Emotional regulation

Emotional regulation is the ability to notice feelings and manage them in a helpful way. It helps people recover after stress or overwhelm.

Definition

Emotional regulation includes noticing body signals, using calming strategies, and asking for support. It can be harder during fatigue or sensory overload. Skills can be built through routines, co‑regulation, and safe environments. The goal is not to suppress feelings but to recover and feel steady.

Why it matters here

Many NeuroBreath tools are focused on calm and grounding routines.

In NeuroBreath you can use this term for…

Common misunderstandings

  • Regulation means never feeling upset.
  • It is only a children’s issue.

Related terms

Citations & review

Educational only. External links are provided as copy‑only references.

Written by:NeuroBreath Editorial Team·Editorial team
Reviewed by:Evidence Review Desk·Evidence reviewer
Editorial roles: Author drafts content · Reviewer checks clarity and safety language · Evidence reviewer checks source quality · Accessibility reviewer checks readability. Meet the editorial team.

Last reviewed

17 Jan 2026

Next review due

16 Jul 2026

Updated

17 Jan 2026

Evidence & sources

0 sources · tiers C

Update history
  • 17 Jan 2026contentInitial glossary definition published.

Educational information only — not medical advice. Read the disclaimer.

Emotional regulation — Glossary | NeuroBreath | NeuroBreath