In the past few months, I have enjoyed a noticeably improved quality of life. I don’t have to spend so much focus desperately trying to build connections. I have more energy for other things, like working in the garden and finding and ordering a pair of shoes that might work with my complex foot conditions. The change in my experience of life is not from trying harder or managing behavior. It emerges from the presence of a relationship that stays stable over time.
It comes down to sensory input. My body needs the sensory input of safe connection to feel safe on this planet. When that input is missing, the body shifts into protection. Attention narrows around finding connection or bracing for the lack of it. That draws energy away from everything else. When the input is there and consistent, the nervous system does not have to work as hard to secure it. Energy becomes available for other parts of life.
Every part of my life is a bit easier thanks to a steady mutual connection with a kindred spirit. He does not react to my state shifts or withdraw when things are intense. He can handle it, understand, and feel it without contracting. That consistency changes how my body organizes from one moment to the next.
The connection developed slowly over time. It feels like we are colleagues who have survived a great deal, and now want to share what we learned with others so they can enjoy a higher quality of life. That means the relationship is not organized around fixing or managing each other. It is based on mutual respect, understanding, and shared reality. That creates consistency, and consistency creates stability.
This is not in person, but through messages, voice recordings, and video meetings. Although all online, it still has a profound effect across every aspect of my life. The body responds to patterns of interaction. Timing, tone, responsiveness, and continuity signals are enough to shift whether the body recognizes the environment as something to defend against or settle into.
Most of the online health voices leave out this crucial element. They talk about scrolling, food, habits, and dopamine. They focus on what people do and overlook conditions that affect those patterns. When the body is not in reliable, safe connection, it will move toward whatever brings some form of relief or engagement. That is not a failure of discipline, but an adaptation to the absence of what is needed.
About 5 years ago, I started from scratch. Virtually all of my relationships had been destroyed by the impact of repeated medical and psychiatric abuse, with no time to recover. I was isolated and overloaded. My body was in constant extremes, and I spent a year near death, and weeks very near death. Crucial to survival, I had been studying Relational Neuroscience and knew the basics. Learning is hampered by being in survival mode. I could not rely on focus or consistency. I still kept going, reading and re-reading in tiny bits, and repeatedly listening to lectures and audiobooks. For years.
I did not just study Relational Neuroscience. I brought myself back to life on those principles. I focused on what inputs my body needed and how to create conditions that could provide them. That required building connections that could hold steady, even if they started small and online. It also meant paying attention to what increased stability and what increased overload. Over time, my body shifted its response as my environment began to meet even slightly more of my core biological needs. I began to build a team of healthcare practitioners who could connect at the nervous system level and provide input I so desperately needed.
Now I lay out what I’ve learned day after day here on the Trauma Aware America blog and Facebook page. Not as theory, but as lived patterns. When people understand that their bodies are responding to conditions, not failing, it opens the possibility of building different conditions, even in small ways.
The shift starts where it can. One relationship that is consistent and not threatened by your process can change how your body organizes. That change naturally spreads into other areas. The need to chase relief decreases when the body receives what it has been missing.
People crave this because it is a biological need. When the input is absent, the system keeps seeking it. When it is present and reliable, the system settles enough to engage with the rest of life.