On The Pilates Lounge Podcast, Katie Crane speaks with Kristin Windsor, a somatic healing practitioner who shares her extraordinary lived experience of fibromyalgia, complex trauma, nervous system dysregulation, and full recovery after years of chronic pain, mental illness, and medical dismissal. Kristin brings depth, courage, and fierce honesty to this conversation — weaving together neuroscience, polyvagal theory, trauma recovery, and movement as a pathway back to safety, embodiment, and self-trust. Her story is not about bypassing pain, but about meeting the body with precision, patience, and radical responsibility. This episode is part of Katie's ongoing fibromyalgia series, created to help Pilates professionals expand beyond muscles and exercises — and truly understand the nervous system realities shaping chronic pain. We Explore: How childhood trauma and nervous system dysregulation can lay the groundwork for fibromyalgia Why chronic pain, depression, anxiety, and fatigue often coexist The role of the dorsal vagal "shutdown" response in weakness, exhaustion, and pain Why fibromyalgia cannot be resolved through willpower or mindset alone How neuroscience, neuroplasticity, and daily rituals supported Kristin's healing The importance of movement as reconnection — not performance or intensity Gentle movement, Pilates, yoga, breath, and presence as tools for safety Why healing requires consistency, not motivation What it actually takes to rebuild trust with the body after trauma This Episode Is For: Pilates teachers working with clients living with fibromyalgia or chronic pain Movement professionals supporting trauma-informed, nervous-system-sensitive bodies Teachers navigating pain, fatigue, mental health, and long-term recovery Practitioners ready to integrate neuroscience, regulation, and compassion into practice A Moment That Landed: "I didn't heal by forcing my body to change. I healed by learning how to listen to it — and respond with consistency, safety, and respect." Fibromyalgia cannot be understood through muscles, joints, or exercise prescription alone. Kristin's story reminds us that chronic pain is often the voice of a nervous system shaped by years of survival — not weakness, laziness, or lack of effort. This conversation reinforces why Pilates teachers must expand their scope to include nervous system regulation, trauma awareness, pacing, oxygenation, and emotional safety. When movement is rushed, forced, or aesthetic-driven, we reinforce harm. When it is paced, relational, and intelligent, Pilates becomes a powerful ally in healing. 👉 Your Next Step: If this episode resonated, consider this: ➡️ Reflect on one client whose pain or fatigue may be asking for safety, not progression ➡️ Reassess how your cueing, pacing, and expectations support regulation ➡️ Ask deeper questions — not to fix, but to understand Continue the Conversation in The Pilates Muse If you're craving deeper reflections, intelligent conversation, and writing that challenges how we think about Pilates, pain, and professional practice: ✨ Explore The Pilates Muse — a publication for Pilates teachers who want to think beyond cues and exercises ➡️ https://www.thepilatesprofessional.com.au/the-pilates-muse-publication 🎥 Prefer to watch? This episode is also available on YouTube — experience the full conversation in a different way: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGs4C3-8NIw2BQZ1QTHZetg This is where philosophy meets practice. About The Pilates Lounge The Pilates Lounge Podcast is where intelligent movement meets real-world practice. Hosted by Katie Crane, each episode supports Pilates teachers and movement professionals to think deeper, teach smarter, and build sustainable careers grounded in integrity, autonomy, and whole-person health.