People often believe that once they “fix their symptoms and get their labs back to normal,” they’ll finally feel like themselves again.
It’s an easy trap to fall into, especially for professionals who are used to solving problems, setting goals, and pushing through discomfort. When fatigue, pain, or burnout start to take over, the instinct is to reach for what worked before: a previous routine, a new medicine, or another plan to “get back” to how things used to be.
Unfortunately, our bodies don’t always work this way. And that’s not a bad thing — because feeling better isn’t about returning to who you were. It’s about becoming the best version of yourself that you can be now.
What It Really Takes to Heal
Lasting change doesn’t come from chasing symptoms or forcing your body to perform like it did a decade ago. Transformation happens through small, consistent shifts that rebuild better habits and promote kindness and connection with yourself.
Here’s what that work looks like behind the scenes:
- Reconnecting to body awareness – Learning to listen to your body’s cues instead of overriding them. When we don’t listen, we can get used to feeling poorly, and over time, changes that could have been corrected early on become permanent. If you have neuropathy or hypoglycemic unawareness, you are probably good at pushing your symptoms away until they can’t be ignored.
- Rebuilding sustainable routines – Creating rhythm and structure around rest, nourishment, community, time in nature, movement, and giving back. All of these things should be considered medicine. They may work more slowly than pills, but they are equally important.
- Regulating the nervous system – Using breath, mindfulness, and emotional awareness to shift from constant survival mode to calm responsiveness. When you get used to these techniques, you can feel your body change instantly as you apply them. It’s a bonus that it is easier to respond to a situation from a place of calmness than from anger or frustration.
- Recognizing small wins – Measuring progress through presence, not perfection. Celebrate every bit of momentum, no matter how small. Most of us are very hard on ourselves and don’t give credit for small wins. We forget to measure how far we’ve come and our improvements in health. We need to recognize these moments to notice we are doing our best.
These aren’t flashy or fast steps. But they are the foundation that makes lasting health possible.
A Client’s Story: From Overwhelmed to In Control
One client came to me, a high-achieving professional woman in her 40s, frustrated that her old strategies weren’t working anymore. She had been living with chronic illness for years and felt like she had tried everything. Every time she felt slightly better, she’d push harder, trying to catch up with everything she put off… and end up right back in exhaustion.
When we began working together, we slowed everything down. Instead of chasing the next fix, we rebuilt her relationship with her body. She learned how to recognize her stress patterns, protect her rest, and build a routine that honored her current capacity rather than her old expectations.
It wasn’t overnight, but over time, her energy stabilized, her flare-ups became less frequent, and most importantly, she felt grounded again. She didn’t just feel better — she felt in control in a new way. She learned what worked for her, now.
Healing Forward
If you’re trying to regain your health, the real path isn’t about going back to who you were; it’s about evolving into someone who knows how to sustain herself, even when life changes.
Healing forward means:
- Redefining what “healthy” looks like for you right now.
- Listening instead of forcing.
- Building systems that make space for rest, connection, and purpose.
Because when you stop chasing the old version of yourself, you create room for the new one to thrive.
Final Thought
It’s easy to admire the outcome — the woman who looks vibrant and in control again. But the real value lies in the daily choices that no one sees.
Healing isn’t about getting back to who you were; it’s about becoming the best you that you can be now.
Cheri Sacks R.N., C.D.C.E.S
With Care,
Cheri Sacks, "Your Neighbor, The Nurse"
Ready to stop fighting your body and start healing? Send me a message. Let's talk about how I can help!
👉 I help women uncover what’s really keeping them stuck in their health and find the next best step toward natural, lasting relief. Check out my website or message me if you’re ready to explore what this could look like for you.