This week on Trauma Rewired we step into a big and important conversation about how racism, historical trauma and systemic oppression impact nervous system health.
Racism is often framed as a social or ideological issue, but neuroscience tells us something deeper. Chronic exposure to discrimination functions as a persistent threat signal to the nervous system. Over time, that threat shapes stress hormones, inflammatory responses, emotional regulation and even pain perception. These are not abstract ideas. They are biological adaptations to sustained social stress.
In this episode we are joined by Lovey Bradley, a NeuroSomatic Intelligence certified practitioner, NSI community facilitator and co-facilitator of the NSI BIPOC Affinity Group. Together we explore how systemic forces shape physiology, how ancestral stress patterns can live in the body, and how chronic exposure to inequity affects both individual nervous systems and the collective nervous system of our culture.
This conversation is real and imperfect. It is one small part of a much larger dialogue. We share research, personal experience and reflections from our work in nervous system education spaces. Our intention is not to represent every perspective, but to open a thoughtful conversation about embodiment, representation, safety and the capacity to stay present with complexity.
From a neurosomatic lens, post-traumatic growth is not about bypassing trauma. It is about expanding nervous system capacity so we can remain embodied in difficult conversations, process rupture rather than avoiding it, and build the relational tolerance required for collective healing.
Topics CoveredHow racism functions as a chronic threat signal that reshapes the nervous system, not just belief or behavior
What the HPA axis, cortisol, and progesterone have to do with racial stress and women's health outcomes
How suppressed expression contributes to physical disease in melanated bodies
What Resmaa Menakem's framework adds to neuro somatic approaches to racialized trauma
Why white supremacy culture traits like urgency and perfectionism map directly onto chronic stress behaviors
How the urgency to fix or regulate can itself become a form of bypassing in healing spaces
What post-traumatic growth looks like at a collective level, not just an individual one
Why witnessing state violence on social media is a genuine nervous system stressor, even for those not directly targeted
How Dr. Levy's community for melanated women came to life and what it is building toward
0:00 - Why This Conversation Had to Happen
01:57 - Welcome: Racial Trauma, the Nervous System, and Post-Traumatic Growth
07:25 - What Racial Stress Looks Like in the Body, for White and Melanated Bodies
10:44 - Post-Traumatic Growth at the Collective Level: What It Actually Requires
15:35 - The Danger of Regulating Out of Activation Before the Cycle Completes
18:09 - The Neuroscience: HPA Axis, Allostatic Load, and Chronic Racial Threat
24:27 - How Racial Stress Shows Up in Hormones, Cycles, and Women's Health
29:25 - Resmaa Menakem, White Supremacy Culture, and the Nervous System
38:42 - Dr. Levy's Community for Melanated Women and What It Is Building
41:35 - Witnessing Violence at Scale: What It Does to All Nervous Systems
49:11 - What This Work Has Made Possible: Dr. Levy on Choosing to Create a Different World
51:59 - Closing Reflection: What Post-Traumatic Growth Requires of Us Collectively
Ways to Engage with Neurosomatics:
Neurosomatic Intelligence is now enrolling : https://neurosomaticintelligence.com/nsi-certification
Join us for a two week trial of neurosomatic practices at rewiretrial.com
Free BrainBased neurosomatic workshop for entrepreneurs at rewirecapacity.com
Sacred Synapse: an educational YouTube channel founded by Jennifer Wallace that explores nervous system regulation, applied neuroscience, consciousness, and psychedelic preparation and integration through Neurosomatic Intelligence.
Wayfinder Journal: Track nervous system patterns and support preparation and integration through Neurosomatic Intelligence.
Learn to work with Boundaries at the level of the body and nervous system at https://www.boundaryrewire.com
Resources:
Brave Heart, Maria Yellow Horse. "The Historical Trauma Response Among Natives and Its Relationship with Substance Abuse: A Lakota Illustration." Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, vol. 35, no. 1, 2003, pp. 7–13.
Brave Heart, Maria Yellow Horse, and Eduardo Duran. "Healing the Soul Wound: Counseling with American Indians and Other Native Peoples." Teachers College Press, 1995.
DeGruy, Joy. Post Traumatic Slave Syndrome: America's Legacy of Enduring Injury and Healing. Joy DeGruy Publications Inc., 2005.
Hobson, J. M., M. D. Moody, R. E. Sorge, and B. R. Goodin. "The Neurobiology of Social Stress Resulting from Racism." Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, vol. 17, no. 2, 2022, pp. 181–191.
Hicken, Margaret T., et al. "Everyday Discrimination, Chronic Stress, and Cardiovascular Health." American Journal of Epidemiology, 2014.
Geronimus, Arline T. "Weathering and the Health of African-American Women." Ethnicity & Disease, 2006.
Menakem, Resmaa. My Grandmother's Hands: Racialized Trauma and the Pathway to Mending Our Hearts and Bodies. Central Recovery Press, 2017.
Okun, Tema. "White Supremacy Culture." Dismantling Racism Works, originally published 1999, revised 2021.
Williams, Monnica T. "Racial Trauma: Theory, Research, and Healing." American Psychologist, vol. 74, no. 1, 2019, pp. 33–42.