Abstract Human adversity is not only a psychological event; it is also embodied, relational, cognitive and neurobiological. Contemporary neuroscience increasingly recognises that emotional regulation, aesthetic experience, social connection, autobiographical memory and meaning-making interact in processes of adaptation after stress. This narrative review and conceptual framework proposes Neuroaesthetic Reorientation as an art-based pathway through which individuals may move from painful disruption towards regulation, symbolic integration, resilience and purposeful action. The framework is practice-informed by the author-created methodology Aprendizaje por el Arte® and the international social movement Dale la Vuelta a la Tortilla; however, these applied concepts are treated here as sources of conceptual inspiration, not as evidence of clinical efficacy. The article does not present original clinical data and does not claim that art cures neurological or psychiatric disorders. Instead, it synthesises selected evidence from neuroaesthetics, affective neuroscience, emotion regulation, resilience research, meaning-making theory and arts-and-health literature in order to formulate a testable model. The proposed RE-TURN cycle comprises six processes: Recognise the disruption, Embody the experience, Translate emotion into symbol, Unlock meaning, Rehearse new action and Nurture prosocial impact. The framework argues that structured encounters with visual art, music, theatre, movement, metaphor and reflective dialogue may support attention regulation, affect labelling, cognitive reappraisal, autobiographical coherence, behavioural activation and prosocial behaviour. Ethical safeguards are emphasised, especially when working with trauma, clinical populations or organisational vulnerability. The article concludes with a staged research agenda for feasibility studies, mixed-methods assessment and neuropsychological, psychophysiological and organisational evaluation.
Bonasa Alzuria Dr. Ignacio (Sat,) studied this question.