Returning to the Body
Before insight, belief, or transcendence, there is a body. Embodiment isn’t a concept to understand—it’s a capacity to rebuild, patiently, sensation by sensation.
Before insight, belief, or transcendence, there is a body. Embodiment isn’t a concept to understand—it’s a capacity to rebuild, patiently, sensation by sensation.
Certainty keeps us safe, but dogma keeps us stuck. This piece explores how staying with uncertainty—especially after psychedelic experiences—creates deeper contact, humility, and genuine integration.
As psychedelics return, the question is no longer whether they matter, but how we hold them. Private healing is not enough. Integration must become cultural, relational, and public.
Healing is not control or transcendence, but coherence. When attention deepens, fragmented parts begin to listen to one another, and life is felt again as rhythm rather than resistance.
The journey doesn’t end when the medicine fades. That’s often when movement begins. Integration is learning to hold what opened—gently, slowly, without forcing—whatever you now carry.
It’s a loaded word. Traditional religion. The New Age movement. Meditation. Transpersonal psychology. Psychedelics. Near-death experiences. Mystical encounters. Kundalini awakenings. Animism. The Bible Belt. Shamans. Prophets. Few of these communities […]
An inner journey from call to descent, confrontation, and return—where hidden parts become known, fear becomes wisdom, and ordinary life slowly transforms through courageous, patient integration into embodied wholeness.
What if some depression isn’t a disorder, but a starvation—for meaning, belonging, and a reason to stay? Freud, James, and Lisa Miller converge on one question: what keeps us alive?
Leaving a high-control faith can feel like losing a parent — not just changing beliefs, but losing safety, certainty, and belonging. Deconstruction is not rebellion; it is grief, differentiation, and psychological reorganisation.
The rebel doesn’t stay a rebel. Done right, defiance becomes aim, then sovereignty: clarity, clean boundaries, and a centre strong enough to serve the collective without being owned by it.