The science of how your nervous system, emotions, and physical health are connected. Research-backed perspectives on polyvagal theory, trauma, somatic therapy, and integrated wellness.
Mind-Body
When your nervous system is stuck — in fight-or-flight, in freeze, in a cycle between the two — every health goal becomes a battle against your own biology.
Mind-Body
The ACE Study was just the beginning. Twenty-five years of research have revealed exactly how childhood adversity gets into the body — and a growing evidence base suggests the damage may not be permanent.
Mind-Body
A chronically activated stress response doesn't always look like panic. For many women, it looks like jaw pain, digestive trouble, 3am waking, and an inability to lose weight.
Mind-Body
The relationship between what happened to you as a child and what your body weighs as an adult is one of the most robust findings in public health. It is also one of the least discussed.
Mind-Body
Therapy is valuable. But it is not the only pathway. A growing body of evidence supports approaches that work at the body and subconscious level — some more accessible than a therapist's office.
Mind-Body
You have tried every diet, every routine, every plan. Nothing sticks. Stephen Porges' polyvagal theory suggests the problem was never your discipline — it was your autonomic nervous system.
Mind-Body
Vagal toning — the practice of strengthening the vagus nerve's regulatory capacity — is emerging as one of the most promising interventions for women who eat in response to emotional overwhelm rather than hunger.
Mind-Body
A quarter-century ago, two researchers uncovered a devastating link between childhood adversity and adult disease. The science has only grown stronger since — but the gap between what we know and what we do remains vast.
Mind-Body
The body positivity movement promised radical self-acceptance. Body neutrality offered a cooler alternative. But for women whose relationship with their body is shaped by deeper wounds, both frameworks miss the point entirely.