How the Love Your Brain Foundation Turns Isolation Into Community For TBI Survivors And Caregivers | E45
What if the most powerful medicine after a brain injury is feeling truly seen? We sit down with Kyla Pearce, Senior Director of Programs and Research at the Love Your Brain foundation, to explore how connection, mind‑body practices, and practical education can restore confidence, calm, and everyday momentum for people with TBI and their caregivers.
Kyla shares the story behind the foundation, launched after pro snowboarder Kevin Pearce’s traumatic brain injury, and the gap they set out to close: the lonely, confusing stretch after acute care. We unpack how free programs—delivered in person, online, and in hospital settings—blend yoga, mindfulness, brain health nutrition, and resilience education to address mental, physical, and social needs. You’ll hear how groups are designed to be both trauma‑informed and TBI‑informed, with predictable structure, sensory‑aware cueing, and space for honest conversation. We also break down the core class arc: targeted breathwork, chair‑based movement for balance and mobility, guided meditation, and a resilience lesson like realistic optimism that ties skills to daily life.
Evidence matters here. Kyla walks through their large pre‑post studies showing significant gains in quality of life, mood, cognition, resilience, and behavioral regulation among community participants. That real‑world data helps clinicians refer with confidence and gives families a bridge from discharge to long‑term living. We also look ahead to March 20-22nd 2026, when Love Your Brain hosts a three‑day online summit featuring leaders in functional neurology, mindfulness science, habit formation, and photobiomodulation. Expect candid, research‑grounded conversations about what works, what’s emerging, and how to navigate device hype, dosing, and trade‑offs without getting lost.
If you or someone you love is recovering from concussion or TBI, this conversation offers clarity, hope, and concrete next steps—from nature‑based retreats and caregiver programming to accessible online groups you can join from home. Explore the lineup and join the community at loveyourbrain.com/summit, then subscribe, share this episode with someone who needs it, and leave a review to help others find the show.
REGISTER for the online global Love Your Brain Summit on March 25th-26th: https://www.loveyourbrain.com/summit
Transcript
Kyla Pearce 00:00
Yeah, so big picture, love your brain's mission now is to improve the mental, physical and social well being of people with brain injury as well as caregivers, and we do that in a couple ways. So we offer free, research backed programs delivered in person, online and in hospital based settings that blend yoga, mindfulness, brain health, nutrition, psychoeducation based on the science of resilience as well as community building.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 00:26
Welcome to Life after impact, the concussion recovery Podcast. I'm Dr Ayla Wolf, and I will be hosting today's episode where we help you navigate the often confusing, frustrating and overwhelming journey of concussion and brain injury recovery. This podcast is your go to resource for actionable information, whether you're dealing with a recent concussion, struggling with post concussion syndrome, or just feeling stuck in your healing process. In each episode, we dive deep into the symptoms, testing treatments and neurological insights that can help you move forward with clarity and confidence. We bring you leading experts in the world of brain health, functional neurology and rehabilitation to share their wisdom and strategies. So if you're feeling lost, hopeless or like no one understands what you're going through, know that you are not alone. This podcast can be your guide and partner in recovery, helping you build a better life after impact.
Welcome to Life after impact, the concussion recovery podcast, where today I am so excited to be joined by Kyla Pearce, the Senior Director of Programs and Research for the Love Your Brain foundation. Kyla, welcome to the show.
Kyla Pearce 01:42
Thank you so much for having me. Dr Wolf, it's a pleasure to be here.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 01:45
Yeah. So I think this has come full circle, because 10 years ago, I had the opportunity to hear Kevin Pearce speak, and I will give you the opportunity to really talk about who Kevin is and his story, but I had the opportunity to hear him speak, and he just warmed my heart. And here we are, 10 years later, talking about your organization and how far it's come and how it's evolved. And so I'm just so excited to dive right in. So why don't you give our listeners a little bit of background about about you and about Kevin and his story and and how that led you to starting your foundation?
