Episode 2 of series on Embodied Intelligence
Safety Creates Space
Safety Creates the Space Where Real Learning Can Begin
Safety as the Gateway to Learning
Teresa Songbird opens the episode by introducing the second part of the Embodied Intelligence series, focusing on how safety creates the internal space needed for learning. She explains that while education often emphasizes intelligence, attention, effort, and brain-based learning, the nervous system plays a central role in determining whether a learner can remain curious, engaged, and open to growth. The episode frames safety not only as physical security, but also as calm, ease, trust, and psychological readiness.
A Classroom Fight That Changed the Teaching Lens
Teresa shares a story from her teaching career about two grade-seven boys who returned to class after a serious lunchtime fight. Although the conflict had been treated as resolved by the playground teacher, the boys’ bodies were still carrying the energy of the incident. During a science activity, they struggled to focus, withdrew, and could not engage normally. Teresa later realized that their nervous systems were still in protection mode, and this experience changed how she approached post-lunch transitions, class discussions, circle time, breathing, yoga, and emotional repair.
The Nervous System Is Always Scanning
The episode explains that the nervous system constantly scans for danger, often without conscious thought. Teresa says that in modern classrooms, children may not be scanning for physical dangers like saber-toothed tigers, but they are often scanning for psychological safety. Criticism, rejection, embarrassment, conflict, uncertainty, and untrusted feedback can all trigger a threat response. When learners do not feel safe, attention narrows, thinking becomes rigid, and the body prioritizes protection overgrowth.
Relationship, Belonging, and Ancient Wisdom
Teresa connects modern nervous system awareness with ancient wisdom and Indigenous understandings of learning through relationship. She emphasizes that learning is built through relationship with self, family, community, nature, land, and the surrounding environment. She says belonging helps regulate the nervous system and that story, observation, participation, and connection have long been central to meaningful learning. She also links the nervous system to the universal law of rhythm, describing cycles of activation, recovery, expansion, and contraction.
Compassion for Learners in Different States
Teresa contrasts two learners receiving the same lesson under the same conditions, with one feeling safe and the other anxious. She argues that their outcomes may differ not because of intelligence, but because their nervous systems are operating from different states of being. She encourages educators and parents to shift their interpretation of resistance, laziness, or lack of motivation, because those behaviors may actually signal overwhelm or a nervous system asking for safety. She also stresses that adults’ own groundedness affects the learning environment.
Practical Examples and a Safety Scan
The episode closes with real-life examples of students freezing during exams, Teresa’s childhood encounter with a growling dog, and her experience teaching children in difficult living conditions in London. She explains that learners need practice feeling safe under pressure and that basic needs must be acknowledged before academic expectations can be realistic. Teresa offers a simple safety scan involving breath, posture, grounding, sensory noticing, and appreciation. She ends by noting that a child’s own voice can feel safe to the body, making self-talk a useful tool for regulation.
