The Aftermath: Life After Brain Changes
The PsychPod Magazine | Brain & Science
Neurological illness can change more than the way people think or feel.
For many individuals, it can also change the way the world itself feels afterward.
Perception is not simply about eyesight or hearing. The brain is constantly interpreting sensory information, emotional experiences, memory, stress, environment, and internal bodily states simultaneously. When neurological or endocrine functioning changes, perception can change with it.
Sometimes subtly.
Sometimes profoundly.
Many people living with neurological illness quietly describe feeling:
• overstimulated
• emotionally sensitive
• disconnected from their surroundings
• hyperaware of stress or sensory input
• mentally overwhelmed in crowded environments
• emotionally detached
• physically present but psychologically distant
• like the world no longer feels the same as it once did
For some individuals, bright lights, noise, crowds, conflict, stress, or constant stimulation suddenly become difficult for the nervous system to tolerate.
Things that once felt ordinary may begin feeling overwhelming.
Crowded stores.
Social gatherings.
Noise.
Fast-paced environments.
Emotional conflict.
Lack of sleep.
The nervous system can become significantly more reactive after neurological illness, hormonal dysregulation, trauma, chronic stress, or prolonged emotional exhaustion.
That overstimulation can affect:
• emotional regulation
• concentration
• fatigue
• anxiety levels
• social functioning
• cognitive functioning
• physical exhaustion
Some people also describe changes in the way they emotionally experience the world.
Music may feel different.
Memories may feel heavier.
Stress may feel more intense.
Certain environments may suddenly feel emotionally unsafe or draining.
Others experience periods of emotional numbness or disconnection where the world feels distant, surreal, muted, or unfamiliar.
These experiences can feel difficult to explain to others because they are deeply internal.
And because many perceptual changes are invisible, people often continue trying to function normally while privately struggling to regulate sensory, emotional, and neurological overload.
I have seen this throughout my career, and I personally live with a pituitary tumor. One thing many people quietly carry is the emotional exhaustion of trying to adapt to a brain and nervous system that process the world differently afterward.
That experience can feel incredibly isolating.
At the same time, perception is also deeply connected to healing.
The brain continuously responds to:
• environment
• emotional experiences
• relationships
• stress
• music
• movement
• creativity
• safety
• repetition
• sensory input
Which means healing is not only physical or cognitive.
It is experiential.
Supporting perception and nervous system healing may involve:
• nervous system regulation
• reducing overstimulation
• sleep restoration
• therapy
• mindfulness and grounding
• music and sound regulation
• creative expression
• movement and exercise
• time in nature
• emotional processing
• creating environments that feel psychologically safe
For many people, healing involves learning how to experience the world differently instead of constantly trying to force themselves back into old ways of functioning.
Because neurological illness can change perception itself.
And sometimes healing begins when people stop fighting those changes and start learning how to move through the world with greater awareness, compassion, and understanding for what their nervous system has experienced.
Dr. Velmi, PsyD
