Home Is Where Your Heart Is

Home Is Where Your Heart Is

Finding — and Becoming — the Home You’ve Always Been Searching For

By Kevin Todd Brough, M.A., MFT  |  VisionLogic & LifeScaping

Close your eyes for a moment and ask yourself: when did I last feel truly at home?

Not just physically sheltered, but deeply, unmistakably at home — the kind where your shoulders drop, your breath slows, and some quiet part of you says, here. This is where I belong.

For some, the image that comes is a specific house: the smell of a grandmother’s kitchen, the sound of a screen door, a porch light left on in the dark. For others it’s a person — a best friend who knew you before you knew yourself, a first love who saw you clearly, a mentor who reflected your worth back to you when you couldn’t yet see it. For others still, it’s a feeling of belonging to a place, a neighborhood, a community, a tribe — some landscape of people and memory in which you felt recognized, accepted, and alive.

And then something changes. Life moves. People leave. Houses are sold. Relationships dissolve. And somewhere in the middle of all that motion, the feeling of home starts to slip away — until some of us begin to wonder if we ever truly had it, or if we’re destined to move through the world like a guest in someone else’s story, never quite landing, never quite belonging.

In my clinical work, this is one of the most quietly aching things I hear. Not always named so plainly, but present underneath: I don’t know where home is anymore. I feel like a stranger in my own life.

This article is for anyone who has ever felt that way — and for anyone who is ready to discover that home is not something you lost. It’s something you can build, from the inside out, and carry with you everywhere you go.

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The Archaeology of Home: Memory, Meaning, and the Stories We Carry

Most of us build our first understanding of home through sensory memory — through the particular quality of light in a childhood room, the pattern of sounds at dinner, the texture of safety or its absence. These early experiences are not just nostalgic; they are neurologically formative. They shape what researchers in attachment theory call our internal working model: a blueprint, largely unconscious, of whether the world is safe, whether we are worthy of love, and whether others can be trusted.

John Bowlby, the British psychiatrist who developed attachment theory, understood that children don’t just need food and shelter — they need a secure base. They need at least one relationship in which they can feel genuinely held, seen, and safe enough to venture out and explore. When that secure base exists, it doesn’t only shape behavior in childhood. It becomes an internalized template that travels with us across decades and relationships, silently organizing how we approach closeness, vulnerability, and belonging for the rest of our lives.

“The goal of the attachment system is to attain felt security — an inner sense of safety that allows us to be both intimate and free.” — Attachment Research (Pietromonaco & Barrett)

Here is what makes this both hopeful and complicated: our memories of these early experiences are not simply recordings. They are interpretations — shaped by the emotions we felt, the meaning we made, and the developmental stage we were in when they formed. The house that felt like a sanctuary to one sibling may have felt like a battlefield to another. The parent who seemed steadfast in memory may have been more complicated in reality. The relationship that felt like coming home may have contained patterns we are still untangling.

This is not to say our memories are false. It is to say they are sacred stories — rich with emotional truth, worth honoring and exploring, and worthy of gentle scrutiny. In LifeScaping work, we often invite clients to become archaeologists of their own inner world: to sift carefully through the layers of their history, to recover what was genuinely nourishing, to grieve what was missing, and to consciously choose what to carry forward.

One useful question to sit with: What did home feel like at its best — even if only in moments? Not the whole picture, but the instances. The flicker of being seen. The afternoon of feeling safe. The conversation that made you feel real. These moments are data. They tell us something true about what you need, what nourishes you, and what you are capable of receiving.

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The Visitor in Your Own Life: When Instability Becomes the Familiar

There is a particular grief that comes from moving through life without a felt sense of home. It can look like restlessness — a chronic low-grade hunger for something you can’t quite name. It can look like disconnection, as if you’re watching your own life through a window rather than living it from the inside. It can look like a pattern of relationships that start with the promise of belonging and end with the old feeling of aloneness.

For those who experienced early instability — frequent moves, inconsistent caregiving, loss, or a home environment where emotional safety was unpredictable — the nervous system learned to adapt in a particular way. It learned to remain on alert, to read rooms and relationships for signs of threat, to either cling to connection or keep it carefully at arm’s length. These adaptations were intelligent. They were survival. But over time, they can begin to feel like the walls of a prison rather than a shelter.

What we know from somatic and polyvagal-informed research is that this kind of chronic dysregulation is not a character flaw. It is a physiological pattern — the autonomic nervous system doing exactly what it was trained to do. The nervous system that never learned to settle into safety will continue to scan for danger even when danger is not present. The body, as Bessel van der Kolk famously observed, keeps the score.

