You can be calm in your head and still watch your body hit the accelerator: tight chest, fast mouth, tunnel vision, a sharp reply you did not mean to make. Nervous System First Aid is a practical guide to what to do in that exact moment, when stress is live and your intentions are losing the race. Instead of asking you to meditate your way into a better personality, it gives you quick, discreet tools that work in meetings, in public, and with the people who know how to push your buttons. Anaya Korvelle breaks stress down into a simple, usable map: how escalation starts in the body, how it changes attention and tone, and where you still have leverage. You will learn breath protocols you can use while someone is talking, grounding techniques that do not require privacy, and stress posture adjustments that soften intensity without making you look odd. You will also get self talk scripts for the first ten seconds of activation, plus clear ways to practise real time calming so it shows up when you need it, not only when life is quiet. This book is for anyone who wants better control of behaviour under pressure: professionals navigating tense conversations, parents and partners trying to argue without damage, and people who are tired of apologising for the same stress patterns. With tools for trigger detection, crisis communication, and short recovery routines after things go wrong, you will build a personal first-aid plan that helps you regain choice, protect relationships, and make cleaner decisions in hard moments.
Nervous System First Aid
SKU: 9789377783440
$23.99 Regular Price
$19.27Sale Price
- Anaya Korvelle writes about the small, practical skills that help people stay steady in the moments that matter most. Her work is grounded in a simple belief: behaviour changes more reliably when we start with the body, not just with good intentions. She is especially interested in the gap between what people know in theory and what they can access when they feel rushed, challenged, or misunderstood. Over years of listening to friends, families, and colleagues describe the same regret cycle - "I heard myself say it and could not stop" - Anaya has focused on tools that are quiet, portable, and usable in public. She approaches stress with respect rather than drama, treating it as a normal human system doing its best to protect you, sometimes with outdated settings. Her aim is to make calming skills feel less like a lifestyle and more like first aid: simple actions you can take before things get worse. A continuing influence is the long tradition of everyday self-management, from wartime-era public guidance on keeping composure in emergencies to older contemplative practices that taught breath and attention as household skills. Anaya brings that spirit forward in modern language: clear, compassionate, and built for ordinary life.


















