Avsnitt
-
Your nervous system is listening to your home long before your mind has an opinion. The light in the hallway, the constant hum of the telly, the buzz of notifications, the piles that never quite get put away all of it adds up to a simple internal question: do I feel safe here? When the answer is “not really”, you can end up feeling edgy, exhausted, reactive, or stuck in that background stress that makes everything harder, including sleep, digestion and pain.
I’m Naomi Mills, chiropractor, author and mum, and I walk you through a down-to-earth way to think about nervous system regulation using the one place you often have the most control over: your home environment. I share a personal story about caring for my sister and how her lower back pain became a clear signal of overwhelm rather than “just” a mechanical problem. From there, we explore what safety cues look like in real homes, including sound, clutter, temperature, smell, technology, and why silence can feel uncomfortable at first but still be exactly what your body needs.
You’ll leave with five practical, low-effort steps you can try straight away: removing screens from bedrooms, reducing background noise, creating a daily moment of connection, adding more nature indoors, and building a calm corner that anyone in the family can use. If you want better sleep hygiene, less stress at home, and a more grounded way to support teens and adults alike, press play, then subscribe, share, and leave a review so more people can find their way back to their body. -
You can schedule the board game, line up the film, even promise yourself you will be calm this time, and still end up in a tense, snappy, everyone-is-annoyed mess. There is a reason that has nothing to do with your teenager being “difficult” and everything to do with nervous system regulation.
We talk about co-regulation and “borrowed calm”: the idea that our bodies constantly read each other for cues of safety, then respond automatically. I share a simple metaphor of the parent as the personal hotspot in the home. If I arrive stressed, rushed, or braced for an argument, my teen is not just hearing my words, they are feeling the nervous system behind them. That is why connection can collapse before we even start, and why shouting so quickly becomes more shouting.
We also dig into what helps. A dysregulated nervous system cannot create regulation in another, so the most powerful move is not the perfect script, it is finding a steadier state in your own body. We cover what “calm” looks like in real life: slower pace, softer voice, breathing, curiosity, and the skill of repair when you do lose it. Those small choices create emotional safety, help teens ride out big feelings, and gradually build a more resilient family culture.
If this resonates, subscribe, share the episode with a parent who needs it, and leave a review so more people can find their way back to their body. -
Saknas det avsnitt?
-
The moment your child says something cruel about your body can hit like a shock, even when you thought you’d built a kind, shame-free home. We start there: a real family story, a clear boundary, and the baffling aftermath where the child storms off, sulks, and seems to make it all about them. If you’ve ever thought, “Why is this so dramatic?” or “Am I getting it wrong?”, you’re not alone.
We unpack that reaction through nervous system regulation, not blame. A firm correction can land as a threat to belonging, approval, and identity, especially for pre-teens and teenagers who are wired for pack safety. We talk fight flight freeze in everyday language, why shutdown and “I don’t know” are protective responses, and how overwhelm from life factors like poor sleep, end-of-term pressure, and constant stimulation can make small feedback feel huge.
From there we zoom out into teenage brain development: the adolescent brain is literally being remodelled, with emotional intensity often arriving before planning, impulse control, and long-term decision making are fully online. We explore dopamine, novelty, and why modern life and screens can hook the reward system so easily, then bring it back to what actually helps at home: more movement, better sleep, real-world connection, and a compassionate, curious approach that supports safety and repair.
If you want a calmer way to understand teen behaviour and support wellbeing without quick fixes, press play, subscribe, and share this with a parent or caregiver who needs it. If it resonates, leave a review so more people can find their way back to trusting their body. -
Everybody feels it right now: kids are more emotional, adults are exhausted, and nobody seems able to properly switch off. We look at that collective pressure through a nervous system lens, because once you understand what your body is responding to, the shame drops away and practical change becomes possible. I share why I am focusing the next run of shows on tweens and teens, and why these years can feel like a booby trapped landscape when you are trying to parent inside an always on world.
We unpack what constant input does to the body, from notifications and group chats to streaming and 24 hour news. Humans are not built for endless stimulation, and even “relaxing” can keep the system on low level alert. That matters for sleep, digestion, hormones, mood, and behaviour. I also explain why we still crave the scroll when we know it drains us, using a simple view of dopamine, novelty, and the tired but wired loop that shows up in so many homes.
