 
                                                                                                    10/26/2025
                                            The last few weeks we've been exploring below-the-head discernment practices. Quakers talk a lot about discernment, and recently the term is getting more airplay in wider circles. By "discernment" I'm referring to the work of making choices in keeping with our values and commitments. In class, we've been exploring embodied ways to feel into this. First, a couple weeks ago, we engaged an approach from the late Suzanne River's "Global Somatics" program (as described by Susan Raffo). I'm adapting and paraphrasing here, based on some old notes I revisited:
Western Medicine didn't always believe that the brain in our skull is the enter of all ways of knowing. Up until Galen showed up in the 500s, the medical systems that eventually became Western medicine saw treating the body as a practice of balancing the humors. What was originally an elemental approach to care - in which the humors were as much about the land and the context around the human body as what was happening in an individual self - slowly became more diagnostic and focused on body separateness. Western medicine and Western culture evolved together, and as knowing things became more important than experiencing things, as individual knowledge was centered over collective knowing, so did the Western understanding of anatomy respond.
In this anatomized view of the body, the brain has a specific role. The brain brings information in through all kinds of body listenings, and especially the nervous system, and then determines a course of action. But for many generations, Western ways of knowing - like so many other cultural ways of knowing - centered on the heart-brain more than the head-brain. It matters, embryologically, that the two were physically connected at the start of our emergence, before separating and spiraling away from each other. The heart-brain, where information from many aspects of the body comes together and decisions are made, isn't just the heart organ, but includes the thymus (the "higher heart" spot we often tap in our practice together), the pericardium, and really, probably the lungs as well. If the head-brain is about making sense of things, a kind of executive function in relation to our survival and our sense of the future and our capacity for pleasure, then the heart-brain does the same, but with the ways in which we connect. And nourish. And are nourished. And then there's the gut-brain, this universe of microbiota and cells of human and non-human species, sorting out how to live together in harmony - or not. The gut-brain is the oldest brain in our bodies - it started learning how to be alive generations before the heart-brain and the head-brain became complex systems. 
We can get out from the reign of the head and deepen our ability to feel our gut instinct, our heart's longing, if we regularly practice dropping into them intentionally. When we practice listening through all three brains together, rather than primarily through one or two, we can connect with the world in way that accounts for the sometimes contradictory information that comes in through our head, heart, and gut. We can feel them in the same way that we'd feel any community (including internal parts of our psyche) who, when asked what they would like, shares a range of opinions and needs that are based on each of their experiences and locations. We are listening to our own internal community and although there are times when they all pretty much agree, they are rare. Even if we are discerning a pathway that responds to a simple question like "should I get more rest?" (which for most of us is like DUH YES F**K TO THE YES), we'll probably get some contradictions. We might get a kind of primal slow yes from our gut, and a feeling of sadness from our heart, and a thought from our head-brain that tells us how much work we have left to do. Listening with all three brains is a practice for not assuming that single answers exist for anything. It's about living with contradictions and practicing feeling, internally, the many ways we respond, sensing our own layers, which in turn helps us hold space for other people's complexities and contradictions, as well. ☀️ 
More in this week’s newsletter:
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