The practice of meeting physical sensations, discomfort, and vulnerability directly without contraction or avoidance.
Dipa Ma's path to fearlessness was built on meeting experience directly. In movement practice, fear often manifests as tension, bracing, or avoidance of certain positions or sensations. Embodied fearlessness means moving into physical sensations—heat, trembling, pressure, exhaustion—with curiosity rather than resistance. When practitioners hold a deep squat in yoga, they meet muscle fatigue. In martial arts forms, they face the vulnerability of open stances. In qigong, they allow energy movements that may feel unfamiliar or intense. By repeatedly choosing presence over avoidance, the nervous system learns that sensation itself is not dangerous. The body becomes a laboratory for deconditioning fear patterns stored in posture, movement, and reflex. This embodied approach creates genuine psychological transformation, not merely intellectual understanding. Fear loses its grip when practitioners discover they can meet anything the body presents with steady awareness.
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