As bad as being peeved feels, it's actually a protective response to what usually starts out as fear or pain, explains Veronica Rojas, MD, a psychiatrist and co-founder of the Mindfulness Forum of Ridgewood in Ridgewood, N.J.. Before you can even make sense of a threat, your amygdala, the almond - shaped emotion center of the brain, triggers a release of adrenaline and other stress hormone
As bad
as being peeved feels, it's actually a protective response to what usually starts out as fear or pain, explains Veronica Rojas, MD, a psychiatrist and co-founder of the Mindfulness Forum of Ridgewood in Ridgewood, N.J.. Before you can even make sense of a threat, your amygdala, the almond - shaped emotion center of the brain, triggers a release of adrenaline and other stress hormone
as being peeved feels, it's actually a protective response to what usually starts out
as fear or pain, explains Veronica Rojas, MD, a psychiatrist and co-founder of the Mindfulness Forum of Ridgewood in Ridgewood, N.J.. Before you can even make sense of a threat, your amygdala, the almond - shaped emotion center of the brain, triggers a release of adrenaline and other stress hormone
as fear or pain, explains Veronica Rojas, MD, a psychiatrist and co-founder of the Mindfulness Forum of Ridgewood in Ridgewood, N.J.. Before you can even make sense of a threat, your amygdala, the almond - shaped
emotion center of the brain, triggers a release of
adrenaline and other stress hormones.
When I was first introduced to the world of trading nearly 6 months ago, my heartbeat, nerves,
emotions, breathing and
adrenaline showed the same pattern and speed up and down
as the lower time - frame candlestick charts.