{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/698a5e9a41bb4de491190baa/69c33c411861d127d540bd58?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"The Inhabited Practice — Ritual, Devotion, and the Body's Memory","description":"<p>In this episode of The Hidden Threshold, Veyrin Vale explores what happens when practice stops being something you do and becomes something you carry — how devotion, repeated honestly over years, eventually lives in the body rather than just the mind.</p><p><br></p><p>There's a gesture that ends every working. Hands together, a kiss, palms to forehead, a bow to Bast and then Anubis. Twenty years of practice compressed into a sequence the body completes before the mind registers the working is over. This episode sits with what that means — how physical practice gets absorbed deeply enough that the gesture precedes the intention, and the body arrives at devotion before the thinking starts.</p><p><br></p><p>From the difference between performing practice and truly inhabiting it, to the body as the most honest record of a practice's depth — this is a reflection on ritual, presence, and what it means when the practice and the person have, in some specific way, become the same thing.</p><p><br></p><p>The body doesn't lie about practice the way the mind can. What your hands do without being told is the truest answer to how deep the practice actually goes.</p>","author_name":"Veyrin Vale - Eclectic Pagan Practice & Spiritual Discernment"}