Nain Webster:

okay, I don't talk about the boundary piece, or the five basic needs of a child that will come in another book that maybe in a year or two, I kind of have a few in the lineup that I love. My goal is to write a book a year for 10 years. By the time I'm 60. My goal is to write 10 books. So I'm about one and a half down on so we're one and a half in.

Heather Hester:

That's impressive.

Madhur-Nain Webster:

So that's my goal. But the book, The Restless brain does have the meditation, it has all the psychology and meditation, philosophy. And there it also comes with 26 downloadable meditation tracks that comes free with the book plus instructions. And I really talk about how the difference between stress and anxiety and that that they are normal to some extent, the problem is our culture has gotten to a place that it's really normal to hear people say like, how are you? Oh my god, I'm so stressed. I'm so stressed to you want to go get a cup of coffee? And it's like, but it's like, well, what does that mean? Or I'm for so anxious. And so the book really talks about the difference between them and how some is some is normal and some becomes unhealthy.

Heather Hester:

Right? Could you just add to that like it To the really high level a little bit, because I think that is something that is so common. I mean, you totally hit the nail on the head there where it is. It's like one of those things that we used to say, I'm fine or I'm busy. I'm busy such a big deal, right? Well, what does busy mean? So I think stress is another one, like, I'm so stressed. Well, a lot of times, I'll like say that, and I'll be like, well, actually, I'm not. Why am I saying that? Right?

Madhur-Nain Webster:

I mean, I mean, I mean, that's it. I mean, I can analyze that. Right? Not you necessarily, but just our culture. And I think that there's, I think that people saying I'm so stressed, it is another way of saying I'm so busy, I have so much going on. And it gives an underlying, it's a message I'm important. Unfortunately, I think that that if you break it, if you kind of like break it down, Break it down and come to the core, it is a sense of there's a certain sense of I must be important, if I'm so busy, and I'm and then finally busy that I'm stressed. The big thing to think about with stress is stress is part of life, we can't avoid it. So the difference was when it's healthy stress versus becomes a toxic stress that turns into anxiety is that when you're stressed about something, and that something happens, and your stress does not go away. So let's say you're giving a speech at work, or let's say you're in a play, or let's say you're going to propose to your partner, or let's say you have an event happening, you're preparing for you're thinking it's appropriate to be nervous is it's appropriate to be a little stressed, like, how's it going to work out? Am I going to say the right thing? Am I going to? Do I understand what I'm saying? Or what are they going to think that's normal to some extent. When the event happens, and you open your mouth and your spin five minutes into it, the stress should be going down every handful of five minutes. And when you're done with it, the stress should be gone. That is healthy stress. Because it's anticipation we just don't know what what it's going to be like, and we want to do a good job where we want it to work out. Unhealthy stress when it starts becoming more of anxiety, which is unhealthy. Toxic stress is when we're worried about something the event happens and we're still worried. So

Heather Hester:

does that translate into something else then like does that because if the event is over,

Madhur-Nain Webster:

