Viewing food and the eating process itself as sources of direct bodily knowledge and spiritual insight, not merely fuel or medicine.
For Dipa Ma, the body was not an obstacle to transcendence but a gateway to it. This reframes nutrition entirely: food becomes a teacher offering real-time feedback about our state, needs, and alignment. A particular grain, vegetable, or preparation method speaks to us through how we feel after consuming it—energy, clarity, ease, or heaviness. This somatic epistemology honors both scientific nutrition and traditional knowledge systems, which emerged from centuries of embodied observation. Different cultures developed food practices attuned to climate, seasons, and local bodies. By cultivating the sensitivity Dipa Ma exemplified—noticing subtle shifts in vitality and consciousness—we become our own nutritional researchers, integrating what science tells us with what our direct experience reveals. Food becomes dharma, each meal a chance to deepen awareness and trust in the body's intrinsic wisdom.
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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