Identity, Stress, and Healing in Midlife
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A proposito di questo titolo
Neural retraining specialist, Madeleine Lowry, explores a powerful and often overlooked driver of chronic stress and symptoms in midlife: long-held roles, expectations, and identity patterns.
Many women have spent decades identifying as “the responsible one,” “the caretaker,” or “the strong one”—roles that once ensured belonging, safety, or stability. Over time, these identities quietly shape the nervous system, keeping it in a chronic state of vigilance and over-responsibility.
Midlife is often the moment when these identities begin to loosen. Hormonal shifts, changing family roles, and emotional bandwidth limitations can make old coping strategies unsustainable. What once worked suddenly doesn’t—and symptoms like anxiety, fatigue, brain fog, and pain can emerge or intensify.
In this episode we explore:
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How identity becomes encoded in the subconscious nervous system
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Why the body often resists letting go of familiar roles—even painful ones
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Why midlife symptoms are often signals of misalignment, not failure
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How neural retraining helps gently update identity-based stress patterns
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What becomes possible when survival roles give way to self-aligned living
This conversation reframes midlife not as a breakdown, but as a reorganization—one that can open the door to deeper regulation, resilience, and healing.
Learn more about subconscious neural retraining and how it can support emotional and physical wellbeing, visit TCNeuralRetraining.com. Take our free quiz, schedule a free phone consultation, or private sessions via Zoom.