it becomes anxiety, but it means me there's plenty of people who live in a constant state of anxiety. It's almost like one thing ends and they're like, oh my god, oh my God, oh, yay, my kid graduated, you know, from middle school or, you know, oh my God. Now there's high school. It's like, instantly, like they just go in. They're always in that state of worry, worry, worry, worry. That is one kind of stress and anxiety. And that's a piece where some people unconsciously feel and think worrying means that I am taking care of things that I'm going to get in front of it that I can anticipate what's going to happen. But what happens physiologically what happens in our body in our brain is our amygdala, our adrenals our glandular system are in a constant state of fight, flight, freeze and fix are constantly like, do I run? Do I stay? Do I fix it? Do I freeze? Maybe they don't notice me and when we do that, we it like tons all health probably most health problems. Not all but most health problems come from that state. There's a really great documentary on Eagleton good. I think it's on YouTube, where you can google it called stress by National Geographics. I actually mentioned this research. It's a professor from Stanford, and he talks about how stress affects us. So this is a little tip for our listeners, if you have a really stressful experience, and you have that cortisol release in your body and the best thing to do is to walk or dance. So if you can't leave the house or the office and you can't go for a 20 minute 40 minute walk because there's they he found in the research is that whole motion of walking is that you're actually releasing the cortisol out of your body. And and we don't store it so in a good a good negative example is oh my god, I'm late for work. I got another red light. Ah, oh my god, I have a presentation on where am I gonna add another red light so all that cortisol is pumping. your amygdala does not know that this is not danger. It's just stress. It's not danger, but your amygdala thinks oh, we're being tapped by a saber toothed Tiger. Oh my god fight flight freeze fixed Fight, Flight freeze. You get to work in what do you do you sit down in your desk for eight hours and all that cortisol goes to your stomach goes to your hips, goes into your organs. And then you do repeat oh my god, I'm late to get home for work. Oh my God, my kids, I gotta pick up my kid at the school. Here we are again. Right? So if you can't do the walk, go in your office, go in the bathroom, close the door, put on some music and shake your whole body, shake, shake, shake, it helps to release the cortisol good have a good old dance party by yourself?

Heather Hester:

That is awesome. That is really, really great advice. First of all, because we've all been there. I mean, all of us. We ran covers. Yes. I mean, it's just kind of part of being human. Right. I'm wondering how much of this response like the using stress as kind of a, almost a coping technique or, or letting it allowing it to get to that 10, toxic, toxic and then anxiety stage. How much of that originally started as also a coping technique, like, when what I'm thinking is like, if you were in situations where to, in your mind survive, you needed to like know what all the potential outcomes of whatever situation we're going to be.

Madhur-Nain Webster:

I mean, I mean, this is when we can kind of get into a little bit, unfortunately, how our ancestors impact us. I mean, there's one study, I read her research paper many years ago, that says that when the mother is pregnant, and she's under a tremendous amount of stress, she's not only taxing her own adrenals, she's taxing the adrenal of her unborn child in her in her belly. So the baby comes out already at a deficit. And not that, again, no shaming out there, please don't take it on. We all it just happens. It's a book called it didn't start with you, which talks about how our trauma drama is passed through our DNA. And there's another research study I actually read recently, that found that grandchildren of grandparents who were in concentration camps in Germany had the same digestive problems as their grandparents who were born and raised in New York City with normal diets. So part of it is in our it's in our DNA is certain, like if we have a disposition to depression or anxiety. Now, the good news, I don't want to leave it on the bad news, the good news is we can change it, we can change it through our diet, we can change it through supplements, we can change it through meditation, we can change it through exercise, we can change it through doing our own mental health work. Because that supports like I tell adult parents that are adults in my office, you working on yourself, is going to benefit your children, even if they're 30. Because when they see you shifting in your, your, your anxious approach, or your depressive approach or your anger approach, or whatever your disposition might be, you create a change inside of you. And that has a ripple effect into your family. And even when I have children whose parents won't go to therapy or won't work on themselves, adult children's like you doing the works. Not that's your responsibility, necessarily, but doing the work does have benefits.

Heather Hester:

Oh my goodness, it absolutely does. It absolutely does. Well, even like you mentioned earlier doing that, if you can 20 minute walk, right. I love the idea of a dance party, I mean, dance party, even in your car, I was saying this to somebody earlier, like, if you love music, and you're in that that space, like flip on your favorite kid, you know, pull up your Spotify playlist and car dance and sing and who cares who sees you

Madhur-Nain Webster:

right? 100% and that that is going to help will fix everything? No, but it does make a huge difference. And it's not about there's a great I often I said this to our client many weeks ago, I said it's not the finish line. It's the journey there. Yeah, the finish line is our last breath. Not to be morbid. Our finish line is when we die. It's all about the journey. There's a great quote. I can't remember who said it, but I love it is not the life you live. It's the courage you bring to it.

