The Problem with Biohacking: Why True Healing Can’t Be Hacked

Devon Hornby LMT, ABT

In a world increasingly obsessed with optimization, speed, and performance, biohacking has emerged as a seductive promise. With nootropics, red light panels, smart supplements, microdosing, cryotherapy, and quantified self-tracking, the modern human is invited to become more: more focused, more efficient, more energized. But at what cost?

While there’s nothing inherently wrong with wanting to feel better, perform better, or live longer, we must ask: are we hacking our way into health, or away from healing?


Healing Is Not a Shortcut

True healing—deep, integrative, lasting healing—does not arrive in a capsule, a wearable, or a cold plunge. It arises slowly, over time, through relationship: with body, with Earth, with ancestry, with breath, with the quiet and discomfort that modern life often rushes to avoid.

Biohacking promises results without reverence. It replaces the cyclical intelligence of nature with the logic of domination and manipulation—improving parts without addressing the whole. We track our sleep but ignore our dreams. We monitor HRV but avoid the emotional labor that shapes the nervous system. We boost cognition while never asking why our minds are exhausted in the first place.

It’s healing as conquest, rather than healing as listening.


The Wisdom of Slow Medicine

There is a lineage of healing that stretches back through time—through herbalism, bodywork, ancestral movement, meditation, somatic unwinding. This path teaches that we are not machines to optimize but living, sensing systems to tend with care.

In this tradition, discomfort isn’t a bug to be fixed—it’s a teacher. Fatigue isn’t just a performance glitch—it’s a message. Pain is not a nuisance to override—it’s a portal to presence.

These are not fast fixes. They don’t promise ROI. They ask us to sit with ourselves, to slow down, to return to what we’ve been taught to override. But they offer something biohacking can’t: wholeness. Soul. Belonging.


What We Lose When We Hack

Biohacking, in its commodified form, severs us from nature’s deeper rhythms. It flattens healing into a set of metrics and upgrades, replacing humility with novelty, and soul with spectacle. In doing so, it risks building a shiny tower of performance on top of unprocessed pain, spiritual disconnection, and cultural amnesia.

Yes, tools have their place. But without soul, without slowness, without a rooted understanding of ourselves as part of something ancient and alive, they’re just more ways to bypass the deeper work.


An Invitation Back

This isn’t a purist rejection of modern tools. It’s a call to root them in something wiser. To remember that healing is not a hack, it’s a homecoming.

A homecoming to your breath. To your grief. To your community. To nature’s slow medicine. Because in the end, the deepest healing can’t be measured in data—it’s felt in the body, in silence, in the soul’s return.


Optional References / Further Reading:

  • Maté, Gabor. When the Body Says No (on psychosomatic roots of illness)
  • Illich, Ivan. Medical Nemesis (on the institutionalization of healing)
  • Kimmerer, Robin Wall. Braiding Sweetgrass (on indigenous ecological wisdom)
  • Cohen, Bonnie Gintis. Engaging the Movement of Life (on osteopathy and relational healing)
  • Porges, Stephen. The Polyvagal Theory (on nervous system regulation and safety)

Classical Chinese Medicine: The Original Functional Medicine

By Devon Hornby, LMT, ABT

In today’s wellness world, functional medicine has gained traction as a patient-centered, systems-based approach to health that focuses on identifying and addressing root causes rather than suppressing symptoms. While this framework may seem cutting-edge, it mirrors a holistic paradigm that has existed for thousands of years: Classical Chinese Medicine (CCM).

Classical Chinese Medicine is arguably the original form of functional medicine. Long before lab tests and diagnostic imaging, ancient Chinese physicians developed a sophisticated understanding of the body as a dynamic, self-regulating system. They viewed health not as the absence of disease, but as the harmonious function of all systems—physical, emotional, and spiritual. When imbalance arises, the aim is not to treat the symptom in isolation, but to restore systemic coherence (Kaptchuk, 2000; Porkert, 1974).

This is precisely the lens I bring to my online health consultations and embodied life coaching sessions. Drawing on decades of experience in Chinese medicine, body-centered therapy, and movement-based healing, I help clients uncover the hidden patterns and fixations behind their physical symptoms and emotional challenges—whether that’s fatigue, digestive issues, chronic pain, or anxiety.

A Timeless Systems-Based Approach

Like functional medicine, CCM is inherently individualized. Every person is seen as a unique constellation of elemental forces, constitutional tendencies, and life experiences. Symptoms are not the problem—they are the body’s intelligent response to stress, depletion, or dysfunction. This philosophy lies at the heart of my virtual coaching practice: We don’t pathologize what’s happening; we get curious about what your system is trying to say.

Using principles rooted in Classical Chinese thought—such as the Five Elements, organ systems as dynamic functions, and the influence of climate, emotion, and lifestyle—we uncover the “why” beneath your symptoms (Maciocia, 2005). Whether you’re seeking to balance hormones, regulate your nervous system, support your digestion, or navigate a life transition, the wisdom of CCM offers practical, grounded tools to reconnect with your body’s inner guidance.

Embodiment as a Healing Path

Healing is not just about herbs or acupuncture points. It’s also about reconnecting with sensation, listening to your body’s rhythms, and retraining your nervous system to respond with flexibility and resilience. In our online sessions, we integrate breath, gentle movement, guided somatic inquiry, and practical lifestyle interventions. These embodied practices allow clients to engage with their health on a felt level—not just conceptually, but experientially (Rossi, 1993).

This combination of Classical Chinese insight and body-centered coaching is a powerful catalyst for transformation. You don’t need to be in crisis to benefit. In fact, many clients begin these sessions seeking clarity, wanting to optimize their health, or realign with their purpose.

Why Work Online?

Online health consultations and embodied life coaching offer profound support from the comfort of your home. No commute. No clinic. Just a direct, personal connection where we tune into your system, explore its deeper messages, and co-create a path forward.

This work is not about fixing you—it’s about helping you listen, respond, and align.


If you’re ready to explore the root causes of your health patterns and step into a more embodied way of being, I invite you to schedule an online consultation. Let’s uncover what your body already knows.

#ChineseMedicine #FunctionalMedicine #EmbodiedHealing #OnlineHealthConsultations #DevonHornbyLMT #LifeCoaching #SomaticTherapy

  • Hoffman, D. (2007). Medical herbalism: The science and practice of herbal medicine. Healing Arts Press.
  • Kaptchuk, T. J. (2000). The web that has no weaver: Understanding Chinese medicine. McGraw-Hill.
  • Maciocia, G. (2005). The foundations of Chinese medicine: A comprehensive text for acupuncturists and herbalists(2nd ed.). Elsevier.
  • Porkert, M. (1974). The theoretical foundations of Chinese medicine: Systems of correspondence. MIT Press.
  • Rossi, E. L. (1993). The psychobiology of mind-body healing: New concepts of therapeutic hypnosis. W. W. Norton & Company.