The mainstream mental illness industry offers a symptom–management and pathology-reduction framework that reflects the incomplete biomedical model of mental health. That narrow framework treats progress as a set of isolated symptom-based milestones, focusing on controlling or managing parts of experience rather than seeing healing as a relational, integrative, and systemic process. This is problematic.
Here’s a list of signs of recovery that reflect Interpersonal Neurobiology (IPNB) principles of integration, connection, coherence, and homeostasis rather than symptoms or behavior management:
1. You feel more at home in your body.
There’s less struggle against sensations, and more capacity to notice what your body is telling you without being overwhelmed.
2. You can move through shifts in mood or state with more ease.
Emotions still come, but they don’t feel like they take you over as completely. There’s a sense that you can flow with them and return to balance.
3. You recover more quickly from stress.
Instead of staying stuck in activation or collapse, you find yourself able to come back to steadiness in a shorter time.
4. You can stay connected with others even when things are hard.
Moments of conflict or tension don’t automatically sever your sense of connection, you can hold onto relationship while holding onto yourself.
5. You notice more coherence in your inner world.
Thoughts, feelings, and bodily sensations line up more often, creating a sense of clarity and wholeness rather than fragmentation.
6. You have more access to curiosity.
Instead of being locked into fear, shame, or defensiveness, you can wonder about your own experience and the experience of others.
7. You feel more choice in how you respond.
Even in difficult situations, you sense you have options, rather than being driven only by old survival patterns.
8. You can take in nourishment from the world.
Beauty, kindness, rest, and connection feel more accessible, and your system can actually absorb them instead of shutting them out.
9. You experience moments of integration.
Parts of yourself that once felt cut off or in conflict begin to feel more linked, and your life feels more coherent as a result.
10. You sense a widening of possibility.
Instead of feeling trapped or closed down, you can imagine a future, make choices toward what matters, and feel more aligned with your values.
This list isn’t measuring “symptoms” but noticing how your system is moving toward greater integration and balance, which is the foundation of well-being from which mental and physical health arise.
