Episode 118: Spotify | Apple Podcasts | YouTube
View transcript on Buzzsprout
Using a personal story about a difficult uphill walk versus an easy downhill one, this episode offers a powerful and validating analogy for the healing journey. Amanda explores why life and healing can feel so hard when you’re dealing with anxiety or depression, diving into the real physiological and biological reasons your body is working overtime. This episode is a compassionate reminder that your struggle is not a personal failing and that the hard “uphill” work you’re doing now is what creates the conditions for life to feel easier later.
Amanda opens with a personal story about a walk to the hospital that inspired this whole episode. Same distance both ways, but the uphill walk burned more energy, triggered a higher heart rate, and felt significantly harder.
That’s exactly what healing can feel like.
Just because you’re doing the same work as someone else—or doing work you’ve done before—doesn’t mean it should feel equally easy. Your body, your circumstances, and your biology all influence how hard or heavy the path feels.
Healing isn’t just emotional or psychological—it’s biological. Dysregulation is physiologically expensive. If you’re stuck in chronic survival mode, your body is already spending extra energy just to function. Add healing on top, and it makes sense that the process feels exhausting.
Amanda outlines real factors that can make healing harder:
These aren’t hypothetical. Inside Restore, clients often discover that previously missed health data (like undiagnosed thyroid issues) were directly contributing to anxiety or emotional shutdown. Once addressed, healing got easier.
Healing often gets harder before it gets easier. That’s not failure—it’s feedback. Amanda reminds listeners that healing requires upfront investment: emotionally, biologically, and practically. But when you build safety, nourishment, and regulation into your life, things begin to shift.
This is what it means to do the hard work of healing in order to experience more ease later. There is a tipping point, and Amanda walks through what it looks like:
Inside Regulated Living, coaching program members learn how to assess their own “stress bucket,” balance their biology, and regulate in small, doable ways.
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Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or qualified mental health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.
A mental health newsletter that feels like a deep breath: simple, grounding, and here to remind you that healing is possible.
Regulated Living provides neuroscience-backed mental health coaching to help you regulate your nervous system and reclaim your life from anxiety and depression.
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