As someone who’s lost a loved one (my father and my dog), suffered a stroke, had skin cancer, navigated a toxic relationship, faced financial uncertainty, and now lives as an amputee —all back-to-back—I found myself in a chronic state of fight-or-flight, hypervigilance, and nervous system dysregulation. This article dives a little deeper into what that actually means, and—more importantly—how healing can begin. When the body goes through sustained stress, grief, relational instability, health crises, and financial insecurity, the nervous system adapts in the only way it knows how: it stays alert. It stays on guard. It learns that safety is not guaranteed, so it remains in a constant state of monitoring the environment for what might go wrong next. Over time, this protective response can become the baseline rather than a temporary reaction. In this state, life begins to feel different. Everyday sensations can become amplified. Sounds feel sharper or more intrusive than they used...
The Hidden Thought Patterns That Keep Us Stuck Over the past year, my life has changed in ways I never could have imagined. After surviving a devastating car accident, losing my leg, enduring multiple surgeries, and facing an entirely different future than the one I had planned, I've had to reinvent myself once again. Reinvention isn't new to me—I've done it many times throughout my life. But this time feels different. Trauma has a way of leaving behind more than physical scars. It can create thought patterns rooted in fear, survival, loss, and uncertainty. If we're not careful, those thoughts become the lens through which we see our future. As I've been working on my own healing, I've been paying close attention to the beliefs and mental habits that no longer serve me. The truth is, many of us unknowingly carry these patterns around, and they quietly keep us stuck, disconnected from possibility, and afraid to move forward. This list isn't about pretending...