
Manta Mode Blog
The Heated Stress Type Starter Kit: 7 Ways to Cool The Fire

So your brain just went full bouncer mode, huh? The mental thought raccoons are throwing lit matches at everything, your brain feels like it’s on fire, and you’re about two seconds away from saying something you can’t unsay.
Welcome to the Heated stress type, the spicy, defensive, “I will fight everyone in this Applebee’s” mode. This is your brain’s bouncer showing up to protect you, but he’s had way too much Red Bull and forgot to use his inside voice.
The good news? You can cool him down. You just need the right moves.
This is your First Thing-To-Do menu for when your brain is running hot. These are quick, body-based resets that interrupt the fire before it spreads. Pick one, try it for 60-90 seconds, and give your bouncer a chance to sit the heck down.

1. Lion’s Yawn
The Move: A really big yawn.
The How: Open your mouth as wide as it will go, stick your tongue out toward your chin, and open your eyes wide. Hold for 5 seconds.
The Why: When you’re Heated and in the fight reflex), your face is the first thing to lock down. You get the predator stare, the clenched jaw, and the narrowed eyes. This is your body prepping for a fight. The Lion’s Yawn is a massive facial reset. It is physically impossible to maintain Fight micro-expressions while your tongue is hanging out like a thirsty Golden Retriever. It forces the your body to dump tension instantly.
Fun fact: your brain reads your facial expressions to determine your mood and your physiological reactions meaning your expressions can affect your mood and physical state.
2. Countdown Breath
The Move: Long exhale + simple counting.
The How: Inhale through your nose for 4. Exhale through your mouth for 6. Count backward from 10 to 1 while you do it, one number per breath.
The Why: Counting gives your brain a boring job, and the longer exhale tells your body to exit fight mode. The Raccoons hate boring jobs. They thrive on drama.
3. Stomp It Out
The Move: Stomp like you’re putting out tiny fires.
The How: Stand up. Stomp your feet 20–30 times. Add a full-body shake for 10 seconds if your muscles feel like they’re buzzing.
The Why: Heated Brain = excess fight energy. Stomping safely burns off some of that charge so your brain doesn’t try to solve the problem with your mouth.
4. The Primal Yell into a pillow
The Move: Contained scream.
The How: Grab a pillow. Scream into it for 5–10 seconds. Repeat once if needed. Water afterward is optional but smart.
The Why: Heated Brain builds pressure. A short, contained yell is a pressure valve, your body discharges some intensity so your brain can think again without the Raccoons commandeering the megaphone.
5. Chew Gum Aggressively
The Move: Chew like you’re mad at the gum.
The How: Pop in gum and chew for 60–90 seconds. No gum? Crunch something like celery, carrots, pretzels, ice. Keep it simple.
The Why: Chewing is a subtle safety signal. Your body doesn’t usually eat when it’s in danger. That message helps your brain stop treating everything like an five alarm fire.
6. Rip Paper
The Move: Destroy paper.
The How: Grab junk mail or scrap paper. Rip it into strips for 60 seconds. Go fast. Make a pile of confetti doom.
The Why: Your hands get a do something now outlet that isn’t texting your ex or starting a Slack war. The brain gets motion + completion, which reduces the urge to escalate.
7. Squeeze a Tennis Ball
The Move: Hand squeeze reps.
The How: Grab a tennis ball or stress ball. Squeeze hard for 5 seconds, release for 5 seconds. Do 10 rounds per hand.
The Why: Repetitive muscle work drains off adrenaline and gives your brain a predictable rhythm. Predictable rhythm = less chaos = fewer openings for the Raccoons to start throwing metaphorical matches.
The Real Talk
These aren’t magic wands. Some will work for you, some won’t. Some will work today but not tomorrow. Some will feel ridiculous (they are: embrace it).
The point is to experiment. Try the ones that make you cringe a little. The discomfort might be exactly what your nervous system needs to snap out of the pattern.
The Heated Brain operates on one faulty premise: that burning the whole place down is the only way to stay safe. It feels like protection, but it’s actually just a trap. You can’t talk a house fire into cooling down with a PowerPoint presentation. You have to douse the flames with a physical reset before the raccoons find more gasoline.
Pick one. Try it. See what happens
My philosophy is that you have to experiment to find what works for you. So go ahead—try something a little uncomfortable, kiss a few frogs, and see what sticks. Happy experimenting!


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