“Trauma is not just an event that happened. It is the residue left in the nervous system — a body waiting for something that no longer needs to come.” — Adapted from Somatic Experiencing Research

This is why simply telling yourself to relax, to trust, to feel at home is rarely sufficient. The work of building an inner home — a stable, grounded felt sense of belonging within yourself — is not only cognitive. It is somatic, relational, and existential. It requires tending to the body, renegotiating the stories, and finding new sources of meaning.

In LifeScaping terms, we call this the work of the Heart dimension — cultivating the emotional soil in which a stable, rooted identity can grow. It is some of the most important inner work a person can undertake.

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Viktor Frankl and the Home Within: Meaning as an Anchor

Viktor Frankl survived four Nazi concentration camps, including Auschwitz. He lost his wife, his parents, and his brother. He was stripped of every external marker of identity, comfort, and belonging. By any external measure, he had no home left.

And yet, what Frankl discovered — and what became the foundation of his logotherapy — was that no one could take from him his freedom to choose his attitude, his response, his inner orientation toward meaning. Even in the most extreme conditions of dehumanization, the interior life remained. And it was that interior life — the will to meaning — that became his anchor, his refuge, his home.

“Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms — to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances.” — Viktor Frankl

Frankl identified three pathways through which human beings discover meaning: through what we create or contribute to the world, through the quality of love we give and receive in relationship, and through the attitude we choose in the face of unavoidable suffering. What is striking about all three of these is that they are not dependent on external circumstances being stable. They are interior capacities — always accessible, even when everything outside is in flux.

This is profoundly relevant to anyone searching for a feeling of home. When we locate our sense of home exclusively in a place, a person, a time period, or a set of conditions, we become vulnerable to losing it whenever those externals change — and they always do. But when we begin to locate home in something more essential — in our values, our sense of purpose, our capacity for love and meaning — we begin to build something more portable, more resilient, more truly ours.

In LifeScaping, we speak of this as LifeScaping from the inside out. Before we can create an outer life that feels like home, we must tend to the inner landscape. We must ask: What do I stand for? What calls forth my deepest caring? Where is meaning alive in me, even in the midst of difficulty? These are not questions that yield quick answers. They are questions worth living with.

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Building Home from the Inside Out: The LifeScaping Framework

The LifeScaping System offers a four-dimensional framework for human flourishing — Mind, Heart, Body, and Spirit — and each dimension has something essential to contribute to the cultivation of inner home.

Mind: The Stories We Tell Ourselves

Much of what we experience as ‘home’ or ‘homelessness’ is constructed through narrative. The stories we carry about who we are, whether we belong, whether we deserve warmth and safety — these stories were written early, often by circumstances we did not choose. Part of building an inner home is becoming the author of a new story: one that is more accurate, more compassionate, and more oriented toward the future you are choosing.

Solution-Focused approaches remind us that exceptions always exist. Even within difficult childhoods, difficult relationships, and difficult seasons of life, there were moments of connection, competence, and care. Identifying these moments — and amplifying their meaning — is not denial. It is wisdom. It is the beginning of a new foundation.

Ericksonian work teaches us that the unconscious mind already holds the resources we need. The hypnotherapeutic techniques we use in session often invite clients to return to those moments of felt safety, to allow the body to re-inhabit them, and to carry them forward as an inner resource — a portable sanctuary they can access anywhere.

Heart: Relationships as Home — and as Practice

Attachment theory teaches us that we are wired for connection, and that secure attachment — first experienced in relationship with caregivers, and later renegotiated in adult friendships, partnerships, and therapeutic relationships — is the ground on which a stable sense of self is built.

The good news is that internal working models are not fixed. They are working — meaning they update in response to new relational experiences. Healing relationships, whether with a spouse, a therapist, a mentor, a community, or a close friend, can gradually recalibrate the nervous system’s expectations. The person who has never experienced consistent, trustworthy love can learn — at any age — what it feels like to be genuinely held.

In my work with couples and individuals, I often ask: Is there at least one relationship in your life where you feel truly known? Not performing. Not managing impressions. But genuinely, messily, beautifully known? If the answer is yes, that relationship is already a form of home. If the answer is no, that is the work — the sacred and urgent work of allowing yourself to be seen, and of learning to see others.

And sometimes the most intimate relationship we are called to reckon with is the one we have with ourselves. Self-compassion — the practice of meeting your own pain, failure, and limitation with the same warmth you would offer a dear friend — is not indulgence. It is the foundation of a stable inner home. As Kristin Neff’s research has demonstrated, self-compassion is one of the strongest predictors of psychological well-being, emotional resilience, and the capacity for authentic connection with others.

