The iROSE Podcast: Empowerment Through Creativity

Come Back to Your Senses: Bottom-Up Art Making with a Flower Petal Mandala

16 min · 12 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Come Back to Your Senses: Bottom-Up Art Making with a Flower Petal Mandala

Descripción

In this week’s episode, host Jodi Rose Gonzales explores bottom-up processing, a body-based approach to creativity that helps calm the nervous system and quiet the thinking mind. When stress, overthinking, or pressure build, creative work can become stuck in the upper brain — the part responsible for planning, judging, and evaluating.  Through story, yoga philosophy, and trauma-informed neuroscience, this episode introduces a different entry point: working from the body upward through the senses. By engaging tactile materials, movement, and rhythm, bottom-up art making activates the body’s rest-and-digest response — creating space for clarity, ease, and creative insight to emerge. You’ll also receive a simple and accessible art-based mindfulness prompt using a flower petal mandala — a sensory, temporary form that helps release perfectionism and reconnect you with your natural creative rhythm. Key Takeaways Bottom-up processing begins in the body. Sensory awareness and movement help regulate the nervous system and quiet mental overactivity. Top-down thinking can block creative flow. When the mind is over-engaged, it often keeps you stuck in evaluation and problem-solving. The body offers a reliable pathway back to ease. Engaging the senses activates the parasympathetic nervous system and supports calm focus. Creative insight emerges after regulation. When the body settles, the mind becomes clearer, more reflective, and more receptive to inner guidance. Connect With Us We’d love to hear your experience of this episode. Share your reflections inside the iROSE Society, or connect with us on Facebook or Instagram. Resources & Links Guided Meditation on Insight Timer: Come Back to Your Senses: A Bottom-Up Grounding Practice -  https://insighttimer.com/jodirose/guided-meditations/come-back-to-your-senses-a-bottom-up-creative-practice [https://insighttimer.com/jodirose/guided-meditations/come-back-to-your-senses-a-bottom-up-creative-practice] Make a donation: If this work supports you, you’re invited to give back: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=DDV9BL8EWTCJS [https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=DDV9BL8EWTCJS] Join the iROSE Society: https://www.jodirosestudio.com/society [https://www.jodirosestudio.com/society] Join the weekly live practice (Attend Open Studio): * Drop-in: https://jodirosestudio.as.me/attend [https://jodirosestudio.as.me/attend] * Four session discount (purchase your package, then select your dates; valid for 90 days): https://app.acuityscheduling.com/catalog.php?owner=27418757&action=addCart&clear=1&id=2123153 [https://app.acuityscheduling.com/catalog.php?owner=27418757&action=addCart&clear=1&id=2123153] Disclaimer This content is intended for educational and reflective purposes and is not a substitute for professional mental health care, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are experiencing distress or need support, please reach out to a licensed mental health provider or a trusted professional in your area.

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76 episodios

episode The Art of Santosha: Contentment is the Body’s Exhale artwork

The Art of Santosha: Contentment is the Body’s Exhale

In this week’s episode, host Jodi Rose Gonzales explores Santosha — the yogic practice of contentment. Drawing from yoga philosophy and trauma-informed neuroscience, this episode examines how contentment can function as a nervous system reset — a quiet shift toward calmness, regulation, and inner steadiness. You’ll also receive a reflective art-based mindfulness prompt designed to help you identify the sensory experiences, objects, and rituals that create the felt experience of contentment in your own life. Key Takeaways Santosha is not forced positivity. True contentment is not the mind talking itself into peace, but the body recognizing moments of enoughness through sensation. The body often experiences contentment before the mind explains it. Warmth, rhythm, softness, beauty, and familiar sensory experiences can quietly regulate the nervous system. Contentment shifts attention toward abundance. As we begin noticing the many small places where we already have enough, the nervous system gradually experiences greater steadiness and ease. Connect With Us We’d love to hear your reflections on this episode. Share your experience inside the iROSE Society, or connect with us on Facebook or Instagram. Resources & Links Guided Meditation on Insight Timer: The Art of Santosha: Contentment is the Body's Exhale [https://insighttimer.com/jodirose/guided-meditations/the-art-of-santosha-contentment-is-the-body-s-exhale] Support this work: If this work supports you, you’re invited to give back: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=DDV9BL8EWTCJS [https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=DDV9BL8EWTCJS] Join the iROSE Society: https://www.jodirosestudio.com/society [https://www.jodirosestudio.com/society] Join the weekly live practice (Attend Open Studio): Drop-in registration: https://jodirosestudio.as.me/attend [https://jodirosestudio.as.me/attend] Four-session package (discount): https://app.acuityscheduling.com/catalog/fe78de7d/?productId=2123153&clearCart=true [https://app.acuityscheduling.com/catalog/fe78de7d/?productId=2123153&clearCart=true] Disclaimer This content is intended for educational and reflective purposes and is not a substitute for professional mental health care, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are experiencing distress or need support, please reach out to a licensed mental health provider or a trusted professional in your area.

