This account, this corner of the fediverse, has become one of the places I let those questions be noisy in public. What does healing mean when the conditions that harmed you are not gone, only rearranged into more respectable shapes? What actually happens inside a counselling relationship when disability or neurodivergence is present but unnamed, or misnamed, or politely ignored? How do we begin to notice the ways power and unspoken norms travel through even the most well-intentioned helping professions? How do we hold culture as something we are constantly creating and being created by, something we may need to grieve and interrogate and occasionally celebrate, often all at once, sometimes in the space of a single conversation?

I keep circling back to the interior labour of this work. The slow, repetitive practice of building emotional regulation when your nervous system's default setting is red alert. The awkwardness of learning self-compassion when sharp self-criticism has been your most reliable survival tool. The moments that feel like failure because you find yourself reacting in an old way, when in reality this is precisely how recovery moves, looping back on itself, revisiting old ground with slightly different eyes. The way trauma and joy can sit shoulder to shoulder in the same hour, the same therapy session, the same breath, and how unnerving and holy that can feel.

Rauch and Ansari suggest that silence can be deliberate and strategic, a form of self-regulation rather than withdrawal, a boundary rather than an absence. I think about this in relation to the freeze response, to the moments in my own history when going quiet was not giving up but holding on. The body stills because there are no safe words yet. Sometimes the silence is the story. And learning to hear it as such, to receive it without rushing to fill or fix it, is one of the things I am still practising, in music and in therapy and in the ordinary, unglamorous dailiness of trying to stay present in a life that sometimes arrives all at once.

I am not arriving anywhere with a finished theory of how any of this is supposed to work. I am coming, again and again, with fragments and questions and a stubborn intention to tell the truth as I understand it in the moment I am writing. That truth is often partial, often shifting. My understanding of myself, of trauma, of disability, of care, keeps moving, and I want it to. I would rather be inconsistent and alive to new information than seamless and rigidly wrong.

If you are still reading, you are already participating in something I care about. A space that treats complexity as ordinary rather than excessive. Where being too much is not an accusation but raw material. Where intense feeling and rigorous thought are both welcome at the same table. Where healing is not a linear journey toward a fixed destination but something more like learning to live inside unresolved chords without pretending they have resolved. Where music is both metaphor and method, both a way of speaking about change and a way of practising it in the body.

True silence does not exist. What we call silence is simply what we have not yet learned to hear. The fullness of life in quieter tones. The heartbeat of thought. The whispered rhythm of resilience. The steady murmur of healing is underway. And when we learn to tune into the music between the notes and into the truth held in breath, we do more than survive. We begin to sing again. This time, in a voice that is entirely our own.

I am not here to introduce myself so much as to keep turning up alongside you. To keep writing from the middle of things, not only from the rare polished moments that look good in hindsight. To keep noticing the small, ordinary, unglamorous ways humans find their way back to themselves, even inside systems that were never set up with them in mind. If any of these threads brush against something in your own story, then you are part of the imagined audience I write towards. And maybe, in a slow, imperfect, occasionally dissonant way, part of the choir that is still learning how to hear itself.

#AuDHD #Neurodivergent #Blind #Deafblind #Disabled #DisabilityJustice #MadStudies #Psychology #Counselling #Therapy #Trauma #TraumaRecovery #Neurodiversity #MentalHealth #ChronicStress #Healing #WindowOfTolerance #LivedExperience #CareWork #Culture #Power #Normality #Access #Inclusion #Ableism #Music #ClassicalMusic #ChoralMusic #Choir #Singing #Writing #PersonalEssay #Silence #LongPost #Fediversea (2/2)

Chronic stress can damage the gut’s protective lining, triggering inflammation that may worsen depressive symptoms. The material emphasizes the gut–brain axis as a mechanism underpinning mood disorders, a topic of particular significance to psychotherapists, social workers, and other mental health professionals. Moreover, the finding that Reelin levels decline under stress and can be restored with a single injection—accompanied by antidepressant-like effects in preclinical models—highlights a tangible biological target at the gut–brain interface for future inquiry and collaboration between disciplines.

Article Title: Scientists discover protein that could heal leaky gut and ease depression

Link to Science Daily Mind-Brain News: https://ift dot tt/UqYFBak

#GutBrainAxis #ReelinProtein #DepressionResearch #ChronicStress #MentalHealthScience

Copy and paste broken link above into your browser and replace "dot" with "." for link to work.

Burnout is more than #fatigue. Per MIT Sloan Management Review article ‘With Burnout on the Rise, What Can Companies Do About It?’ #chronicstress in the workplace shows up through 3 primary symptoms: exhaustion, cynicism and detachment. See more at https://substack.com/profile/23237822-mike-temkin/note/c-166704484
Mike Temkin (@miketemkin)

