All Learning Reimagined with Teresa
All Learning Reimagined with Teresa Songbird Episode 3 of series on Embodied Intelligence Fascia: Connected by Design Fascia, Embodiment, and the Living Web of Learning A Hidden Web Beneath Learning Teresa opens part three of the Embodied Intelligence series by introducing fascia as a hidden web of connection throughout the body. After recapping earlier episodes on the physical body and the nervous system, she explains that this episode asks whether the body contains an internal communication network that education has largely ignored. She frames the conversation as an invitation rather than a fixed doctrine, encouraging listeners to explore what resonates with them. The Body as a Spiderweb of Communication Using the image of a spider’s web, Teresa describes the body as an interconnected system where tension or change in one area can influence another. She explains fascia as a continuous web of connective tissue surrounding muscles, bones, organs, nerves, and blood vessels. She suggests that fascia may be part of the body’s communication system and invites listeners to consider its relationship to capacity, identity, consciousness, and learning. Emotion, Safety, and Somatic Experience The episode connects fascia to emotional experience by considering how stress, grief, uncertainty, and overwhelm can show up in the jaw, stomach, chest, shoulders, or other areas of the body. Teresa clarifies that she is not claiming emotions are stored in one fixed place for everyone, but she does suggest that lived experience may influence bodily patterns of tension, protection, and movement. She also links fascia to the nervous system and the felt sense of safety needed for expansion and learning. Why Learning Cannot Be Brain-Only Teresa challenges the idea that learning happens only through the brain, especially in mainstream schooling. She argues that children learn through movement, sensation, emotion, environment, relationships, breath, comfort, and safety. From this perspective, sitting still for long periods and treating movement as a brief interruption rather than a central part of learning can disconnect education from the body’s natural intelligence. Questioning Conformity in Education Reflecting on her own decades as an educator, Teresa questions how the industrial model of schooling measures success through grading, productivity, and conformity. She contrasts that with qualities such as complexity, creativity, innovation, and pattern recognition, asking where the body fits into a system that mainly champions the mental plane. She connects this concern to the law of oneness and the law of harmony, describing health and growth as whole-system processes. A Practice for Listening to the Body The episode closes with a simple body-listening practice in which listeners sit or stand comfortably, roll the shoulders back, open the chest, reach the arms overhead, and gently twist from side to side. Teresa invites listeners to notice where the body feels free, where it feels restricted, and what it may be communicating. She encourages adults and children to build self-trust through interoception, gentle movement, reflection, grounding, and a deeper relationship with the body.
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