Heather Hester:

That's good. Yeah, that is a really good one. That's so true. I mean, it's gonna be messy. That's what I say all the time. It's all it's all messy, but it's beautiful. There's it's both right. I mean, it's just, it is both and we we are all works in progress. So, you know, it's never too late to start working on yourself to start trying some of these things and seeing what works for you. And what you connect with. And what just holy cow. Yeah, one one step at a time. Yeah, I wanted, I want to shift a little bit here, because we were talking before, before we started recording. And I just want to touch on this question. But this is something that I was asked recently. And, you know, we'll, we'll kind of touch on down the road a bit. But talking about, it's talking about trauma, and then grief. So in this specific question was handling and processing the grief that comes when you come out after a loved one, whether it's a parent, grandparent has passed away? And how to deal with that, you know, not either not being able to tell them or having waited to, to, you know, come out until after the you know, why that happened? Right. So how does one kind of, and it goes into like the bigger overarching, like, how do we process grief? But I think that is a very specific scenario, that would be a speak to my audience, for sure.

Madhur-Nain Webster:

Well, there's a couple things. One is, there's a great saying that I also share that I got the concept from gab or Monty's work, which is, it's not what happens to you, it's how you make sense of it. So in that in that concept of, of how you make sense of it, so when, when a person chooses to not tell a parent about about your identity, or your grandparent, there's one that's like, the logistics of it, what's hurting us, is how we make sense of us choosing to not share, we're choosing to wait, what meaning are you giving that what your what your what you chose to do. And that the meaning that you give yourself why I did something or didn't do something that's going to be more of the target, call them hooks, that might be more of a pulling and stuck feeling that maybe I wait for to do, you know, tell my grandparents till they pass. And now I come out, and I just still don't feel like a sense of relief. And that's when we want to look at well, what's the meaning I'm still holding? That, that I give my give to this choice I made not about good or bad right or wrong. I'm not talking about that. We're talking about the meaning each individual person gives to the choices you make. Now, we don't always know that cognitively. We don't always know what I know I did this because of this. It that's where spending some time to really sit with. Wow, I'm still feeling hurt, pain, anger, confusion. In this choice I've made or didn't make. What meaning Am I giving it that's allowing me or holding me stuck in the journey of why I'm doing it?

Heather Hester:

I love that. That's such a great question. That's a question that you can ask yourself, like, you don't need someone to

Madhur-Nain Webster:

ask yourself. Yeah, you can go journal, you go for a walk. And you ask it multiple times. If you're still holding it. Then you say again, what meaning Am I giving it now? That keeps me from letting go?

Heather Hester:

Right. Oh, that is so great. That is something that we all can do.

Madhur-Nain Webster:

Yeah. Yeah, in grief has multiple multiple stuff steps. And grief is not linear. It's all over the place. So the steps are in Nope. And this is the order they are but you go in and out of different ones. So it's shocking, denial, anger, sadness, depression, acceptance. And then you throw in there every once in a while you throw in there. Wishful thinking, numbing. And we bounce around like one one moment we're angry and anger can just lots of different kinds of anger. And then we're just in denial. Well, something about it. And then we're just like, and then three days later, three weeks later, we're just kind of sad. I kind of wonder why I'm feeling melancholy. I wonder why won't come back to like, there's something I'm processing and I'm still and we're working towards acceptance. And there's a great sharing from the book, Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl. It's very good. And he talks about that one of the things that I'm paraphrasing just this I'll be writing About this, and my next book hopefully comes out in December, that part of how we get out of anger and sadness and shock and denial, part of what gets us out, is the idea of wonder. I wonder what it would feel like be like, if I wasn't feeling sad, depressed, angry, I wonder, I wonder what my life would be like, if I wasn't holding on to this, I wonder what my life would transform, if I were to grieve the loss of x, whatever that is, when you can start wondering, it opens up a space for new growth to happen. But as long as the wandering is closed, you're more likely to unconsciously or consciously be bouncing around these other steps.

