Tracy Prowse https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/ Physiotherapist Sat, 09 May 2026 11:27:49 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/cropped-Tracy-Prowse-Favicon1-32x32.jpg Tracy Prowse https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/ 32 32 The Boredom Breakthrough: Why “Rest” Isn’t Enough for Healing https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/the-boredom-breakthrough-why-rest-isnt-enough-for-healing/ https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/the-boredom-breakthrough-why-rest-isnt-enough-for-healing/#respond Sat, 09 May 2026 07:11:43 +0000 https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/?p=225606 Five weeks post-injury, I hit a strange wall. The agonizing pain has settled, but the motor deficit—my "gammy leg"—remains. I’ve embraced the slow life: the naps, the bird-spotting, and the journaling. But in the quiet of Unakuruwa, I realized something startling: I was bored. I realized that fun isn't the reward for healing; it’s a requirement for it. This week, I traded the meditation cushion for a boogie board and found a different kind of medicine in Hiriketiya.

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The Pendulum Swing: Finding Safety When the Expert Brain Fails https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/the-pendulum-swing-finding-safety-when-the-expert-brain-fails/ https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/the-pendulum-swing-finding-safety-when-the-expert-brain-fails/#respond Sun, 03 May 2026 05:47:33 +0000 https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/?p=225603 Healing isn’t a steady climb; it’s a pendulum. This week, I swung between the deep, restorative joy of Unakuruwa and the sharp, cold panic of the "Physio Brain." But I discovered something profound: you cannot always be your own anchor. This is the story of how a single phone call with a neurosurgeon provided the "Safety In Me" (SIM) that I couldn't manufacture on my own.

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The Art of the Pivot: From Friction to Flow in Unakuruwa https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/the-art-of-the-pivot-from-friction-to-flow-in-unakuruwa/ https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/the-art-of-the-pivot-from-friction-to-flow-in-unakuruwa/#respond Mon, 27 Apr 2026 11:46:44 +0000 https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/?p=225584 Healing is rarely a straight line; it is a series of adjustments. After a week of navigating the noise and physical "friction" of Weligama, I realized that my environment was working against my nervous system. By making the radical choice to pivot—abandoning our plans for a surf-centric stay in Ahangama for the secluded sanctuary of Unakuruwa—I finally found the "Flow" state my body was craving. This is about the power of choosing ease, the reality of weaning off nerve medication, and the tears that come when the "Expert" finally lets go.

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The Blue Pharmacy: Physics, Physiology, and the Indian Ocean https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/the-blue-pharmacy-physics-physiology-and-the-indian-ocean/ https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/the-blue-pharmacy-physics-physiology-and-the-indian-ocean/#respond Sat, 25 Apr 2026 13:34:57 +0000 https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/?p=225577 After weeks of clinical monitoring, hospital corridors, and the heavy weight of an MRI report, I finally reached the edge of the Indian Ocean. I was exhausted, hyper-vigilant, and still reliant on crutches to navigate the Sri Lankan heat. But the moment I left my crutches on the sand and let the water take my weight, I realized I hadn't just found a beautiful view—I had found a biological sanctuary. This is the science of why the ocean became my most effective clinical intervention.

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The Paradox of the Expert: Choosing Trust Over Surgery https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/the-paradox-of-the-expert-choosing-trust-over-surgery/ https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/the-paradox-of-the-expert-choosing-trust-over-surgery/#respond Thu, 23 Apr 2026 07:04:14 +0000 https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/?p=225570 What happens when the clinician becomes the crisis? Sitting in a wheelchair at Kathmandu airport, staring at a foot that no longer responded to my brain’s commands, I faced the ultimate professional crossroads. I already had the MRI report in my hand—it confirmed global disc bulges and foraminal stenosis at both L4/L5 and L5/S1. My "Physio Brain" saw the structural narrowing, but my "Patient Heart" was calling for a different kind of risk. This is the story of the day I decided to fly toward the ocean instead of the operating theater.

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The descent into the unknown

I didn’t leave Nepal on the trekking boots I arrived in. I left in a wheelchair, with a pair of crutches balanced across my lap and a right foot that felt like a heavy, silent stranger.

By this stage, I had already received my MRI results. In my professional life, I’ve reviewed thousands of these reports, but reading your own is a surreal experience. The words “global disc bulge” and “foraminal stenosis” jumped off the page. It wasn’t just one level; both L4/L5 and L5/S1 were involved, creating a mechanical bottleneck for the nerves traveling down my leg.

