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My Body Is Not the Enemy—It’s My Home

7 January 20268 June 2025

It’s hard to feel at home in your body when it’s carried pain. Sometimes, when you’ve been hurt, abandoned, judged, or violated, your body starts to feel like a battlefield. You might look at yourself and only see damage. You might feel angry at your body for being “too much,” “too loud,” “not enough,” or just too hard to live in.

But your body didn’t betray you. It protected you the only way it knew how.
If it froze—it was trying to keep you safe.
If it shut down—it was trying to survive.
If it changed—gained weight, lost energy, felt numb—that was your nervous system doing its job in a world that didn’t feel safe.

Your body didn’t cause the pain. It held the pain. And it kept going.

You don’t need to worship your body or pretend to love every part of it. That’s not the goal. What matters is beginning to see it differently—not as the enemy, not as the problem, but as your home. The place that has never once left your side. The one thing that’s been there through every heartbreak, every memory, every moment of joy or shame or fear.

This body—your body—deserves kindness. Deserves care.
Not because it’s perfect. But because it’s yours.

You can start small. You can stretch in the morning and say thank you. You can rest when you’re tired without guilt. You can eat without punishment. You can touch your skin and remind yourself, “I live here. And this place matters.”

Today, just try telling yourself:
“My body is not the enemy. It’s my home. And I am learning to come home to myself.”

That’s enough. That’s more than enough.

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  • Beyond Religion
  • Coming Back to Myself
  • Life and Livelihood
  • Love, Redefined
  • Notes from Life
  • Raising Humans
  • The Quiet Bloom
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