08/05/2026
Why is it important to listen to your body?
Recently, something interesting has been happening with me. For about two years now, pork and beef have been rare on my table. Not a decision I forced. My body just stopped wanting them. Chicken was the last one standing. Light, easy, safe.
And then even that started making me feel like throwing up. Not a mild aversion. An actual physical rejection. My body making it very clear, no more.
And I listened.
Because the body doesn't speak randomly. It doesn't make things up. When it starts saying no to something it used to accept without question, something is shifting underneath.
You have approximately 37 trillion cells in your body. All of them alive, all of them responsive, all of them constantly in conversation with each other through chemical signals, electrical impulses, and a living web of information connecting everything inside you. Your gut alone has over 500 million neurons, which is why it's called the second brain. Not as a metaphor. Literally. It processes information, holds memory, responds to your environment, and sends signals up to your brain, not just the other way around. That gut feeling is neurological data. Your body computing something real, something it picked up before your mind had words for it.
The heart does something similar. Research from the HeartMath Institute shows that the heart generates an electromagnetic field extending several feet outside the body, one that changes with your emotional state and receives information from your environment before the brain consciously registers it. When people talk about sensing energy, there is measurable science underneath that. The body doing exactly what it was designed to do.
The body is always communicating. Every single moment. Through cravings and aversions. Through the tightness in your chest when something feels off. Through exhaustion that doesn't go away even after sleep. Through the way your energy shifts the moment a certain person walks into the room. Always sending information. The question is just whether you're receiving it.
Most people aren't. Not because something is wrong with them, but because we were never taught to listen. We were taught to push through, to manage, to show up, to keep going even when everything inside is asking for something different. Over time the nervous system adapts to all that overriding by going into a protective numbness. You stop noticing you're tense until you're in pain. You stop noticing you're exhausted until you crash. You stop noticing a relationship is draining you until you're running on empty. The signal never disappears. It gets buried under years of not listening.
Some people are more in tune than others, quicker to pick up on things, and it's connected to how much inner work someone has done, how much they've learned to slow down and actually be present in their body. Meditation, breathwork, somatic work, choosing silence, these things literally rewire the nervous system over time. Scientists call it building interoceptive awareness, your ability to sense what's actually happening inside you. The clearer you get internally, the clearer the signal becomes. Sensitive people aren't special. They've just done enough clearing to actually hear. And I know this because I used to override my own signals constantly, push past them, rationalize them away. The difference now isn't that I became a different person. It's that I finally got quiet enough to listen.
That's what feels like it's happening with me right now around food. And it's not just a dietary shift. When the body moves away from heavier, harder to digest foods, the vagus nerve, the main nerve connecting your brain to your gut, your heart, your organs, becomes more active and more sensitive. People report feeling clearer, lighter, more emotionally open. Spiritual purification and physiological process are not two separate things happening at once. They are one system moving together.
Whatever I'm moving through right now is refining me. Something in me knows it needs to be lighter for where it's going. And so it's letting things go. Starting apparently with chicken.
And that same intelligence carries over into people. Into relationships. Into the spaces you walk into. You're around someone and your body tightens. Your energy pulls back. You feel tired after spending time with them even when nothing obviously bad happened. There's research showing that nervous systems sync with the people around us, something called co-regulation, and that the body physiologically responds to stress signals from others even without conscious awareness. When someone's presence costs you energy, something real is happening on a cellular level. The body working harder. Telling you something your mind is still trying to be polite about.
The more I do this work, the more I trust that. I've stopped talking myself out of what my body already knows.
The body knows. Learning to listen to it, to actually trust it, is one of the most important things you can do for yourself. Not just for your health but for your clarity, your discernment, your ability to move through life with more truth and less noise.
Whatever your body is telling you right now, even if it doesn't make sense yet, start there. Sit with it. Ask what it needs. It has never stopped paying attention. Even when you had.