This explained the “foot drop”—a term that sounds far more clinical than it feels when you’re trying to navigate an airport and your toes simply refuse to lift.

Civil war: physio brain vs. patient body

Being an expert in your own injury is a double-edged sword. Having the report meant I couldn’t hide behind “maybe it’s just a strain.” I knew the structural reality of the stenosis and the multi-level involvement.

As a pain practitioner and physiotherapist, I have spent decades treating this exact pathology. But sitting in that terminal, the “Expert” was nowhere to be found. I was just a woman whose body had reached its absolute threshold. My “Expert Brain” became a relentless noise machine, searching internal archives for surgical outcomes and long-term prognosis.

My Physio Brain shouted: “You’ve seen the report. There is significant foraminal narrowing. You need a surgical consult immediately. You are being reckless.”

My Patient Body whispered: “I need warmth. I need the ocean. I need to feel safe before I can heal.”

The choice: Values Over Fear

 In Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), we talk about “Psychological Flexibility”—the ability to stay in contact with the present moment and choose actions based on our values, even when difficult emotions or sensations are present.

I had a choice. I could fly back to South Africa and head straight for a neurosurgeon—a path that a multi-level stenosis report certainly justified. Or, I could follow through with my sabbatical plans and fly to Sri Lanka.

To many, flying to a tropical island with a foot drop and confirmed spinal stenosis looks like denial. To me, it was a calculated clinical risk. I knew that my nervous system was in a state of high-alert (the “Freeze” response). I knew that while the MRI showed structural narrowing, the experience of pain is heavily influenced by the state of the nervous system. I wanted to see if, by resourcing my body with the safety of the ocean, I could settle the neural inflammation enough to regain motor function & reduce this constant, unremitting and excruciating nerve pain.

I’ve spent my career telling patients: “You are not your MRI. Your body is a self-healing organism. Trust the biology.”

Now, it was time to see if I actually believed it.

I chose the flight to Colombo. I chose the uncertainty of the “Path of Trust” over the perceived safety of the “Path of Control.” I chose to believe that if I could lower the “threat” level in my brain, my body would have the energy it needed to manage the inflammation at those levels and begin the slow work of neural repair.

I boarded that plane not knowing if I would ever walk properly again, but knowing that for the first time in my life, I was truly walking my own talk.

 What’s Next?

The flight was grueling, and the arrival in Weligama was a crash course in humility. In my next post, I’ll share what happened when I finally touched the Indian Ocean—and why “The Blue Pharmacy” became my most important clinical discovery yet.

Tracy’s Clinical Note: If you are navigating a similar injury, please remember that this is my personal journey. While I chose to proceed with my plans despite the MRI findings of multi-level stenosis, I remained hyper-vigilant for “Red Flags” like Cauda Equina Syndrome. Trusting your body also means knowing when it truly needs expert medical intervention.

Contact: Tracy Prowse at tracyprowsephysio.co.za

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Get in Touch

(+27) 083 408 8582
tracy@prowse.org

Visit Us

Mondays - Fridays: Online Consultations
Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays: The Gatehouse, 91 Brommersvlei Rd, Constantia, Cape Town, 7806
Saturdays: 6 Krige Street, Stellenbosch, 7600

Open Hours

Mon., Wed. & Fri.: 9:00 - 18:00 (Constantia)
Sat.: 9:00 - 17:00 (Stellenbosch)

© 2026 Tracy Prowse Physiotherapist. All Rights Reserved. | Developed by Jose Geraldes (Pty) Ltd

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From the summit to the sickbed – when the “thaw” becomes a collapse https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/from-summit-to-sickbed/ Sat, 18 Apr 2026 13:50:02 +0000 https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/?p=225560 Have you been diagnosed with a L4/5 or L5/S1 disc prolapse or disc bulge? Or perhaps, like me, you have this with an acute radiculopathy causing excruciating sciatica and possibly even sensation loss or motor power loss? Read further to hear how I am taking this information and using my clinical knowledge to try and make the best decisions for myself regards the next step.

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A big lesson in being the patient and living my truth

In my last post, I wrote about the “mountain within”—the bracing patterns and the “Freeze” response I navigated while trekking the Annapurna Circuit. I spoke of the lessons learned at 5,400 meters about pain being a language of survival.