Heather Hester:

That makes so much sense. And I love to that this is something that you can really process like, take upon yourself to process, right. And if you need the help of a professional therapists, and absolutely right, but it's something that you can spend time journaling, or you can you know, walk and just kind of let it but opening up that I mean, that makes so much sense to just open that's like the idea of parallel to just being curious. Which I use a lot so that I had forgotten him I read that book 100 years ago, it feels like that's such a it's so good.

Madhur-Nain Webster:

I had to do it in like stages, because it is heavy. I had to like do it and then take a little break, read something else and then read it and then take a little break. And the I think it's

Heather Hester:

one of those books that if you you kind of have to have a little life under your belt to read. Because if you read it too young, it doesn't make any sense. Or you miss a lot of a lot of it right? Yeah. Oh, my goodness. So I have just, I'm trying to decide here. I have a couple more questions. And maybe we'll touch on this one, because I think it'll be a good parallel to my audience. So it's a little bit about trauma, talking about trauma, and when, when is good to acknowledge it to work on it. And when we shouldn't do that, when when, how do we know when it's not the right time?

Madhur-Nain Webster:

Yeah, well, I'll start with the latter. I think it's not the right time, when you have when you have something that you're really trying, like you're in college, or you're really trying to get through college, then you want and you want to be able to say, Okay, I'm going to work on this, when I'm not so focused on something or let's say you're trying, you're focusing on something else, when we unpack trauma, and we have other things going on simultaneously, it can feel like a Pandora's box, and we can feel a sense of, we're treading water in our life, which can bring us into depression. Or we can feel like nothing ever works out for me. And we can get into that mindset. And I also think that, and I say this very gingerly, gently, is when you're younger, like when you're from birth until 30, your brain is not fully developed. And so the idea of self awareness and if you have it, but who I was that we were talking about earlier, who I was at 20 is not the same person I was when I was 30, or 40. Or now in my 50s. Like it's not the same and it's not about better or worse. It's different. And, and that's the part of when you're in your teens and your 20s. It's really about cultivating experiences, you are a sponge, and your brain is developing so much to say that you can learn the most in these ages. But then when you're older, you have the ability to reflect a little bit different because you have more experience. So when you're younger, you're really gathering information and experiences. So that's one second is how to do our trauma. Part of it, again, comes to that concept of hearing earlier, it's not what happens to us. It's how we make sense of it. So when you have let's say you have two siblings in yourself in a family and there's a traumatic or dramatic experience in the family system. All three of the children are going to have a different kind of trauma or pain in one is not better or worse than the other. They're just different. And so part of it is when you want to do some work. You know, there's lots of books out there that can kind of guide you through, but it's really coming to the idea of what are the parts that come up in me When I think about this trauma because that will be an example of how you've made sense of it. I'm not enough. I'm too much things never work out for me. I never get what I want. People don't see me I never understood like all of those always and Nevers, those are, that's our hooks. Right? And, and it's being able to really sit with that, and give your time, yourself time, set up a time, maybe it's weekly, that you're gonna reflect on it. And then you're gonna say, like, Okay, I'm going back to my life. And it sounds kind of corny, but you say like, whatever. The inner parts were like, hey, my four year old self, I love you, I'm gonna be back. And then the next week on that dot, you got to be back. It's God, it's really important, because that's building internal trust inside of ourselves. And that is when healing, that's when the click, click click shifts into that shifting of healing. And, and member wonder if we can get to acceptance.

Heather Hester:

Exactly, exactly. And interesting, the parallel between processing grief and processing trauma. Yeah, they are intertwined, for sure. But that is that is interesting. And, and just also the awareness piece. And having, you know, a fully formed, fully developed brain, right?

Madhur-Nain Webster:

Difference, oh, my goodness, difference.