Then we zoom out to what the research is really pointing towards: it is not only screen time, but the quality of the online experience, how it affects sleep, and the culture of comparison. We end with small, realistic ways to create tiny gaps that help your nervous system remember safety again, like a phone free morning, screen free dinners, conversation cards, walks without headphones, and more real presence.
If you want more calm, connection, and resilience for your family, press play, share this with someone raising a tween or teen, and subscribe so you do not miss the rest of the arc. If it helps, leave a review and tell me which micro change you are trying first. -
Welcome to the final episode in our "mindset arc"! Here I put together everything we covered over the last 10 episodes, including the realisations I've had along the way.
So, if your phone is always within reach, your diary is full, your mind won’t switch off and somehow that’s considered normal. We’re closing the mindset arc by naming what sits underneath so much “failed mindset work”: a nervous system that’s exhausted, overstimulated and chasing relief. When you understand that pattern, you stop blaming yourself for needing comfort, certainty and distraction, and you can finally choose change that your body can actually sustain.
We talk about why consistency creates transformation, even when the steps feel tiny, and why “common” habits like overthinking, scrolling and running on autopilot can still be deeply unhealthy. I share one of the most empowering reframes I’ve learned: you are not your thoughts. Your brain is built to predict danger and keep you safe, which means it can sound convincing even when it’s wrong. Learning to witness thoughts rather than obey them changes everything from boundaries to burnout.
To ground it, I tell the story of a skydive that was meant to be meaningful and became truly terrifying, and what it taught me about feeling fear and still being safe. We also get honest about the wellness world: healing, mindset and nervous system regulation are nuanced, and quick fixes often collapse under real life. Hope isn’t pretending things are fine; it’s the spark that makes new behaviour possible.
If you want practical tools, we explore gentle ways to reset your system, build self-trust and create a positive snowball effect, plus why community matters when you’re trying to normalise calm. If it resonates, subscribe, share with someone who needs it, and leave a review so more people can find their way back to their body. -
Your nervous system is not only reacting to life, it is reacting to what you expect life to be. Naomi Mills closes out the mindset series by getting practical about how belief, curiosity and playfulness change what your body does under pressure, and why the placebo and nocebo effect is not a niche science fact but a daily reality for your health and wellbeing.
We talk about what happens as adults when we become allergic to looking silly, failing publicly, or being new at something. Naomi shares a playful tool from improv, the “Yes And” game, and why practising agreement and creativity can open the system out of threat mode and into connection. We also bring back a simple perspective check many of us use with children, then forget for ourselves: will this matter tomorrow, next week, or next month?
From there we go deeper into mantras as belief filters, not pretty quotes. You’ll hear an example that lands for a lot of high-achieving people: “I am deeply loved even at rest”, and how shifting that kind of story can change your physiology, your boundaries and your capacity to recover. We finish with a grounded take on manifestation: get clear on how you want to feel, take action, and let your subconscious start highlighting the opportunities you used to walk past.
If you want a calmer, braver nervous system and a mindset that supports real change, follow the podcast, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find their way back to their body. -
If a sham knee operation once outperformed the real surgery for pain and mobility, it forces a bigger question: what if expectation is not a side note, but a biological input your nervous system is using all the time? I’m Naomi Mills, and I’m digging into the placebo effect and the nocebo effect as proof of how tightly linked the body, brain, and healing really are. This is not about pretending you are fine or “thinking yourself well”. It is about understanding how meaning, belief, and repeated inner stories can shift physiology in measurable ways.
We look at how nocebo can creep in through side effect lists, scary predictions, and the familiar line of “nothing can be done”, then how those messages can organise the nervous system around threat, fear, and increased pain. I share examples from my work and from firewalking, where attention and expectation can amplify sensation long after an event, and we connect it all back to survival wiring: your brain keeps asking “Am I safe?” and “What should I prepare for?”
From there we move into what helps: genuine hope, clearer language, and practical nervous system support like sleep, hydration, food, daily regulation practices, and connection. I also share how learning about epigenetics changed my relationship with a personal fear after losing my mum to cancer, and why your “future self” is shaped by the filters you live through today. If you have ever felt betrayed by your body, this is a reminder to make it a friendlier place to be.Subscribe, share this with someone you care about, and leave a review so more people can find their way back to their body.
