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By Pascaline Odogwu | Source
Your body often knows before your mind does. Learn how to quiet the noise, restore safety, and rebuild trust in the wisdom of your gut, the powerful intuitive system that signals safety, warning, and truth.
There are moments when your body reacts before you have words for what’s happening.
Your stomach tightens, your appetite disappears. A quiet nausea settles in, or a sudden calm arrives without explanation. You might try to reason it away. You tell yourself you’re overthinking, being dramatic, imagining things. But the body doesn’t speak in arguments. It speaks in sensation.
Before I learned to call it intuition, my body knew.
Before I could explain why a place didn’t feel safe, why a decision felt wrong, or why a person unsettled me despite their kindness, my gut responded. It folded inward, went silent, or grew heavy in a way that felt like a warning I wasn’t yet ready to honor.
We are often taught to distrust this kind of knowing. Feelings are framed as unreliable, especially bodily ones. Be logical, we are told. Be rational. Gather evidence. Wait for proof. Explain yourself. And yet, time and again, it is the body that reacts first, long before the mind catches up.
Physical Proof of the Body’s Wisdom
The gut is both a physical system in the body and a metaphysical sixth sense.
Science is beginning to explain what the body has always known. There is a complex network of neurons embedded in the walls of the gastrointestinal tract known as the enteric nervous system. Often called the “second brain,” it contains hundreds of millions of neurons and operates largely independently of the brain in the skull. It processes information, learns patterns, and communicates constantly with the central nervous system—not in words, but signals.
The gut is deeply involved in emotional processing. It produces neurotransmitters, including serotonin, and responds rapidly to stress, safety, familiarity, and threat. When something feels off, the gut often registers it before conscious thought forms a narrative. It doesn’t predict the future—it remembers the past. Patterns of harm, overwhelm, or protection are tracked, learned, and remembered, and the body responds first.
You might notice it in everyday moments, too. Like when you finish a task and it looks done, but something feels off. You can’t really put your finger on it, but your gut is nudging you: Not yet. Maybe it’s a detail that needs shifting, a section that needs trimming, or something that needs removing entirely. You fiddle with it, adjust it, move things around, and then finally it clicks. There’s a little flutter of relief, a quiet satisfaction that spreads through your chest and stomach. Your body knew all along it wasn’t truly finished, and now it finally feels right.
Many of us are trained to override these signals. We silence hunger, fatigue, discomfort, and unease in order to be productive, agreeable, or strong. We say yes when our bodies say no. Over time, this creates a fracture, not just between mind and body, but between us and our own trust.
Stress Scrambles the Signals
Trauma, chronic stress, and prolonged emotional strain can distort these signals. When the nervous system remains in a heightened state, the gut may react with anxiety rather than clarity. Appetite changes, nausea, or digestive unrest may appear without clear cause. These are not imagined sensations; they are communication. The body is trying to protect itself with instructions that may no longer fit the present moment.
Physical nourishment plays a role here, too. The gut not only responds to emotional experience but to what it is given to work with. Irregular eating, highly processed foods, and constant metabolic stress can heighten gut reactivity, making signals feel louder and more confusing. When the body is nourished consistently, the nervous system settles, inflammation lowers, and gut signals often become quieter and clearer. This is not about dietary perfection or control, but support. The body reads nourishment as safety, and clarity often follows.
The work, then, is not to silence the gut, but to restore safety so its messages can be heard clearly. Regulation, rest, nourishment, and emotional honesty help the system recalibrate. When the body learns it is safe, its guidance becomes steadier, quieter, more trustworthy.
Trust May Take Practice
Listening to the body is a practice of presence. It requires slowing down enough to notice sensation without immediately trying to explain it away. It asks us to be honest about what we feel, even when it inconveniences plans or challenges logic. Trusting your gut is not about reacting impulsively. It is about building a relationship with your own body, learning its language, and honoring it consistently.
It’s when you pause and ask, What does my body know right now? It’s when you allow yourself to feel tension instead of pushing through it, or feel relief instead of dismissing it. With practice, you begin to repair a relationship with yourself that may have been neglected for years.
The body does not shout. It whispers. It is patient. It waits for us to slow down, to pay attention, to align ourselves with its guidance.
All it asks is that we listen. Trust doesn’t grow in certainty, but in the quiet attention we give ourselves.
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