Update on Burnout from The MIT Sloan School Of Management: “Burnout is more than fatigue. The MIT Sloan Management Review article ‘With Burnout on the Rise, What Can Companies Do About It?’ uses a definition based on the work of Christina Maslach, a researcher and professor at the University of California, Berkeley: ‘a psychological response resulting from chronic stress in the workplace that shows up through three primary symptoms: feelings of exhaustion, feelings of cynicism and detachment, and a perceived lack of accomplishment.’ … In a 2024 survey of 1,500 full-time employees of U.S. companies, 51% said they’d suffered burnout in the past year. Nearly two-thirds cited mental and emotional stress as the top cause. Fifty-four percent cited long hours, 52% cited a shortage of workers, and 38% cited the challenge of maintaining work/life balance. A recent survey of 8,200 tech workers had even worse findings, with 84% reporting burnout at work. AI is adding fuel to the fire, with 88% of the most active AI users saying they’re burned out. It’s probably no surprise that nearly the same number of people in that survey reported that they’re more polite to AI than to humans. … Nick Petrie, an organizational psychologist, spent five years researching Navy SEALs, surgeons, CIA agents, and business leaders. His research and client work found that most organizations treat burnout as a binary condition: You’re either burned out or you’re fine. As he explained during a recent Work Forward Forum session, most workplace wellness programs are designed to address …the temporary, acute stress that comes and goes when we’re feeling overwhelmed. This kind of stress is typically followed by a quick recovery.  But many high performers are experiencing … chronic stress and fatigue, leading to decreased motivation that persists — or even … a full burnout where even simple tasks can feel overwhelming and emotions become difficult to control. …  Burnout isn’t healthy for individuals or organizations, but merely taking a break isn’t a long-term solution. Instead, people need a radically new approach to personal growth, along with different workplace conditions. Researchers found that one trigger for burnout is spending an inordinate amount of time doing what you already know and too little time learning anything new. Rebalancing how much time is spent in these “perform” and “grow” modes is an important step toward positive change. … The solution to burnout isn’t rest or a couple of days off. Instead, people need different workplace conditions — and a new approach to personal growth.”  From a September 29, 2025 posting on the MIT Sloan Management Review by Brian Elliot – U.S. executive advisor, CEO of Work Forward, founder of  Future Forum, a think tank focused on the future of work.   For more Thoughts And Observations about Burnout, Fatigue and Rejuvenation go to https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/you-sick-tired-being-fatigued-suffering-from-burnout-could-temkin/ --

Substack
Environmental determinants of ketamine's prohedonic and antianhedonic efficacy: Persistence of enhanced reward responsiveness is modulated by chronic stress (Jenkins, et al, 2025) #ketamine #ketaminetherapy #stress #chronicstress #depression #mentalhealth #psychedelics #psychedelic #psychedelicresearch https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40288209/
Environmental determinants of ketamine's prohedonic and antianhedonic efficacy: Persistence of enhanced reward responsiveness is modulated by chronic stress - PubMed

Ketamine, a dissociative anesthetic with well documented abuse liability, can also provide rapid-onset and persistent antidepressant effects and is currently used for the management of treatment-resistant depression. Although the precise neurobiological mechanisms underlying its antidepressant actio …

PubMed
Before you continue to YouTube

Sleep, Stress and Nutrition Synergy 🔄

Sleep, stress, and nutrition are interconnected: poor sleep increases stress hormones, which negatively affect appetite regulation, leading to poor food choices. This creates a cycle that can hinder muscle-building efforts.

#sleep #rest #recovery #musclegain #musclegrowth #stress #chronicstress #nutrition #physicalactivity #onlinecoach #onlinepersonaltrainer #personaltrainer

Just published my first blog post! 🖋️ Explore a fresh perspective on balance and well-being in today’s fast-paced world. Let’s rethink how we approach mindful living and societal harmony.

Read it here: https://harmony-seeker.com/a-vision-for-balance-rethinking-well-being-in-modern-life/

#MindfulLiving #WellBeing #Harmony #ChronicStress #Neuroscience #Balance

A Vision for Balance: Rethinking Well-Being in Modern Life - The Mindful Melody

In a perfect world, there would be no suffering, no stress. Imagine a world where stress is a fleeting sensation rather than a chronic state, where abuse and harm are unheard of, and where kindness and respect govern every interaction. While this vision may feel unattainable, it serves as a benchmark for what we, the

The Mindful Melody - Exploring the harmony of neuroscience, mental well-being, and mindful living.
Scientists uncover an unsettling effect of chronic social stress on brain cells

Chronic social stress accelerates brain aging by causing neurons to enter a harmful "senescent" state, linked to inflammation and aging diseases, according to new research.

PsyPost
CHRONIC STRESS ACCELERATES COLORECTAL CANCER SPREAD
Research reveals stress hormones fuel tumor growth, weaken immune system, and promote unhealthy behaviors.
#ChronicStress #ColorectalCancer #CancerResearch #StressManagement #Health
https://globalcommons.onrender.com/science/chronic-stress-linked-to-accelerated-colorectal-cancer-spread/
Chronic Stress Linked to Accelerated Colorectal Cancer Spread

A study finds chronic stress disrupts gut bacteria and speeds colorectal cancer's progression. Mental health impacts prognosis, say researchers. | TGC News

The Global Commons News
CHRONIC STRESS ACCELERATES COLORECTAL CANCER SPREAD
Research reveals stress hormones fuel tumor growth, weaken immune system, and promote unhealthy behaviors.
#ChronicStress #ColorectalCancer #CancerResearch #StressManagement #Health
https://globalcommons.onrender.com/science/chronic-stress-linked-to-accelerated-colorectal-cancer-spread/
Chronic Stress Linked to Accelerated Colorectal Cancer Spread

A study finds chronic stress disrupts gut bacteria and speeds colorectal cancer's progression. Mental health impacts prognosis, say researchers. | TGC News

The Global Commons News