Kyla Pearce 02:22
Sure, wow, can't believe it's been 10 years. You're right. So I'll, um, kind of frame this from a little bit of Kevin's story, and then weave kind of my role in as I, as I, yeah, give a little history of why I'm on this podcast with you today. So Love Your Brain is a national nonprofit that has been around for 10 years. We were founded by Kevin Pearce and his brother, Adam Pearce, who's also my husband, after Kevin experienced a very significant traumatic brain injury right before the Winter Olympics, he was a professional snowboarder, projected to win the Olympics and in a training accident right before in Park City, had a bad fall and was rushed to University of Utah in acute care for about three months and then transitioned to Craig. Had a long healing journey. I'll keep it quite brief, but one thing that his brother, Adam, who ended up taking a year of leave from his work to really be by Kevin's side and support him in his healing process. So they were very lucky. Our family was very lucky to receive fantastic care up front at the acute phase save Kevin's life allowed him to return to some of functioning that allowed him to think about what life could be moving forward, and what, what became very clear was that when Kevin was transitioning back to his community, there was such a lack of ongoing support that really saw the whole person so allowed Kevin to still continue to feel confident physically.
As a professional snowboarder, he really relied so much of his identity relied on participating physically in in meaningful activities. Um, also his mental health there, as the listeners probably know, mental health is often impacted after TBI, about 50% of people have a mental health condition, and he continued to struggle to kind of figure what his place was in the world, and then socially, relationships change. His friendships changed. So Kevin and Adam really felt like Love Your Brain as an organization had an opportunity to provide holistic health programs that really supported the whole person after brain injury and how I fit into this story and can share more about what love your brain's work is in a moment. But at the time I was doing my MPH at Dartmouth, I was interested in looking at actually. I was in women's health at that time, but when Kevin had his injury, was really transitioned into the field of brain injury, I became much more interested in seeing the gaps in holistic health programming. So ended up pursuing a PhD in public health, looking at specifically the the effectiveness of Mind Body interventions yoga and breath work for supporting nervous system regulation and different aspects of functioning after traumatic brain injury. So was able to kind of pursue a research path alongside of being a yoga and meditation teacher, and we saw how much Kevin was benefiting from yoga himself. So decided to weave that as one of the different ways Love Your Brain builds curriculum to support people with brain injury and their caregivers in their healing journey for the long term.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 05:55
Amazing. Yeah. I remember when I was living in Bend Oregon, there was a Love Your Brain hub, where they offered yoga classes, and I would send a lot of my patients there that had that were working with me on their brain injury recovery, and everybody said the same thing, which was that one of the most valuable things about going to that class was the time afterward, where everybody could sit there and just share their stories And realize that they're not alone in their experience or in their sense of isolation or their struggles. And so I do think that that ability to just be with other people that are having your same challenges is so important.
Kyla Pearce 06:36
Definitely, and I think even Vivek Murphy, the old us. Surgeon General in the last administration issued a public service announcement saying that there was a national epidemic of loneliness in the United States and for people with brain injury, who often face an invisible injury and different impacts to their cognition and functioning that shape the way they interact in their jobs, their family life, school, it's can be tremendously isolating, so that's been a real emphasis of our organization for how to build community, which can sound there's a lot to it, and happy to kind of talk a little bit more about what that means. But there's also a lot of research showing more and more how loneliness or isolation has just as much pernicious impacts to health as obesity, smoking, physical inactivity. So it's not just a nice thing to have, it's an essential aspect of of human nature.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 07:38
Yeah, I remember when those statements came out, and there were a lot of headlines in the news saying that loneliness is worse than being a smoker, and comparing some of these other issues or diseases, and looking at the actual effects of loneliness and just how devastating that is to somebody's health and well being and longevity. So do you want to talk a little bit about your programs, maybe, like in person versus virtual, and how does that look? Sure.
