TLDR: Sri Preethaji discusses the inseparable link between consciousness, internal states, and physical health. When the inner state shifts—from stress to ease, from resistance to acceptance—the body biochemically responds. The conversation explores "digesting life," the process of metabolizing unresolved past experiences so they no longer unconsciously drive present behavior and chronic physical symptoms. True health is not symptom management but liberation from stressful internal states, harmony in the body's energetic systems, and freedom from inherited and karmic patterns that repeat across generations and lifetimes.
Why Does the Body Reflect Internal Experience?
The body is not separate from consciousness; it is an expression of the inner state. When the mind is in stress, fear, or resistance, the nervous system activates the sympathetic branch—the fight-flight response—releasing cortisol, adrenaline, and other stress hormones. These neurochemicals directly affect inflammation, immune function, digestion, and cellular regeneration. Conversely, when the inner state is characterized by ease, trust, or peace, the parasympathetic nervous system activates, supporting healing, rest, and restoration.
The mechanism is bidirectional. Not only do internal states trigger bodily responses; the body's condition also influences perception and emotional tone. Chronic tension in muscles feeds back to the brain as a signal of threat, reinforcing anxious thought patterns. Poor digestion creates a depleted internal environment, which the consciousness interprets as lack or scarcity. This feedback loop means that healing the body and healing the mind are not separate projects—they are one integrated process.
What Is "Digesting Life" and Why Does It Matter?
Most people live with undigested past experiences. When something traumatic, shameful, or overwhelming occurs, the nervous system may lock it away—partially processed, stored in the tissues, still exerting influence without conscious awareness. This is what Sri Preethaji refers to as failing to "digest" life. Just as the digestive system breaks down food into usable nutrients, consciousness must break down experience into wisdom. If experience remains undigested, it ferments—it becomes resentment, regret, or unconscious reactivity.
Undigested experiences act as invisible scripts. A person may find themselves repeatedly entering the same relationship dynamics, attracting similar conflicts, or developing physical symptoms in the same bodily regions, lifetime after lifetime, without understanding why. The pattern persists because the root experience was never truly metabolized. The body remembers what the conscious mind has forgotten. Muscle tension, chronic pain, hormonal dysregulation, and autoimmune responses often point to experiences the being has not yet digested.
Digesting life means bringing consciousness to what was split off or denied. It means feeling what was avoided, speaking what was silenced, and integrating the lesson so that the past no longer unconsciously runs the present. This is not intellectual analysis alone; it requires the body and nervous system to complete the process. When digestion occurs, the person experiences a genuine release—a softening in the tissue, a shift in breathing, a lightness in the being.
How Does Awakening at the Level of Consciousness Break Patterns?
Awakening is not merely a mystical or spiritual achievement. It is a functional shift in how consciousness relates to experience. When consciousness awakens, the person begins to witness the repetitive inner patterns—the automatic thoughts, the habitual emotional reactions, the ingrained physical contractions—without being entirely identified with them. This witnessing space is freedom.
From this awakened awareness, the person is no longer mechanically compelled to repeat old patterns. If a pattern of anxiety arises, the awakened being can observe: "This is anxiety. It is here because of an undigested past. It is not the truth of this moment." This simple shift—from being the anxiety to observing it—creates a discontinuity in the automatic chain reaction. The stimulus no longer directly triggers the response.
More profoundly, awakening at the level of consciousness allows the being to access what might be called karmic or inherited patterns—deeply embedded conditioning passed down through family lines or carried from previous lifetimes, according to spiritual understanding. At ordinary consciousness, these patterns feel fated, inevitable, "just how I am." At awakened consciousness, they are recognized as patterns, not identity. The being can then consciously choose to engage differently, to metabolize the charge, and to release the pattern rather than pass it to the next generation.
What Is True Health Beyond Symptom Treatment?
Conventional medicine often addresses health as a problem-solving exercise: symptoms appear, and treatments aim to suppress or eliminate them. This approach has its place, but it misses the deeper dimension of health that Sri Preethaji points toward. True health, in this view, consists of three interwoven elements:
- Freedom from stressful states: The nervous system rests in parasympathetic tone more often than sympathetic activation. The being is not chronically in fight-flight-freeze. The inner landscape is characterized more by ease, presence, and trust than by vigilance, worry, or resistance.
- Harmony in the body's energy: The body's subtle energy systems—what yogic and Ayurvedic traditions call prana, chi, or vital force—flow smoothly. There are no chronic blockages, no regions of deadness alternating with regions of over-stimulation. Energy circulates, regenerates, and renews.
- Release from inherited and karmic patterns: The person is not compulsively repeating the traumas, diseases, or behavioral patterns of previous generations or previous lifetimes. Genetic predispositions may exist, but they are not destiny. The person can consciously metabolize and transform what was inherited.
From this perspective, a person taking medication for blood pressure while still in chronic internal conflict is not fully healthy. A person with perfect lab work but a fragmented, undigested emotional life is not fully healthy. Health is an integrated state in which the being, the body, and the consciousness are aligned and flowing together.
How Do Past Unresolved Experiences Continue to Influence the Present?
The nervous system does not forget. Even when the conscious mind suppresses or denies a difficult experience, the body holds a complete record. The muscles may remain contracted in a protective pattern. Breathing may stay shallow in the region where panic was felt. The immune system may remain hypervigilant, scanning for threat. These somatic imprints act as a background operating system, continuously influencing perception, emotion, and behavior.
A person who experienced abandonment in childhood may develop an anxious attachment style, unconsciously recreating abandonment scenarios as an adult to resolve the original trauma (a failed attempt by the psyche to integrate it). Another person with undigested shame may develop a perfectionist drive or a dismissive attitude toward the body—ways of avoiding the vulnerable truth of being human. A third person with undigested rage may develop chronic inflammation or autoimmune disease, the body expressing internally what the person could not express externally.
These are not metaphorical connections. Modern neuroscience and somatic psychology have documented how traumatic memories are stored differently than ordinary memories—held in the body, triggered by sensory similarity rather than conscious recall. Healing requires bringing that stored charge into conscious awareness and completing the incomplete physiological and emotional response. Until this happens, the person remains partially stuck in the past, even as they try to move forward in the present.
Where to Go From Here
If you recognize undigested experiences or repetitive patterns in your own life, the first step is not to judge or pathologize them—they are intelligent survival strategies the body and mind employed when they lacked resources to process what happened. The next step is to create conditions for genuine digestion: practices that help the nervous system feel safe enough to relax, modalities that bring consciousness to where it has been split off, and communities or teachers that can hold and witness the integration process.
Practices such as meditation, breathwork, somatic therapy, yoga, and conscious dialogue all create space for digestion when held with awareness. The Oneness Health Festival mentioned in the video context offers a structured opportunity to engage this work with the support of experienced facilitators and the power of the Surya Mandala healing geometry. The invitation is to move beyond treating symptoms and toward genuine health—freedom in the inner state, harmony in the body, and liberation from patterns that no longer serve.



