A Body Scan for the Ones Who Live in Their Heads
A Five-Minute Practice for the Body You've Been Living Above
You cannot think your way out of a body you’ve been ignoring for years. I know, because I tried for most of my adult life.
If you live almost entirely in your mind — analyzing, planning, narrating — this will feel foreign at first. Good. That’s the point.
We’re not trying to add another thought.
We’re trying to come home to the thing that has been carrying you this whole time.
The practice
Five minutes. No app required.
1. Arrive — 30 seconds. Sit or lie down. Let your eyes close, or soften your gaze toward the floor. Take one breath that’s slightly longer on the exhale than the inhale. You’re not relaxing yet. You’re signaling to your nervous system that it’s allowed to.
2. Feet and legs — 1 minute. Bring attention to the soles of your feet. Not the idea of your feet — the actual sensation. Warmth, pressure, tingling, nothing at all. Whatever is there is correct. Move slowly up through your ankles, calves, knees, thighs.
3. Center — 1.5 minutes. Move into your pelvis, your belly, your lower back. This is where a guarded body holds its oldest tension. Don’t try to release anything. Attention landing on a place the body has been bracing is itself a signal that the bracing is no longer required. The noticing is the medicine.
4. Chest, shoulders, hands — 1 minute. Let your attention rise to your chest. Is the breath shallow or full? Travel out across your shoulders. The shoulders are the great storage shelf of the overthinker. Move down the arms, into the palms.
5. Head and whole body — 1 minute. Soften the jaw, the eyes, the space between the brows. Then, for the last stretch, hold your entire body in awareness at once. One field of sensation. Breathing. Alive. Yours.
Why this matters more than it looks
There’s a reason I anchor this in the body and not the mind. Your physiology runs on rhythm — circadian, ultradian, the daily tides of cortisol and rest. When you live only in your head, you override those signals constantly. Over time, that override compounds: the HPA axis stays primed, inflammatory tone rises, and sleep architecture quietly degrades — not because anything is broken, but because the body stopped receiving permission to stand down.
A body scan is a small act of re-syncing. A moment where you stop directing the body and start listening to it.
Do it once. Notice what comes up. That’s all.
The body keeps better records than the mind.
Dr. Shiv Kumar Goel is a board-certified physician practicing internal, functional, and aesthetic medicine in San Antonio, Texas. He is the founder of Prime Vitality Care. He is the author of the forthcoming book Healing the Split: When Your Biology Is Fighting Your Biography, hosts the Healing the Split podcast, and writes the Healing the Split Substack at healingthesplit.com. His work appears in KevinMD, Op-Med, Medium, Elephant Journal, and San Antonio Medicine.