Kyla Pearce 08:08
So, yeah, so big picture. Love your brain's mission now is to improve the mental, physical and social well being of people with brain injury, as well as caregivers. And we do that in a couple ways. So we offer free, research backed programs delivered in person, online and in hospital based settings that blend yoga, mindfulness, brain health, nutrition, psychoeducation based on the science of resilience as well as community building. And the research shows that in order to build a sense of belonging and social connection. Not only is it important to connect people with shared experiences, as you were saying about our love your brain yoga program, a big piece is yes, ensuring that people feel a sense of validation and seen by someone else who understands from the inside out what the experience is like. And it's also about working internally to disrupt self limiting thoughts or negative beliefs about yourself that can inhibit your ability to connect meaningfully with other people. And if you think about it after brain injury, there's not only challenges, yes, sometimes going outside for sound sensitivity or light sensitivity, so being with people, but it's also negative ruminating thought patterns that can erode one's sense of self, efficacy and sense of self.
So our programs really work at both of those levels. So for people who want to connect in person, our flagship program was a yoga program that we partnered with yoga studios and now hospitals and neuro rehabilitation facilities across the country to offer in person yoga based programming where people not only can build tools to learn how to self regulate, become more aware of their. Thought patterns and interrupt them. But also, of course, connect in person with people that they can feel a sense of like I am understood. Finally, that also during the pandemic, we shifted that program. Now we call it love your brain mindset to an online platform, and at the time, there's a lot of questions for us, was screen sensitivity going to be an impediment to people actually participating in this program, but through many years of kind of testing and ensuring we have digital accessibility measures in place, we've found really strong participation, and I can share a little bit more about our research on this program later. But high participation and also we've heard for many people who maybe it's a bad day and they don't, they can't, they can't access transportation, or they have headaches and they don't want to go outside. Having a program that people can be in their home and minimize the logistics has been a real boon and supported accessibility.
We also offer a Love Your Brain retreat, community retreat program, so that's another in person program now in five states, that is a five day program in nature based settings, where we're really supporting people with brain injury and caregivers to step out of their daily routine and come to a place with other people with shared experiences and learn tools in mindfulness, yoga, nutrition, there's some we have a creative expression Art Project that asks people to examine different aspects of their Identity and use a creative process to help share what they're hiding and what they're what they're exposing to the world about their injury, to help support a bit of re examining how they want to be in relationship to themselves after their injury. And it's a really yeah these. There's also a research base behind the benefits of of that program, and we find just tremendous not only benefits there, but that have a ripple effect into people's lives when they return home.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 12:10
Absolutely and I love that you include the caregivers in that equation, because those are the people too, who often maybe feel their own sense of isolation or burnout or whatnot.
Kyla Pearce 12:23
Absolutely and in our family's experience, yes, all the attention was immediately given to Kevin for understandable reasons. And caregivers are never taught the tools to be able to support a sense of balance for their own needs and supporting their loved ones needs, and also, similarly, need a sense of community, where people can feel able to share the truths of what their experience is life like, and then also be with people who understand and can give some inspiration for how to maybe work through challenging points as well. So we actually just, well, we have a caregiver retreat that is online. It used to be in person, but that's been a really powerful way to support caregivers from across the country and how to learn new ways of listening to themselves and their loved ones, how to support different stress management techniques, using mindfulness and meditation and as well as there's a really powerful framework for understanding how to be kind of one foot in and one foot out, and balance being open hearted to your loved one, but also still tending to your own needs, since it's an ongoing practice.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 13:37
Yeah, absolutely. And the retreats that you have in person, you said they're in five different locations. Do you how many a year? Do you host of those in person, five day retreats.
Kyla Pearce 13:49
The retreats are in right now in Maine, Colorado, Arizona, where, and we just expanded to Oregon. And let me make sure yes, that was all the locations. And those are Yes. Five times a year, we serve about 250 people. So each retreat has about 35 people with brain injury and caregivers, and they're completely free. We offer opportunities for people to do some peer to peer fundraising, but really, we're very committed knowing the high expense of ongoing medical care for people with brain injury to really democratize access to holistic health programming so that there's knowing the chronic nature of brain injury people know that they have access to resources in the long term.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 14:40
Yeah, that's amazing that you can offer that at no cost to the people who attend. Do you have a waiting list of people? How do you kind of plan out who gets to go and when and where?
