Country music legend Trisha Yearwood released her first new album — “The Mirror” — in six years earlier this year and in doing so she went out and made the media rounds.
That included an interview on “BobbyCast” with Bobby Bones, where the 61-year-old singer opened up about a serious health issue that she battled across the past several years and a revolutionary treatment that she says changed her life.
Yearwood, who is married to Garth Brooks, said she struggled with long COVID to the point that she could not identify common household items such as a “rolling pin,” according to Parade. Thankfully, Yearwood told Bones that a friend of hers heard another radio personality, Amy Brown, interview a LENS therapy specialist.
“A friend of mine heard Amy interview with Sheri at Lens Therapy and told me about it and I went,” Yearwood said. “I didn’t tell anybody I was going because I was like, ‘I don’t understand what this does.’ But the first thing I noticed was I was sleeping better than I had slept in 10 years.”
LENS is short of “Low Energy Neurofeeback System,” and it uses “low energy electromagnetic fields to stimulate brain wave activity.”
“It changed my life,” Yearwood said.
“I had a mild case of COVID,” she continued. “But it really messed with my smell and taste. I would say I’m a long COVID person. I had all the brain fog … people were like, ‘You are in menopause,’ and I would be like, ‘Yeah, but this is different because I’m looking at a rolling pin and I can’t name it. So, I either have early-onset Alzheimer’s or something else wrong.”
She told Bones that after several rounds of treatment her brain fog began to lift.
“If you’ve ever had surgery or ever had anesthesia your brain stays asleep,” she said. “My brain was asleep.”
She said her brain now feels like it did when she was in her 30s.
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.pennlive.com ’












