Softening the Guard
Slow exhalation activates the vagus nerve, shifting the nervous system toward parasympathetic dominance — heart rate variability rises, the chest muscles release, and the body stops organizing itself around threat.
Place one hand over your chest. Feel the warmth of your own palm pressing lightly against your sternum. Notice if there's any tightness there — a subtle bracing, a held breath, a shoulder pulled slightly forward. You don't need to fix it. Just notice. Take a slow inhale through your nose, and as you exhale, let your chest soften just a little into your hand. Not collapsed — just less defended. Do this three times.
Florence Scovel Shinn understood this long before the neuroscience caught up. She taught that the heart is not something you protect — it is the very dwelling place of the power you're seeking. You are not a body guarding something sacred. You are the sanctuary itself.