Body: The Nervous System as Home Base

One of the most powerful and least discussed dimensions of inner home is the body. The body is, quite literally, the home we are never outside of. Yet for many people who have experienced chronic stress, trauma, or early insecurity, the body does not feel like a safe place. It feels like a source of anxiety, pain, or unwanted sensation — something to be managed, overridden, or escaped.

Somatic approaches — including Somatic Experiencing, the work of Peter Levine, and polyvagal-informed practices — offer a doorway back into the body as a place of safety rather than threat. When we learn to orient gently to our sensory environment, to feel the support of the ground beneath us, to track the sensations of warmth and steadiness in the body, we are teaching the nervous system a new story: You are here. You are held. This moment is safe.

This is not a metaphor. It is neurophysiology. When we consciously attend to positive somatic markers — the felt sense of grounding, warmth, ease, or expansion in the body — we activate the parasympathetic nervous system, dampen the stress response, and begin to build what Levine calls a biological resource: an embodied memory of safety that can be called upon in difficult moments.

In our LifeScaping practice, and within the VisionLogic Therapeutic Tools suite, we emphasize body-centered practices not as additions to the work but as the very ground of it. The body is where the past is stored. It is also where healing lives — not in the future, but right here, in the breath, in the feet on the floor, in the hand on the heart. Bringing conscious, compassionate awareness to the body is one of the most direct routes to an experience of inner home.

Spirit: Purpose, Belonging, and the Larger Story

Frankl understood that human beings are not merely seeking comfort. We are seeking meaning. And meaning, at its deepest, involves understanding ourselves as part of something larger — a family, a community, a calling, a story that continues beyond the edges of our individual lives.

Spiritual dimensions of home — and we use this word in the broadest possible sense, inclusive of all traditions and none — involve asking: What is my place in the larger story? To what, and to whom, am I truly devoted? Where does my life touch the lives of others in ways that matter?

These questions are not separate from the work of healing. They are the culmination of it. A person who has done the inner work of examining their stories, tending their relationships, and inhabiting their body with care naturally begins to orient outward — toward contribution, toward community, toward a sense of calling that gives the present moment its full weight and color.

Within LDS faith tradition, and in many wisdom traditions across cultures, there is recognition that our deepest sense of home is ultimately not of this world alone — that there is a belonging that transcends the circumstances of any particular life. Whether or not this resonates with your personal belief system, the psychological truth it points to is real: a life oriented toward meaning, connection, and transcendent purpose is a life that can find home anywhere.

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Practices for Building Your Inner Home

These are not prescriptions but invitations — entry points into the ongoing practice of creating a home within yourself that you carry wherever you go.

The Felt Sense Anchor

Call to mind a moment — however brief — when you felt genuinely safe, seen, or at peace. It may be from childhood, from a relationship, from a moment in nature. Allow yourself to return to it sensorially: What did you see? Hear? Feel in your body? Notice the quality of sensation this memory evokes. This is a resource — a portable piece of home you can return to with intention. Ericksonian and somatic approaches both affirm the power of this kind of anchored memory to shift the nervous system toward regulation in real time.

The Meaning Audit

Borrowing from Frankl: ask yourself where meaning is alive in your life right now. Where do you feel most like yourself? What relationships call forth your best? What work — paid or unpaid — gives you a sense of contribution? What suffering have you faced that now serves as wisdom or compassion? Meaning does not eliminate difficulty. It transforms it into something bearable — even, at times, beautiful.

The Compassionate Witness

Drawing on IFS (Internal Family Systems) and self-compassion practices: practice meeting yourself with the same warmth, patience, and curiosity you would offer a dear friend or a struggling child. When the inner critic rises, when shame surfaces, when the old story of not belonging floods in — can you meet it with presence rather than defense? The part of you that feels like a stranger in your own life is not the enemy. It is a younger version of you that never received enough welcome. Welcoming it — gently, repeatedly — is the work.

The Gratitude Daily Practice

One of the VisionLogic tools we return to again and again is the Gratitude Daily Practice — not as a feel-good exercise but as a deliberate re-orientation of attention. When we consciously notice what is present, nourishing, and real in our current life, we interrupt the nervous system’s bias toward scanning for threat. We begin to train the brain to register home in the now — not as a memory of the past or a hope for the future, but as something available, if imperfect, right here.

The Vantage Point

The Vantage Point tool in our VisionLogic suite invites you to step back from the immediate terrain of your life and see it from a wider perspective — to notice patterns, to locate yourself in a larger arc, to ask what story is emerging. From this elevated view, the feeling of being a visitor in your own life often softens. You begin to see that you are not merely being moved by your history; you are, in fact, authoring something — something with shape, intention, and forward momentum.

