Episode 25. The Memory Before Memory
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Your earliest experiences with stress, safety, and scarcity didn't get stored as memories. They got stored as body states. And decades later, those states are still shaping how you earn, spend, avoid, and relate to money.
In this episode, we explore what happens when stress and trauma are encoded before the first conscious memory forms. Drawing on the work of Stephen Porges and polyvagal theory, Peter Levine's research on how trauma lives in the body as incomplete biological responses, Bruce Perry's neurosequential model of early brain development, and Daniel Siegel's interpersonal neurobiology, we trace how the nervous system builds its baseline in the earliest years of life and carries that baseline forward into adulthood.
We then follow that thread into financial behavior, looking at why some people freeze when opening bills, feel panic at a low bank balance even when they are objectively stable, spend impulsively as a form of self-soothing, or consistently earn below their actual capacity. These are not character flaws or failures of discipline. They are body memories, firing in financial contexts.
The episode closes with four practical takeaways for anyone who recognizes these patterns in themselves, including why somatic awareness reaches places that mindset work alone cannot.
The body is not broken. It learned exactly what it needed to learn. This episode is about what it takes to teach it something new.