The practice of cultivating internal silence to access the body's subtle communications, patterns, and inherent wisdom beneath mental noise.
Antar mouna, inner silence, represents a deliberate quieting of mental activity to reveal the body's natural intelligence beneath the constant chatter of thought. Patanjali's teaching that mental fluctuations (vritti) obscure true perception applies profoundly to somatic awareness; the chattering mind prevents genuine listening to bodily signals, creating disconnection and dissociation. Through antar mouna practices—whether meditation, silent retreat, or meditative movement—practitioners develop capacity to notice what the body is communicating when the mental volume decreases. This silence is not empty but pregnant with information: the nervous system's subtle patterns, emotional residues held in tissue, areas of contraction or expansion, the body's natural rhythms and preferences. Many modern practitioners struggle with somatic intelligence precisely because they've never cultivated sufficient internal silence to hear the body's quiet voice. Antar mouna creates the spaciousness necessary for authentic body knowledge, where sensation and perception aren't filtered through constant mental interpretation. This practice reveals that the body speaks clearly when we finally stop talking to ourselves.
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