Using body-centered awareness practices to identify and gently release trauma patterns inherited from poverty lineages across generations.
Poverty and its health consequences transmit intergenerationally through both material deprivation and stored somatic trauma. Children of parents who experienced food insecurity, medical neglect, or health-based shame often inherit heightened nervous system activation, anxiety around resources, and disconnection from bodily signals. Dipa Ma's precise attention to subtle somatic experience provides tools for recognizing these inherited patterns without pathologizing them. Through patient observation during meditation, individuals can notice where they hold ancestral fear in their body: the grip in the chest, the vigilance in the eyes, the perpetual bracing for catastrophe. This awareness, held with compassion rather than judgment, creates possibility for release. The body-mind can gradually learn new patterns through sustained attention and kindness. This isn't therapy requiring external experts but a contemplative practice accessible to anyone willing to sit with their own felt experience. Breaking intergenerational trauma patterns becomes possible through this direct, dignified investigation of inherited bodily wisdom and wounding.
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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