The Regulation Revolution
This article could have gone one of two ways. I could have written about how chronic stress leads to injury. How the more you listen to your body and respond appropriately, the less potential there is for you to end up hurt. And honestly, that would have been a great article. I probably will do that one day. But a recent conversation I had lead me to this path instead. The despair you feel when you’re injured and can’t function in your normal range of life. The mental battle of being knocked sideways by your own body and feeling betrayed by your physical capabilities. Because that shit is hard to get through. The whole reason I started learning about the body, which turned into the nervous system, which turned into everything I do now, is because I was a high-level dancer who was constantly injured. Not your typical banged up once in a while and exhausted from hours of movement injured. I mean I got cortisone-shots-in-both-hips-at-17 injured. I tore a disc in my spine at 20 that haunted me for years because they kept misdiagnosing me. A fractured foot I danced on for seven months before I let it rest. And to round it out, a dislocated knee - twice - in the span of a year. Some of those injuries left me in bed for days and out of my routine for weeks, even months, or for my back - a few years of not knowing the real problem. The mental battles that came with them were heavy and nobody could help me through that, except myself. So here’s what I actually did to regulate my nervous system while I was dealing with injuries that left me feeling debilitated. What Is Nervous System Regulation During Injury? Nervous system regulation is your body’s ability to move between activation (fight-or-flight) and recovery (rest-and-digest). When you’re injured, your nervous system can get stuck on high alert (in the sympathetic nervous system). It reads the pain as a threat signal and keeps your body flooded with stress hormones. That’s why you can’t sleep. Why you’re irritable. Why everything feels more hopeless than it probably is. I mean when I messed up my back, I was truly laying in bed wondering “is this it?!”. Regulating your nervous system during injury means intentionally creating conditions where your body feels safe enough to stop fighting and start healing. When your nervous system is stuck in sympathetic overdrive (fight or flight), your body is prioritizing perceived danger over repair. I know when you’re in pain, your first thought is to be out of it. But this isn’t about rushing the process of healing. It’s about finding patience within it. Slowing down enough to let your body do what it already knows how to do - heal. Your body is a science experiment and it WANTS to fix you. But if you are constantly in an activated state, it will start fighting you to keep you alive. How to Regulate Your Nervous System While Injured 1. Remind yourself that nothing lasts forever. Get it tattooed if you have to. There is always an answer. Sometimes it doesn’t come as fast as you want it to but this injury will not last forever. Anchoring yourself to that truth and actually sitting with it, is one of the most underrated nervous system tools there is. 2. Get outside. Even for five minutes. One of the first things I encourage clients to do after an injury to add into their routine is to step outside. Fresh air, natural light, a few quiet minutes where you’re not staring at your ceiling or your phone are crucial. Research shows [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33066853/] that natural environments lower sympathetic nervous system activation and support the shift toward rest-and-recover mode, which will ultimately allow you body to speed up the healing process. Five minutes outside can start that shift. An amazing documentary that you can watch for free!! Is The Earthing Movie [https://www.ultimatelongevity.com/earthing-grounding/videos/the-earthing-movie-2.shtml?gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=22981303679&gbraid=0AAAAADsUfCwLuxdElXnmKvIuNPl7PjJZv&gclid=CjwKCAjwgO7RBhBKEiwAZNP85tV2G-eI5eiahICmRgxZk1gHTS_hQS74_IfwXxPFyQSeNPcN3nORtRoCUzAQAvD_BwE]. If you are not familiar with grounding techniques, this is something I have incorporated into my practice. 10 out of 10. 3. Move your body in SOME capacity. When I dislocated my knee, I did upper body work. When I hurt my back, yin yoga was my best friend. It doesn’t have to look like your “normal routine” - it’s not one size fits all. But if you don’t use it, you lose it. And by “it,” I mean your mental sanity. Movement, even modified movement, sends a signal to your nervous system that you’re still here, still capable, still okay. If you’ve ever been injured, you know that particular feeling of your body betraying you. And it SUCKS. But I promise, it’s not betrayal. It’s just a different way of speaking to you and gives you a lot of insight into how you are living your life. Where there may be pieces anatomically you need to improve, where you could dial it back. As I said, your body is a science experiment and sometimes an injury gives you parameters. If this landed and you’re realizing your body has been trying to tell you something for a while, that’s worth paying attention to. I mean we only have one of them anyways. I work with clients 1:1 to understand what their nervous system is communicating and build practical tools for regulation, recovery, and actually feeling even better than you could of possibly imagined. [Book a 1:1 connection here. [https://tiadevincenzowellness.checkout.kiwilaunch.com/date-and-time?serviceId=8abe4ba5-8c9a-4331-a8d6-9a1b26632173]] Lots of love, Tia Why does injury feel so mentally devastating, even when the pain is manageable? Because your nervous system doesn’t separate physical threat from emotional threat. An injury activates the same stress-response pathways as any perceived danger — keeping you in fight-or-flight even when you’re physically safe on your couch. The mental weight is real, and it’s neurological. Can regulating my nervous system actually support physical healing? Yes. Chronic stress and sympathetic nervous system activation direct your body’s resources toward survival rather than repair. Shifting into a parasympathetic state through nature exposure, gentle movement, and mindset anchors creates the internal conditions where healing becomes possible. It’s not about speeding up the process - it’s about not getting in the way of it. What’s the first thing to do when an injury derails your routine? Get outside. Before you modify your workout plan, before you spiral about your timeline - five minutes of fresh air and natural light is one of the most accessible tools for shifting your nervous system toward safety. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit tiadevincenzo.substack.com [https://tiadevincenzo.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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