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Thursday, October 13, 2016

Embodied, Grounded, Integrated: at Home

The following text grows from the inside out. Within it we will take a look at the human condition and its place in the world, bouncing off of both recent and ancient findings and concepts. We will start from deep within us and expand outwards, both upwards into the sky and downwards into the earth, just like the plant does in growing. The point therein will be to briefly introduce a philosophy, a common sense that corresponds to both what we feel and experience, and to what we have learned through analysis and inquiry. As the title indicates, the following will be structured into three parts, only to watch them amalgamate in the end.




Throughout the first part, which will be termed ‘embodied’, we will be looking deep within us and explore the revelatory concept of modern philosophy of mind and cognitive science, called Embodiment. With this concept in mind, Cartesian ideas of dualistic existence, of identifying with the conscious mind only, cannot be upheld. What this may mean for us practically will be the focus of this presentation. Here we discover ourselves, not within the organism, but as the organism. The concept of embodiment hence is the foundation of this text. It is the root from which everything else sprouts.
by Diego Delso, Wikimedia Commons, License CC-BY-SA 3.0

Accordingly, the second part will inquire into one of the main implications of this very root-concept. Here, we will take a look at the psychological, or rather psychosomatic, relevance of this, mainly focusing on Alexander Lowen’s work. As a psychotherapist Alexander Lowen is known for developing what is now known as Bioenergetics. Its main premise is the unity of body and mind and the relevance of vibration and grounding for the health of the organism. This is not an esoteric discipline, as the terms might suggest, but a consequence of the slow shift in medicine towards a holistic approach to health. Here, we will ground ourselves in reality and stand firmly, yet always dynamic and never rigid.

Throughout the third part we will expand further outwards, integrating ourselves into an ever-changing and strongly interrelated environment. For that matter we take a look at the ancient philosophy of Daoism, which is based on a correlative, dynamic and inclusive cosmology. The main Daoist text, the Dao De Jing, with its poetic and metaphorical expression will function as our entry-point into understanding the Daoist approach to life. Here, we will find ourselves deeply embedded in an ever-changing, mutually entailing world-process in which we are just as significant as anything else. Finally, we will see whether we cannot make ourselves comfortable there, or even feel at home.

Embodied
The main ‘Embodiment Thesis’ as formulated by Robert Wilson and Lucia Foglia reads as follows:
“Many features of cognition are embodied in that they are deeply dependent upon characteristics of the physical body of an agent, such that the agent's beyond-the-brain body plays a significant causal role, or a physically constitutive role, in that agent's cognitive processing.”[i]
This isn’t merely stating that there has to be a brain in order for there to be a mind, but even further it implies that “our conceptual systems and our capacity for thought are shaped by the nature of our brains, our bodies and our bodily interactions”[ii], as Lakoff put it. Not only is it impossible to separate the mind from the body, but the body also influences the very structure of the mind. This further leads to an understanding of the mind as much more a part of the organism, rather than as the controller of it. Research therefore suggests that Descartes’ concept of ‘I think, I exist’ and further identifying with the ‘mental substance’ only, is inherently flawed. However obvious the problems of such a strong mind-body dualism may seem, similar concepts are still deeply entrenched in cultural common sense and language. We say ‘Me and my body’, or ‘My body reacts..’, we don’t say ‘I’, or ‘I react..’. Our sense of self seems to imply some kind of entity within the organism with which we identify. While what exactly we say as far as terminology goes might not make that big a difference, what makes a difference is how we truly feel underneath the words.

Research in embodied cognition therefore also presents the opportunity to rethink our own identity and realize that we are more than the conscious aspect of our mind that we are not merely some entity encapsulated within a body, but that we are the organism, all of it. A popular Zen kôan points to just that:
            “Who is dragging this corpse around?”
Everybody who has exercised before or has generally moved around a lot will have experienced the correlation of movement and well-being, which is one simple way of experiencing our embodied nature. Other ways which are more and more well-researched denote the correlation of how posture can influence the mood of a person, for better or worse. The real joy with which embodiment can present us however, seems to be the expanded sense of self, to no longer feel ‘a stranger and afraid’ isolated within a body, but to feel oneself fully as an organism, living, breathing, moving. It is in this spirit that Alexander Lowen created the concept of Bioenergetics.

Grounded
Alexander Lowen founded his concepts on the conviction that “[y]ou are your body and your head doesn’t control it”[iii], with that in many ways ahead of his time. Further, the key aspects of Bioenergetics are Grounding, Breathing and Vibration.[iv] For now, the focus will be on the aspect of grounding, the three concepts can however never be fully separated from each other. From inquiring deeply into these basic assumptions, also by studying with Wilhelm Reich, Lowen observed and concluded that childhood trauma often times leads to a natural defensive reaction of the child in the form of muscular armoring. If the child, in expressing pain or grief through sobbing or expressing anger through biting, is repeatedly shunned and punished for these natural emotions and reactions, it will, for the sake of survival, stifle its very own freedom of expression by chronically contracting the associated muscles. This muscular armoring can be quite thoroughly distributed throughout the body, yet the most important areas are the jaw and correspondingly the neck, holding back both sobbing and biting (however also laughter), and the muscles of the front of the body, that is the muscles of respiration. For Lowen and quite possibly for any non-dualist, emotions are physical, bodily sensations, hence the restriction of breathing also dampens feeling, so as not to express those ‘inappropriate’ feelings.