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Home Is Not a Destination. It Is a Practice.

The deepest truth about home — the thing that the old saying has always been reaching toward — is that it is not primarily a location. It is a quality of presence. It is the felt experience of being fully here, in this body, in this life, in this moment, without apology and without flight.

Home is what happens when you stop waiting for the circumstances to align perfectly and begin, instead, to bring yourself — your full, complicated, worthy self — into the present. It is what happens when you develop enough trust in your own inner resources to let the outside world be what it is without being undone by it.

It is built in the small moments: the morning breath that you actually feel, the conversation in which you allow yourself to be vulnerable, the act of service that reminds you that your life is woven into the lives of others. It is built in the grief that you allow to move through you instead of carrying it locked in your chest for decades. It is built in the moment you look in the mirror and, for the first time, see someone worth coming home to.

Viktor Frankl, writing from the ruins of his world, chose meaning. He chose to carry his interior life — his love, his purpose, his witness — as his home, knowing no one could take it from him.

You carry that same interior life. You always have. The invitation of LifeScaping — and of this work — is simply to move in more fully. To tend the rooms. To light the fire. To open the door and let yourself, at last, come home.

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Kevin Todd Brough, M.A., MFT, is a Marriage and Family Therapist at Ascend Counseling & Wellness / Center for Couples & Families in St. George, Utah (License #14258159-3904. He is the founder of the LifeScaping System and VisionLogic Therapeutic Tools, an integrative approach to human flourishing spanning Ericksonian hypnotherapy, IFS, somatic therapies, SFBT, ACT, and ketamine-assisted psychotherapy. Learn more at visionlogic.org.

Finding Your Center / Finding Your Self

The Vantage Point and Fluid Perspective Framework for Whole-Person Integration

Kevin Todd Brough, M.A., MFT

Ascend Counseling & Wellness | VisionLogic

Have you ever noticed that sometimes you are your anxiety—completely consumed by racing thoughts—while other times you can observe those same anxious thoughts with a sense of calm perspective? This difference isn’t random. It reflects a fundamental capacity that multiple therapeutic traditions have independently identified as essential to psychological well-being: the ability to access an observing awareness that can witness our inner experience without becoming lost in it.

In my clinical practice at Ascend Counseling & Wellness, I’ve developed an integrative frameworkVantage Point and Fluid Perspective, that synthesizes insights from evidence-based therapies, including Dialectical Behavior Therapy, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, Internal Family Systems, and somatic approaches. Whether you are considering therapy, a fellow clinician, or simply interested in personal growth, understanding these concepts can provide a roadmap to greater integration and well-being.

What Is a Vantage Point?

Imagine standing on a hilltop where you can see the entire landscape below—the valleys, rivers, forests, and paths all visible from your elevated position. You’re not in any single valley; you’re observing them all from a place of clarity.

Your psychological Vantage Point works the same way. It’s a stable, centered inner position—a kind of psychological home base—from which you can observe and engage with all aspects of your experience: your thoughts, emotions, physical sensations, and sense of meaning. It’s what I call the “CenterPoint/Vantage Point”, it’s your Core-Self, from which you can see all perceptual positions clearly.

This concept appears across multiple therapeutic traditions. In Dialectical Behavior Therapy, Marsha Linehan (1993, 2015) describes Wise Mind as the synthesis of emotion and reason—”that part of each person that can know and experience truth… almost always quiet… has a certain peace” (Linehan, 2015, p. 167). In Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, Hayes et al. (2012) refer to it as self-as-context—the perspective from which all experience is observed. Richard Schwartz’s (2021) Internal Family Systems model identifies the core Self, characterized by calmness, curiosity, clarity, compassion, confidence, creativity, courage, and connectedness.

The convergence of these independent traditions suggests they’re all pointing to something fundamental about human consciousness and healing.

The Four Aspects of Your Whole Self

From your Vantage Point, you can observe four distinct but interconnected aspects of yourself:

Mind — Your thoughts, analysis, planning, reasoning, and cognitive processes. When you’re “in your head,” you’re operating primarily from this position.

Heart — Your emotions, feelings, relational connections, and emotional wisdom. This is where love, grief, joy, and fear are experienced.

Body — Your physical sensations, energy levels, tension patterns, and somatic wisdom. The body often knows things before the mind catches up.

Spirit — Your sense of meaning, purpose, values, connection to something larger than yourself, and transcendent perspective.

Each aspect offers valuable information and wisdom. Problems arise not from any aspect itself, but from becoming stuck in one position—locked in anxious thinking, overwhelmed by emotion, disconnected from body sensations, or so focused on spiritual concerns that practical needs are neglected.

