How Resonance Helps Us Return to Joy
“When we are deeply understood, our brain shifts toward integration and possibility” – Sarah Peyton
Have you ever noticed how hard it is to play when you feel tense, worried or overwhelmed? When your nervous system is braced, even small moments of lightness can feel out of reach. Neuroscience helps us understand why. The PLAY circuit, one of Jaak Panksepp’s core emotional systems, only comes online when the body feels safe enough to explore, imagine and take small risks.
Play is not just for children. It is how humans of all ages learn, connect and stay flexible. Children need play to figure out how the world works. Adults need play to stay creative, spontaneous and emotionally alive. Yet many of us learned early that play was unsafe, or that we had to be serious, responsible or vigilant instead.
“Joy and the PLAY circuit are the most vulnerable emotional circuitry we have as humans. Our capacity to experience joy is especially vulnerable to the ways in which we have experienced feeling unsafe, unaccompanied, or not having a sense of mattering to those around us.” – Sarah Peyton
Does any part of that land for you? Have you ever felt your joy shrink when life felt too heavy or you were too alone?
Why Play Needs Safety
Play and joy require a sense of safety. If our nervous system is in fight, flight, immobilisation or alarmed aloneness, the PLAY circuit simply cannot activate. Our brains prioritises survival over delight. This is why resonance is so powerful. When someone meets us with warmth and curiosity, making guesses so we can check out the truth of our own experiences, the brain/body begins to trust again. The survival circuits quieten and calm. The PLAY circuit wakes up and comes back on-line and we can be more balanced, alive and available for joy.
Think of the last time you laughed unexpectedly, or found yourself being silly with someone you trust. Do you remember how your body felt? Bubbles of delight in your chest? Ripples of contracting/releasing tummy? A shout or gurgle? That is the PLAY circuit doing its work.
Neuroscience shows that play activates regions of the brain linked to creativity, social bonding and emotional regulation. It helps us learn new patterns, break old habits and experience joy without needing a reason. When the PLAY circuit is active, the brain releases oxytocin and endogenous opioids, our body’s own chemistry, which support connection and wellbeing.
I remember when my son was a baby and some family came over to meet him. They all went outside to play group games, full of excitement, and I stayed indoors. I couldn’t see the appeal of games. Now I realise and understand why I don’t always feel safe around certain family members. The bigger the group, the worse I feel.
And in my partner relationship at the time, I was walking on eggshells without yet knowing it, anxiety my constant companion. My body knew I didn’t feel safe long before my mind did.
After many Resonant healing language sessions, something unexpected happened. A sound escaped my lips and rippled out. A laugh. It felt unfamiliar to my ears and my body. I was laughing!! These days I laugh more easily and delight in my capacity to be silly, creative and have fun again.
How Resonance Supports the PLAY Circuit
Resonance is the experience of being met with warmth and curiosity. It is moments when someone says, “Of course you feel that way,” and your nervous system begins to calm. When you feel understood and safe the PLAY circuit in your brain has the right conditions to reconnect us to joy and creativity..
This is why resonance often leads to small sparks of playfulness. A joke. A shared smile. A moment of imagination. A tiny burst of creativity. These are signs that the nervous system is shifting from protection into possibility.
Have you ever felt that moment when someone’s presence made things feel lighter, even if nothing in your life had changed?
In my thirties I had a dear friend who was severely depressed and would start to cry as soon as others became silly or started joking. It used to frustrate me, before I was educated in trauma. She needed very specific listening to, with feelings and needs guesses (I now know these as Resonance skills) before she could move through the trauma triggers and access fun again. Sometimes it took real effort, other times only a few moments of connection. The greatest joy was watching her shift from sadness and tears, to tears of laughter, and her able to join in with the rest of us.
PLAY as a Pathway to Healing
Play is not childish. It is a sign of a regulated nervous system. It tells us that the body feels safe enough to explore. When we play, we practise flexibility, connection and joy. We remember that life is not only about surviving. It is also about delight.
If you were to invite a tiny moment of play into your day, what might it be? A silly voice? A doodle? A gentle joke? A moment of imagination? A shared smile?
The PLAY circuit does not need much. It only needs a little safety, a little resonance and a little room to breathe.
PLAY is one of the most vulnerable brain circuits we have. It is easily shut down by fear, loneliness or feeling like we do not matter. Yet it is also one of the most life‑giving. When we receive resonance, our brain shifts toward integration. When we feel understood, the body relaxes. And when the body relaxes, the PLAY circuit can finally come back.
Joy becomes possible again. Creativity becomes possible again. And we remember that delight is not a luxury. It is part of what makes us human.
When I’m working with clients, they often say that I have a great imagination for just the right fresh metaphor or an impossible dream guess (more Resonance tools) – I put this down to the years of Resonance work I have experienced as a client with Sarah Peyton herself, and how my brain has changed and healed so much that this creative part of myself is now ready to come and play.
Would you like more lightness, connection and creativity in your life? Perhaps Resonance is the key to unlock play.
If you think this might be the case, and you have any questions, please get in touch.
