Jackson Cionek
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The Body Knows When You Are Well

The Body Knows When You Are Well

Your body does not want success. It wants balance.

When we talk about well-being, happiness, or mental health, we almost always think in psychological terms:
thinking the right way, feeling the right way, acting the right way, achieving something.

But the body does not operate through abstract goals.
It operates through balance.

Before any idea of success, purpose, or fulfillment, the body is busy with something far more basic — and far more intelligent: regulating itself to stay alive.


Well-being is not a psychological ideal

The body does not chase happiness.
It does not search for meaning.
It does not want to “succeed in life.”

The body wants:

  • internal stability

  • sufficient energy

  • predictable rhythms

  • a habitable environment

When this happens, a quiet state of organization emerges.
That state is felt as well-being.

Not because something special happened,
but because nothing is wrong.


DANA: DNA as a regulatory intelligence

The DANA avatar represents a simple but powerful idea:
DNA is not just a genetic code — it is a living regulatory intelligence.

From the beginning of life, DNA:

  • regulates growth

  • adjusts metabolism

  • responds to the environment

  • learns rhythms

It does not “think.”
It senses conditions.

Temperature, nutrition, sleep, stress, social bonding, territory — all of this is in constant dialogue with DNA.

The body does not ask:

“Does this make me happy?”

It asks:

“Does this sustain my stability?”


Tekoha: the biome that lives inside you

This is where Tekoha, our avatar of extended interoception, comes in.

Tekoha represents:

  • what you eat

  • what you drink

  • how you sleep

  • how you breathe

  • the rhythm of your days

  • the environment you inhabit

  • the beliefs you repeat

This is not “lifestyle.”
It is everyday biology.

Two bodies of the same age, in the same school, with the same external routine
can live completely different internal states
because their internal Tekoha is different.

The body senses this long before the mind understands it.


Rhythm, sleep, food, and environment regulate more than thoughts

One of the biggest mistakes of modern life is trying to fix the body with ideas.

But the body regulates itself through:

  • rhythm (regularity)

  • sleep (restoration)

  • food (energy)

  • environment (safety)

Not through discourse.

You can understand everything about yourself
and still feel unwell
if your body is disorganized.

And you can understand almost nothing
and still feel well
if your body is regulated.


Why sustainable happiness is simple

Sustainable does not mean easy.
It means biologically compatible.

Sustainable happiness:

  • does not depend on constant stimulation

  • does not require excitement

  • does not need intensity

  • does not grow through excess

It appears when:

  • the body sleeps enough

  • rhythm slows down when needed

  • food sustains rather than assaults

  • the environment does not threaten

This feels simple because it is.
The body was built for this.


Modern life: constant interoceptive noise

Modern life creates a specific problem:
interoceptive noise.

Too much stimulation.
Too little rhythm.
Too little bodily silence.

The body tries to regulate itself amid:

  • constant screens

  • notifications

  • information overload

  • social pressure

  • continuous comparison

The result is not sadness.
It is disorganization.

And internal disorganization is felt as:

  • anxiety

  • fatigue

  • irritability

  • confusion

  • emptiness

Not because “something is missing,”
but because the body cannot find balance.


The body knows when something is right

You don’t need to explain when you are well.
You feel it.

The body knows because:

  • breathing slows down

  • muscles soften

  • focus widens

  • internal time changes

This does not come from a correct idea.
It comes from a suitable condition.

The body always knew.
The mind learns afterward.


A simple path to the now

Nothing complex.
Nothing heroic.

Some bodily questions:

  • Is my body in rhythm or in a rush?

  • Am I sleeping enough?

  • Does this nourish me or only stimulate me?

  • Does my environment support me or tense me?

Small choices:

  • respecting sleep

  • reducing excess

  • eating to sustain, not to numb

  • creating real pauses

  • listening to basic bodily signals

This is not self-help.
It is biological literacy.


The central point

Well-being is not a psychological goal.
It is a biological state that is possible.

The body does not want success.
It does not want infinite performance.
It does not want constant intensity.

It wants:

  • balance

  • rhythm

  • a habitable territory

  • living belonging

Or, in the Brain Bee sentence to remember:

Your body does not want success. It wants balance.

When the body finds balance,
the mind rests.
And well-being appears
without needing to be searched for.


Scientific references (post-2020)

Interoception, regulation, and well-being

Verdonk, J. C., et al. (2025).
Toward a multidisciplinary neurobiology of interoception.
Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
— Comprehensive review establishing interoception as the basis of emotional, cognitive, and well-being regulation, supporting the idea that healthy states emerge from bodily organization rather than abstract psychological ideals.

Leão, R. N., et al. (2025).
Interoception: current knowledge gaps and future directions.
Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews.
— Highlights interoception as a core mechanism of homeostasis and mental health, aligning with well-being as distributed biological intelligence.


Rhythm, sleep, metabolism, and biological regulation

Walker, M. (2021).
Why We Sleep: Unlocking the Power of Sleep and Dreams.
— Demonstrates how sleep regulates metabolism, emotion, and cognition, supporting the thesis that balance precedes any subjective notion of happiness.

McEwen, B. S., & Akil, H. (2020–2022).
Stress, allostasis, and allostatic load: implications for health and well-being.
Annual Review of Clinical Psychology.
— Provides biological grounding for the body’s pursuit of dynamic stability and explains how excess stimulation produces systemic disorganization rather than “lack of meaning.”


DNA as regulatory intelligence (DANA)

Carey, N. (2022).
Epigenetics: How Environment Shapes Our Genes.
— Supports the idea that DNA continuously responds to rhythm, environment, and nutrition, aligning with DANA as a living regulatory intelligence.

Meaney, M. J. (2021).
Experience, epigenetics, and stress regulation across the lifespan.
Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience.
— Shows how environment and care modulate gene expression, reinforcing well-being as biological and situated, not a psychological ideal.


EEG and fNIRS: regulated vs. dysregulated states

Balconi, M., Angioletti, L., & Amenta, S. (2024).
Inter-brain synchronization during interoception: a multimodal EEG–fNIRS approach.
Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews.
— Demonstrates that interoceptive attention (breathing, rhythm) alters neural coherence and cerebral hemodynamics, evidencing regulated presence states.

Raimondo, F., Cheng, R. K., et al. (2023).
Brain states of mind wandering identified using simultaneous EEG–fNIRS.
Cognitive Neurodynamics.
— Differentiates automatic/disorganized states from regulated states, supporting the idea that well-being emerges when the system finds balance.

Chen, X., Liu, Y., & Zhang, D. (2024).
Emotion state recognition using EEG–fNIRS.
Brain Sciences.
— Shows that bodily and affective states are objectively measurable, reinforcing that the body “knows” before conscious narrative.


Brain Bee synthesis

Post-2020 science shows that the body knows when you are well because well-being is a regulated state of biological balance, observable through bodily signals, EEG, and fNIRS — not a psychological ideal to be pursued.

 

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Jackson Cionek

New perspectives in translational control: from neurodegenerative diseases to glioblastoma | Brain States