Life After “Survivor”
What happens when the word survivor no longer fits?
In this episode of Like Me, J’K explores what it means to live beyond survival, not by erasing the past, but by loosening its grip on identity.
For years, surviving became both a skill and a label. It shaped how the body stayed alert, how safety was negotiated, and how patterns of loss and stability quietly repeated themselves. Even when life became calmer, the nervous system continued to operate as if danger were just around the corner.
This episode reflects on how trauma lives in the body, not just in memory and how healing is less about fixing what broke and more about teaching the body that peace is safe.
Drawing on personal reflection, neuroscience, spirituality, and the rhythms of nature, J’K examines the weight and limits of the word survivor, the difference between endurance and evolution, and what it means to live within what’s next, rather than beyond what was.
This is a conversation about identity, awareness, and becoming about choosing to live fully, not just live past.
In This Episode
Survival as a skill and how it becomes identity
Why the body holds trauma long after the threat has passed
Learned fear vs learned safety
The limits of the word survivor
Healing through neuroscience, spirituality, and nature
Moving from endurance into evolution
Key Reflection
Survival may keep you alive, but it doesn’t have to define who you become.
About the Host
J’K is the host of Like Me, a reflective podcast exploring identity, self-advocacy, healing, and life beyond survival — into courage, self-insurance, and thriving.
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