Do you have a mind/body or nervous system topic you want to hear more about? Visit www.youaretheanswer.co.uk or email [email protected].uk and let us know!
-
Your screen time might not be a bad habit at all. It might be your nervous system trying to solve a real problem the fastest way it knows how. I’m Naomi Mills, chiropractor and host of You Are the Answer, and I’m inviting you to look at scrolling, gaming, and constant checking through the body’s wiring rather than through shame, guilt, or “just try harder” discipline.
We talk about what happens when your baseline stress response sits a little too high for a little too long. In that low-level fight or flight state, your brain craves both relief and stimulation, and screens deliver both on demand. We unpack dopamine, unpredictability, notifications, and why the next video, message, or like can feel irresistible even when it doesn’t genuinely make you feel good. This nervous system regulation perspective also explains why focus can feel harder offline, because real life isn’t designed around constant rewards.
If you’re a parent, we go deeper into why teens struggle more with smartphones and social media. The teenage brain’s reward and emotional centres develop earlier than the logical centres that support impulse control, and the prefrontal cortex keeps developing into the mid twenties. That doesn’t mean your child is weak or difficult. It means the environment matters, and the support needs to match their stage of development.
We finish with a practical shift that changes everything: regulation versus distraction. You’ll leave with kinder questions to ask yourself or your young person, plus real-world ideas that meet the underlying needs for safety, connection, soothing, and healthy stimulation. If this resonated, subscribe, share with someone you care about, and leave a review so more people can find their way back to their body.You can order your nervous system reset deck via my website: Products | You are the answer
-
Your phone isn’t just a tool in your hand, it can become the background environment your nervous system lives in. When that environment is filled with constant input, rapid topic switching, comparison, and fear-based headlines, your body can stay slightly on alert all day long and we end up calling it a “mindset problem”. I want to take the shame out of that and bring it back to something more honest and more workable: regulation starts in the body, not in perfect thoughts.
We talk about why modern screen time can leave you feeling tired but wired, why scrolling before bed or first thing in the morning primes your stress response, and how clickbait and negativity hook into survival wiring that doesn’t always know what is relevant to your real life. I also share the dopamine layer of social media and novelty, why stillness can feel oddly uncomfortable over time, and why even curated images can land in the body as a subtle signal of “I’m behind”.
Rather than pushing discipline or deleting everything, we explore a gentler, more sustainable path: creating space. Small pauses like a phone-free start to the day, a short walk without input, waiting in a queue without scrolling, or keeping your phone out of the bedroom can give your nervous system the gap it needs to settle. When your body softens, your thoughts often shift on their own.
If this resonates, listen, share it with someone you care about, and leave a review. Subscribe so you don’t miss next week, and tell me what you notice when you add a little more space to your day. -
Four phrases get repeated like gospel in self-help culture: “fake it till you make it”, “no pain, no gain”, “everything happens for a reason”, and “just think positive”. I’m not here to mock them, because each one holds a kernel of truth. I am here to slow them down and ask the missing question: what is your nervous system doing while you’re trying to live by that slogan?
When we’re in fight or flight, advice that relies on controlling thoughts can feel impossible. That doesn’t mean you’re failing, it means your body is trying to protect you. We explore why confidence built on pretending can deepen disconnection, how growth requires discomfort but not pain, and why rushing to find meaning after a painful event can invalidate real emotion. We also name the subtle harm of toxic positivity, especially when we use it on ourselves, and why you can’t think your way out of a body that feels unsafe.
You’ll leave with a calmer, more practical model for mindset: regulate first, then reframe. I share grounded nervous system regulation tools like gentle stretching of your comfort zone, integrating emotions through the body, journalling, movement, and a simple three-breath reset you can do anywhere. If this helped you, subscribe, share it with someone you care about, and leave a review so more people can find their way back to safety in their body. -
Projection can make you certain you’re reacting to someone else, when you’re actually meeting your own fear, anger, or unmet need. I’m Naomi Mills, and I’m taking you into a moment from my firewalker instructor training where a trust fall goes wrong, the group panics, and one person’s distress gets pointed at the “obvious” problem. It becomes a clear mirror for how quickly our minds decide what something means and how fast our bodies follow.
