<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/">
  <channel>
    <title>embodiedcognition &amp;mdash; mindyourmegan</title>
    <link>https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/tag:embodiedcognition</link>
    <description></description>
    <pubDate>Fri, 08 May 2026 07:54:57 +0000</pubDate>
    <item>
      <title>Embodied Cognition  </title>
      <link>https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/embodied-cognition?pk_campaign=rss-feed</link>
      <description>&lt;![CDATA[Embodied Cognition  &#xA;Subtitle: Why thought lives in muscle memory  &#xA;&#xA;Author: Megan A. Green  &#xA;Project: Cognitive Culture Series  &#xA;Date: October 2025  &#xA;&#xA;---&#xA;&#xA;Abstract  &#xA;Brains don’t think in isolation; bodies do.  &#xA;This essay explores how sensation, posture, and movement shape cognition—and why survivors often “think with their bodies” long before language catches up.  &#xA;&#xA;---&#xA;&#xA;The Body as Hardware  &#xA;Every cognitive act rides on physical substrate: breath, heartbeat, muscle tone.  &#xA;A tense jaw biases perception toward threat; relaxed shoulders expand interpretive bandwidth.  &#xA;To change thought, we often have to first change posture.  &#xA;&#xA;Western psychology long treated the body as a transport device for the brain.  &#xA;But neuroscience now shows feedback loops everywhere—gut bacteria modulating mood, heartbeat rhythm influencing moral reasoning.  &#xA;The mind is a distributed network, not a command center.  &#xA;&#xA;---&#xA;&#xA;Memory Stored as Motion  &#xA;Trauma encodes itself somatically.  &#xA;When words disappear, muscles remember.  &#xA;That’s why therapy that includes movement—yoga, dance, physical grounding—restores narratives that talk alone can’t reach.  &#xA;&#xA;In steno or voice writing, this becomes visible: cognition flows through fine-motor timing.  &#xA;Accuracy improves not just with practice but with regulation—breathing, rhythm, physical trust.  &#xA;Embodied learning is literally nervous-system literacy.  &#xA;&#xA;---&#xA;&#xA;The Politics of Disembodiment  &#xA;Digital culture trains us to live neck-up.  &#xA;We scroll, type, and argue as if cognition happens only in pixels.  &#xA;The cost is empathy erosion: when the body is numbed, compassion lags.  &#xA;&#xA;For disabled or neurodivergent users, embodiment looks different but no less real.  &#xA;A screen reader’s cadence, a tactile keyboard, or a cane’s vibration are all extensions of thought.  &#xA;Accessibility isn’t accommodation—it’s cognitive architecture.  &#xA;&#xA;---&#xA;&#xA;Reclaiming Somatic Intelligence  &#xA;Re-embodiment isn’t just wellness; it’s epistemology.  &#xA;To feel again is to know again.  &#xA;Grounding, pacing, sensory awareness—all rebuild the bandwidth that trauma and technology erode.  &#xA;&#xA;So the next time insight arrives, notice where you feel it—  &#xA;the tightening chest, the lifted spine, the softening jaw.  &#xA;That’s cognition in its native format.  &#xA;&#xA;---&#xA;&#xA;TL;DR  &#xA;The brain doesn’t think alone.  &#xA;Mind is movement.  &#xA;Feeling is data.  &#xA;&#xA;---&#xA;&#xA;Tags  &#xA;#CognitiveCulture  #EmbodiedCognition  #Neurodiversity  #TraumaRecovery  #Accessibility  #MeganWrites]]&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2 id="embodied-cognition" id="embodied-cognition">Embodied Cognition</h2>

<p><strong>Subtitle:</strong> Why thought lives in muscle memory</p>

<p><em>Author:</em> <strong>Megan A. Green</strong><br/>
<em>Project:</em> Cognitive Culture Series<br/>
<em>Date:</em> October 2025</p>

<hr/>

<h3 id="abstract" id="abstract">Abstract</h3>

<p>Brains don’t think in isolation; bodies do.<br/>
This essay explores how sensation, posture, and movement shape cognition—and why survivors often “think with their bodies” long before language catches up.</p>

<hr/>

<h3 id="the-body-as-hardware" id="the-body-as-hardware">The Body as Hardware</h3>

<p>Every cognitive act rides on physical substrate: breath, heartbeat, muscle tone.<br/>
A tense jaw biases perception toward threat; relaxed shoulders expand interpretive bandwidth.<br/>
To change thought, we often have to first change posture.</p>

<p>Western psychology long treated the body as a transport device for the brain.<br/>
But neuroscience now shows feedback loops everywhere—gut bacteria modulating mood, heartbeat rhythm influencing moral reasoning.<br/>
The mind is a distributed network, not a command center.</p>

<hr/>

<h3 id="memory-stored-as-motion" id="memory-stored-as-motion">Memory Stored as Motion</h3>

<p>Trauma encodes itself somatically.<br/>
When words disappear, muscles remember.<br/>
That’s why therapy that includes movement—yoga, dance, physical grounding—restores narratives that talk alone can’t reach.</p>

<p>In steno or voice writing, this becomes visible: cognition flows through fine-motor timing.<br/>
Accuracy improves not just with practice but with <strong>regulation</strong>—breathing, rhythm, physical trust.<br/>
Embodied learning is literally nervous-system literacy.</p>

<hr/>

<h3 id="the-politics-of-disembodiment" id="the-politics-of-disembodiment">The Politics of Disembodiment</h3>

<p>Digital culture trains us to live neck-up.<br/>
We scroll, type, and argue as if cognition happens only in pixels.<br/>
The cost is empathy erosion: when the body is numbed, compassion lags.</p>

<p>For disabled or neurodivergent users, embodiment looks different but no less real.<br/>
A screen reader’s cadence, a tactile keyboard, or a cane’s vibration are all <em>extensions of thought.</em><br/>
Accessibility isn’t accommodation—it’s cognitive architecture.</p>

<hr/>

<h3 id="reclaiming-somatic-intelligence" id="reclaiming-somatic-intelligence">Reclaiming Somatic Intelligence</h3>

<p>Re-embodiment isn’t just wellness; it’s epistemology.<br/>
To feel again is to know again.<br/>
Grounding, pacing, sensory awareness—all rebuild the bandwidth that trauma and technology erode.</p>

<p>So the next time insight arrives, notice <em>where</em> you feel it—<br/>
the tightening chest, the lifted spine, the softening jaw.<br/>
That’s cognition in its native format.</p>

<hr/>

<h3 id="tl-dr" id="tl-dr">TL;DR</h3>

<p>The brain doesn’t think alone.<br/>
Mind is movement.<br/>
Feeling is data.</p>

<hr/>

<h4 id="tags" id="tags">Tags</h4>

<p><a href="https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/tag:CognitiveCulture" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">CognitiveCulture</span></a>  <a href="https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/tag:EmbodiedCognition" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">EmbodiedCognition</span></a>  <a href="https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/tag:Neurodiversity" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">Neurodiversity</span></a>  <a href="https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/tag:TraumaRecovery" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">TraumaRecovery</span></a>  <a href="https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/tag:Accessibility" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">Accessibility</span></a>  <a href="https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/tag:MeganWrites" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">MeganWrites</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <guid>https://megan.madamgreen.xyz/embodied-cognition</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 15 Oct 2025 12:24:44 +0000</pubDate>
    </item>
  </channel>
</rss>