Prado Aesthetics

Prado Aesthetics

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170 Ingram Street Glasgow G1 1DN

27/02/2026

This image represents what many people don’t see.

Domestic abuse doesn’t only leave emotional scars.
It places the body in prolonged survival mode.

When someone lives in fear, tension, unpredictability, or control, the nervous system remains activated for long periods of time.

Over time, that constant state of fight, flight, or freeze can lead to:

• Chronic inflammation
• Hormonal imbalance
• Fatigue
• Migraines
• Muscle pain
• Digestive issues
• Autoimmune conditions

The body is not weak.

It adapted to survive.

Chronic illness in many survivors is not coincidence — it is the biological impact of prolonged trauma.

Healing begins with safety, support, and nervous system regulation.

Survival mode becomes chronic pain.
But recovery is possible.

— Nanda Prado

27/02/2026

Hey lovely 🤍

I went once again to see the team for another MRI because I’m still dealing with ongoing pain from my accident.

And honestly… I’m so grateful I did, because the scans explain a lot.

In my wrist alone, there are four separate injuries.

I have a TFCC central disc tear, which affects stability and rotation.
A sprain of the scapholunate ligament, which connects key wrist bones.
A cartilage injury at the lunate, meaning joint surface damage.
And an ECU subsheath injury with mild tendon inflammation, which causes instability and pain with movement.

So this isn’t “just wrist pain.”
There are multiple structural injuries.

And my lower back scan also confirmed significant findings.

I have degenerative disc disease between L4 and S1, with disc dehydration and loss of height.
There are annular tears — which are small tears in the outer part of the disc.
And disc herniations that are pressing forward and contributing to nerve-related symptoms.

That explains the ongoing lower back pain and the radiating symptoms into my legs.

What I appreciate so much about Unirad is that they don’t dismiss pain.

They investigate thoroughly.
They explain everything clearly.
And they treat you with respect and care.

If you’re struggling with ongoing pain and considering self-referral imaging — this is genuinely the place I recommend.

Don’t ignore your body.
Don’t let anyone minimise your symptoms.

Get answers.

Highly recommended by me 🤍
• MRI / medical transparency
• Injury recovery
• Self-referral imaging
• Chronic pain awareness
• Personal testimonial

27/02/2026

Domestic abuse is not only emotional or physical harm.
It is prolonged stress on the nervous system.

When someone lives in constant fear, tension, criticism, or unpredictability, the body stays in survival mode — fight, flight, or freeze.

Over time, this keeps stress hormones like cortisol elevated. Chronic stress increases inflammation, weakens the immune system, disrupts hormones, affects digestion, sleep, and muscle function.

Science now shows that long-term trauma can literally rewire the brain and dysregulate the nervous system.

This is why many survivors develop conditions such as:
• Chronic fatigue
• Autoimmune disorders
• Fibromyalgia-type pain
• Migraines
• Anxiety disorders
• Hormonal imbalance
• Digestive issues

The body is not “failing.”
It adapted to survive.

Chronic illness in many survivors is not weakness — it is the biological impact of living in prolonged threat.

Healing must include safety, nervous system regulation, emotional support, and trauma-informed care.

No one should suffer in silence.
Support exists. Recovery is possible. 🤍

14/02/2026

Hey lovely’s! ❤️
I know I have so many students here and so many amazing professionals in the area, and that’s exactly why I wanted to share this with you.

Beauty Idols Scotland is an award-winning event, and what truly makes it different is how it’s judged. Entries are reviewed by real industry professionals with years of experience in beauty, aesthetics, hair, and related areas — people who genuinely understand the work, the standards, and the journey behind what you do.

You’re not judged on popularity. You’re judged on the evidence you provide, fairly and professionally, by a panel of experienced judges.

⏰ Registrations close on the 1st of August
🎉 And the awards ceremony will take place in Glasgow on the 16th of November.

I’m sharing this because I truly want the right talent to be seen and recognised. If you’ve been thinking about entering, this might be your moment.” ❤️✨ I can’t wait to see you all there 🫶🏻🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿
BeautyIdolsScotland

14/02/2026

I don’t believe people learn to live with pain.
I believe they learn to stop talking about it.

But today, I choose honesty over silence.
I choose strength with softness.
I choose to show up — even on the days my body hurts and my soul feels tired.

Pain doesn’t define me, but it has shaped my compassion, my resilience, and my purpose.
If you’re reading this and quietly carrying more than you show… you are not weak. You are brave. 🤍

One day at a time. One breath at a time.”
FaithAndStrength OneDayAtATime YouAreNotAlone

13/02/2026

Brain Fog 🧠 So… as you can see… I completely forgot to make a video about brain fog 😂
Which is actually very on brand.

