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“from the Prize winning poem - UNBORN in the book Terra Affirmative. Under the surface / her body is curled, / seed of the one race, / shell of the world. // She is thw waterfall, / she is the womb, / she is the bubble, /she is the tomb. // Her hair flows upward, / blood red of the birth. / Her arms are folded / deep into the earth. // She is the fern, / she is the bark, / she is the lantern, / she is the dark. // Her eyes burn the flame / of the old and the young. / Her breath is the name / of each branch of each lung. // She is the ingredient. / She is the blend. / She is the beginning. / She is the end.”

— Jay Woodman, Riding the Escalator and Terra Affirmative, Share via Whatsapp

“A good woman keeps her mind right and her body tight.”

— Habeeb Akande, Share via Whatsapp

“You are a human being, not a human body.”

— Kate Wicker, Weightless: Making Peace with Your Body, Share via Whatsapp

“The person senses what it feels like to be free from inhibitions. At the same time he feels connected and integrated – with his body and, through his body, with his environment. He has a sense of well-being and inner peace. He gains the knowledge that the life of the body resides in its involuntary aspect. […] Unfortunately these beautiful feelings do not always hold up under the stress of daily living in our modern culture. The pace, the pressure and the philosophy of our times are antithetical to life.”

— Alexander Lowen, Bioenergetics, Share via Whatsapp

“Bioenergetics is an adventure in self-discovery. It differs from similar explorations into the nature of the self by attempting to understand the human personality in terms of the human body. Most previous explorations focused their investigations on the mind.”

— Alexander Lowen, Bioenergetics, Share via Whatsapp

“Love yourself enough to take care of your health of mind, body, and soul as a top priority, then you lll be fit to face anything.”

— Jay Woodman, Share via Whatsapp

“He’s like a hero come back from the war, a poor maimed bastard living out the reality of his dreams. Wherever he sits himself the chair collapses; whatever door he enters the room is empty: whatever he puts in his mouth leaves a bad taste. Everything is just the same as it was before; the elements are unchanged, the dream is no different than the reality. Only, between the time he went to sleep and the time he woke up, his body was stolen.”

— Henry Miller, Tropic of Cancer, Share via Whatsapp

“Although contemplating the nature of the body highlights its less attractive features, the purpose of the exercise is not to demonize the body. While it is certainly true that at times the discourses describe the human body in rather negative terms, some of these instances occur in a particular context in which the point being made is that the speakers in question have overcome all attachment to their body. In contrast, the Kāyagatāsati Sutta takes the physical bliss of absorption attainment as an object for body contemplation. This passage clearly demonstrates that contemplation of the body is not necessarily linked to repugnance and loathing. The purpose of contemplating the nature of the body is to bring its unattractive aspects to the forefront of one s attention, thereby placing the attractive aspects previously emphasized in a more balanced context. The aim is a balanced and detached attitude towards the body. With such a balanced attitude, one sees the body merely as a product of conditions, a product with which one need not identify.”

— Anālayo, Satipaṭṭhāna: The Direct Path to Realization, Share via Whatsapp

“The human body is the most ordinary of things, yet also the most extraordinary.”

— Will Forest, Co-ed Naked Philosophy, Share via Whatsapp

“My body is tired as worn out rug, but my brain (if i had) is always full of curiosity, jumping around for seeking new funs. If they could learn how to be cooperative each others, my life could be way easier... sigh*”

— Hiroko Sakai, Share via Whatsapp