Kyla Pearce 14:53
Yeah, we have a so we have two cycles of open enrollment, usually a spring cycle and a fall cycle. And. And we have an amazing team who, when we open enrollment, when people apply, we actually have an interview process so that, because for many people, this is often the first time they've traveled since their injury. And we have people coming, you know, two years out to sometimes 15 years out, and really want to ensure that there's a sense of connection to the organization, trust in the team that's going to be supporting the retreat, and also a space to ask questions, because there can be a lot of anxiety and question around Yes, can I do this? Is this the right space for me? So we have an interview process that involves that includes that kind of face to face time. And then yes, we have a wait list and we have no trouble filling them. And also want to ensure that people who are first time participants, from an equity of access perspective, can participate?
Dr. Ayla Wolf 16:02
Sure, absolutely. And then, on top of all of that amazing programming that you have, you mentioned the the research part that you wanted to touch upon, do you want to talk about the what you're doing from a research perspective?
Kyla Pearce 16:16
Sure, yeah. So I think love, your brain kind of uniquely sits in a place where we're in service delivery, but we also want to help shift the culture around how people perceive the healing process and what kind of the recovery journey looks like. So a few things, we participate and lead. So we collaborate and lead research that looks at this point at the preliminary effectiveness of our curricula. So what is what when we blend yoga, mindfulness, education, nutrition and a strong emphasis on community building, how, what is the experience of people with traumatic brain injury? So we've done, actually, the largest studies looking at online and in person, yoga based interventions for people with traumatic brain injury.
One study, for instance, was of our Love Your Brain mindset online program. This looked at participants who had joined a Love Your Brain mindset program over a two year period. We use a pre post methodology so we assess at the eligibility form stage, and then the feedback form stage changes in five different health outcomes. We look at quality of life using the quality of life after brain injury scale and four different short form, self reported quality of life measures from the NH that the NIH promise patient reported outcome, measured scales looking at resilience, cognition, emotional and behavioral dysregulation. And there is one more that's and positive affect in mood. And in this study, there was about 1800 people who participated, about 700 of whom we had complete pre and post data for, and found significant improvement in all five of those outcomes. So of course, the limitation is, this is not a controlled study. There's no randomization. And a benefit of this is, this is there's a lot of ecological validity, meaning, this is a study looking at people with brain injury in everyday in everyday life, who are accessing a holistic health program. So it can be kind of generalized to if somebody's out in their community feeling a lack of support and needing access to other tools that support mental, physical and social well being, what some of the results might look like for that that type of individual. So suggest that there is multifaceted benefit from online yoga, mindfulness and psychoeducation programming.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 18:58
I mean, research has to start somewhere, and it usually starts by collecting data and having these, you know, insights to say, Okay, this is what we're seeing in this program, before we start to try to apply this randomization process to a study design.
Kyla Pearce 19:15
exactly, exactly. And so we're fortunate, because we have, we serve about 10,000 people a year, about half of whom have brain injury and are caregivers, about half of whom are clinicians through different outreach initiatives. So we have a large platform for data collection and can contribute to the kind of scientific literature in that way which has been such a we're very proud of that, knowing there's a lot of nonprofits who are doing great work, but don't necessarily have necessarily have that infrastructure to be able to collect, collect and analyze data in a kind of meaningful, robust way. So that's helped us also position ourselves and collaborate more formally with the medical system, so that we can really be more of a bridge for once, people. Once patients return to their homes and are looking for kind of their next step. Love your brains. Programming can be a bridge for long term healing.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 20:12
Amazing. I love it. And then on top of all of that, you have your first ever online Summit coming up in March of 2026 tell us about that. And you know kind of what led you to to launching this, and then some of the people that will be presenting at it, including myself!
