Nervous System Revolution For Artists

Is It Trauma… Or Do You Need A Nap?

Ruby Rose Fox Season 3 Episode 4

Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.

0:00 | 25:45

What if stage fright, creative paralysis, burnout, emotional numbness, and self-doubt weren’t character flaws… but nervous system states?

In this powerful episode, Ruby Rose Fox offers a deeply human and radically practical exploration of “preservation mode,” the ancient freeze response that can silently hijack artists, performers, writers, and creators.

Using vivid metaphors, neuroscience, humor, and hard-earned wisdom from the performing arts world, Ruby unpacks why so many artists feel trapped between longing to express themselves and feeling physiologically unable to move. She explores how the nervous system can confuse emotional overwhelm with actual danger, shutting down creativity, clarity, connection, and performance capacity in the process. 

This episode also dives into:

  •  The difference between true freeze states, dopamine crashes, exhaustion, and insulin crashes 
  •  Why artists often misdiagnose their own nervous system states 
  •  The hidden physiological cost of prolonged immobilization 
  •  How shame around freezing became culturally reinforced 
  •  Why great art often comes after suffering, not necessarily during it 
  •  The concept of “preservation mode stories,” the internal narratives that keep artists stuck 
  •  Why the goal is not to shame your nervous system, but to understand it 

At its core, this episode is about learning to recognize when your body is protecting you… even when that protection no longer serves your creative life.

This is a free glimpse into Ruby Rose Fox’s audiobook SUPERPLAY: Your Instrument Is You, a groundbreaking exploration of nervous system training for artists, performers, creators, and highly sensitive humans. Through storytelling, neuroscience, performance theory, and practical tools, SUPERPLAY reframes the artist not as “broken,” but as someone working with the most complex instrument on earth: the human nervous system.

Support the show

https://www.muscle-music.com/