Today, I am writing from a hospital bed in Kathmandu. The “residual sciatica” I mentioned didn’t settle. It roared. I am currently navigating a full-blown L5/S1 nerve root compression, a foot drop, and pain so unremitting it required IV pethidine to break the cycle. My MRI shows a global disc bulge and foraminal stenosis. As a physiotherapist and SE practitioner, I’ve spent years telling patients: “You are not your scan.” Now, I am the one tasked with living that truth. 

When the professional becomes the patient

In ACT (Acceptance and Commitment Therapy), we talk about context. My disc didn’t just “give out” because of a bouncy jeep ride. It reached its threshold after a perfect storm of “Danger-In-Me” (DIM) cues:

The Biological Drain: I started the trek recovering from Norovirus, then took Diamox (a diuretic), which likely contributed to disc desiccation.

The Emotional Load: At my physical limit, I received news that my father was unwell. My system, already taxed, immediately manifested this as nausea and diarrhea—the gut-brain axis screaming for a halt.

The Final Push: After the harrowing descent, I “ran” that last day down the mountain without my trekking poles. That burst of “High Sympathetic” energy felt like triumph, but it was likely the last bit of fuel my adrenals had to give.

By the time I hit the bouncy jeep to Pokhara, my body had no more “give.” The bracing that protected me on the mountain became the very thing that compressed the nerve.

Right now, my body is a fortress. The inflammation is a biological “splint,” and the pain is a high-decibel alarm. My medical team is providing the “top-down” support—corticosteroids, NSAIDs, and muscle relaxants. This is the medical window —a pharmacological hand-hold that allows my nervous system a moment of quiet so I can begin the “bottom-up” work.

The question I’m holding is: How do I signal safety to a body that feels betrayed?

1. Somatic Tracking and the “Thaw”

Last night, I practised a somatic review of the trek. I revisited the triggers—the stairs, the news about my dad, the fear of the insurance company. I allowed the tears to come. In Somatic Experiencing, we know that suppressed emotion is simply stored “incomplete” energy. By crying, I am allowing the “Freeze” to thaw, letting the sympathetic charge move through me rather than staying locked in my spine.

 2. Finding Quiescence

My SE training taught me about Quiescence —a state of purposeful rest that is deeper than just “not moving.” It is an active surrender. I am currently in a state of forced stillness. I can fight it, or I can use it as a sanctuary. I am choosing to see this hospital bed as a “Resourcing” station. 

3. ACT: Acceptance vs. Resignation

Acceptance doesn’t mean I like the foot drop. It means I stop wasting energy fighting the fact of it. 

* The Values: My value is resilience and body-wisdom. 

* The Action: Sometimes, the most “courageous” action isn’t climbing a mountain; it’s being willing to lie still, breathe into the discomfort, and trust the phagocytes to do their work

The Reframing: is this an opportunity?

 It’s easy to spiral into “Why did I push?” and “I should have turned back.” I’ve even projected that blame onto my husband (and promptly apologized—blame is just pain looking for a home). 

But the reality is: This is the path now. Being in a hospital in a foreign country is a massive “Danger” cue. To counter it, I am looking for “Safety” cues: 

* The relief of the insurance being sorted after a hard fight.

* The warmth of my husband’s hand. 

* The fact that I discovered actually have severe cervical stenosis and multi level disc bulges in my cervical spine —which looks worse on paper—isn’t causing me any trouble at all, and never has! This proves to me (not just because the research tells me this but because this is my lived experience) that physiology is fluid, not fixed.

My body spent weeks trying to keep me alive on a mountain. It did a spectacular job. Now, I am talking to my cells. I am telling my lower back: “We are off the mountain. We are at a lower altitude. We are cared for. It is safe to stand down.”

Recovery isn’t just the absence of a bulge; it’s the return of a sense of internal safety. Whether I end up in surgery or manage this conservatively, the goal remains the same: to move from a state of survival back into a state of being.

For now, there is only the breath, the bed, and the slow, miraculous process of healing.

Contact: Tracy Prowse at tracyprowsephysio.co.za

Written by

Get in Touch

(+27) 083 408 8582
tracy@prowse.org

Visit Us

Mondays - Fridays: Online Consultations
Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays: The Gatehouse, 91 Brommersvlei Rd, Constantia, Cape Town, 7806
Saturdays: 6 Krige Street, Stellenbosch, 7600

Open Hours

Mon., Wed. & Fri.: 9:00 - 18:00 (Constantia)
Sat.: 9:00 - 17:00 (Stellenbosch)

© 2026 Tracy Prowse Physiotherapist. All Rights Reserved. | Developed by Jose Geraldes (Pty) Ltd

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The mountain within: lessons on Pain, Fear & Survival from the Annapurna Circuit https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/lessons-on-pain-fear-emotions/ Thu, 16 Apr 2026 02:20:53 +0000 https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/?p=225556 Have you ever wondered if there might be some underlying "hidden" emotions driving your physical pain? Read on to learn more about psychoneuroimmunology - the science of the mind-body connection- and how I worked with it personally.

