Recovery isn’t always faster with stronger interventions
Recovery from knee, back, foot, shoulder pain doesn’t come faster if we try harder or stronger interventions.
Forcing the system might actually be the reason slowing your recovery.
This post will simplify a profound idea for you: lasting change often comes not from doing more, but from offering your nervous system smaller, gentler differences it can actually use.
The cybernetics lesson in how gentle inputs create big change
Gregory Bateson, the founder of cybernetics said:
“the only difference that matters is the difference that makes a difference.”
Bateson was talking about complex systems, the kinds that constantly generate feedback and reorganize themselves based on that feedback.
For a system like this to change, new information has to arrive in packets small enough that the system chooses to incorporate it.
When the input is subtle, digestible, and non-threatening, the system absorbs it and reorganizes itself. But if the input is too big, too forceful, or too abrupt, the system rejects it. It gets “spit out,” and no real change occurs.
Feldenkrais and Bateson were contemporaries. Dr Feldenkrais found Bateson’s principle deeply resonant in human learning and healing so much so that it constitutes the backbone of what we now call the Feldenkrais Method of Somatic Education.
You already know this in your everyday life
🌸 In the garden, lush growth needs consistent, gentle inputs
With my dahlias and roses. I had to really fine tune my irrigation timer so they received a big drink once a week for most of the summer (my dahlia lovers know what I’m talking about!).
If I water them just right and with the right doze of soil amendments, the roots take in exactly what they need and the plant responds with lush growth and breathtakingly beautiful flowers. Dump too much water and the tubers rot.
With baking, dough needs the “right” conditions to rise
My daughter is an exacting baker in the most endearing way. She kneads dough with the kind of attention you’d reserve for sculpting something fragile. And she’s right to be picky: bread dough is another complex system. A little kneading organizes it. A little more brings it to life. But knead too hard or too fast, and it tightens, toughens, and loses its ability to rise.
With parenting, we see this truth daily
Give your kids one manageable piece of direction and they can respond. Overwhelm them with too much at once and they shut down or you get 🙄.
Everywhere we look, complex systems tell the same story: small differences, offered gently, are the ones that lead to real change.
What this means for recovering from pain, injury or surgery
We live in an age that promises quick fixes and fast results. We’ve been conditioned by “Amazon Now” to believe everything, including our health should be delivered instantly.
But your nervous system doesn’t work on a two-hour delivery window. It works like a rose bush. Like dough. Like a child trying to process. It responds best to small, meaningful increments, differences it can sense, integrate, and reorganize around.
When you push hard like with one too many exercises done in several reps or a forceful deep tissue relaxation or stretch, the system does what any complex system does: it rejects the input.
When you go slow, the system says:“This I can use.”
This is why healing happens faster when we go slow.
Because slow is not weak.
Slow is intelligent. Slow is efficient.
Slow is the pace at which the nervous system truly learns.
One small, meaningful difference at a time, until the whole system transforms.
How this shows up in real client experience
One of the most common things clients say to me at the end of a 1:1 session or group teaching:
“This was so subtle… I thought you hardly did a thing, and I feel so much better.”
“How is this working? It feels like magic.”
To them, it feels like magic because many times the movements are so minimal they seem almost inconsequential.
But to the nervous system, those small distinctions are huge. They’re exactly the kind of input a complex, self-organizing system can use.
Clients often expect healing to come from intensity—big stretches, lots of reps, adjustments you can hear.
So when their body changes dramatically from something subtle, they’re surprised.
But this is precisely how nervous-system-based healing works:
You offer the smallest possible change the system can say “yes” to.
The system integrates it.
Then it builds on it.
And the changes accumulate into something that feels profound.
From the outside, the session may look like “hardly anything happened.”
From the inside, the system is reorganizing itself at a foundational level.
It isn’t magic.
It’s cybernetics in motion.
It’s how complex systems, like your nervous system heal: through small, meaningful differences offered gently enough that the system can truly use them.
Does this resonate with you?
If this resonates, reach out to me via this contact form to share what’s going on in your body, what you’ve tried, and what you hope might be possible. Together we can explore whether this gentle, intelligent, nervous system based approach is the right next step for you.