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Finally Regain Control of Your Arm and Hand After Stroke

Even If Progress Has Stalled for Months

Most Stroke Survivors Feel
Frustrated and Stuck

After Therapy Ends

You want to open your hand again and use your arm freely in daily life.

Instead, it stays tight, spastic, or unresponsive — no matter how many exercises you try.

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It’s discouraging. You’re doing everything right, yet your body isn’t listening… and you worry the window for real progress is closing.

You deserve a clear plan — not just exercises to guess at.

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Hi, I'm Evan

Your Guide at Neuro Pathways

A licensed Occupational Therapist and Certified Neuro Specialist with over 10 years in stroke rehab. I specialize in arm and hand recovery because that's often the most frustrating and life-limiting challenge after stroke. I created Neuro Pathways to give survivors the clear, practical, neuroscience-backed plan most people never get after discharge.

Your Clear 3-Step Path to

Opening Your Hand and Regaining Arm Function

Know Exactly Where You Are

Take the free 5-Minute Recovery Roadmap to identify exactly where you are and what's holding your arm back.

Choose Your Best Next Step

Book a free Recovery Call for personalized guidance, or start the Open Hand Protocol immediately for structured daily progress.

Follow, Track, and Progress

Follow your daily routine consistently. Add 1:1 coaching when you want faster progress or expert adjustments.

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Don’t Let Another Month Slip By
Without Real Progress

Without a focused plan, spasticity can worsen and independence keeps slipping away.

What Recovery Can Look Like

With the right plan, many stroke survivors are able to: 

Improve arm and hand movement. 

Reduce stiffness and spasticity.

Perform more daily tasks independently.

Continue progressing even months or years after your stroke.

Recovery is a process, the right guidance can make a huge difference. 
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From Being Bedbound to Sitting Up Again.

"When we started, I couldn't even sit at the edge of the bed. Now, I can sit up and feed myself again"
- David, Stage 2 Stroke Survivor, 10 months post-stroke

Your Recovery Isn't Over — It's Just Missing the Right Plan

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