1. Limbic brain (The Drama Department): The limbic brain is your emotional brain, systematically connecting your senses (i.e., olfactory cortex) with memories, emotions, and narratives, and getting results through your reactions (fight, flight, flee, and bond; Sapolsky, 2003). The limbic brain loves drama!
2. Thalamus (The Producer): The thalamus receives and passess sensory and motor information to the cerebral cortex (the cerebral cortex is divided into four lobes: frontal, parietal, temporal, occipital which is needed to process sensory information, 2003). The Producer oversees the passing of information to keep you alert. If the thalamus is damaged, you can go into a coma (2003). βYou need me,β says thalamus, βto keep you moving (running from danger) or to stay alert (i.e., stay conscious, pay attention to detail) so you can stay in the game!β
3. Amygdala (The Director): The amygdala is responsible for emotional reactivity via fear or anxiety. These reactions include fight, flee, or freeze. The amygdala is an almond shaped part of the brain involved in emotional-decision making (Murray, Izquierdo, Malkova, 2009)
4. Cingulate gyrus (The Assistant): The cingulate gyrus has a very important role in the limbic system because it assists with emotion regulation, speech and voicialization, emotional bonding and attachment, and body posture (Vogt, 2005). The amygdala may be about fighting and fleeing, but the cingulate gyrus is about bonding (2005). βI voice my concerns,β says cingulate because βI work with , , and to process emotions, make emotional connections, and/or formulate a plan... My objective is to support agenda or my agenda. Your affect, body posture, tone of voice, and speech will either support emotional intention (fight or flee response) or my emotional intention (bond response).β



