What Neurofeedback Is Teaching Me About a Brain That’s Been Surviving for Years

There comes a point in a long healing journey when you realize that your body isn’t the only thing that’s been carrying the weight.

After years of surgeries, chronic pain, medications, setbacks, and living in a constant state of uncertainty, I began to understand that my nervous system had been working overtime for a very long time. My brain had learned to stay on high alert, always preparing for the next challenge, the next appointment, the next procedure, or the next disappointment.

Healing isn’t just about muscles, joints, or bones. Sometimes it’s about helping the brain remember what safety feels like.

That’s what led me to begin neurofeedback therapy.

If you’re unfamiliar with neurofeedback, think of it as a gentle form of brain training. It provides the brain with information about its own activity, encouraging healthier patterns and greater self-regulation. Rather than forcing change, it supports the brain’s incredible ability to adapt and reorganize itself over time.

I’m still early in this journey, and I’m not writing this as an expert. I’m simply sharing my experience as someone who has spent years trying to heal physically while only recently realizing how much my brain and nervous system have been through as well.

For so long, I believed I needed to push harder, think more positively, or simply be stronger. But chronic pain, repeated surgeries, trauma, stress, and long-term illness all leave an imprint. The brain learns patterns of vigilance and protection that don’t simply disappear when the physical crisis ends.

I’ve spent years teaching mindfulness and adaptive yoga, helping others reconnect with their bodies through breath and awareness. Yet this experience is reminding me that healing is wonderfully layered. Mindfulness teaches us to observe. Neurofeedback offers another way to support the brain’s natural capacity to find balance.

It’s fascinating to notice the subtle shifts. A little calmer. A little less mental noise. Moments where my nervous system seems to exhale before my body does.

Not every day feels different. Healing rarely happens in dramatic leaps. More often, it arrives quietly, almost unnoticed, until one day you realize you’re responding differently than you used to.

I’ve learned that survival mode can become so familiar that we mistake it for our personality. Hypervigilance feels normal. Exhaustion feels expected. Constant planning and worrying become habits we barely recognize.

What if our brains deserve healing just as much as our bodies do?

That question has stayed with me.

As someone who has lived through years of medical uncertainty, I know there isn’t one treatment that fixes everything. I don’t expect neurofeedback to erase my past or magically solve every challenge. But I do believe our brains have an extraordinary capacity for change, and that possibility fills me with hope.

Healing isn’t only about getting back to who we were before.

Sometimes it’s about becoming someone new—someone softer, calmer, more present, and more connected to ourselves than we’ve been in years.

As I continue this journey, I’ll share what I’m learning with honesty and curiosity. My hope is that if you’ve been living in survival mode too, you’ll know that healing doesn’t always begin with doing more.

Sometimes it begins by giving the brain permission to rest, regulate, and remember that it is finally safe enough to heal.

May we all find gentle ways to support not only our bodies, but also the remarkable minds that have carried us through so much.


Enjoying this content? My book 52 Weeks of Wisdom & Wellness goes deeper — find it here.

Finding a New Normal with Chronic Hip Pain, Healing & Gardening

Finding a New Normal: Hip Pain, Healing, Neurofeedback & Gardening for the Soul

There comes a point in every healing journey where we realize we may never return to the version of ourselves we once were.

That realization can feel heartbreaking.

But it can also become the beginning of something gentler, wiser, and more honest.

For me, this season of life has been about learning how to create a new normal while living with chronic hip pain, recovering from multiple surgeries, reducing long-term pain medications, and finding small moments of beauty that still nourish my spirit.

Healing has not looked linear.

Some days I feel hopeful and grounded. Other days I feel frustrated by limitations, exhaustion, or uncertainty. But somewhere in the middle of all of it, I’ve started discovering something important:

Life can still hold meaning, beauty, creativity, and joy — even while healing.

Learning to Live in a Different Body

Chronic pain changes more than the body.

It changes routines. It changes relationships. It changes energy levels. It changes identity.

As someone who spent years teaching yoga, supporting others, and living an active life, adapting to physical limitations has required deep emotional work.

I’ve had to let go of timelines. I’ve had to stop comparing myself to who I used to be. I’ve had to redefine productivity.

And perhaps hardest of all, I’ve had to learn that rest is not failure.

There is grief in all of that.

But there is also growth.

I’m learning to honor my body instead of fighting it every moment of the day.

Reducing Pain Medication & Exploring Neurofeedback

One of the biggest shifts in my healing journey right now is reducing long-term pain medications.

After years of relying on medications to manage pain and simply survive difficult days, I’ve become increasingly aware of how deeply these medications can affect energy, cognition, mood, motivation, and overall well-being.

Tapering is not simple.

It requires patience, support, nervous system regulation, and realistic expectations.

One tool I’m beginning to explore is neurofeedback.

Neurofeedback works by helping the brain recognize and shift patterns of dysregulation. While everyone’s experience is different, many people use neurofeedback to support stress reduction, nervous system balance, focus, sleep, emotional regulation, and chronic pain management.

For me, this process feels less about “fixing” myself and more about helping my nervous system feel safe enough to heal.

Healing from chronic pain is rarely just physical.

The body, brain, emotions, stress response, and environment are all connected.

I’m learning that healing sometimes begins with creating moments of calm, safety, and steadiness in small everyday ways.

Gardening as Therapy for the Soul

One of the greatest gifts during this chapter has been gardening.

Not perfect gardening. Not magazine-worthy gardening.

Just getting my hands in the dirt. Watching things grow. Planting flowers that surprise me. Allowing beauty to exist alongside pain.

My garden has become a reminder that healing is rarely neat or linear.

Some flowers bloom unexpectedly. Some plants struggle and come back stronger. Some seeds never grow at all.

And yet the garden continues.

There is something deeply healing about caring for living things while learning to care for yourself.

Even on difficult pain days, stepping outside for a few moments helps me reconnect to something larger than my circumstances.

The fresh air. The sunlight. The birds. The simple rhythm of watering plants.

These small rituals matter.

They remind me that healing does not always happen in dramatic breakthroughs. Sometimes it happens quietly. One mindful moment at a time.

Creating a Life That Still Feels Meaningful

I used to think healing meant returning to my old life.

Now I’m beginning to understand that healing may actually mean creating an entirely new relationship with myself.

A slower life. A softer life. A more intentional life.

One where I celebrate small victories. One where creativity matters. One where rest is respected. One where beauty still has a place.

I don’t have everything figured out.

But I’m learning that even in uncertainty, there are still moments worth savoring.

A blooming flower. A quiet morning. A peaceful meditation. A good conversation. A dog curled beside you. A body that keeps trying.

That is enough for today.

Gentle Reflection

If you are navigating chronic pain, recovery, grief, or major life changes, may this be your reminder that you do not have to heal perfectly.

You are allowed to adapt. You are allowed to slow down. You are allowed to create a new version of life that supports who you are now.

Healing is not always about becoming who you once were.

Sometimes it’s about discovering who you are becoming.


Call to Action

How are you finding moments of peace or joy during difficult seasons? Share in the comments — I’d love to hear what is helping nourish your spirit lately.


Enjoying this content? My book 52 Weeks of Wisdom & Wellness goes deeper — find it here.