After the psychiatric abuse of a “standard treatment” nearly killed me 8 years ago, I found the tools that made survival possible. This was at the intersection of the NeuroAffective Relational Model (NARM) and Interpersonal Neurobiology. Unlike the mental illness industry that harmed me, they gave me a map that made sense of my experience. These two frameworks–one focused on developmental trauma, the other on the relational and physiological foundations of being human–helped me understand what the so-called mental health system never could: that my suffering was not evidence of defect, but the natural outcome of a life shaped by chronic threat, violation, and disconnection.
NARM taught me to look at trauma through the lens of what was interrupted rather than what was broken. It shifted the focus from pathology to adaptation. It helped me see that the patterns I had been blamed for–like collapse, dissociation, hypervigilance, emotional shutdown, and over-functioning–were ways my system had learned to protect me in environments where safety and attunement were missing. NARM gave language to the survival styles that form when a child has to choose between authenticity and connection. It showed me that these adaptations aren’t disorders to fix but intelligent solutions, some of which kept running long after they were needed.
Interpersonal Neurobiology took that understanding even deeper. It helped me see that everything about being human–emotion, perception, thought, and behavior–emerges from relationship. Not just relationships with people, but the ongoing relationship between body and mind, between internal experience and external conditions. IPNB taught me that what we call “mental health” is really about integration, how well the parts of our system can stay in relationship with one another. Where integration is missing, we suffer. But that suffering isn’t a sign of disease; it’s a sign of disconnection.
Together, NARM and IPNB dismantled the lies I’d been told by psychiatry, psychology, my family, and the mainstream culture. They replaced shame with understanding. They gave me a way to see my reactions, symptoms, and struggles not as evidence of illness but of life. They helped me understand how chronic threat shapes perception, how early relational injury affects self-image, and how real, embodied safety changes everything. They gave me a framework that honors the body’s intelligence and the primacy of connection.
I used these to create the foundation of the neuroscience-based recovery plan that saved my life. Not a one-size-fits-nobody plan with DSM checklists or medication algorithms, but a dynamic framework that acknowledges the reality of how humans actually heal. My plan is about restoring conditions that support regulation, integration, and connection. It involves learning to listen to the body instead of overriding it, and responding to distress with curiosity instead of control. It centers on rebuilding trust in my own perceptions after years of being told they were wrong.
If I had not rejected the mental illness industry pathology, it would have had me dead. It seems to willfully ignore complexity, context, and the truth that the body knows what it needs to survive. What it called “treatment” was really management: sedation, suppression, and containment. NARM and IPNB gave me something radically different: tools that align with life itself. They taught me that healing isn’t about fixing what’s wrong, but reclaiming connection with self, others, and the world.
Bringing these two approaches together showed me that trauma recovery isn’t a mental process. It’s relational and physiological. It requires safety, presence, and compassion, not diagnosis or control. It demands seeing people not as cases or categories, but as living systems doing their best to adapt. It’s slow, it’s nonlinear, and it’s profoundly human.
NARM and IPNB gave me a way to understand and honor the intelligence of my own survival, a way to build my own path when the system offered nothing but harm. And that’s what I want others to know: it’s possible to heal outside of the machinery that calls itself mental health. It’s possible to live fully and truthfully by following the same principles that every healthy system depends on: connection, safety, and integration.