Heather Hester:

I even think, you know, the work that my son has done, that all of my kids have done. I mean, obviously, they're all under the age of 30. And, you know, he's still only 23, but has already done, you know, work. And I often think about this, like, what, where will he? How will he be processing this 10 years from now? Because it'll be so different, right? And my hope is just that they know what their tools are, right? They know, these different little pieces that while it may not make sense, or it makes sense in a very different way than it's going to 1015 2030 4030 years from down the road. Right? That, that they can do that.

Madhur-Nain Webster:

I think a big piece of it is when any of us are working on trauma, drama, or feelings or memories is just pause and like, what do I need right now? Which is different than what do I need in my life, like, you're not going to know what you need in 20 years. So it's really about what do I need right now. And maybe it's like, you know what, I don't want to deal with this right now. Write a letter of the trauma, drama, and go put it somewhere in your in in and say, I'll come back to you and put a day put a reminder in your calendar for three years from now. That's what you choose. And then you go back and look at the letter. I mean, like it's okay to say, I'm going to pause. But the thing is, don't just pause and then sit there. Go. Remember, I was bringing in experiences, bringing in knowledge bringing in learning, like, that's where that's building self esteem and self worth. And self esteem. and self worth is an antidote, it is one of the most important tools to being able to do the work. So if you can't yet because you're too sensitive, you don't feel you're enough, then put a pin in it. And go do the work to build your self esteem and your self worth so that you have you have the capacity to hold uncomfortable feelings and self reflect the past yourself other people.

Heather Hester:

Right? Well, I think there's so much power in that being able to just pause, I need to pause. I need to shelve it, whether it's for you know, an hour a day, a week, a month, a year. Right and, and come back to it when you know, there are different pieces in place. So but that just that gift to yourself and and you know, to not shut on yourself all the time, right. So

Madhur-Nain Webster:

yeah, and I think it's really important to do things that uplift you and make you feel whole and make you feel because when we do nothing I always tell people like nothingness is not a good thing because it makes us complacent and complacent makes takes me take steps back. Yeah, it's really and that's that piece of and you know, inside outside boundaries. It's like, I gotta protect my partner or my children or my co workers from my whoosh feeling like you never you always it's like, Well, I gotta look at that. I can't plop that on the other person. Then,

Heather Hester:

now. Now, that alone is, you know, such wonderful, just knowledge to have. And on that note, I'm watching our time. And so I want to just really quickly end with a thought on meditation because that's where we started. And wonder if you could just give a really quick, whether it's a recommendation or point, everyone to, you know where you, I know that you have a number of things on your website that are wonderful.

Madhur-Nain Webster:

Yes, I so i have i pi over 50, or 60, meditations on my website. And they do come most of them come out of the Kundalini technology, space. And I've started creating, I have a Christian album coming out for those of you who are listening, who are Christian, or AVID Jewish ones coming out, because I just want to be able to have something for everyone and they can connect to. So it's on Spotify, iTunes, YouTube, they're on all the streaming spaces. And one thing I'll leave listeners with is that singing, chanting or breathing in a sequence, like when you're having a pattern like a pattern, breath, any of those things stimulate your body stimulate the vagus nerve, which when you stimulate the vagus nerve, you actually naturally calm yourself from the inside out. So, so if you do if you sing in your car, like you were saying, if you do a chant, or you do a breath, where your is some people that there's like a box, box breathing really wanted you really, you got to create a little pulse with your breath. It can't just be long, deep breathing, it needs to be like a pulse, where you're stimulating the lungs, which then which is your vagus nerve is in the center of your chest and connects to all your organs and glands except for your adrenals. So by stimulating it by doing those things, you're able to create a relaxation starting from the inside out. That's my eye sharing.

Heather Hester:

I love it. That is the perfect, perfect way to to end. Thank you so much. And it is such an honor to have you here. Thank you.

Madhur-Nain Webster:

Thank you so much, Heather. I really enjoyed our conversation.

Heather Hester:

Me too.