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We often think of pain as a simple mechanical failure—a worn-out hip or a strained disc. But as I found myself hobbling down from 5,400 meters on the Annapurna Circuit, I was reminded that pain is never just about the body. It is a story told by the nervous system, written in the language of survival.

When the Professional Becomes the Patient

I went to Nepal as a physiotherapist, a somatic experiencing practitioner, and a mindfulness teacher. I came back as a student of my own nervous system.

Early in the trek, a simple head cold began to unravel my resilience. At altitude, breath is life; when your breathing is compromised, your brain receives a primal signal: “Not safe.” This subtle shift in my internal state set the stage for what followed—a cascade of physical symptoms that mirrored my internal distress. As my hip tightened into tendonitis, my body did exactly what it was evolved to do: it protected me. I began to “brace,” using my lower back to compensate for the hip. In Pain Neuroscience, we know that when the brain perceives a threat (whether that’s altitude sickness, the fear of failure, or physical injury), it increases muscle tone to create a “splint.” My back wasn’t just “sore”; it was a fortress. This is the Freeze Response in action—a state of high sympathetic arousal where the body tightens to withstand an impending blow.

The Competition vs. The Connection

I noticed a familiar, conditioned pattern: the drive to keep up, to compete with my husband, to prove I was “fine.” This cognitive “pushing” effectively muted my body’s softer signals for rest. In Somatic Experiencing, we look at how we override our biological boundaries as well as our underlying emotions. This ‘overriding’ often starts when we are growing up and our neural networks are starting to form. By ignoring the initial hip tightness to maintain a certain pace, I forced my nervous system to speak louder. It eventually moved from a whisper (tightness) to a scream (sciatica).

The Turning Point: Finding Safety

The most significant shift didn’t come from a stretch or a pill. It came from “Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy” and communication for help – thereby activating my “soothe” part of my nervous system – the cornerstone of safety. (If we think of how babies find safety – they cry out for help). In the polyvagal theory, we can say this is the ventral vagal brake being activated.Vulnerability: I stopped pretending. I spent some time tracking my body somatically and curiously exploring what the back bracing was protecting me from. In pain science we always say that “pain is protective”. I spoke to my back as if it were a little innocent child and enquired what it was afraid of. The answer made me cry! This little innocent part was worried that if I didn’t push through, achieve and be perfect at this summit, I would lose my connection with my husband. He would reject me. Now, I knew that this was completely illogical as my husband and I have been together for many years and I knew that we would survive this, even if we did not complete the summit, so I assumed this fear was coming from a much younger part of me. I know this part – it’s the perfectionist, overachiever 13 year old part of me!! The part that learnt that these traits bring connection. I gently worked with this part, thanked it for its concern and showed it how old I was and that I, the wise 49 year old adult, was going to keep us safe and loved. I then told my husband and my guide exactly how afraid and in pain I was and we made a new plan. By having the guide carry my pack and slowing our ascent by an extra day to acclimatise, my environment became “safe” again. Once I felt heard and supported, my nervous system could move out of the “Freeze” state. The bracing began to soften, not because the disc was “fixed” instantly, but because the perceived threat had diminished.

Now back at sea level, I am sitting with my residual sciatica and my reflections. My recovery isn’t just about physical therapy; it’s about Down-regulation. It’s about allowing the inflammatory markers to settle and reminding my nervous system that the mountain has been crossed.We cannot outrun our biology. Whether you are on a mountain or in the stresses of daily life, your pain is a messenger. The question is: are you creating a safe enough environment to listen to what it’s saying?

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Why Does My Child’s Stomach Always Hurt? Understanding the Brain-Gut Connection https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/child-abdominal-pain-nervous-system/ Thu, 08 Jan 2026 22:08:20 +0000 https://tracyprowsephysio.co.za/?p=225353 Is your child suffering from unexplained abdominal pain? Learn how nervous system dysregulation and the brain-gut connection might be the cause, and how pediatric physio can help.

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