2 de jun de 202612 min
episode A Living Art Journal: This Practice Meets the Body Before the Mind artwork

A Living Art Journal: This Practice Meets the Body Before the Mind

In this week’s episode, host Jodi Rose Gonzales introduces the practice of the living art journal — a temporary, nature-based form of art-making that combines sensory awareness, found objects, and creative reflection. Unlike traditional journaling or sketchbook work, the living art journal uses gathered materials from the natural world to create impermanent compositions that reflect emotional experience, memory, and inner process.  Through story, yoga philosophy, trauma-informed neuroscience, and art-based mindfulness, this episode explores why the living art journal can be especially powerful during seasons of grief, overwhelm, resistance, or emotional numbness. By working through both bottom-up sensory awareness and top-down meaning-making, this practice helps quiet the nervous system, externalize interior experience, and reconnect people with parts of themselves that language alone may not fully reach. Key Takeaways The living art journal works through both the body and the mind. Sensory engagement helps regulate the nervous system while reflection and composition support meaning-making and insight. Found objects can help externalize emotional experience. Natural materials often carry sensory and emotional associations that make interior experience easier to witness and work with. The gathering process is part of the practice. Walking slowly, noticing details, and handling objects with care activates bottom-up regulation before the composition even begins. Impermanence is part of the healing. Returning materials to the earth or allowing the composition to change over time invites reflection on release, transition, and presence. Connect With Us We’d love to hear your experience of this episode. Share your reflections inside the iROSE Society, or connect with us on Facebook or Instagram. Resources & Links Guided Meditation on Insight Timer: A Perfect Pause | Jodi Rose Gonzales [https://insighttimer.com/jodirose/guided-meditations/a-perfect-pause] Support this work: If this work supports you, you’re invited to give back: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=DDV9BL8EWTCJS [https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=DDV9BL8EWTCJS] Join the iROSE Society: https://www.jodirosestudio.com/society [https://www.jodirosestudio.com/society] Join the weekly live practice (Attend Open Studio): Drop-in registration: https://jodirosestudio.as.me/attend [https://jodirosestudio.as.me/attend] Four-session package (discount): https://app.acuityscheduling.com/catalog/fe78de7d/?productId=2123153&clearCart=true [https://app.acuityscheduling.com/catalog/fe78de7d/?productId=2123153&clearCart=true] Disclaimer This content is intended for educational and reflective purposes and is not a substitute for professional mental health care, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are experiencing distress or need support, please reach out to a licensed mental health provider or a trusted professional in your area.

26 de may de 202618 min
episode Creativity in Community: Why Making Alongside Others Makes a Difference artwork

Creativity in Community: Why Making Alongside Others Makes a Difference

While creative practice is often imagined as something deeply solitary, many people experience creative isolation that reaches far beyond simply working alone. Old messages about not being “good enough,” experiences of grief or illness, and the quiet shrinking of the world that can happen during difficult seasons all shape the way we approach making.  In this week’s episode, host Jodi Rose Gonzales explores the relationship between creativity, community, and connection. Through story, yoga philosophy, and trauma-informed neuroscience, this episode explores why making alongside others can feel so regulating and restorative. From the neuroscience of co-regulation and sympathetic resonance to the yogic concept of satsang, Jodi reflects on how creative community helps quiet the inner critic, restore connection, and deepen creative practice through shared presence. Key Takeaways Creative isolation runs deeper than working alone. Old messages, grief, illness, and disconnection can all shape the nervous system’s relationship to creativity. The nervous system responds to shared presence. Co-regulation helps the body settle in the presence of other regulated nervous systems. Making alongside others changes the creative experience. Creative community can soften the inner critic and create a greater sense of ease, safety, and connection. Yoga philosophy describes this as satsang. Practice deepens when we gather in the company of others who are also in practice. Connect With Us We’d love to hear your experience of this episode. Share your reflections inside the iROSE Society, or connect with us on Facebook or Instagram. Resources & Links Guided Meditation on Insight Timer: Visualize A Fountain For Healing | Jodi Rose Gonzales [https://insighttimer.com/jodirose/guided-meditations/visualize-a-fountain-for-healing] Support this work: If this work supports you, you’re invited to give back: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=DDV9BL8EWTCJS [https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=DDV9BL8EWTCJS] Join the iROSE Society: https://www.jodirosestudio.com/society [https://www.jodirosestudio.com/society] Join the weekly live practice (Attend Open Studio): Drop-in registration: https://jodirosestudio.as.me/attend [https://jodirosestudio.as.me/attend] Four-session package (discount): https://app.acuityscheduling.com/catalog/fe78de7d/?productId=2123153&clearCart=true [https://app.acuityscheduling.com/catalog/fe78de7d/?productId=2123153&clearCart=true] Disclaimer This content is intended for educational and reflective purposes and is not a substitute for professional mental health care, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are experiencing distress or need support, please reach out to a licensed mental health provider or a trusted professional in your area.