Fluid Perspective: The Ability to Move Freely

Fluid Perspective describes the capacity to move flexibly between these four positions while maintaining connection to your centered Vantage Point. It’s not about staying detached from your thoughts, feelings, body, or spirit—it’s about being able to visit each aspect fully without getting trapped there.

Think of it like the difference between being a tourist who can explore different neighborhoods of a city and return home, versus being lost in one neighborhood with no map and no way back. Psychological flexibility—the ability to move fluidly between positions—is consistently associated with better mental health outcomes (Hayes et al., 2012; Masuda et al., 2010).

The Body: Your Foundation for Finding Center

Here’s what decades of psychophysiological research have confirmed: the body is the foundation for psychological integration. When your body relaxes and grounds, your emotions can calm. When your emotions calm, your mind can find peace and stillness. And when all three are settled, you can more easily attune to your deeper sense of spirit and meaning.

This isn’t just philosophy—it’s measurable science. Research from the HeartMath Institute has demonstrated that states of centered awareness correlate with specific patterns called psychophysiological coherence: a smooth, sine-wave-like heart rhythm, increased heart-brain synchronization, and the entrainment of multiple physiological systems into harmonious functioning (McCraty et al., 2009; McCraty & Childre, 2010). When you’re in this coherent state, you experience greater emotional stability, mental clarity, and a sense of being centered.

Stephen Porges’ Polyvagal Theory (2011, 2022) explains the neurophysiological basis of this. Your autonomic nervous system is constantly scanning for safety or threat through a process called neuroception. When the nervous system detects safety, the ventral vagal system activates, slowing heart rate, reducing arousal, and enabling social engagement. This is the physiological state that supports access to your Vantage Point—you can’t think clearly or feel compassionately when your body is in threat mode.

What Does the Research Show?

For fellow clinicians and those interested in the evidence base, here’s what meta-analyses tell us:

Heart Rate Variability Biofeedback shows large effect sizes for reducing stress and anxiety (Hedges’ g = 0.81; Goessl et al., 2017) and medium effect sizes for depressive symptoms comparable to CBT (g = 0.38; Pizzoli et al., 2021). A systematic review of 58 studies found significant effects on anxiety, depression, anger, and performance (Lehrer et al., 2020).

Somatic Experiencing, Peter Levine’s body-oriented trauma approach, has demonstrated effectiveness for PTSD treatment in randomized controlled trials (Brom et al., 2017), with scoping reviews showing positive effects on trauma-related symptoms, affective regulation, and well-being (Kuhfuß et al., 2021).

Metacognitive approaches that develop observer capacity show large effect sizes across populations (Normann & Morina, 2018), whereas mindfulness meditation is associated with characteristic changes in brain oscillations, including increased alpha, theta, and gamma-wave activity (Chiesa & Serretti, 2010; Lomas et al., 2015).

The concept of physiological entrainment—independent oscillating systems synchronizing with one another—has been identified as a crucial mechanism impacting cognitive, motor, and affective functioning (Colantonio et al., 2024). This provides a physiological explanation for the integration experience: when our bodily systems entrain into coherent patterns, we experience what contemplative traditions have long described as centered awareness.

The Whole Soul: Integration in Action

When you can access your Vantage Point consistently and move fluidly between Mind, Heart, Body, and Spirit, something remarkable emerges. I call this the Whole Soul or Congruent Soul—a state of integration where all aspects of yourself are attuned, unified, and working in harmony.

The Whole Soul is wiser than any single part. When you’re stuck in your Mind, you might overthink and miss emotional insight. When you’re stuck in your Heart alone, strong feelings might cloud your judgment. When you’re stuck in Body alone, you might react without reflection. When you’re stuck in Spirit alone, you might neglect practical realities.

But when all four aspects work together—when you can think clearly, feel deeply, sense your body’s wisdom, and connect to meaning—you access your fullest capacity for navigating life’s challenges.

Simple Ways to Find Your Vantage Point

Here are practical approaches to cultivating your Vantage Point and Fluid Perspective:

1. Ground Through Your Body First. Because the body is the foundation, start there. Feel your feet on the floor. Notice where your body contacts your chair. Take three slow breaths. This isn’t just relaxation—it’s creating the physiological conditions for coherence.

2. Breathe for Coherence. Research shows that breathing at approximately 5-6 breaths per minute (about 5 seconds in, 5 seconds out) optimizes heart rate variability and promotes the coherent state (McCraty & Zayas, 2014). Even 2-3 minutes of coherent breathing can shift your physiological state.