From there, I unpack projection in everyday life and in group healing spaces, where witnessing someone else’s release can stir up material we didn’t expect. I share the fable of the monk bumped by an “offending” boat that turns out to be empty, and we use it as a practical way to spot when a trigger is really an internal signal. When we miss that, the nervous system stays on guard, sleep and mood suffer, and we end up trying to control what was never ours to control.
To bring things back to the ground, I walk you through the circle of control: what you control, what you can influence, and what is genuinely outside your reach. We talk nervous system regulation and simple self-care that actually supports resilience, from food and movement to meditation, nature, bodywork, and time with the people who steady you. I close with an embodiment prompt from my nervous system reset cards: healing starts when you notice, not when you fix.
If this lands, subscribe, share the episode with someone you care about, and leave a review so more people can find their way back to their body. -
Productivity sounds like a compliment until you notice what it is taking from you. I am Naomi Mills, chiropractor and healthcare professional, and I want to ask a sharper question than “What have you done today?”: is your health paying the price for your productivity?
We start with a simple story about a fisherman and a businessman that exposes a modern mindset trap: working harder and harder to earn a future you can enjoy, while your nervous system struggles to cope in the present. I share how running a busy family chiropractic practice looked successful from the outside, but came with warning signs in my body, from sleep and mood to skin, digestion, and the constant feeling of pressure. When we do not pause to reflect, we can normalise stress and miss the cost until it becomes burnout.
From there, we get practical. We talk about clues that you are overriding your needs, including numbing behaviours like scrolling, shopping, comfort eating, and filling every quiet moment because “just being” feels uncomfortable. I explain why living in fight or flight blocks the thriving work your body wants to do, including repair, resilience, and long-term wellbeing. You will also hear about simple resources on my website to help you spot signs of nervous system overwhelm.
My favourite takeaway is a tool called ‘Your Many Hats’, a quick way to reveal the invisible work you are carrying and decide what to keep, what to drop, and what to outsource. Less doing is not laziness. It can be the most effective health strategy you make.
If this resonates, subscribe, share the show with someone you care about, and leave a review so more people can find their way back to their body too. -
Today I’m making the case that boundaries are not a personality preference, they’re medicine. When we say "yes" while our body feels tight or heavy, we override the very signals designed to keep us well. That pattern doesn’t stay “mental” for long; it shows up in sleep, digestion, hormones, mood, and the way we move through our relationships.
We talk about the hidden link between people pleasing and stress, and why being seen as a “good person” often gets tangled up with self-abandonment. I lean on a powerful idea from Glennon Doyle’s Untamed: your job is to disappoint everybody else before you disappoint yourself, and what that means in real life when you still want to be kind. We also look at the cultural conditioning that rewards overwork, especially in corporate environments, and how that training makes it harder to say no even when you’re running on empty.
You’ll leave with a simple three-step practice: pause before you answer, feel what yes and no do in your body, then deliver the response your nervous system is asking for. I share language you can use in the moment, why parasympathetic “safe state” matters, and a brilliant litmus test: if you can’t say yes with the joy of a small child feeding a duck, it’s a no. If this resonates, subscribe, share with someone you care about, and leave a review so more people can find their way back to their body. -
“Keep calm and carry on” can sound like strength, but what happens when your body never gets the second half of the story: the part where you finally get to feel, process, and come back to safety? I’m Naomi Mills, chiropractor and healthcare professional, and I’m exploring how this deeply British mindset can quietly train us to ignore signals, delay support, and stay functional at the expense of our nervous system health.
I share one of the most painful moments of my life when I carried on too soon after losing my mum, and why that choice shaped my healing for years. From there, I tease apart the nuance: sometimes it truly is wise to hold it together in the moment, especially when circumstances or responsibilities demand it. The harm comes from the silent add-on many of us live by: carry on forever. That’s when unprocessed stress and emotion can get stuck in the body, keeping you in fight, flight or freeze, disrupting sleep, digestion, and your ability to feel at ease in your own skin.
We also talk about practical somatic healing ideas that help the stress cycle complete, including the power of shaking, reflection, and journalling. If you’ve ever been told you’re “so strong” while privately thinking you’re not fine, this will land. Subscribe, share with someone who needs it, and leave a review so more people can find their way back to trusting their body. -
Today we celebrate being 20 weeks into the podcast!
