TBI Traumatic Brain Injury / Concussion

Edited

A traumatic brain injury (TBI) can occur from any blow to the head.
The injury may be penetrating (like a wound) or non-penetrating (such as a strike during a car accident, fall, or impact during sports).

Brain injuries are far more common than most people realize.
While we often associate concussions with football or contact sports, research shows that soccer players experience more concussions—due to dozens of micro-injuries per game that add up over time.
In fact, some of the earliest and most overlooked brain injuries come from traumatic births or C-section deliveries.


A Different Way to Understand TBI:

Think of the head like an egg:

  • The shell is the skull and cranial fascia.

  • The egg white represents the protective fluids and soft tissue layers.

  • The yolk represents the brain.

When trauma occurs—even a minor blow—the fascia contracts on the outside, restricting blood and fluid flow, while the internal structures (the yolk) can also bruise and swell.
This disrupts the natural movement of cranial bones, which are supposed to slightly expand and contract with every breath.

Even small constrictions change blood flow, compress nerves, and limit fluid drainage—leading to symptoms that can show up months or even years after the original injury.


Symptoms We Commonly See Following TBI:

  • Digestive issues

  • Chronic headaches

  • Anxiety and depression

  • Cognitive dysfunction

  • Mood swings and emotional reactivity

Often people don’t even recall a major head injury—but experience a lifetime of these lingering symptoms.

The good news:
We've consistently seen that resetting the entire body, reducing systemic inflammation, and restoring fascia flow can create profound changes.


Healing the Body from the Inside Out:

In our experience, the most effective approach starts with:

1. Hydrating and Mineralizing the Body

The Foundation Bundle of Supplements (PowerCurc30, Fascial Flow, Fascial Foundation) supports:

  • Reducing systemic inflammation

  • Rehydrating fascia

  • Rebuilding digestion

  • Supporting mood regulation (Serotonin, Dopamine, Oxytocin)

Learn more about why hydration and minerals matter here:
🔗 Dehydration of the Fascia

2. Reducing the Stress Response

Following brain trauma, the body often gets locked into fight-or-flight mode.
Daily fascial maneuvers release pressure from the nervous system and allow healing to unfold naturally.


Movement Protocol for TBI and Concussion Recovery:

Adapt the movement to your mobility. Even seated movements create profound results.

Day 1:

Day 2:

Day 3:

If you need to skip a day, that’s perfectly okay—just continue when ready.
Gentle consistency, not perfection, is the key.

Helpful additional releases:


Additional Insight:

The brain and small intestine are deeply connected—over 90% of serotonin (our connection chemical) is produced in the gut.
Brain injuries often disrupt gut health, which is why rebuilding digestion is critical for emotional recovery.


Real Stories and Deeper Understanding:

🎥 ADHD, C-Section Birth, and TBI Connection


Healing after TBI is not about fixing one injury—it’s about restoring the full-body flow: hydration, emotional release, digestion, and movement.
The brain doesn't heal because we force it—it heals because we remove the barriers holding it back.

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