
By Holly Batchelder, PhD
We often say that time heals.
And sometimes it does…at least on the surface. Pain softens. Memories feel less sharp. Life moves forward.
But neuroscience suggests something more specific:
The nervous system doesn’t change simply because time passes.
It changes through experience.
Not just any experience, but experiences that contradict what our brains and bodies previously learned.
The Brain Is Constantly Making Predictions
One of the most important insights from neuroscience is that the brain is not just reacting to the world. It’s constantly predicting it.
Your nervous system is always asking a quiet question in the background:
Am I safe right now?
Based on past experiences, your brain develops predictions about what will happen next. If you’ve been hurt, rejected, abandoned, or unsafe before, your nervous system learns to anticipate those outcomes again.
In many ways, this is adaptive. It’s the brain trying to protect you.
But it also means that old experiences can shape how we interpret the present—even when the situation has changed.
When Reality Contradicts the Prediction
Research on learning and fear suggests that the brain updates when something unexpected happens—when reality contradicts what it predicted.
This is sometimes called prediction error.
When the expected threat doesn’t happen, the nervous system has an opportunity to learn something new.
For example:
You expect rejection, but someone listens.
You expect conflict, but repair happens.
You expect criticism, but you are treated with respect.
These moments may seem small, but to the nervous system they are powerful pieces of evidence.
Emotional Memories Can Be Updated
For a long time, scientists believed emotional memories were fixed once they were formed.
But newer research suggests something different.
When an emotional memory is reactivated and followed by a new experience, the brain can actually update how that memory is stored.
In other words, old learning can be modified.
This process is known as memory reconsolidation.
It helps explain why certain experiences—especially emotionally meaningful ones—can reshape how we feel, react, and relate to the world.
Healing Is Often Experiential
This is one reason therapy, relationships, and real-life experiences matter so much in healing.
Insight alone doesn’t always change the nervous system.
What often changes it are moments like:
Being understood when you expected dismissal.
Setting a boundary and being respected.
Staying present in a situation where you once shut down.
Over time, these experiences accumulate.
They become evidence.
And slowly, the nervous system begins to revise its expectations about what is possible.
So What Actually Helps the Nervous System Heal?
If healing isn’t just about time, what helps?
Experiences that introduce new information.
Moments that contradict the old story the nervous system learned.
This is why healing can happen through:
safe relationships
therapy
corrective experiences
gradual exposure to feared situations
moments of repair and connection
Each experience gives the brain another opportunity to update its predictions.
Over time, those updates can reshape how we move through the world.
A Different Way to Think About Healing
So maybe it’s not quite accurate to say that time heals.
Time may create distance from pain.
But what often heals us are the experiences that happen at that time.
The moments that show the nervous system something different from what it learned before.
Little by little, those experiences can teach the brain - and the body - that a different reality is possible.
References
Craske, M. G., Treanor, M., Conway, C. C., Zbozinek, T., & Vervliet, B. (2014). Maximizing exposure therapy: An inhibitory learning approach. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 58, 10–23.
Foa, E. B., & Kozak, M. J. (1986). Emotional processing of fear: Exposure to corrective information. Psychological Bulletin, 99(1), 20–35.
Schiller, D., Monfils, M.-H., Raio, C. M., Johnson, D. C., LeDoux, J. E., & Phelps, E. A. (2010). Preventing the return of fear in humans using reconsolidation update mechanisms. Nature, 463, 49–53.