Now feels like the right time to zoom out on the embodiment arc and reveal a pattern many of us miss: lasting change is built from small, repeated acts that teach the body it is safe. We unpack why starting before you feel ready matters, how consistency beats quick fixes, and what it takes to move from overthinking into grounded action. Along the way, Naomi shares candid lessons from practice and personal life, tying together body-brain connection, breathwork, and the lived experience that rewires a nervous system over time.
We explore how safety is often a sensation rather than a story, and why listening to signals like breath, tension, gut instinct, and energy levels is smarter than muscling through them. You’ll hear how firewalking and other challenges can update your brain’s map of “what’s possible,” what a healing crisis really means, and ways to ride the curve with connected breathing, posture shifts, and gentle movement. This is not mindfulness as an idea; it’s regulation as a skill, built through repeatable steps that widen the gap between trigger and response so choice can enter.
We also look at the biology: chronic stress chemistry accelerates ageing, disrupts immunity, and rattles hormones. By creating felt safety from the inside out, you influence inflammation, recovery, and resilience in practical ways you can feel. Self-care stops being indulgence and becomes maintenance—like servicing a car—so your body remains a friendlier place to be. We close by protecting what you cultivate with boundaries and previewing our next arc, where we pivot from body to brain and challenge the mantra “keep calm and carry on.” Subscribe, share with someone who needs this reframe, and leave a review to help others find their way back to their body. -
What if self-care wasn’t about pampering at all, but about learning to steer your nervous system so you feel safer, clearer, and more present? We explore how to reclaim self-care from clichés and make it a grounded, daily practice that builds resilience where it matters most—in your body.
I share the moment that tested my beliefs: committing to a week-long breath work retreat while juggling clients, costs, and an eight-year-old who asked how leaving could possibly make me a better mum. That gut punch opened a bigger conversation about guilt, cultural conditioning, and the myth that caring for ourselves is selfish. We unpack why regulation is maintenance, not indulgence, and how a well-tended system transforms how we show up for family, work, and community.
Together we map out simple, free regulation tools—long exhales, shaking, sunlight, short walks, boundaries you can say out loud—and show how to stack tiny practices into real change. We talk honestly about the paradox of motivation: you often don’t want to do the thing that helps until after you’ve done it. So we focus on reflection, tracking small shifts, and building a bank of lived evidence that your efforts work. Expect practical steps for mornings, mid-days, and nights, ideas for navigating resistance, and a framework for making self-care a priority without drama or perfectionism.
If you’re tired of quick fixes and ready for steadier energy, better sleep, clearer focus, and a calmer mood, this conversation will help you turn self-care into nervous system stewardship. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs permission to rest, and leave a review so more people can find their way back to their bodies. What small act of regulation will you choose today? -
Are you feeling tired but wired, stuck in overthinking, or cut off from your own signals?
In this episode, we dive into a body-led path to calm that starts with the spine and ripples through your mood, focus, and energy. As a chiropractor and nervous system coach, Naomi unpacks the difference between stress chemistry and the parasympathetic holiday state, then shares simple tools to move from survival to safety without gimmicks or grind.
We start by reframing the body as barometer, using interoception—the sense that reads our inner world—to notice jaw clench, shoulder armour, low back ache, or that restless fizz in the chest. From there, you’ll learn a quick daily check-in to capture thoughts, emotions, and sensations in real time, and a practical way to translate those cues into action. Instead of rigid routines you won’t keep, Naomi teaches organic, spine-first movement: slow stretches, gentle spirals, breath that widens the ribs, and micro-movements you can weave into any day. The goal is not performance; it’s creating enough safety for the system to settle and heal.
We also explore a music-and-move ritual that helps complete the stress cycle—mirroring how animals shake to process adrenaline—so emotions don’t get stuck. You’ll hear why the spine is the bridge between body and brain, how movement shifts state faster than thought, and what signs show you’re landing in that holiday state: deeper sleep, steadier digestion, and more outward energy. Expect clear prompts you can try tonight, plus reflections to help you notice real change: lighter mood, softer breath, or simply more space inside your day.
If this conversation sparks something, share it with a friend who needs a gentle reset, then leave a review so more people can find their way back to their body. Subscribe for future episodes on nervous system health, interoception, and movement practices you can actually keep. -
Anxiety screams; your body often whispers the truth. We dive into what self-trust actually feels like and how to build it, not with slogans, but with embodied proof. From navigating doom-laden news cycles to parenting without over-rescuing, we map a practical path from fear to grounded action. You’ll learn how to tune in when your brain spins stories, how to sense real-time safety through your body, and how small, deliberate challenges teach your nervous system that you can do hard things and still be okay.
