Brain–Body Reset: Simple Coping Skills That Work

An Atracare Mental Health director’s note from Dr. Dane Bluestone

“When our body is doing well, our brain is doing well—and when our brain is doing well, our body is doing well.

Quick Take

  • Core idea: The brain and body are deeply connected. In co-occurring disorders, that connection can feel severed—and care should focus on restoring it.
  • How we do it: Use talk therapy to identify which treatment modalities will help you find the most success
  • What you can start today: Simple, low-key coping skills that calm and center your nervous system.

The Brain–Body Loop (Why It Matters)

For many people navigating co-occurring mental health and substance-use challenges, the internal “wiring” between mind and body can feel out of sync. Reinstating that connection is a foundation of recovery. In practice, that means pairing clinical support with everyday habits that settle the body so the mind can do its work—and vice versa.


How Therapy Helps You Choose the Right Tools

Talk therapy isn’t one-size-fits-all. In session, we’ll sort through what’s most helpful for you:

  • Clarify goals and stressors
  • Test coping strategies and notice what actually moves the needle
  • Adjust the plan as you learn what works

Success comes from fit—the right tool, at the right time, for the right person.


Simple Coping Skills (You Can Use Today)

Low-effort, grounding activities can quickly restore balance. Dr. Bluestone’s favorites:

  • Barefoot beach walk — slow, sensory, and soothing
  • Boardwalk fries or a comfort snack — mindful, celebratory, and stabilizing
  • Anything simple, passive, and low-key — choose activities that make you feel calm and centered without overthinking

Rule of thumb: if it helps you feel steady—not stimulated—it’s working.


Care at Atracare Mental Health

  • Individual therapy for anxiety, depression, trauma, and substance-use support
  • Person-centered planning to reconnect brain and body
  • Judgment-free care with practical coping you can actually use
  • Flexible access, including telehealth and timely scheduling

Get seen. Get better. Get on your way.

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