Feeling can further be understood as a movement, a vibration or wave of excitement that flows through the organism. Examples of this are the waves of sobbing or the contractions of laughter which can be easily observed and felt. From this it follows that the more supple and soft a body is, as opposed to rigid and constricted, the more vibration and excitation it can hold or rather let flow freely. Lowen hence attributed great importance to the motility and vibrational capacity of the organism, to which the term ‘vibrant health’ should point. The more (involuntary) movement one can allow, the more alive one will be. An expanded sense of self, an ego deeply embedded in the body, is what goes right along with this.

The concept of grounding revolves around exactly these points of motility and softness. Further, the real point here is trust. If we, because of our life experiences or traumatic events, do not trust the world around us anymore, we defend. We put up rigid barriers which, as we have seen, correspond to physical, neuro-muscular barriers. We can’t fully trust other people and further don’t even seem to trust the ground to hold us up. Therefore we stand rigid and contracted, in a way attempting to hold ourselves up, to pull ourselves up by our own bootstraps. It can’t be done. If on the other hand, we can trust life, even if it means tears and fury, and hence relax our constant effort to defend ourselves, we may realize that the ground will hold us up no matter what. So we relax. In that, the tension in the lower body, especially in the psoas muscles, and with that all excess tension fades and we literally sink back down to earth. Here, when we fully feel our feet on the ground, almost flowing into it, merging with it, we feel safe and alive. We discover ourselves not only as a single organism living on a planet, but further as an organism deeply rooted in the earth which gives live to us, and hence we trust it deeply.

Integrated: At Home
In its main premises, Daoist cosmology denotes a world that is deeply interrelated and always subject to dynamic change. In the Dao De Jing it is said that “[a]s soon as everyone in the world knows that the beautiful are beautiful, [t]here is already ugliness”[v], pointing to the concept of Yin and Yang or the mutual entailing of opposites. There can never be only one without the corresponding other. That way, all things are mutually dependent on each other, which makes them inseparable. It is quite common for us to see that there can’t be black without white, but this also includes that by virtue of us having a soft skin, we evoke hardness out of wood or even that by virtue of having eyes that relate to the radiation of the sun, we evoke light out of the universe.[vi] In a world where ‘distinct things’ cannot be separated from each other, all there is is one process. We may call it god, or we may call it Dao, what it comes down to, is that all things are intimately connected, including ourselves. Here, we find ourselves deeply embedded in the world-process and hence not as an isolated cork floating in the ocean, but as a wave which is continuous with the water.
For this very reason, going along with the stream of change that is the world, is acknowledging that one is not separate from it. Trying to resist it however, reveals an entanglement with the illusion of being separate. This point is very similar to the philosophy of Bioenergetics, as the following chapter of the Dao De Jing elucidates:
“While living, people are supple and soft, but once dead, they become hard and rigid cadavers. […] Thus it is said: Things that are hard and rigid are the companions of death; Things that are supple and soft are the companions of life.”[vii]
Realizing that we are not separate from the world-process, but a unique aspect of it, a unique expression of the whole ‘thing’, we may feel both more significant and whole in this world. As we have seen, this begins with the inseparability of body and mind and extends itself to the connection of earth and organism and finally, to the connection of cosmos and organism.
There are many ways in which one can translate the words ‘Dao De Jing’ into English, depending on aim and personal preference. For now, I will choose one of my favorites:

Feeling At Home in This World


Notes:




[i] Wilson, Robert A. and Foglia, Lucia, "Embodied Cognition", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2016 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.), URL = <http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2016/entries/embodied-cognition/>.
[ii] Lakoff, George und Mark Johnson. Philosophy in the Flesh. New York: Basic Books, 1999. p. 265f.
[iii] The Lowen Foundation. „The Energetics of Bioenergetics – Trailer.“ Online Video clip. Youtube. Youtube, 15.02.2012. Web. 05.05.2016.
[iv] What is Bioenergetics?. The Alexander Lowen Foundation. Web. 06.05.2016.
[v] Dao De Jing: “Making This Life Significant”. Trans. Roger T. Ames and David L. Hall. New York: Ballantine Books, 2003. p. 80.
[vi] thejourneyofpurpose. „You Are the Eternal Universe – Alan Watts.“ Online Video clip. Youtube. Youtube, 11.11.2007. Web. 06.05.2016.
[vii] Dao De Jing p. 195.

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