Braiding Neuroscience, Decolonization, and Mental Wellness Mind–Body Interventions, Indigenous Knowledge, and the Science of Healing

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Kimber R. Olson, Ph.D., MSW

Keywords

Healing, Indigenous Knowledge, Science of Healing, Decolonization, Neuroscience, Mental Wellness

Abstract

Western neuroscience and Indigenous knowledge systems are often seen as separate worlds. However, when we examine emerging brain and molecular science alongside Indigenous teachings about land, story, ceremony, and relational responsibility, a powerful convergence emerges. Mind–body interventions, including meditation, reconceptualization, ritual, and kindness practices, are now demonstrated to alter neural networks, immune signaling, and gene expression in ways that echo what Indigenous peoples have known for generations: relationships, story, and ceremony are medicine. 


This paper braids three strands:



  • Neuroscience and the biology of intensive mind–body practice (Jinich-Diamant et al., 2025).

  • The Decolonization Equation as a structural and relational framework for collective healing (Yellow Bird & Luo, 2025).

  • Indigenous teachings and practices that predate, and in many ways anticipate, today’s mind–body and kindness science (Basso, 1996; Indigenous Oral Scholars, Olson, 2025).


Together, they indicate that increasing kindness and prioritizing decolonization are not only ethically essential but also biologically feasible and culturally rooted parts of comprehensive mental health strategies. 

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