Coming back to your body, coming back to yourself
To be embodied is to be present in your body.
To not just know something with your mind, but to feel it.
In your skin, your breath, your belly.
Embodiment is the practice of living in the body, not just thinking about it.
It means listening to the signals your body gives you.
Trusting your felt sense.
Moving from inner awareness rather than external pressure.
And slowly learning that your body is not an obstacle, but a home.
What embodiment means to me
Embodiment has been a doorway back to myself.
For years I lived mostly in my head. Analysing, overthinking, pushing through. I was disconnected from what I truly felt and needed. And when I did feel something, I didn’t always trust it.
Through embodiment practices, I began to rebuild a relationship with my body.
I learned to recognise when I was pushing too far. I learned what a yes feels like, and what a no feels like.
I began to tune into my breath and belly, to soften into my pelvic area and to reconnect with my womb.
As a woman, I’ve discovered that the womb and lower belly are not just physical spaces, but centres of power and wisdom.
When I slow down and listen there, I feel my truth more clearly. I can move energy, feel emotions rise and shift, and anchor into a deeper sense of self.
I started tuning in to the different chakras, gently feeling into each area, noticing what’s present, what needs space, and what messages are held in sensation.
Now, I meet myself through feeling, not fixing.
Through awareness, not effort.
Through softness, not strategy.
Why embodiment matters
In a world that teaches us to override our body’s messages, embodiment is a quiet revolution.
It invites you to:
- Reclaim your body as a safe and sacred space
- Deepen your connection with intuition and emotional truth
- Regulate your nervous system through body awareness
- Release tension and emotion in healthy, gentle ways
- Explore sensuality, cyclical energy, and grounded pleasure
- Set clearer boundaries by sensing what is true
- Listen to the deeper messages hidden in sensation
Embodiment helps you anchor into your inner world and live from there.
What embodiment can look like
Embodiment doesn’t have to be dramatic.
It doesn’t need to look like anything from the outside.
It’s about how it feels inside.
It can be:
- Placing your hand on your womb and simply breathing
- Letting your hips move with the rhythm of your breath
- Noticing the sensation in your heart or throat
- Feeling your feet on the ground when you speak your truth
- Tuning into your chakras or specific areas and asking: what’s here?
You might explore:
- Grounding and breathwork
- Free movement or intuitive dance
- Somatic journalling or self-inquiry
- Touch, sound, or visualisation
- Sensory awareness in stillness or in motion
The key is to slow down and listen.
Especially helpful for
- Women reconnecting with their body, womb, and cycle
- People who feel disconnected from emotions or sensations
- Those who overthink or stay “in their head”
- Sensitive or neurodivergent nervous systems
- Anyone healing from stress, burnout, or trauma
- People longing for more truth, presence, and inner power
And for men, embodiment offers a powerful path back to presence, strength, and emotional integrity.
It supports the ability to lead from grounded confidence, rather than control.
To stay open in connection, even when emotions arise.
To move from clarity, not reactivity.
To feel and hold space, for yourself and others, with rooted awareness.
Embodiment helps restore a healthy connection with the masculine, one that is not about hardening, but deepening.
Not about dominance, but attunement.
Not about perfection, but presence.
Masculine & Feminine Embodiment Explained
Two qualities. One body. A dance of energy and awareness.
Embodiment is not gendered.
It lives in all bodies. In all people. In every breath.
But within each of us, there is a unique balance of masculine and feminine energies, not as roles, but as qualities of being.
Understanding these qualities can support deeper presence, emotional fluency, and relational harmony within yourself and with others.
What is feminine embodiment?
Feminine embodiment is the practice of softening into feeling.
It is receptive, fluid, emotional, intuitive, creative.
It listens before speaking. It breathes before deciding. It surrenders not in weakness, but in trust.
In the body, feminine embodiment may feel like:
- Moving from sensation rather than thought
- Breathing into your womb or belly
- Expressing emotions freely
- Trusting the body’s rhythms and intuition
- Exploring sensuality, cycle awareness, and fluid movement
- Feeling safe in not-knowing, in being, in receiving
For women, feminine embodiment is often a journey of reclaiming what has been suppressed.
For men, it may be a path toward deeper emotional presence and inner softness.
For everyone, it offers access to aliveness, vulnerability, and relational depth.
What is masculine embodiment?
Masculine embodiment is the practice of cultivating presence, direction, and grounded awareness.
It is structure, stillness, clarity, consciousness.
Not rigid. Not controlling. But deeply rooted and trustworthy.
In the body, masculine embodiment may feel like:
- Being anchored in the breath and spine
- Holding steady in discomfort without shutting down
- Leading with clarity and integrity
- Creating safety through presence
- Listening deeply without needing to fix
- Moving from vision and grounded purpose
For men, masculine embodiment is often a return to strength that includes care.
For women, it can bring confidence, boundaries, and sovereignty.
For all of us, it offers a container to hold and honour what moves within.
The dance between the two
Masculine and feminine embodiment are not opposites, but complements.
They can shift and flow within you, depending on the moment.
A strong container (masculine) allows soft emotion to be felt (feminine).
Emotional awareness (feminine) brings depth to direction (masculine).
When the two are in dialogue, not in battle, something whole can emerge:
- A body that moves and stills
- A voice that speaks from truth and listens with care
- A heart that leads and follows, gives and receives
This is not about fitting into a fixed identity.
It is about learning the language of your body, your energy, your truth and meeting yourself with compassion.
Picture: Maja Elders