19 de may de 202617 min
episode Come Back to Your Senses: Bottom-Up Art Making with a Flower Petal Mandala artwork

Come Back to Your Senses: Bottom-Up Art Making with a Flower Petal Mandala

In this week’s episode, host Jodi Rose Gonzales explores bottom-up processing, a body-based approach to creativity that helps calm the nervous system and quiet the thinking mind. When stress, overthinking, or pressure build, creative work can become stuck in the upper brain — the part responsible for planning, judging, and evaluating.  Through story, yoga philosophy, and trauma-informed neuroscience, this episode introduces a different entry point: working from the body upward through the senses. By engaging tactile materials, movement, and rhythm, bottom-up art making activates the body’s rest-and-digest response — creating space for clarity, ease, and creative insight to emerge. You’ll also receive a simple and accessible art-based mindfulness prompt using a flower petal mandala — a sensory, temporary form that helps release perfectionism and reconnect you with your natural creative rhythm. Key Takeaways Bottom-up processing begins in the body. Sensory awareness and movement help regulate the nervous system and quiet mental overactivity. Top-down thinking can block creative flow. When the mind is over-engaged, it often keeps you stuck in evaluation and problem-solving. The body offers a reliable pathway back to ease. Engaging the senses activates the parasympathetic nervous system and supports calm focus. Creative insight emerges after regulation. When the body settles, the mind becomes clearer, more reflective, and more receptive to inner guidance. Connect With Us We’d love to hear your experience of this episode. Share your reflections inside the iROSE Society, or connect with us on Facebook or Instagram. Resources & Links Guided Meditation on Insight Timer: Come Back to Your Senses: A Bottom-Up Grounding Practice -  https://insighttimer.com/jodirose/guided-meditations/come-back-to-your-senses-a-bottom-up-creative-practice [https://insighttimer.com/jodirose/guided-meditations/come-back-to-your-senses-a-bottom-up-creative-practice] Make a donation: If this work supports you, you’re invited to give back: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=DDV9BL8EWTCJS [https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=DDV9BL8EWTCJS] Join the iROSE Society: https://www.jodirosestudio.com/society [https://www.jodirosestudio.com/society] Join the weekly live practice (Attend Open Studio): * Drop-in: https://jodirosestudio.as.me/attend [https://jodirosestudio.as.me/attend] * Four session discount (purchase your package, then select your dates; valid for 90 days): https://app.acuityscheduling.com/catalog.php?owner=27418757&action=addCart&clear=1&id=2123153 [https://app.acuityscheduling.com/catalog.php?owner=27418757&action=addCart&clear=1&id=2123153] Disclaimer This content is intended for educational and reflective purposes and is not a substitute for professional mental health care, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are experiencing distress or need support, please reach out to a licensed mental health provider or a trusted professional in your area.

12 de may de 202616 min
episode The Bowl by the Door: A Creative Practice for Giving and Receiving artwork

The Bowl by the Door: A Creative Practice for Giving and Receiving

In this week’s episode, host Jodi Rose Gonzales explores the practice of Dana, an ancient yogic concept of generosity that describes the natural relationship between giving and receiving. While many people are skilled at offering care, support, and presence, fewer have learned how to receive in a way that allows that exchange to remain sustainable.  Through story, yoga philosophy, and nervous system science, this episode introduces the idea that giving and receiving form a circuit. When that circuit flows in only one direction, the body registers depletion—not virtue. When receiving is allowed to land, the system settles, and something essential is restored. You’ll also receive a simple but powerful art-based mindfulness prompt designed to help you explore your own relationship to giving, receiving, and the space between. Key Takeaways Giving without receiving can lead to depletion. The nervous system does not distinguish between noble and unsustainable—it simply registers the cost. Yoga describes this exchange as Dana. Giving and receiving are not opposites, but part of the same relational flow. Receiving is a nervous system event. Allowing care or support to land helps complete the circuit and restore balance. Connect With Us We’d love to hear your experience of this episode. Share your reflections inside the iROSE Society, or connect with us on Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/jodirose.studio/] or Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/jodirose.studio/]. Resources & Links Guided Meditation on Insight Timer: The Bowl by the Door: A Creative Practice for Giving and Receiving https://insighttimer.com/jodirose/guided-meditations/a-creative-practice-for-giving-and-receiving [https://insighttimer.com/jodirose/guided-meditations/a-creative-practice-for-giving-and-receiving] Support this work: If this work supports you, you’re invited to give back here [https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=DDV9BL8EWTCJS]. Join the iROSE Society: https://www.jodirosestudio.com/society [https://www.jodirosestudio.com/society] Join the weekly live practice (Attend Open Studio): https://jodirosestudio.as.me/attend [https://jodirosestudio.as.me/attend] This content is intended for educational and reflective purposes and is not a substitute for professional mental health care, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are experiencing distress or need support, please reach out to a licensed mental health provider or a trusted professional in your area.

5 de may de 202613 min