#14: What Your Body Remembers – Reclaiming Presence in a World That Forgot

 

What does it really mean to be natural?

Not what’s familiar. Not what’s been normalized.
But what your body remembers—instinctively, intuitively, without needing permission.

In this deeply reflective episode, we explore how modern life has confused performance for presence and productivity for worth.

We unpack the hidden cost of disconnection and offer a somatic pause to begin returning to the rhythm beneath the noise… the part of you that was never lost, only covered. You’ll hear a story about the “tree in the container,” a metaphor for survival-based adaptation, and how healing is not about undoing the past but re-rooting into truth.

This episode includes:

  • A reflection on what it means to be natural

  • The difference between normalization and alignment

  • A somatic pause to return to the body’s intelligence

  • Why “stillness” isn’t an escape, but a homecoming

Let this be an invitation, not to become someone new, but to remember who you are underneath the performance.

🧡 If this spoke to something inside you, share it with someone who might need to hear it.

Want to go deeper?

If today’s reflection stirred something in your body and you're ready to explore how to reconnect with your natural state, you may find deeper support in Returning to Your Nature in Practice, a gentle companion to Episode 14.

Veronica

Veronica Penacho is a writer, podcaster, yoga teacher, and alignment guide exploring the deeper layers of the mind, body, and soul. Her work is rooted in the knowing that alignment is not about perfection but about learning to meet yourself fully, as you are.

With over a decade of experience in yoga, breathwork, and self-inquiry, Veronica blends yogic philosophy, energy awareness, and practical reflection tools to support intentional growth and deep personal transformation.

https://alignwithveronica.com
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#15: You Don’t Need More Reminders. You Need to Remember.

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#13: Surrender Isn’t a Concept. It’s a Return to Wholeness