From scanning to sanctuary: A guided re-meeting with your own eyes as the first safe place after exile. Somatic Healing.
Somatic Programs for Trauma Recovery: https://exiledandrising.mykajabi.com/
Buy Book: The Trauma We Don't Talk About https://amzn.to/41SjKKL
✨ Please donate and support podcast continuation:
https://exiledandrising.castos.com/donate?_gl=1*143ufxc*_gcl_au*NDc5MTE5MjU3LjE3NTYwNTYzMTU
Core thesis
Hypervigilance as love’s residue: The “tired eyes” are a metaphor for a nervous system trained by harm to scan for danger, even in safety. Vigilance began as protection but has become exhausting maintenance
Receiving care is risky: When warmth arrives, the eyes “quickly look away” — a precise depiction of how praise, intimacy, or compliments can feel dysregulating to trauma survivors
From outer surveillance to inner witnessing: The pivot line — “Can they see the beam of genuine care coming from inside of yourself?” — moves the locus of safety from others’ eyes to one’s own compassionate gaze
Ritual of re-sacralization: Repeated naming — “your sacred eyes, your precious eyes” — performs a restorative rite, reassigning dignity to organs conscripted by fear
Somatic & attachment lens
Neuroception in the eyes: The piece captures neuroception (automatic threat detection) expressed through gaze behaviors — scanning, averting, contracting — classic signs of sympathetic arousal and dorsal shutdown
Gaze aversion ≠ rejection: Looking away from kindness is framed as a survival reflex, not pathology, lowering shame and inviting curiosity
Release vs collapse: Eyes that “contract with unease” dramatize the difference between protective bracing and softening into support. The invitation to “let them rest” hints at ventral vagal settling and capacity-building rather than forced relaxation
Internal secure base: “Meet them with love and pride” models reparenting — building an inner witness whose steady gaze can gradually replace the compulsion to search for safety in others
Craft choices that land
Second-person address: “Do you think about your eyes… Can you let them rest?” keeps the listener in gentle contact with their own interoception, not just the idea of it
Rhetorical questions: The cadence of questions mirrors scanning itself, then slowly decelerates into rest — form enacts function
Repetition as regulation: Recurring phrases (“tired eyes,” “sacred eyes,” “precious eyes”) anchor attention, offering a verbal rocking that invites down-shift
Naming exiled identities: The closing bow to those “exiled from your country, family, community” widens the circle from personal symptom to collective wound, aligning with the show’s trauma-justice frame
About Ana Mael: Ana Mael is a genocide survivor, somatic therapist, and author of The Trauma We Don’t Talk About. She is the founder of the Somatic Trauma Recovery Center and has dedicated her career to helping survivors reclaim their identity, dignity, and self-trust. With decades of lived experience, Ana offers a unique, unapologetic approach to healing that combines trauma justice, somatic therapy, and spiritual integrity. She advocates for vulnerability, accountability, and collective healing to dismantle the sy...
Dateline NBC
Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com
Stuff You Should Know
If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.
My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark
My Favorite Murder is a true crime comedy podcast hosted by Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark. Each week, Karen and Georgia share compelling true crimes and hometown stories from friends and listeners. Since MFM launched in January of 2016, Karen and Georgia have shared their lifelong interest in true crime and have covered stories of infamous serial killers like the Night Stalker, mysterious cold cases, captivating cults, incredible survivor stories and important events from history like the Tulsa race massacre of 1921. My Favorite Murder is part of the Exactly Right podcast network that provides a platform for bold, creative voices to bring to life provocative, entertaining and relatable stories for audiences everywhere. The Exactly Right roster of podcasts covers a variety of topics including historic true crime, comedic interviews and news, science, pop culture and more. Podcasts on the network include Buried Bones with Kate Winkler Dawson and Paul Holes, That's Messed Up: An SVU Podcast, This Podcast Will Kill You, Bananas and more.