Kyla Pearce 20:31
Including you! Yes, we're so thrilled that you'll be one of our inaugural presenters. So yes, we're so love your brain has a strong emphasis on education and capacity building, so I'll get to the summit in a moment. But what we've been testing over many years is we have a learning lab speaker series where we bring experts in diverse fields who come and speak to our community about innovative approaches to supporting mental, physical and social well being after brain injury, those have been just there's been so much of an appetite and hunger from our community to learn new tools. We also offer teacher trainings and leadership trainings for health professionals as well as yoga teachers and how to adapt yoga mindfulness and psychoeducation for TBI, we do these 20 hour certification level trainings that are online now, so we've been kind of building a training and education platform, and felt, though that although there's amazing conferences that that are often more kind of clinician focused and also advocacy conferences that are more consumer focused, but may there was just an opportunity to create a space where there can be a really rich conversation looking at this sometimes gray space of where there is evidence based practice. So there's a research base behind different holistic approaches, but they may either be underutilized, there may be misconceptions about them. They may also not have a strong battery of randomized control trials, because they're the research is still a bit in the nascent stage or emerging.
So the impetus behind the summit was to create a gathering. This will be a three day online event at the end of March, so March 20 through the 22nd where we'll bring together kind of visionary leaders who are really changing the way healing happens after brain injury, and looking at it from different angles, bringing in research, but then also talking about where there's innovation. So we have people like you, Dr Wolf, who will come and speak about functional neurology and acupuncture, more from I know, kind of Western scientific lens around kind of the nervous system, and other people like Judson Brewer, who's a mindfulness researcher at Brown looking at how habit formation happens and after brain injury, knowing that sometimes with memory and cognition, forming new habits can be challenging, especially if there's an overlay of anxiety. So how to use techniques that are non pharmacological, so behavioral interventions to build a sense of curiosity and an awareness around the brain's habit loops to then form new, more healthier habits after brain injury. We have people who will be speaking about photobiomodulation and light therapy, which is a very kind of interesting new area of research, and also the kind of complexities too, when there's more and more device organizations or companies that are coming online that potentially could manipulate people with brain injury, who sometimes feel very desperate about finding kind of the thing that's going to be really helpful. So so wanting to be very thoughtful around where, yeah, where there's not an evidence base, where there might be kind of safety implications, and having some conversation with the experts around, what are the trade offs? What are the benefits? What are some of the drawbacks? So that people leave feeling more informed and clear around the the many different options that are out there and how to access them in a helpful way.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 24:28
Yeah, and that's such a big conversation around devices and technology, and I see in my practice too, a lot of patients will be online. They'll be hunting, they'll be searching. And when they find a device, they're kind of looking at it maybe from the perspective of like, Oh, I'm going to use this as its own standalone therapy, but in a functional neurology kind of mindset. Oftentimes these different devices, we're using them in the larger context of a more targeted rehab program. And. Know, and understanding that there's always a limitation to every device, and there's a certain amount of either frequency that needs to that it needs to be used, or to really make a difference. And so there is a lot of questions around, you know, if I'm going to go buy some kind of device or tool, you know, how, how frequently do I have to use it. Can Can it actually work better if it's used in the larger context of some other targeted rehab program, and then also compared to other things? How far is this going to actually move the needle on my recovery? And so there's just so many different layers that you have to kind of look at all this technology through to say, Does this make sense for me?
Kyla Pearce 25:43
Yeah, it's so true, and that the multifaceted lens like you were speaking to of using them in isolation versus using them in combination with other approaches and is is really what the summit is designed to help unpack and provide space for people to ask questions and hopefully come away with more clear actions for what is that? What are the doorway in that is unique to each individual, unique to each brain injury experience, but also draws on some universal research and lived experience best practices,
Dr. Ayla Wolf 26:22
yeah, and I know the summit is going to be live that third weekend in March. Are you also recording it and making it available to people for a time frame afterward? Or do people have to be able to kind of be there at that moment in time?
