The Good Intentions Group transforms wellness education, turning trauma, responsibility, and survival into practical tools for the nervous system.
When Childhood Isn’t Safe, the Body Learns First
This story doesn’t begin with an injury, a certification, or a wellness trend.
It begins with a child learning how to stay alert at night.
Lucyk grew up in a household where values were clear, but stability was fragile. When his family faced major disruptions, life changed quickly—and permanently. Much of the responsibility fell on Lucyk while he was still a child.
By the age of 12, he was waking in the middle of the night due to crisis situations at home. Sleep was inconsistent, and safety was uncertain. At times, Lucyk had to manage emergency situations that no child should have to face.
He also experienced regular emotional and physical challenges, which reinforced a constant state of vigilance. This was not a childhood defined by innocence. It was defined by responsibility.
Learning to Function Before Learning to Feel
At 14, Lucyk got his first job roofing. Work wasn’t a milestone—it was survival. The physical labor taught endurance, discipline, and how to keep going even when the body was exhausted.
When he later returned to high school, something unexpected emerged: a deep interest in medicine and how the body functions under pressure. He became curious about how systems break down—and how they adapt when under constant stress.
But instability followed him. His home environment remained unpredictable. Lucyk came home one day to find things had spiraled again, reinforcing a lesson that had already been learned: unresolved systems repeat their failures.
That understanding stayed with him.
When the Healthcare System Reopened Old Wounds
Years later, as an adult seeking help for physical injury and nervous system dysregulation, Lucyk entered the healthcare system expecting support. Instead, he encountered experiences that reactivated everything his body had learned in childhood.
Interactions with certain healthcare providers felt dismissive, coercive, and at times emotionally dismissive—mirroring the powerlessness and lack of safety he had known growing up. Rather than being treated as a whole person, he felt reduced to a case file, symptoms questioned, pain minimized, and agency removed.
The insurance process compounded the harm.
Repeated denials, shifting requirements, contradictory information, and manipulative communication tactics created an ongoing state of uncertainty. Calls that felt threatening. Language designed to intimidate. Processes that forced constant self-advocacy while in pain.
For someone whose nervous system had been shaped by instability and uncertainty at a young age, this wasn’t just frustrating—it was retraumatizing.
The body didn’t interpret these experiences as “administrative.”
It interpreted them as danger.
Old survival patterns resurfaced: hypervigilance, shutdown, anger, exhaustion. It became clear that even in adulthood, systems meant to help could replicate the same dynamics that once caused harm.
That realization became a turning point.
From Survival Mode to System Thinking
Lucyk stopped asking, “What’s wrong with me?”
He started asking, “What is this system doing to the human body?”
He began studying the mechanisms behind stress responses:
- How chronic invalidation affects the nervous system
- Why power imbalances recreate trauma
- How uncertainty and lack of agency keep the body stuck in survival mode
Breathwork. Somatics. Trauma physiology. Lymphatic health. Nervous system regulation.
These weren’t wellness trends—they were survival tools finally explained.
He tested everything on himself. Slowly. Methodically. What emerged was a simple but radical insight: many people aren’t failing to heal—the systems around them are dysregulating them.
That insight became the foundation of The Good Intentions Group.
The Good Intentions Group: Education for People Who’ve Been Overpowered by Systems
Today, The Good Intentions Group is not a clinic and not a replacement for medical care. It exists to fill a gap many systems cannot.
The company provides education that helps people:
- Understand how power dynamics affect the nervous system
- Regulate stress responses triggered by authority and uncertainty
- Rebuild body trust after medical or institutional harm
- Learn to feel safe inside themselves again
Its flagship program, the New World Nervous System Program, offers a structured, step-by-step framework rooted in physiology and real-world experience. It doesn’t promise healing as an identity. It offers regulation as a skill.
Lucyk calls it nervous system literacy—because understanding restores agency.
Why This Message Resonates With People Who Feel Failed by Care
The Good Intentions Group speaks to people who don’t feel seen by traditional wellness or healthcare narratives:
- Tradespeople and laborers
- Burned-out professionals
- Men excluded by self-care culture
- Trauma survivors
- Individuals harmed or dismissed by medical or insurance systems
The language is plain. The tone is grounded. No forced positivity. No spiritual bypassing. Just clear explanations of how the body responds when it feels trapped—and how to come back from that state safely.
People don’t feel fixed.
They feel respected.
“This Was Never About My Trauma. It Was About Breaking the Pattern.”
Lucyk is clear about the intent behind his work.
“I know what it’s like to grow up without safety,” he says. “And I know what it’s like to ask for help and feel overpowered all over again. This work exists so people don’t have to keep reliving that cycle in their own bodies.”
The company is designed to scale beyond one person—offering tools, education, and eventually certifications that allow nervous system literacy to spread without dependency on a single figure.
Real Experience. Real Structure. Real Relief.
The Good Intentions Group doesn’t promise healing through belief.
It offers stability through understanding.
For people whose bodies learned survival early—and were re-triggered later by systems meant to help—this work offers something rare: a way to feel safe again without having to explain or relive everything.
Because when the nervous system is finally supported, healing stops being a fight—and becomes a process.
Getting Started with The Good Intentions Group
Ready for nervous system education that feels real, not like a lecture or sales pitch? Here’s how to begin:
- Website & Store: goodintentionswellness.group
- TikTok: @anecdotalmike
- Instagram: @goodintentions.group, @anecdotalmike
- YouTube: @anecdotalmike
Whether you’re dealing with chronic tension, emotional stress, post-injury recovery, or simply want to feel more at home in your body, The Good Intentions Group offers a fresh, pressure-free approach—real education for real people.
