Indigenous Wisdom, Alchemy, and Human Potential Tricia Eastman

 

Bio-cultural stewardship advocate Tricia Eastman works with indigenous groups like Colombia's Kogi people to bridge traditional practices with modern wellbeing and creative expression approaches.

 

The Physical Foundation

Research shows that physical experiences create lasting changes in muscle fascia and connective tissue. Eastman notes how the Kogi people of Colombia recognize this connection through their body-based practices that support mental clarity and overall wellbeing.

According to Eastman, "our issues are in our tissues. Talk therapy in the brain is not gonna get the issues out of the tissues." Your autonomic nervous system functions as your body's background operating system, and breathwork techniques can optimize this system by stimulating the vagus nerve.

Many wellness approaches focus solely on mental techniques while overlooking the body's role. As Eastman explains, even extensive meditation practice may have a limited impact "if unprocessed tension remains locked in your tissues."

Developing Internal Resources

Many approaches to wellbeing encourage reliance on external teachers, systems, and frameworks. Eastman observes that this pattern can limit the development of genuine internal resources and self-trust.

She describes how indigenous cultures emphasize direct experience over secondhand knowledge: "A Kogi apprentice doesn't simply read about consciousness—they develop it through years of structured practice, then get tested to verify their capabilities."

Building authentic wellbeing, according to Eastman, requires "reclaiming your power" and developing your own capacity for discernment rather than constantly seeking external validation.

Environmental Integration

Humans evolved in natural environments, yet most spend over 90% of their time indoors. This disconnection from natural systems creates what researchers call "nature deficit disorder"—a cluster of attention, mood, and cognitive issues linked to environmental isolation.

Studies show that even brief exposure to natural environments reduces cortisol levels, improves focus, and enhances creative problem-solving. Indigenous cultures understood this connection intuitively, viewing individual health as inseparable from environmental health.

Your nervous system requires natural inputs to calibrate properly. Without them, you're essentially running outdated software on modern hardware.

Building Resilience

Life presents challenges that can either fragment or strengthen us. Eastman describes this process through the lens of "inner alchemy"—developing the capacity to process experiences constructively rather than avoiding difficulty.

She draws on the Japanese practice of kintsugi to illustrate this principle: "It's about taking something broken and making it beautiful by gluing it back together... painting the cracks with gold." Similarly, challenging experiences can become sources of wisdom when approached with the right framework.

This involves what Eastman calls building tolerance for discomfort while developing practical skills for emotional regulation and creative problem-solving.

Daily Practices for Wellbeing

Effective practices are simple but consistent:

  • Breathing techniques: Several minutes of conscious breathing daily support nervous system balance and build capacity for handling challenges.

  • Body awareness: Regular checking for physical tension helps identify and release accumulated stress before it becomes chronic.

  • Present-moment attention: Developing the ability to stay grounded in immediate experience enhances focus and reduces mental loops.

  • Environmental connection: Regular time in natural settings supports physiological and psychological restoration.

Practical Implementation

Begin with physical foundations: address sleep, nutrition, and basic stress management before exploring more complex practices. Build internal resources by developing your own capacity for decision-making and self-assessment.

Cultivate environmental connection through regular nature exposure and sustainable living practices. Maintain consistency through daily awareness practices rather than sporadic intensive efforts.

Individual wellbeing contributes to collective health. Your personal practices ripple outward, affecting your community and environment in ways that extend beyond immediate awareness.

The Bigger Picture

This integrated approach challenges the fragmented view of human development that dominates Western culture. Instead of treating mind, body, and environment as separate systems, it recognizes their fundamental interdependence.

The goal isn't perfection or transcendence—it's developing the capacity to show up fully for life as it actually is. This means building genuine resilience rather than defensive strategies, and creating sustainable practices rather than quick fixes.

The most profound transformations often happen not through dramatic interventions, but through consistent attention to the fundamentals of human functioning. The question isn't whether you need development—it's whether you're willing to approach it systematically rather than haphazardly.

 
 
 
 
 

Connect with Tricia

Tricia Eastman, a lineage-honoring medicine woman and founder of nonprofit Ancestral Heart, bridges worlds rooted in her mestiza ancestry with profound insights from a decade of Bwiti initiations and training. A renowned speaker, artist, and writer, Eastman has been privileged to engage with audiences at Stanford University’s d.school and the World Economic Forum and on GAIA TV’s Psychedelica. Eastman has curated transformative retreats worldwide with plant medicines as well as facilitated the psychospiritual program with Ibogaine and 5-MeO-DMT at Crossroads Treatment Center in Mexico. Her wellness retreat center, Hu Azores, is scheduled to open in 2026/7.

Tricia’s MAGIC

Her magic is maintaining joy and lightness despite processing heavy, difficult experiences. She describes having "a lightness and a joy and a brightness" that allows her to transmute family karma and challenging circumstances without becoming weighed down by depression. She attributes this to being given abundant life force energy that prevents her from being crushed by the darkness she's had to move through, calling it her "superpower."

 
 

Credits & Revisions:

  • Guest Alignment Reviewer: Tricia Eastman

  • Story Writer/Editor: Dr. Jiani Wu

  • AI Partner: Perplexity, Claude

  • Initial Publication: Aug 29 2025

 

Disclaimer:

  • AI technologies are harnessed to create initial content derived from genuine conversations. Human re-creation & review are used to ensure accuracy, relevance & quality.

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