Kyla Pearce 26:37
There will be different ways people can engage So yes, there will be the option for people to access recordings so that it can be an ongoing learning resource. Also, knowing three days of online content can be a lot for the brain to process, so minimizing cognitive fatigue by having access later will be important for sure.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 26:57
Yeah, great. And then what is the website address where people can go and learn more about it.
Kyla Pearce 27:04
It's so loveyourbrain.com/summit. But really invite folks to check out loveyourbrain.com knowing that we always have free programming available for people with brain injury, caregivers as well as clinicians. And yes, would love folks to be able to participate in the summit, since the goal is really to leave people with actionable steps for how to continue to support the healing process, since it is non linear and ongoing.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 27:32
Yeah, I looked at the lineup, and I'm very excited to be part of it, but also to hear what other people have to say, because I think you've brought in such a diverse group of people to present on, on different topics, and I think it's going to be fabulous. Thanks.
Kyla Pearce 27:48
Well, it's definitely a big honor of ours to have you part of it, and I know you've helped connect me with some great people, like Dr Morrissey, who's been on this podcast with who's advanced EMDR, specifically for brain injury, and then so yes, it's going to be it's going
to be great.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 28:03
Yeah, excellent. And would you mind giving people an update on how Kevin is doing these days? I know you said he's got a new kiddo, yes.
Kyla Pearce 28:14
So he has actually three kids, a new kiddo, who's now about six months, and lives in Florida with his family and is doing some speaking engagements, but very much focusing on being a dad that derives a tremendous amount of meaning for him. And I think in some ways, yes, he's kind of been looking for that like, what's that spark that he felt such a sense of connection to, of course, as a snowboarder. And what I see from the outside is that being a family, being a partner, of course, a family person and a father of three very high energy and fun and physical kids, has been such a sense of purpose for him, so I'm, yeah, really proud that he's found this direction for him to really soak up a lot of his time, and does continue to still raise awareness about TBI and the benefits of kind of more nutrition based approaches for supporting healing.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 29:22
Yeah, and then, do you guys do fundraisers? Or how do you get your funding for this organization that is able to offer a lot of great services to people?
Kyla Pearce 29:31
Yeah, we have a fantastic development team. So we do fundraisers as well as like different campaigns throughout the year. We do a really fun event in New York City actually called ride for resilience, which is in collaboration with the five borough bike tour. So this fundraiser for many different organizations, people can bike throughout the city when there's no cars, and it's a great way, since biking actually has a pretty high in. Incidents of concussion. So it's a great way to both raise awareness about how common it is to have a concussion in athletics, particularly biking, and then different approaches to support peeling after if there's persisting post concussive symptoms. So we do that as a fundraiser in May, and the summit will also be part of a fundraiser since March is Brain Injury Awareness Month. I'm sure many people on the listening know that, but yes, we do a lot to make sure that our programs continue to have no cost so that there's no financial access barriers. Wonderful.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 30:35
And then one of the things I wanted to talk to you about, which I think you're perfectly positioned to be able to answer the question is, a lot of times when we see, we see the term trauma informed, in terms of, you know, either different clinics or different classes or yoga or whatnot. Can you talk about the word, the word trauma informed, and what that means, and how you are bringing that awareness to everything that you guys are doing. Yeah.
Kyla Pearce 31:04
So this is definitely, especially our roots in yoga spaces, or wellness spaces, as you said, a term that's really thrown about a lot. And so if you think about trauma, holla Corey has, she's a yoga teacher as well as I believe, a social worker, has a great kind of simple definition of trauma, as being any situation where our our capacity to respond and cope is overwhelmed and we feel helpless, hopeless and out of control. So thinking about that as kind of the umbrella of trauma creating spaces that are trauma informed from a TBI, traumatic brain injury informed lens is a little more specific. So always so big picture. See trauma informed spaces as ones that create a sense of safety, predictability and control. So how are we supporting people to feel a sense of agency in their choice to participate in whatever activity, activity it is, and then really empowering people with tools to regulate themselves, while also creating a sense of safety, that's not only that internal self regulation, but also with other people knowing that they're whenever.
