There’s an age-old dualism in many cultures between psyche and soma, but especially in the West. This separation has also affected science, medicine and religion and, as the art critic, feminist philosopher and essayist Siri Hustvedt repeatedly points out, we continue to be held by ‘the implicit neo-Cartesian model still widely applied that isolates mind from body and it is seriously flawed.’ Hustvedt also tracks back to the ancient Greeks and she reminds us how both Plato’s imprisoned view of the body weighing down the soul and Aristotle’s form and matter hierarchy went on to influence Judaism and Christianity alike. Through religious dogma this dualism has also been gendered as ‘the masculine is tied to purity, intellect and culture and the feminine to the polluted body, passion and nature.’ Hustvedt clearly believes that the mind/body problem still isn’t solved as these beliefs continue to play out in art, gender, misogyny, racism and cultural authority. She suggests that, as thinkers, writers, women and mothers, our lives cannot be contained by strict categories, borders and binaries. Somatic practices are a way to move beyond these divisions within ourselves, to go beyond the narrative of our identity and simply land back into the experience of ourselves in our bodies, in this present moment. I experience it as a relief.
This text is part poem, part body sensing meditation, part invitation to inhabit and map your body as a way of arriving into this moment.
x Sam
Body over Mind
When thinking has taken over
The senses
And a deep groove has formed
On the brow
With no obvious way out or forward
Of the mind
Choose to redirect the flow of continual traffic
From the head
Into the body circuits of sacredness
Flesh and blood
And swallow it’s tasty offerings
In the mouth
So that you can feel again the pulse
Of sensation
That hums through every orifice and protrusion
The ear canal
Hears that beat and rhythm of life itself
The nostrils
Smell the sweet aroma of shared breath
The skin
A body envelope that expands and condenses
With love
And gives into gravity with a melting weight
The back body
Feels the support of the earth itself
The front body
Opens diffusely into the space all around
The viscera
Are vessels for receiving the flow of relaxation
From head
Through every grasping limb
To toe
Nothing to do but fully welcome and Inhabit
this soma
It will respond, whatever state we’re in.