How Did We Become Alienated from Our Bodies and the Earth?
Thich Nhat Hanh opens with a stark observation: "We have lived in such a way that we get alienated from the earth, from our own body." This is not abstract philosophy—it is a diagnosis of how contemporary life operates. The separation from body and earth is not something we chose in a single moment; it is the cumulative effect of how we have structured our days, our attention, and our priorities.
The alienation is concrete and measurable. "We spend many hours every day forgetting that we have a body," Nhat Hanh notes. This is not poetic exaggeration. Many people—professionals at desks, students in virtual classrooms, anyone caught in digital work—spend eight, ten, or twelve hours in a state of mental absorption where the body becomes merely an instrument to hold the head in front of a screen. The body is forgotten.
What drives this forgetting? Nhat Hanh identifies the mechanism: "We are caught in your computer. Your problems you forget that you have a body." The computer and the problems—the digital entanglement and psychological preoccupation—create a gravitational field that pulls consciousness away from the physical ground. The body, in this state, is treated as though it does not exist. And if the body is forgotten, the earth that the body stands upon, is made of, and returns to, is equally forgotten.
This alienation has consequences. When we forget the body, we lose touch with the living, sensing, feeling ground of existence. We float in abstraction—in thought, worry, screen-light, and problems. The earth, which sustains every breath and every heartbeat, becomes invisible.
What Is the Practice of Returning Home to the Body?
Nhat Hanh does not offer theory alone. He offers a practice: "The practice is to breathe in, stop the thinking and go home to your body and relax your body."
This instruction is radical in its simplicity. It consists of four interlocking movements:
- Breathe in: A conscious, intentional breath becomes the anchor. Breathing is something the body does constantly, yet we forget it. To notice the breath is to notice that we are alive, that the body is alive.
- Stop the thinking: The second movement is cessation. Thinking—the ceaseless mental chatter, the problem-solving, the worry—is the current that carries us away from the body. To stop thinking is to cut that current.
- Go home to your body: With breath conscious and thinking paused, there is a return. The body becomes not a forgotten instrument but a destination, a home. This is not home in the abstract sense—it is the lived experience of skin, bones, organs, sensations.
- Relax your body: The final instruction is relaxation. When we are caught in thinking and problems, the body is tense—held in anticipation, fear, effort. Relaxation is a letting-go, a permission given to the body to simply be.
This is not a complex meditation technique requiring years of training. It can be done in a moment. Breathe. Stop. Return. Relax. The practice is available now.
How Does Touching the Body as Wonder Open Connection to Mother Earth?
The next step is the turning point: "And if you can touch your body as a wonder, you have the opportunity to touch mother earth in you as a wonder and the healing begins."
Notice the shift in language. It is not "understand" your body or "analyze" your body. It is "touch your body as a wonder." This is contemplative perception. When we actually attend to the body—the warmth, the intricate systems, the fact that it is alive and breathing and sensing—the body reveals itself as miraculous. The body is not a problem to be managed or a machine to be optimized. It is a wonder.
And here is the crucial connection: Mother Earth is in the body. This is not metaphorical. The elements that make up the body come from the earth. The water in our blood is earth-water. The minerals in our bones are earth-minerals. The air we breathe circulates through earth's atmosphere. The food that becomes our flesh was grown in soil. When we touch the body as a wonder, we are touching the earth as a wonder, because the body is not separate from the earth—it is the earth, present and alive in this form.
Thich Nhat Hanh is pointing to an insight available through direct experience: the body is not a prison or a burden. It is a gateway. To truly inhabit the body, to touch it with reverence and amazement, is to touch Mother Earth herself in that very moment.
What Does Healing Begin Mean in This Context?
Nhat Hanh concludes: "and the healing begins." This is significant. Healing—not as a future goal, but as a beginning that occurs in the present moment, when the body is touched as wonder and the earth is recognized within it.
What is being healed? The alienation itself. The separation between self and body, between body and earth, between mind and matter. Healing here means the restoration of wholeness, the reunion of what had been split apart by how we have lived.
This is not a promise of instant transformation. It is a statement that healing is possible and that it begins—it starts—when we take the practice seriously. The moment we consciously breathe, stop thinking, come home to the body, and touch it as wonder, the process of healing is initiated. Not later. Not when conditions are perfect. Now.
Where to Go from Here
If this teaching resonates, the next step is experiential. Set aside five minutes. Sit or stand. Breathe consciously. When the mind pulls toward problems and computers, notice it and return to the breath. Relax the body. Touch it—your hands, your face, your heart—as though touching something miraculous. Notice what it feels like to be in a body, to be the earth in human form. Thich Nhat Hanh's full course, Zen and the Art of Saving the Planet, offers deeper teachings and community support for this journey of reconnection. But the practice itself begins here, now, with a single conscious breath.
]]>