Quick question —
have you ever walked into a room and just stopped…
like…
Why am I here?
Who called me?
What was the plan?

Or you grab your phone, unlock it, stare at it…
lock it again…
and still have no idea why you picked it up.

Yep.
That’s brain fog.

Brain fog is when your brain is awake,
but it’s moving like it’s stuck in traffic.

It’s forgetting words mid-sentence,
reading the same message over and over,
saying ‘sorry, what?’ even though you WERE listening,
and putting things in places that make absolutely no sense.

Some days my brain has:
low battery,
no signal,
twenty open tabs,
and one random song playing for no reason.

And let me say this clearly —
you’re not lazy,
you’re not dumb,
and you’re not losing your mind.

Brain fog happens with stress, chronic pain, fibromyalgia, hormones, poor sleep, burnout…
basically when life is doing too much.

Your brain just says,
‘Nope. We’re slowing down today.’

It can be frustrating.
Sometimes embarrassing.
Sometimes funny.
Sometimes all three at once.

But the good news?
Small things help.

Rest — without feeling bad.
Drink water.
Move gently.
Lower the pressure.
Be nicer to yourself.

Because being angry at your brain doesn’t make it work better.
I checked 😅

So if today you forgot what you were saying,
lost your train of thought,
or walked into a room and forgot why…

Congratulations —
you’re human.

If this sounds like you, comment ‘brain fog’ or drop a 🧠😂
Tag someone who forgets why they opened the fridge.

You’re not alone.
We’re all just out here…
buffering together.”

06/02/2026

Did you know this is also related to fibromyalgia?

Fibromyalgia doesn’t only affect muscles and joints. It also impacts the gut and bladder, because it’s a condition that involves the nervous system.

Many people living with fibromyalgia experience:
• IBS and digestive discomfort
• Bloating, nausea, reflux
• Food sensitivities
• Frequent urination
• Bladder pain or urgency (IC/BPS)

These symptoms are often dismissed or treated separately, but they are commonly connected. When the nervous system is in constant overdrive, organs like the gut and bladder can become hypersensitive too.

This is not “in your head.”
This is the body responding to chronic neurological stress.

Understanding this connection can help people seek better support, manage flares, and feel less alone in what they’re experiencing.

✨ Knowledge brings validation.
✨ Validation brings empowerment.

— Nanda Prado

invisibleillness chronicillnesseducation nervoussystem fibrowarrior

04/02/2026

Brain fog with fibromyalgia 🧠☁️

This is one of the hardest symptoms to explain—because you can’t see it, but it affects everything.
Brain fog isn’t just “forgetfulness.” It’s slowed thinking, struggling to find words, losing focus, confusion, and feeling disconnected from your own mind.

For me, it comes in waves. Some days I can think clearly, other days even simple tasks feel overwhelming. And that’s the reality of living with fibromyalgia—no two days are the same.

What has helped me manage brain fog (not cure it, but cope with it):
• Pacing myself and respecting my limits
• Prioritising rest and quality sleep
• Gentle movement, even on low-energy days
• Anti-inflammatory nutrition and hydration
• Reducing stress and emotional overload
• Giving myself grace instead of guilt

Science says there is no cure for fibromyalgia—yet. But there are ways to support the nervous system, reduce flares, and improve quality of life.

This is my experience. Yours may be different. And both are valid.

If you live with brain fog, you are not lazy, weak, or imagining it. Your nervous system is working overtime. Sending my love and understanding 🤲🏻🤍

🤍
Nanda Prado

healingjourney spoonielife chronicillnessawareness nervoussystem fibrowarrior

03/02/2026

This is how I got diagnosed with fibromyalgia 🤍
Your journey may be different — and I truly hope it’s easier.

After trauma and domestic abuse, my body changed in ways I couldn’t explain.
Years of pain, exhaustion, misdiagnosis, and being told “everything looks normal”… until a rheumatologist finally listened.

Fibromyalgia isn’t “just pain.”
It’s the brain and nervous system amplifying pain signals.
It’s the body living in fight-or-flight.
It’s invisible — but very real.

I’m sharing my story so you don’t feel alone, unheard, or crazy for knowing something isn’t right.

If this resonates with you, please comment, share, or save — someone out there needs to hear this today 🤍
This page is a safe space for education, support, and healing together.

✨ You are not alone.


FibroWarrior
TraumaAndHealing NervousSystemHealing
PainIsReal DisabilityAwareness
ChronicIllnessSupport HealingJourney
YouAreNotAlone FibroCommunity

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