Part 3: Righting the Ship – Protocols for Neuro-Metabolic Recovery
By Dr. Logan Chopyk
In Part 2, we confronted a difficult reality: the “burnout” and performance anxiety plaguing so many musicians are not character flaws. They are physiological injuries. We looked at how the Cell Danger Response (CDR) hijacks your mitochondria, how protective bracing locks your psoas, and how chronic threat rewires your brain for survival rather than art.
If Part 2 was the diagnosis, Part 3 is the prescription.
The most important discovery in modern neuroscience is neuroplasticity—the brain’s ability to reorganize itself by forming new neural connections. Your nervous system is not a fixed machine; it is a dynamic garden. If it can be wired for trauma, it can be re-wired for safety, flow, and mastery.
Recovering your “chops”—and your joy—requires a multi-front approach. We cannot just “think” our way out of a survival reflex. We must signal safety to the cells, fuel the repair mechanisms, and physically release the trauma held in the tissue.
1. Metabolic Intervention: Fueling the Repair
We often view diet through the lens of weight or vanity. For the injured musician, nutrition is neuro-rehabilitation. If your mitochondria are stuck in the “Cell Danger Response,” they have walled themselves off from normal energy production. To bypass this blockade, we need a fuel source that burns cleaner and more efficiently than glucose.
The Deep Ketogenic Diet
When you restrict carbohydrates and moderate protein, the body shifts from burning glucose to burning fat, producing ketones (specifically beta-hydroxybutyrate). Ketones are not just fuel; they are signaling molecules that have profound effects on the brain.
- Bypassing the Blockade: In a trauma-stressed brain, glucose metabolism often becomes impaired (a state sometimes called “type 3 diabetes”). Ketones can cross the blood-brain barrier and provide energy to neurons that are starving for fuel, effectively “turning the lights back on” in the cortex.
- Calming the Noise: Chronic anxiety is often a result of an imbalance between Glutamate (the excitatory neurotransmitter) and GABA (the calming neurotransmitter). A deep ketogenic diet promotes the conversion of Glutamate into GABA, literally quieting the electrical storm in the brain that leads to performance tremors and racing thoughts.
- lowering Neuro-inflammation: Ketones effectively block the NLRP3 inflammasome, a complex of proteins that triggers inflammation. By running on ketones, you are dousing the fire in your nervous system.
Therapeutic Fasting and Autophagy
Fasting is the most ancient healer. When you fast, your body runs out of exogenous fuel and turns inward. This triggers a process called autophagy (literally “self-eating”).
During autophagy, your cells hunt down and recycle damaged components—broken proteins, dysfunctioning mitochondria, and cellular debris. For the musician, this is a “spring cleaning” of the neural hardware. Furthermore, the temporary stress of fasting acts as a hormetic stressor—a “good stress” that signals to your mitochondria that they need to become more efficient, eventually breaking the loop of the Cell Danger Response.
2. Somatic Reconstruction: The Issue is in the Tissue
You cannot talk your way out of uncontrollable spasms or hesitations. Traditional talk therapy (top-down processing) is often ineffective for musicians because the trauma of performance injury is stored in the subcortical brain (the lizard brain) and the body. We need bottom-up therapies. Below are two excellent and effective experiential therapeutic modalities:
Internal Family Systems (IFS)
IFS is an evidence-based psychotherapy model that moves away from the “mono-mind” concept—the idea that we are a single, unified personality. Instead, it posits that the human mind is a system composed of multiple sub-personalities or “parts,” each with its own viewpoint and function.
In the context of performance trauma, the psyche often fragments into three distinct roles to manage the threat:
- Exiles: Parts that hold the pain, shame, or fear from past injuries or failures.
- Managers: Proactive protective parts that attempt to control the environment to prevent the Exiles from being triggered (e.g., perfectionism, rigid practice routines).
- Firefighters: Reactive parts that act impulsively to extinguish pain when Exiles break through (e.g., substance use, dissociation, or sudden somatic collapse).
IFS works by facilitating a state of “Self-leadership.” The goal is not to eliminate these parts, but to separate the core Self—characterized by clarity and calmness—from the protective parts that have taken over the system. By identifying the specific protective role a behavior plays (such as a tremor or mental block), the musician can “unburden” the part of its extreme role, restoring internal coherence and allowing the nervous system to regulate itself without the need for defensive bracing.
Brainspotting
Developed by Dr. David Grand, Brainspotting is based on the maxim: “Where you look affects how you feel.”
The visual field is directly connected to the subcortical brain. When a musician has a “block”—for example, a stutter in their articulation—there is often a specific eye position that correlates with that neural “glitch.” By holding the gaze on that “brainspot,” the therapist allows the brain to process and release the stuck traumatic capsule. Unlike talk therapy, which engages the prefrontal cortex, Brainspotting accesses the deep brain where the “freeze” response lives.
3. Physical Reconstruction: Movement as Medicine
The final piece of the puzzle is physical. We must burn off the stress chemicals that have accumulated in the body.
Exercise and BDNF
High-intensity exercise does more than build muscle; it triggers the release of Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF). BDNF is essentially “Miracle-Gro” for the brain. It supports the survival of existing neurons and encourages the growth of new synapses and neurons (neurogenesis), particularly in the hippocampus.
If trauma shrank your hippocampus (as discussed in Part 2), exercise is the protocol to grow it back. It is the biological signal that tells your brain, “We are moving, we are surviving, it is time to build.”
Conclusion
A combination of these metabolic, somatic, and physical strategies can be effective in healing us physically and emotionally. By addressing the injury at the cellular and neurological levels, we can build a level of resilience that concretely impacts our ability to play an instrument in the face of stress.
Annotated Bibliography
Grand, David. Brainspotting: The Revolutionary New Therapy for Rapid and Effective Change. Boulder: Sounds True, 2013.
Dr. David Grand outlines the discovery and mechanism of Brainspotting. This source is critical for understanding how fixed eye positions can access the subcortical brain to process trauma that traditional talk therapy cannot reach. It provides the theoretical framework for “bottom-up” processing in performance anxiety.
Naviaux, Robert K. “Metabolic Features of the Cell Danger Response.” Mitochondrion 16 (2014): 7–17.
This seminal paper by Dr. Naviaux defines the Cell Danger Response (CDR). It provides the biochemical basis for the argument that “burnout” is a cellular defense mechanism rather than a psychological weakness. It explains how mitochondria shift from energy production to cellular defense under chronic stress.
Ratey, John J., and Eric Hagerman. Spark: The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain. New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2008.
Ratey’s work is the definitive text on the relationship between physical exercise and brain function. This source is used to support the section on BDNF, detailing how exercise physically alters the brain’s structure, promotes neurogenesis, and combats the corrosive effects of cortisol.
Schwartz, Richard C. Internal Family Systems Therapy. 2nd ed. New York: Guilford Press, 2019.
This text explains the IFS model, moving away from the “mono-mind” concept to a “multiplicity” of mind. It validates the musician’s internal conflict (e.g., the “Perfectionist” vs. the “Artist”) and offers a protocol for integrating these parts to restore “Self-leadership” in performance.
Sinha, Sangita, and Sharon Manfredo. “The Ketogenic Diet as a Potential Treatment for Neurodegenerative and Neurodevelopmental Disorders.” Cureus 10, no. 8 (2018): e3180.
This medical review analyzes the neuroprotective mechanisms of the ketogenic diet. It supports the blog’s claims regarding the reduction of neuro-inflammation, the shift in GABA/Glutamate balance, and the efficiency of ketones as an alternative fuel source for the stressed brain.