Beyond Horizyns
Beyond Horizyns with CJ Sugita-Jackson, PhD Think about how you feel when you walk into your home right now. Not the home you are planning. The one you actually live in. Does it feel like exhaling? Or does it feel like adding something else to carry? Here is what modern science has confirmed that most of us were never taught. The space you inhabit is not a neutral container for your life. It is an active participant in it. The light in your rooms is changing your hormone levels right now. The clutter on your counter is measurably elevating your cortisol. The color on your walls is affecting your nervous system. And the arrangement of your space is influencing how energy, both electromagnetic and psychological, moves through your daily experience. For thousands of years, human civilizations understood this so thoroughly that they built entire sciences around it. This episode recovers that understanding and brings it directly into your home. The Ancient Sciences Feng Shui, developed within Taoist philosophy over more than three thousand years, is not about lucky objects or wealth corners. It is a sophisticated observational system that spent millennia documenting the relationship between spatial arrangement, energy flow, and human experience. We go deep on the two primary classical schools, the Form School and the Compass School, and deliver the complete Bagua map with all eight life areas explained so you can immediately apply it to your own space. We cover all five Feng Shui elements, wood, fire, earth, metal, and water, and explain exactly what each one looks and feels like in a home environment, what its deficiency produces, and how to activate it. We explore Vastu Shastra, the ancient Indian science of sacred architecture whose foundational texts predate Feng Shui in written form, including the Brahmasthan, the sacred central space, and why Vastu's directional wisdom aligns precisely with modern circadian biology research on morning light exposure. We also explore the Navajo hogan as a dwelling designed as a model of the cosmos, the Japanese tea room as the most precise example of a space engineered to produce a specific quality of inner experience, the Roman lararium as the household shrine that placed the sacred inside the kitchen rather than outside of it, and the Celtic hearth traditions that understood the home as the first temple. The Science Roger Ulrich's landmark 1984 study published in Science documented that hospital patients whose windows overlooked trees recovered measurably faster, used less pain medication, and went home sooner than those facing a brick wall. The only variable was the view. Research published in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin found that women who described their homes as cluttered showed elevated cortisol not just at home but throughout the entire day. The disorder followed them everywhere. We cover the neuroscience of ceiling height and cognitive processing, the specific color wavelengths that lower heart rate and blood pressure versus those that elevate anxiety, and the lighting revolution that most people have completely missed. Your standard LED evening lighting is suppressing melatonin and telling your nervous system it is still noon. Switching to warm amber spectrum light one hour before sleep produces measurable improvements in sleep quality within days. We also cover frankincense and the TRPV3 ion channel, the specific brain receptor that the resin burned in sacred spaces for thousands of years actually activates. And the acoustic research on water sounds, nature recordings, and the specific decibel level that promotes creative thinking. Six Practical Steps We close with six immediately actionable steps requiring no renovation, no significant budget, and no expertise. Clear before you create. Apply the Bagua with one intention. Address your lighting. Build your altar. Engage all five senses deliberately. And create your technology-free sacred zone, backed by Harvard Medical School research on screen light and melatonin suppression. Sacred space is not a luxury. It has always been available to everyone. In this episode: * The Bagua map and all five Feng Shui elements explained fully * Vastu Shastra and the Brahmasthan * Navajo hogan, Japanese tea room, Roman lararium, and Celtic hearth traditions * Roger Ulrich's hospital window study and the clutter cortisol research * Color psychology, lighting biology, scent neuroscience, and acoustic medicine * Frankincense and the TRPV3 ion channel * Six practical steps starting tonight with one candle and one clear surface * Tea4Peace tip on the tea corner as complete sacred space in miniature References include: Roger Ulrich, Science (1984) — Esther Sternberg, Healing Spaces — Darby Saxbe, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin — Joan Meyers Levy and Rui Zhu, Journal of Consumer Research — FASEB Journal, frankincense research — Journal of Biological Rhythms — Harvard Medical School, melatonin and screen light — Robert Wicklund, symbolic self completion theory — BJ Fogg, Stanford Connect: * Horizyns platform preview: www.horizynsinc.com * Horizyns community: www.horizyns.com * Tea4Peace TranquiliTea Lounge: [link in show notes] Beyond Horizyns — new episodes every week. Follow the show wherever you listen. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2602624/support]
13 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Beyond Horizyns!