Transforming fear and trauma by accepting the body's wisdom and sensations rather than fighting or suppressing them.
Dipa Ma developed profound fearlessness not through denying fear but through direct embodied experience of its impermanent nature. Her teaching on fear release emphasizes that spiritual vessels must contain and transform difficult emotions, not bypass them. When practitioners sit with physical sensations—pain, tension, trembling—without resistance or judgment, fear gradually dissolves as they discover its constructed nature. This concept integrates trauma-informed somatic therapy with Buddhist psychology: the body holds wisdom about our defensive patterns and habitual reactions. By developing compassionate attention toward physical experience, fear loses its grip over spiritual development. This principle appears across traditions in practices like Hakomi somatic psychotherapy, Somatic Experiencing, and traditional healing rituals that recognize the body as an intelligent system capable of self-regulation. For embodied spirituality, accepting the body means trusting its intrinsic capacity for healing and liberation.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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