3. Check In With All Four Parts. Ask yourself: What is my Mind saying right now? What emotions are present in my Heart? What sensations is my Body experiencing? What does my Spirit or sense of meaning have to offer? Simply asking these questions begins to activate your observer capacity.

4. Create an Anchor. Develop a word, image, or gesture that represents your centered state. Use it repeatedly while feeling centered to create a neural pathway you can access when you need it most.

5. Practice Self-Compassion. When you notice you’ve lost your Vantage Point—you’re spiraling in anxious thoughts or overwhelmed by emotion—that noticing itself is the observer returning. Gently return to the center, to your True Innate Self, without self-criticism.

Experience It for Yourself

I’ve developed an interactive guided practice tool that walks you through the process of finding your Vantage Point and exploring your Fluid Perspective. It includes a grounding breathwork exercise, a check-in with each of the four aspects, access to Whole Soul wisdom, and the creation of personal anchors for daily use.

Try the Vantage Point Tool: https://www.visionlogic.org/vantage-point.html

This tool is part of the VisionLogic LifeScaping™ suite—a collection of therapeutic resources designed to support whole-person integration and transformational growth.

Working With a Therapist

While self-guided practices are valuable, working with a trained therapist can significantly deepen your ability to access and maintain your Vantage Point—especially if you’re working through trauma, attachment wounds, or persistent patterns that feel stuck.

At Ascend Counseling & Wellness, I integrate these concepts with evidence-based approaches, including Internal Family Systems, somatic techniques, Ericksonian hypnotherapy, and Solution-Focused Brief Therapy. My approach honors all four aspects of your experience and supports you in developing the observer capacity and psychological flexibility that research shows are central to well-being.

If you’re interested in exploring how this framework might support your healing journey, I welcome you to reach out.

The Wisdom of the Whole

The remarkable convergence across therapeutic traditions—from Linehan’s Wise Mind to Schwartz’s Self to Hayes’ self-as-context—suggests that the cultivation of observer consciousness isn’t just one approach among many. It may be fundamental to human healing and flourishing.

When you can access your Vantage Point, move fluidly between Mind, Heart, Body, and Spirit, and allow all aspects to work in harmony, you’re not just managing symptoms—you’re accessing your Whole Soul’s wisdom for navigating whatever life brings.

The Whole Soul is wiser than any part.

References

Brom, D., Stokar, Y., Lawi, C., Nuriel-Porat, V., Ziv, Y., Lerner, K., & Ross, G. (2017). Somatic experiencing for posttraumatic stress disorder: A randomized controlled outcome study. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 30(3), 304-312.

Chiesa, A., & Serretti, A. (2010). A systematic review of neurobiological and clinical features of mindfulness meditations. Psychological Medicine, 40(8), 1239-1252.

Colantonio, L., Rossi, F., Giannini, A. M., & Di Pace, E. (2024). Physiological entrainment: A key mind-body mechanism for cognitive, motor and affective functioning, and well-being. Brain Sciences, 15(1), 3.

Goessl, V. C., Curtiss, J. E., & Hofmann, S. G. (2017). The effect of heart rate variability biofeedback training on stress and anxiety: A meta-analysis. Psychological Medicine, 47(15), 2578-2586.

Hayes, S. C., Strosahl, K. D., & Wilson, K. G. (2012). Acceptance and commitment therapy: The process and practice of mindful change (2nd ed.). Guilford Press.

Kuhfuß, M., Maldei, T., Hetmanek, A., & Baumann, N. (2021). Somatic experiencing—effectiveness and key factors of a body-oriented trauma therapy: A scoping literature review. European Journal of Psychotraumatology, 12(1), 1929023.

Lehrer, P., Kaur, K., Sharma, A., Shah, K., Huseby, R., Bhavsar, J., Sgobba, P., & Zhang, Y. (2020). Heart rate variability biofeedback improves emotional and physical health and performance: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback, 45(3), 109-129.

Linehan, M. M. (1993). Cognitive-behavioral treatment of borderline personality disorder. Guilford Press.

Linehan, M. M. (2015). DBT skills training manual (2nd ed.). Guilford Press.

Lomas, T., Ivtzan, I., & Fu, C. H. (2015). A systematic review of the neurophysiology of mindfulness on EEG oscillations. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 57, 401-410.

Masuda, A., Hayes, S. C., Twohig, M. P., Drossel, C., Lillis, J., & Washio, Y. (2010). A parametric study of cognitive defusion and the believability and discomfort of negative self-referential thoughts. Behavior Modification, 34(4), 303-324.

McCraty, R., Atkinson, M., Tomasino, D., & Bradley, R. T. (2009). The coherent heart: Heart-brain interactions, psychophysiological coherence, and the emergence of system-wide order. Integral Review, 5(2), 10-115.