We unpack the cost of constant information overload and why young people and adults alike benefit from a reset that centres sensation over speculation. Naomi shares a simple 3-3-3 tool to return to the present: name three things you feel, three you see, and three you hear. Add a hand to your heart or solar plexus and you’ll amplify the message of safety to your system. With that foundation, even stretch experiences like trust falls or public speaking become labs for resilience rather than panic tests. Success and stumbles both count, because either way your body learns, “I remained safe.”
We also explore a mindset shift for parents, carers, and teams: hold the discomfort, don’t steal the lesson. Resisting the urge to fix builds confidence on both sides and creates a culture where action springs from clarity, love, and a regulated nervous system. By pairing daily sensory check-ins with micro-challenges just beyond your comfort zone, you gather the only evidence that matters: lived experience. The takeaway is simple and powerful—your body is not broken, and your resilience is already present. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs it today, and leave a review to help more people find their way back to their own inner guidance. -
Ever made a healthy change and felt worse before you felt better? We dive straight into that unnerving moment and explain what a healing crisis really is: a short, intense recalibration as your nervous system responds to new inputs and starts to reorganise. From sleepless nights to tender muscles and big emotions, we unpack why these spikes can be signs of progress rather than proof you’ve done something wrong.
Across the conversation, we put the central nervous system at the centre of health—touching everything from digestion and hormones to mood, focus, and pain—and explore how years of physical strain, chemical load, and emotional stress push it toward survival mode. You’ll hear clear, practical ways to lower the “water level in the cup” so your system has room to adapt: creating space in your schedule, swapping high-intensity workouts for gentle movement, using breath to downshift, and building quiet rituals like journalling, restorative yoga, qigong, and unhurried walks. We also cut through the noise around buzzwords like vagus nerve and somatic. No gadgets needed—most effective tools are simple, body-led, and free, and they work because around 80% of vagal signalling travels from body to brain.
We share how to scale inputs when symptoms surge, track trends over weeks, and pair physical practices with supportive self-talk to steady the process. Most of all, we come back to trust: your body’s intelligence may not match your diary, but it is on your side. Progress often looks like release before relief. If you’re navigating a rocky patch on your healing journey—or supporting someone who is—this conversation offers reassurance, clear steps, and a reminder that you are not broken.
If this resonates, share it with a friend, leave a quick review, and visit our site to explore resources and the book You Are the Answer. Subscribe for new episodes each week and tell us: what gentle habit helps your nervous system feel safe today? -
What if feeling “older than your age” has less to do with birthdays and more to do with your nervous system? We dig into why some people in their forties feel light and strong while others feel decades older, and how long stretches of stress chemistry quietly speed up ageing. Rather than chasing hacks, we take a practical route: five levers that signal safety, restore repair, and help your biology act younger today.
First, we unpack how accumulated physical, chemical, and emotional stress shapes resilience. You’ll hear how chronic dysregulation raises cortisol, inflammation, and immune wear, while good vagal tone and consistent regulation slow biological ageing. We talk candidly about midlife, including why perimenopause can feel like “puberty in reverse” and how much easier it is when earlier decades banked rest, strength, and support.
From there, we get concrete. Movement comes first—not punishing workouts, but a steady mix of walking, strength, mobility, and balance to protect muscle, bone, and independence. Sleep follows as the nightly repair shop that lowers inflammation and resets your system. We explore the often‑overlooked power of belonging: safe relationships, co‑regulation, laughter, and shared meals that calm the body far beyond what supplements can do. We then reframe stress as training, using gentle challenges and breath to teach your body it can rise and recover. Finally, we land on meaning and purpose—choosing actions that align with your values to replace helplessness with agency and speed healing.
You’ll leave with a simple plan: pick one lever for the next 30 days and let it lift the rest. To help, grab our printable life‑area assessment in the show notes to spot the lowest slice—movement, sleep, connection, resilience practices, or values and purpose—and start there. If this conversation helped, follow the show, share it with someone you care about, and leave a quick review so more people can find their way back to their body. - Visa fler