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From Survival to Stillness: What Your Body Is Trying to Tell You, with Cindy Costley
Description
You are functioning, you are doing life, but your nervous system is always braced, always waiting. And stillness, when it finally shows up, feels like a foreign language your body doesn't quite trust yet.
In this episode of The Mindful Living, host Sana sits down with Cindy Costley, a Mast Cell Wellness Coach, author, and creator of the Electromagnetic Body Desensitization Technique (EBDT), to explore what it really means to move from survival mode to stillness. Not by forcing calm, but by learning to listen. If you have ever wondered why your body keeps reacting, why symptoms appear out of nowhere, or why peace feels so hard to hold, this conversation offers a different, gentler way of understanding yourself.
About the Guest:
Cindy Costley is a Mast Cell Wellness Coach, author, trauma survivor, and the creator of Electromagnetic Body Desensitization Technique (EBDT). For 34 years, Cindy lived with severe chronic illness rooted in early trauma, which she describes as her body's way of communicating rather than betraying her. Her healing journey led her to develop EBDT, a method that weaves together science, Eastern practices, spirituality, and scripture to support healing at a root level. She works with clients at theunderlyinganswers.com.
Key Takeaways:
- Your symptoms are a message, not a betrayal. Asking "what is my body trying to tell me?" is the first act of healing, and one of the most powerful shifts you can make.
- Trauma is a biological event first. Stress hormones, the sympathetic nervous system, inflammatory responses, all of it happens in the body before the mind catches up. Healing often has to happen there too.
- The nervous system creates protective patterns to keep us safe, and those patterns can become self-fulfilling over time. Understanding the origin of your patterns is the beginning of releasing them.
- Stillness is not always what we need. Curiosity is. Whether it shows up through meditation, a walk in nature, art, music, or simply pausing for two minutes, what matters is the willingness to ask and listen.
- A purposeful pause does not require a whole day. Even 2 to 5 minutes of genuine curiosity about what your body is feeling can begin to shift the patterns that trauma has built over years.
- Mindfulness is not about running away from your challenges. It is the practice of navigating them without losing yourself in the process. Sometimes that looks like sitting still. Sometimes it looks like a state shift, reaching for a friend, going for a walk, or simply stepping away from the noise.
Connect with Cindy Costley:
Website: https://theunderlyinganswers.com/
Episode Chapters:
[00:00] The Quiet Kind of Survival — Sana opens with an honest portrait of what it looks like to function while braced
[00:40] Meeting Cindy — A warm check-in and introduction to Cindy's healing journey
[03:26] When the Body Becomes the Messenger — Cindy shares 34 years of chronic illness rooted in early trauma
[08:02] Labels, Misunderstanding, and the Body We Live In — On being seen only through a physical trait, and the human cost of that
[11:38] Symptoms as Signals, Not Betrayals — The turning point: learning to ask "what is my body trying to tell me?"
[18:02] The Purposeful Pause — Cindy's approach to mindfulness as curiosity, not forced calm
[26:36] From Survival to Stillness — What actually chang