Because we have such an emphasis on group based programming to support a sense of social connection, there's a lot of more nuanced now that it's impossible to create a truly safe space, because when groups get together, everyone has different conditions, different experiences, different needs. So how can we create a safer space where people recognize that disagreement or even being triggered may happen? So how to support people, to work through that, give each other feedback, support themselves, to stay grounded, knowing that when we're working in groups, there's always going to be a complexity and uncertainty in what people's exact needs are that moment. So I think we talk a lot about this in our yoga teacher trainings, especially with clinicians who may work with a population that has post traumatic stress disorder as well as TBI, and on a very kind of granular example, base level, I think it's interesting where there's a lot of techniques that Are trauma informed. So from a yoga perspective, so meaning teaching people to feel a sense of interception, so awareness of what's going on within them. And in doing that, there can be approaches that are better for people with TBI or better for people with PTSD.
So for instance, if the goal of a yoga practice is to support someone to rebuild a sense of what am I feeling inside, to then be able to make choices, like to take a longer breath, if you're feeling your heart rate high, feeling activated, if a trauma informed approach would be to teach at the front of the class and not move around, because people may feel a sense of lack of safety if someone's moving around, they don't know where that person's going, where the teacher is going. A TBI informed approach from a sensory processing perspective, it could be a lot for someone to listen to someone give instruction at the front of the class and then move around. So auditory processing is happening, kind of cognition to pay attention to where that person is moving. So from a trauma informed lens and a TBI informed lens. Both, the technique of giving instruction from one place is best practice, but for different reasons. So I'm maybe I'll pause there and hear if that's answering your question.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 35:17
Yeah, I love that kind of the thought that goes into all of that, what you just said, and your your yoga classes, you have a yoga teacher training, and so I'm assuming that a big part of that is this idea of, how do we work with a room full of people who all are having different experiences and their own unique challenges, and make it a safe space for everybody in the best way that we can. And then really thought into, yeah, is it better for somebody with a brain injury to be able to see the teacher, or better for them? You know, if, if there's a lot of movement happening, maybe some people need to be positioned in the front of the class or the back of the class, or maybe mirrors are a problem, like are all of these things thoughts that go into it as well?
Kyla Pearce 36:07
Yes, yes, very much so. And, you know, even body positioning. So I think, like we talk about, because of dysautonomia or challenges with regulating the nervous system. Any sort of inversion when the where the head is below the heart can be destabilizing, cause dizziness, cause challenges with balance. And it can also be a helpful technique for calming the parasympathetic or activating the parasympathetic nervous system, or calming the nervous system. So there's just trade offs, and I think from a trauma informed lens, really being in a space of CO, creating the group space by working together with the group, with clients, with patients, to kind of build a sense of trust and flexibility in how we're centering choice and awareness and predictability as best as we can.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 37:06
Yeah, I love that. And you mentioned that your your in person yoga classes are at different hospital settings. Is this still mostly outpatient? People that are going to the courses?
Kyla Pearce 37:20
So it's mostly outpatient. And we also do have some inpatient rehab settings that are implementing love, your brain yoga in slightly different ways. So for instance, we actually just formalized a partnership with the University of Alabama Spain rehab in in Birmingham, and we're really thrilled about that partnership. They're a TBI model system, our kind of a leading provider of brain injury care, and they've integrated it through the leadership of Dr Rachel tarani, in their inpatient services. And do both group based programs, but also can bring in more one on one the tools to more one on one settings as well. So it's very dynamic. And the curriculum itself has 10 minutes of breathing exercises to support with nervous system regulation. 45 minutes of chair based yoga to support with functional mobility and balance and interception. 10 minutes of guided meditation, and then at the end is psychoeducation as well as group discussion based on a factor that's been empirically shown to promote resilience. So for instance, one of the sessions is about this idea of realistic optimism. So how can we be realistic that we will have challenges after a brain injury, but then still build a sense of optimism that we can work through them instead of getting bogged down by the challenge.
