
Role of Nervous System Regulation in Accessing Nondual Consciousness
The Body Was Never the Problem
For a long time, I carried a quiet spiritual assumption I barely knew I had: that awakening meant rising above what happens in the body.
This belief takes many forms. Sometimes it appears as an ideal of serenity so pristine that no contraction is allowed to enter the room. Sometimes it shows up philosophically, as devotion to teachings that emphasize disidentification from form. And sometimes it arrives clinically, disguised as competence—the idea that if we just regulate enough, process enough, resource enough, we’ll finally arrive at a stable baseline where we are no longer reactive, no longer hijacked, no longer pulled into duality.
Even within traditions I love, I began to notice how this assumption subtly distorts practice. Read with grounding, teachings about not being the body point toward something liberating: Awareness is not limited to sensation, personality, or physiology. Read without grounding, they can become a spiritual crowbar—used to pry ourselves away from embodiment, to treat somatic experience as a lesser reality, to interpret activation as evidence that we’re failing to awaken.
But the more I worked with people’s bodies—and the more I listened to my own—the less convincing transcendence-as-escape became.
Inclusion, Not Transcendence
The metaphor of the ocean in a drop matters here. A drop is not the whole ocean—and yet the ocean is fully present in the drop. Saltwater is saltwater.
In the same way, if sensation, emotion, fear, contraction, and ease all arise within Awareness, then awakening cannot be a project of getting rid of embodiment. It has to be an inclusion project: learning to be present with bodily experience without collapsing into identification with it.
Because once you take the body seriously, something becomes both obvious and startling: the body does not organize itself around enlightenment. It organizes itself around protection.
How the Body Creates “Other”
This is not a moral failure or a spiritual immaturity. It is survival physiology doing exactly what it evolved to do.
Clinically, we have many names for this—defense, projection, splitting. Spiritually, we talk about ego and separation. But underneath the language, the mechanism is simple: when the system senses danger, it runs an us-versus-them script.
This is why it’s so hard to stay open in conflict. Why a single text message can turn a grounded adult into a panicked child with a legal brief forming in their head. Why people feel bewildered by who they become when activated.
From the inside, this doesn’t feel like distortion. It feels like reality.
The body supplies sensation—tight throat, hot face, collapsing belly—and thought follows faithfully: Something is wrong. Someone is wrong. I am not safe. You are the problem.
This is the moment “other” is born.
Sometimes it’s loud: fight, flight, urgency, obsession, anger.
Sometimes it’s quiet: collapse, withdrawal, numbness, dissociation.
Different expressions. Same underlying logic.
Protection wins. Connection loses. Experience reorganizes itself around separation.
This is not a character flaw. It is a design feature.
The False Promise of Permanent Regulation
In psychotherapy, it often appears as a treatment fantasy: Once I process enough, I’ll stop getting triggered.
In spiritual communities, it appears as an enlightenment fantasy: Once I wake up, I won’t react anymore.
Both fantasies collapse under the same reality: the nervous system does not work that way.
It moves. It oscillates. It tightens and releases. It mobilizes and settles. This flux is not the problem. The belief that flux shouldn’t be happening is the problem.
This is not resignation.
The Body Keeps the Score—and the Story
- The body tightens and the mind says, I’m being attacked.
- The body collapses and the mind says, I’m alone.
- The body mobilizes and the mind says, I need to win.
- The body freezes and the mind says, There’s no point.
When we don’t see this sequence, we assume our stories are objective descriptions of reality. When we do recognize what the nervous system is up to, something opens. We gain space. We can hold the story more lightly—without dismissing the body’s intelligence.
Why “I Am Not the Body” Isn’t the Whole Story
Agency Without Blame
The body was never the problem.