Healing COVID Brain Fog from the Inside Out

August 16, 2024 Minding Corona No Comments

COVID brain fog can cloud your thinking and disrupt daily life, lingering long after the virus itself. It’s part of what many call long-COVID, where symptoms persist for weeks or months.

This condition, rooted in the body’s prolonged immune response, affects not just your body but your mind as well. Healing from COVID brain fog requires a holistic approach, one that nurtures both your mental and physical well-being, helping you restore clarity and balance from within.

Ready to reconnect with your true self?

Here are some recovery strategies with specific emphasis on a healing process from the inside out. Since there is no proper medication yet (will there ever be?) against long-COVID, this is at least what you can do, supporting your natural healing processes, respecting both your mental and physical needs, and fostering a deep connection between the two by specifically, consciously focusing on this connection while doing:

Physical exercise

Gentle physical activity, such as walking, is not just about moving your body; it’s about fostering a connection between your mind and body. When you engage in exercise, even at a mild level, it encourages your brain to release endorphins and other neurotransmitters that promote healing and well-being. This isn’t just about pushing yourself physically but about nurturing your body’s natural ability to heal. Walking can also serve as a form of meditation, where you connect with your surroundings and your inner self, supporting both physical and mental recovery in harmony.

Gentle mental exercises

Cognitive recovery through mental exercises should be approached with kindness toward yourself. Start with simple, manageable tasks, such as reading short articles or doing puzzles. Gradually, as your brain begins to re-establish its natural rhythms, you can build up to more complex activities. This gradual approach respects your brain’s current state and encourages it to strengthen from within. It’s not about forcing yourself to think harder but about allowing your cognitive functions to reawaken and grow naturally, like nurturing a plant to bloom.

Rest and relaxation

Sleep and relaxation are essential for healing because they provide your brain with the time it needs to repair and reset. When you relax, especially in a deep, restful state, your brain processes and organizes information more efficiently. This supports cognitive recovery by reducing mental clutter and stress. Rest is a form of self-Compassion, where you allow your brain the space to heal naturally. Think of it as giving your mind and body permission to restore themselves at their own pace.

Mindful meditation and autosuggestion

Mindfulness and autosuggestion are about connecting with your inner self and guiding your mind gently toward healing. Mindful meditation encourages you to be present and notice your thoughts without judgment, which helps to calm the mind and reduce the mental fog. Autosuggestion, on the other hand, is a way of communicating with the deeper parts of your mind. By consistently using positive, relaxed autosuggestions—phrases or thoughts that resonate deeply with you—you can gently guide your mind toward clarity and focus. This process is not about forcing change but about inviting your mind to realign and rejuvenate itself, encouraging deep, lasting recovery.

Toward a post-COVID new you

These attitudes or exercises are – hopefully – the start of lifelong habits. COVID brain fog may be seen as a symptom or consequence of chronic ‘inflammatory stress’ to an unhealthy degree.

The virus has come to tell you this. The above is a significant part of the answer you may give.

Are you listening?

This may be an occasion to experience that your mind is a powerful healer.

Leave a Reply

Related Posts

A Tale of Two Letters About Remdesivir – Enter Mind – Exit Remdesivir?

Remdesivir or ‘We,’ Which Cure Will it Be? Intrigued by the antiviral drug, remdesivir, I delved into scientific studies about it. The result is a duo of ‘Letters to the Editor’ to the new England Journal of Medicine (top journal of medical science), in May and June 2020. Not even hoping they would accept, indeed, Read the full article…

11. Summer of Covid

June 13, 2020   It’s almost summer in Europe. COVID-19 seems to be a recent nightmare. Glad it’s over. But it isn’t, of course.   There are several ways in which it isn’t over: A second wave will probably hit Europe and the US in the autumn. It may be even much worse, given the Read the full article…

Masked Poetry

  For the doctors and nurses Who give more than ever you can Please put on your mask.   For the beauty of eyes That are looking at a beautiful world From right above a mask,   For your parents and grandparents Who want to keep getting your love Keep on that face mask.   Read the full article…

Translate »