Kyla Pearce 38:49
So we use a very kind of multifaceted or multimodal way of exploring that theme through breath, body meditation and discussion. So, yes, mostly outpatient, but also inpatient. And really support clinical facilities to break it up, however, works for their patient population and goals.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 39:13
Yeah, amazing. And then what does the next three, five years look like for Love Your Brain?
Kyla Pearce 39:21
Such a good question. And you know, we, of course, have a three year strategic plans and really prioritize different pillars of our organizational health, our financial health and our programmatic health. And I'd say we're a very nimble organization that is constantly trying to absorb what are the priorities of people with brain injury and caregivers within our community, and help craft and refine our programs to better meet those needs. So who knows what that looks like? I know one priority of mine in the program side is we get so much demand for. Kind of a next step program. So after you come to a Love Your Brain community retreat, or you come to a Love Your Brain mindset online program, people want to come back and from an equity of access perspective, we want to ensure people who haven't had yet a chance to participate can do that. So thinking about what's then, kind of a Love Your Brain retreat to 2.0 so that there is a real pathway for people to stay connected and continue to support their healing journey.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 40:29
Yeah, yeah. I love it. I can imagine when somebody comes and they have just this really amazing healing experience and meet a lot of great people, it is probably hard to then kind of go back into day to day life, and then feel like, okay, well now, now what do I do with with this experience?
Kyla Pearce 40:47
Yeah, and it's, it's a both, and because we very much want people to and they do, go to one of our programs and then carry forward the learnings and apply them into their daily daily life to build more sense of resilience and ability to navigate life and support their emotional well being. And yes, I there is that feeling of like, oh, I finally felt I finally found my people so how to then build that sense of ongoing relationship. So our mindset program, because it is essentially a type of peer support group online, allows people to stay connected that way. But there's, yes, there's some questions for us around how to do that in an even more robust way.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 41:31
Well, I'm sure people also just make, you know, organic friendships while they're there that they can continue outside too, and that gives them a great opportunity to do that.
Kyla Pearce 41:41
Actually, just in my most recent living room mindset program, I led one of my our, my participants, who lived in Virginia, was traveling to Colorado to see somebody that she had met at a retreat. And yes, there's just, and that's really the goal. I mean, community reintegration is the goal of rehabilitation. So to see that that is happening through our programs is really, really meaningful.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 42:07
Yeah, excellent. Well, any final you know, comments or words or information you want to pass on here?
Kyla Pearce 42:15
Just a huge thank you to you and the listeners for allowing me some space to share about love your brain. It's pretty amazing if I think back to when Kevin had his accident 15 years ago, and the sense of hopelessness and roads being closed, things going sideways, that our family felt to now be a part of this thriving organization and community that sees the potential of in all of us to move through adversity and find new dimensions of ourselves and and grow through this together, has been just such an honor in my life, and that's why I'm selling this, and we'll be in it for for the long run.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 42:57
Yeah, well, he's so lucky to have you and his brother and what a way to take a very traumatic experience and help other people in ongoing it's incredible, really.
Kyla Pearce 43:10
Thank you so so much. Yeah, all right.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 43:13
Kyla Pearce, everybody, I will put all of your information in the show notes on the Love Your Brain website, the dates for the summit links for people to show up. Or do you guys also have social accounts that you want me to share Instagram?
Kyla Pearce 43:27
Or we do? Yes, we put a lot of good education out on Instagram. So it's just love your brain. We gave it simple but yes, join, join our community, and we hope to see you and stay connected.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 43:38
Excellent, amazing. Thank you so much for coming on the show.
Kyla Pearce
Thanks. Dr Wolf.
Dr. Ayla Wolf 43:48
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