The Alarm in Your Body: Dr. Russell Kennedy’s New Science of Anxiety

The Roots of Living Alarm

When we talk about

, we often treat it as a malfunction of the mind—a series of runaway thoughts that need to be tamed through logic or cognitive restructuring. However,
Dr. Russell Kennedy
, a physician and neuroscientist, argues that what we call anxiety is actually a secondary byproduct. The primary issue is a state of physiological alarm stored in the body, typically rooted in childhood trauma. This alarm is not just a feeling; it is a neurological and biological imprint that dictates how we perceive reality.

Growing up with a father who suffered from

and
Bipolar Disorder
, Kennedy experienced firsthand how a chaotic environment prevents the prefrontal cortex from maturing. In a secure environment, this part of the brain develops to help us regulate stress and roll with the punches. In a traumatized child, the brain instead supercharges the subcortical areas like the
Amygdala
and
Basal Ganglia
. These areas are responsible for automatic survival responses and addiction. When the prefrontal cortex—the logical "CEO" of the brain—is underdeveloped or paralyzed by stress, we lose the ability to regulate ourselves. We become trapped in a loop where the body feels a sense of danger, and the mind creates worries to make sense of that physical pain.

The Body as the Unconscious Mind

The separation of mind and body is a convenient academic fiction, but in reality, they are a singular, interconnected system.

and
Bessel van der Kolk
have long championed the idea that the body keeps the score, and Kennedy’s work pushes this into a specific clinical practice. He points to the
Insular Cortex
as the mediator that translates bodily sensations into thoughts and vice versa. When a child faces overwhelming trauma, the insula records those sensations. Decades later, a stressful event can trigger that same physical sensation, which the
Amygdala
interprets as a present-moment threat because it has no sense of linear time.

Kennedy identifies this as a "state of alarm." For him, it manifests in his solar plexus; for others, it might be a tightness in the throat or a weight on the shoulders. This sensation is actually a version of your younger self asking for attention. Most people try to escape this feeling by going up into their heads to ruminate. This is a fatal mistake in the healing process. Worry acts as a distraction from the physical pain, but it also aggravates the alarm, creating the "alarm-anxiety cycle." Healing requires descending from the head back into the body to acknowledge and soothe that younger version of yourself that remains stuck in a moment of unresolved terror.

Why Modern Society Is Stuck in Worry

Our modern world is experiencing an epidemic of disconnection, which fuels global anxiety.

suggests that all anxiety is essentially separation anxiety—primarily a separation from oneself. When children are neglected or abused, they don't stop loving their parents; they stop loving themselves. They develop a habit of judging, abandoning, blaming, and shaming themselves (an acronym Kennedy calls "JABS"). This internal split becomes the model for how they interact with the entire world.

Humans have a fundamental intolerance for uncertainty. Our "Stone Age" brains are wired to prioritize certainty for survival, but in a digital age, this manifests as a compulsive need to know what happens next. Worry provides a false sense of certainty. By imagining the worst-case scenario—such as a headache being a brain tumor—the mind narrows down a global sense of dread into a specific category. For a fraction of a second, the

feels a sense of relief because it has "identified" the threat. However, this identification immediately triggers more cortisol and epinephrine, worsening the physical alarm and reinforcing the cycle. To break this, one must learn to embrace uncertainty rather than solve it through overthinking.

Masculinity and the Emotional Language Gap

There is a distinct difference in how men and women experience and process these states of alarm. Research using functional MRI scanners shows that women often have more "lighting up" in the brain when exposed to emotional concepts, suggesting a more robust emotional language. Men, conversely, often lack the vocabulary to describe their internal states. This leads to a phenomenon Kennedy calls "Manoance"—where male anxiety manifests as anger, antagonism, or annoyance.

Society polices male vulnerability from a young age, teaching boys that sharing emotion is a sign of weakness. This prevents men from using one of the brain’s most effective adaptive tools: tears. Crying releases brain-derived growth factor and helps the brain resolve issues it cannot change. When men shut off the ability to cry, the energy of their alarm has nowhere to go but into alcohol abuse, pornography, or violence. Healing for men requires a radical shift in perspective—moving away from a victim mentality where they are powerless against their feelings, toward a state of vulnerability where they can connect with their younger selves and their peers.

The Path to Integration: Somatic and Parts Work

Traditional cognitive therapies like

are effective for coping, but they often hit a ceiling because they try to use the mind to heal the mind. Kennedy advocates for a multi-modal approach that includes
Somatic Experiencing
and
Internal Family Systems
(IFS). Somatic work involves localizing the alarm in the body and staying present with the sensation without adding thoughts to it. By grounding yourself in the "is-ness" of the feeling, you can begin to metabolize the old trauma that was never processed.

involves identifying different "parts" of the psyche—the part that was bullied, the part that protects you through hyper-vigilance, and the "Self" that can provide the love and protection you lacked as a child. Kennedy even suggests "mirror work," where you look at a photograph of your younger self and talk to that child from your current perspective as an adult. This helps show the
Amygdala
that you are no longer in that dangerous past environment. While this sounds like "woo" to those trained in strict allopathic medicine, Kennedy insists it is the only way to reach the subcortical programs that are unreachable through logic alone. True resilience isn't the absence of alarm; it’s the ability to recognize it, hold it with compassion, and refuse to let it drive you into the prison of your own thoughts.

The Alarm in Your Body: Dr. Russell Kennedy’s New Science of Anxiety

Fancy watching it?

Watch the full video and context

6 min read