McCraty, R., & Childre, D. (2010). Coherence: Bridging personal, social, and global health. Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine, 16(4), 10-24.

McCraty, R., & Zayas, M. A. (2014). Cardiac coherence, self-regulation, autonomic stability, and psychosocial well-being. Frontiers in Psychology, 5, 1090.

Normann, N., & Morina, N. (2018). The efficacy of metacognitive therapy: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Frontiers in Psychology, 9, 2211.

Pizzoli, S. F. M., Marzorati, C., Gatti, D., Monzani, D., Mazzocco, K., & Pravettoni, G. (2021). A meta-analysis on heart rate variability biofeedback and depressive symptoms. Scientific Reports, 11(1), 6650.

Porges, S. W. (2011). The polyvagal theory: Neurophysiological foundations of emotions, attachment, communication, and self-regulation. W. W. Norton.

Porges, S. W. (2022). Polyvagal theory: A science of safety. Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience, 16, 871227.

Schwartz, R. C. (2021). No bad parts: Healing trauma and restoring wholeness with the Internal Family Systems model. Sounds True.

Kevin Todd Brough, M.A., MFT

Ascend Counseling & Wellness

https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists/kevin-todd-brough-saint-george-ut/1386605

VisionLogic | LifeScaping™

www.visionlogic.org

Finding Your Center

Finding Your Center: How Your Body, Heart, Mind, and Spirit Work Together for Well-Being

By Kevin Todd Brough, M.A., MFT

Have you ever noticed that when you’re stressed, it’s hard to think clearly? Or that when you’re anxious, your body feels tense and your emotions feel overwhelming? This isn’t a coincidence—it’s your body, heart, mind, and spirit all communicating with each other.

For over two decades, I’ve been exploring a simple but powerful idea: when we find a centered place within ourselves—what I call our Vantage Point—and develop the ability to move flexibly between different parts of our experience—what I call Fluid Perspective—we gain access to our whole, integrated self.

The exciting news? Modern research supports what many wisdom traditions have taught for centuries: there’s real science behind finding your center.

What Is a “Vantage Point”?

Imagine standing on a hilltop where you can see the entire landscape below—the valleys, the rivers, the forests, and the paths connecting them. From this elevated position, you can observe everything without being lost in any single area.

Your inner Vantage Point works the same way. It’s a calm, centered place within you from which you can observe your thoughts, feelings, physical sensations, and a more profound sense of meaning—without being overwhelmed by any of them. Different therapy approaches have different names for this:

Wise Mind in Dialectical Behavior Therapy (Linehan, 2015)

The Observing Self in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (Hayes et al., 2012)

The Self in Internal Family Systems, characterized by calmness, curiosity, clarity, and compassion (Schwartz, 2021)

The fact that so many different approaches point to the same thing suggests this capacity is fundamental to human well-being.

The Four Parts of You

From your Vantage Point, you can observe four essential aspects of your experience:

Mind — Your thoughts, analysis, planning, and problem-solving

Heart — Your emotions, feelings, and relational connections

Body — Your physical sensations, energy, and somatic experience

Spirit — Your sense of meaning, purpose, values, and connection to something larger

Fluid Perspective is the ability to move flexibly between these four areas—to check in with your body, listen to your emotions, engage your thinking, and connect with your deeper values—without getting stuck in any one place.

When all four are working together in harmony, you experience what I call your Whole Soul—a state of integration where you feel unified, clear, and authentically yourself.

The Body: Your Foundation for Finding Center

Here’s something I’ve observed in my clinical work that research thoroughly supports: the body is often the fastest pathway to your Vantage Point.

When your body relaxes and grounds, your emotions naturally begin to calm. When your emotions settle, your mind can find peace and clarity. And when body, heart, and mind come into harmony, you become more open to spirit—to meaning, purpose, and connection.

This isn’t just philosophy—it’s measurable physiology.

What Happens When You Find Your Center

Researchers at the HeartMath Institute have discovered that when we enter a calm, centered state, our heart rhythm changes. Instead of an erratic, jagged pattern, our heart rate variability becomes smooth and wave-like—a state they call coherence (McCraty & Childre, 2010).

During coherence, something remarkable happens: our breathing, heart rhythm, and even brain waves begin to synchronize. Scientists call this entrainment—different systems in your body literally coming into harmony with each other.

The research shows that in this coherent state, we think more clearly, feel more emotionally stable, and experience greater overall well-being. Our body and brain simply work better together (McCraty et al., 2009).

Why Safety Matters

Dr. Stephen Porges’ Polyvagal Theory helps explain why finding your center can feel so difficult when you’re stressed (Porges, 2011). Your nervous system is constantly scanning for safety or threat—usually without your awareness.

