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The Body Didn’t Leave - The Deeper Thinking Podcast
Manage episode 513318426 series 3604075
The Body Didn’t Leave: Embodiment, Memory, and the Quiet Refusal of the Nervous System
The Deeper Thinking Podcast is digitally narrated.
For listeners drawn to the intelligence of the body, the limits of explanation, and the ethics of presence.
#Embodiment #SomaticTherapy #Trauma #PolyvagalTheory #Phenomenology #AttachmentTheory #EMDR
What if the body never left at all. This episode follows what lives beneath language and persists in posture, breath, and pulse. Through the lenses of somatic experiencing, polyvagal theory, and phenomenology, we explore why insight alone rarely changes what the body keeps. Drawing on Bessel van der Kolk, Gabor Maté, Peter Levine, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty, we consider what it means to let sensation lead and allow language to follow.
This is not a rejection of thinking. It is a restoration of proportion. With help from Stephen Porges and Eugene Gendlin, we look at incomplete survival responses, why clarity without sensation changes little, and how practices like EMDR and forms of somatic therapy create conditions for completion rather than performance. The question is simple, though not easy. Can understanding follow the body rather than replace it.
Reflections
This episode traces the gap between observing ourselves and contacting ourselves, showing that the most reliable truths arrive as sensation before they become story.
Other reflections that surfaced:
- Insight without contact rarely becomes change.
- The body stores what it was forced to postpone.
- Some defenses are precise responses to history, not mistakes.
- Clarity can be distance in elegant clothing.
- Completion is a bodily event before it becomes a coherent narrative.
- Attachment scripts teach which emotions feel permitted.
- Safety is evidenced, not announced.
- Numbness is accumulated effort, not emptiness.
- Care begins when the body is allowed to speak in its own timing.
Why Listen.
- Reframe trauma as unfinished bodily process rather than event alone.
- See how polyvagal theory and phenomenology complement one another.
- Understand why somatic experiencing and EMDR stress completion over catharsis.
- Engage with van der Kolk, Maté, Levine, Porges, Gendlin, and Merleau-Ponty on memory, sensation, and meaning.
Listen On.
Support This Work
If this episode stayed with you and you would like to support the ongoing work, you can do so here: Buy Me a Coffee
Further Reading
- Bessel van der Kolk, The Body Keeps the Score
- Gabor Maté, When the Body Says No
- Peter A. Levine, Waking the Tiger
- Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Phenomenology of Perception
- Stephen W. Porges, The Polyvagal Theory
- Eugene T. Gendlin, Focusing
The body is not waiting for better language. It is waiting for company.
#EmbodiedThinking #Somatics #TraumaInformed #NervousSystem #Interoception #Attachment #DeeperThinkingPodcast
212 episodes
Manage episode 513318426 series 3604075
The Body Didn’t Leave: Embodiment, Memory, and the Quiet Refusal of the Nervous System
The Deeper Thinking Podcast is digitally narrated.
For listeners drawn to the intelligence of the body, the limits of explanation, and the ethics of presence.
#Embodiment #SomaticTherapy #Trauma #PolyvagalTheory #Phenomenology #AttachmentTheory #EMDR
What if the body never left at all. This episode follows what lives beneath language and persists in posture, breath, and pulse. Through the lenses of somatic experiencing, polyvagal theory, and phenomenology, we explore why insight alone rarely changes what the body keeps. Drawing on Bessel van der Kolk, Gabor Maté, Peter Levine, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty, we consider what it means to let sensation lead and allow language to follow.
This is not a rejection of thinking. It is a restoration of proportion. With help from Stephen Porges and Eugene Gendlin, we look at incomplete survival responses, why clarity without sensation changes little, and how practices like EMDR and forms of somatic therapy create conditions for completion rather than performance. The question is simple, though not easy. Can understanding follow the body rather than replace it.
Reflections
This episode traces the gap between observing ourselves and contacting ourselves, showing that the most reliable truths arrive as sensation before they become story.
Other reflections that surfaced:
- Insight without contact rarely becomes change.
- The body stores what it was forced to postpone.
- Some defenses are precise responses to history, not mistakes.
- Clarity can be distance in elegant clothing.
- Completion is a bodily event before it becomes a coherent narrative.
- Attachment scripts teach which emotions feel permitted.
- Safety is evidenced, not announced.
- Numbness is accumulated effort, not emptiness.
- Care begins when the body is allowed to speak in its own timing.
Why Listen.
- Reframe trauma as unfinished bodily process rather than event alone.
- See how polyvagal theory and phenomenology complement one another.
- Understand why somatic experiencing and EMDR stress completion over catharsis.
- Engage with van der Kolk, Maté, Levine, Porges, Gendlin, and Merleau-Ponty on memory, sensation, and meaning.
Listen On.
Support This Work
If this episode stayed with you and you would like to support the ongoing work, you can do so here: Buy Me a Coffee
Further Reading
- Bessel van der Kolk, The Body Keeps the Score
- Gabor Maté, When the Body Says No
- Peter A. Levine, Waking the Tiger
- Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Phenomenology of Perception
- Stephen W. Porges, The Polyvagal Theory
- Eugene T. Gendlin, Focusing
The body is not waiting for better language. It is waiting for company.
#EmbodiedThinking #Somatics #TraumaInformed #NervousSystem #Interoception #Attachment #DeeperThinkingPodcast
212 episodes
All episodes
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