When your nervous system detects safety, it activates what Porges calls the “social engagement system”—your heart rate slows, your body relaxes, and you become capable of connection, clear thinking, and calm presence. This is the physiological foundation of your Vantage Point.

When your nervous system detects a threat, it shifts into fight-flight mode (anxiety, racing thoughts) or shutdown mode (numbness, disconnection). In these states, accessing your centered Vantage Point becomes much harder—not because something is wrong with you, but because your biology is doing precisely what it’s designed to do.

The good news? We can learn to signal safety to our nervous system through practices such as slow breathing, grounding, and intentional body awareness.

Does This Really Work? What Research Shows

Yes! Multiple research reviews have found substantial effects for practices that help us regulate our body-heart-mind connection:

A significant analysis found that heart rate variability biofeedback significantly reduces anxiety and stress (Goessl et al., 2017).

Research on body-focused trauma therapy (Somatic Experiencing) shows positive effects on PTSD symptoms and overall well-being (Brom et al., 2017).

Studies on mindfulness meditation show it changes brain activity in ways associated with improved attention and emotional regulation (Hasenkamp & Barsalou, 2012).

In other words, when we practice finding our center, our brains and bodies actually change in measurable, positive ways.

Simple Ways to Find Your Vantage Point

Here are some practices you can start using today:

1. Ground Through Your Body

Feel your feet on the floor. Notice where your body makes contact with the chair. Take a slow breath. This simple practice signals safety to your nervous system.

2. Breathe for Coherence

Slow, rhythmic breathing (about 5-6 breaths per minute) helps your heart rhythm become coherent. Try breathing in for 5 counts, out for 5 counts.

3. Check In With All Four Parts

Ask yourself: What is my body feeling? What emotions are present? What is my mind saying? What does my spirit need?

4. Create an Anchor

Find a word, image, or gesture that represents your centered state. Practice accessing this anchor daily so it becomes easier to find your Vantage Point when you need it most.

5. Practice Self-Compassion

Remember: losing your center is normal and human. The goal isn’t to stay centered all the time—it’s to develop the ability to return to center when you notice you’ve drifted from it.

Your Whole Soul Is Wiser Than Any Part

When we’re stuck in just one part of ourselves—caught in anxious thoughts, overwhelmed by emotion, disconnected from our body, or cut off from meaning—we lose access to our full wisdom.

But when we find our Vantage Point and can move fluidly between mind, heart, body, and spirit, something powerful happens: we access the integrated wisdom of our Whole Soul.

This isn’t about being perfect or never struggling. It’s about developing the capacity to observe your experience with compassion, to listen to all parts of yourself, and to respond from a place of wholeness rather than fragmentation.

The research confirms what many have intuitively known: we are designed for integration. And with practice, we can learn to come home to ourselves.

Ready to explore these concepts further? I work with individuals and couples to develop these capacities within a supportive therapeutic relationship. Contact Ascend Counseling & Wellness to learn more about how therapy can help you find your center and access your Whole Soul.

References

Brom, D., et al. (2017). Somatic experiencing for posttraumatic stress disorder: A randomized controlled outcome study. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 30(3), 304-312.

Goessl, V. C., Curtiss, J. E., & Hofmann, S. G. (2017). The effect of heart rate variability biofeedback training on stress and anxiety: A meta-analysis. Psychological Medicine, 47(15), 2578-2586.

Hasenkamp, W., & Barsalou, L. W. (2012). Effects of meditation experience on functional connectivity of distributed brain networks. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 6, 38.

Hayes, S. C., Strosahl, K. D., & Wilson, K. G. (2012). Acceptance and commitment therapy: The process and practice of mindful change (2nd ed.). Guilford Press.

Linehan, M. M. (2015). DBT skills training manual (2nd ed.). Guilford Press.

McCraty, R., Atkinson, M., Tomasino, D., & Bradley, R. T. (2009). The coherent heart: Heart-brain interactions, psychophysiological coherence, and the emergence of system-wide order. Integral Review, 5(2), 10-115.

McCraty, R., & Childre, D. (2010). Coherence: Bridging personal, social, and global health. Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine, 16(4), 10-24.

Porges, S. W. (2011). The polyvagal theory: Neurophysiological foundations of emotions, attachment, communication, and self-regulation. W. W. Norton.

Schwartz, R. C. (2021). No bad parts: Healing trauma and restoring wholeness with the Internal Family Systems model. Sounds True.

Ascend Counseling and Wellness – ascendcw.com – 435.688.1111 – kevin@ascendcw.com