Body Dynamics & Interfaith Interface of A.I.W.P.

Body Dynamics & Interfaith Interface of A.I.W.P. for people who wish to deepen their embodiment of honesty, authenticity, impeccability, mindfulness a

"Body Dynamics" is the name of Coquelicot ("co-cle-co") Gilland's healing practice - a comprehensive and integrative approach to wellness and continued evolution. She employs a unique and engaging discovery process that combines body-oriented developmental psychology, touch work, body sensing, intuition, mutual connection, and deep listening.

For the first time, MIT scientists managed to observe what happens at the exact instant a human life begins. We’re not t...
12/27/2025

For the first time, MIT scientists managed to observe what happens at the exact instant a human life begins. We’re not talking about minutes later, or hours: we’re talking about the precise second in which the egg is fertilized.
What they saw was unexpected. Right after fertilization, biochemical waves travel across the egg as if someone had pressed an invisible switch. It’s not a chaotic reaction: it’s an organized activation signal, a true biological “second zero” that sets everything that comes afterward into motion.
What’s unsettling is that these waves are not distributed at random. They follow rhythmic patterns and proportions that the researchers compare to shapes that repeat throughout nature: spirals, orderly growth, sequences similar to Fibonacci, the same ones that appear in galaxies, seashells, and plants.

She discovered that breast milk changes its formula based on whether the baby is a boy or girl. Then she found something...
12/12/2025

She discovered that breast milk changes its formula based on whether the baby is a boy or girl. Then she found something even more shocking: the baby's spit tells the mother's body what medicine to make.

2008 Katie Hinde stood in a California primate research lab staring at data that didn't make sense.

She was analyzing milk samples from rhesus macaque mothers—hundreds of samples, thousands of measurements.
And the pattern was impossible to ignore:
Mothers with sons produced milk with higher fat and protein concentrations.
Mothers with daughters produced larger volumes with different nutrient ratios.
The milk wasn't the same. It was customized.
Her male colleagues dismissed it immediately. "Measurement error." "Random variation." "Probably nothing."
But Katie Hinde trusted the numbers. And the numbers were screaming something revolutionary:
Milk wasn't just food. It was a message.
For decades, science had treated breast milk like gasoline—a delivery system for calories and nutrients. Simple fuel.
But if milk was just nutrition, why would it be different for sons versus daughters?
Katie kept digging.
She analyzed over 250 mothers across more than 700 sampling events. And with each analysis, the picture became clearer—and more astonishing.
Young, first-time mothers produced milk with fewer calories but dramatically higher cortisol (stress hormone) levels.
Babies who drank this high-cortisol milk grew faster but were more nervous, more vigilant, less confident.
The milk wasn't just feeding the baby's body. It was programming the baby's temperament.
Then Katie discovered something that seemed almost impossible.
When a baby nurses, tiny amounts of saliva travel back through the ni**le into the mother's breast tissue.
That saliva contains information about the baby's immune status.
If the baby is fighting an infection, the mother's body detects it—and begins producing specific antibodies within hours.
The white blood cell count in the milk would jump from 2,000 to over 5,000 during illness. Macrophage counts would quadruple.
Then, once the baby recovered, everything would return to normal.
It was a conversation. A biological dialogue between two bodies.
The baby's spit told the mother what was wrong. The mother's body responded with exactly the medicine needed.
A language invisible to science for centuries.
Katie joined Harvard in 2011 and started digging into existing research.
What she found was disturbing: there were twice as many scientific studies on erectile dysfunction as on breast milk composition.
The world's first food—the substance that nourished every human who ever lived—was scientifically neglected.
So she started a blog with a deliberately provocative title: "Mammals Suck...Milk!"
Within a year: over a million views. Parents, doctors, scientists asking questions research had ignored.
Her discoveries kept coming:

Milk changes throughout the day (fat peaks mid-morning)
Foremilk differs from hindmilk (babies who nurse longer get higher-fat milk at the end)
Over 200 types of oligosaccharides in human milk that babies can't even digest—they exist solely to feed beneficial gut bacteria
Every mother's milk is unique as a fingerprint

In 2017, she delivered a TED talk that millions have watched.
In 2020, she appeared in Netflix's "Babies" docuseries, explaining her discoveries to a global audience.
Today, at Arizona State University's Comparative Lactation Lab, Dr. Katie Hinde continues revealing how milk shapes infant development from the first hours of life.
Her work informs care for fragile infants in NICUs. Improves formula for mothers who can't breastfeed. Shapes public health policy worldwide.
The implications are profound.
Milk has been evolving for 200 million years—longer than dinosaurs.
What science dismissed as "simple nutrition" was actually the most sophisticated biological communication system on Earth.
Katie Hinde didn't just study milk.
She revealed that the most ancient form of nourishment was also the most intelligent—a dynamic, responsive conversation between two bodies that has been shaping human development since the beginning of our species.
All because one scientist refused to accept that half the conversation was "measurement error."
Sometimes the most revolutionary discoveries come from paying attention to what everyone else dismisses.

11/04/2025

This is an amazing system and the core training which informs all the work that I do.

If you're wanting a life-changing experience and no longer want to be held hostage by outdated survival strategies this is a great place to start.

I would not be where I am and who I am if not for this amazing and unique body of work.

There is so much kindness and presence within a field of mutual connection it will support your dignity and well-being.

As you learn through this training you will have so much more compassion for yourself and others while maintaining better boundaries through voice, actions and being in touch with your feelings. The training will also give you much better access to a wide variety of life skills because it is precision somatic/ body based learning along with cognitive understanding. When those two centers of intelligence work together so much more is possible and you become much more present. This will allow you to move past reacting to responding to life and living more fully.

If you're curious please check it out and see if it might be a right fit for you.

09/22/2025

Scientists may have just discovered a new organ – hiding in our throats this entire time.

While studying prostate cancer patients, researchers at the Netherlands Cancer Institute used a specialized imaging method called PSMA PET/CT, designed to detect a molecule common in prostate cancer. But instead of only spotting tumors, they saw something unexpected: two large, symmetrical glands tucked behind the nose and above the throat, in a spot previously believed to contain only microscopic tissue.

Each gland was about 1.5 inches (3.9 cm) long, and they showed up clearly in every one of the 100 patients scanned. They don’t match the known salivary glands – the parotid, submandibular, or sublingual – and they appear to play a key role in lubricating the upper throat, especially during speaking and swallowing.

This isn’t just a curious anatomical update. It has real implications for cancer treatment.

Salivary glands are extremely sensitive to radiation. Patients receiving radiotherapy to the head or neck can suffer chronic dry mouth, pain, difficulty speaking or swallowing, and increased infections if these glands are damaged. But until now, doctors didn’t even know this structure existed – which means they couldn’t avoid targeting it.

Traditional imaging methods like MRI and CT scans weren’t detailed enough to spot them. It took a newer, highly sensitive scan and a bit of luck to reveal what had likely been there all along.

Further research is needed to confirm whether these are a separate organ or part of a larger salivary system. But one thing’s clear: we’re still discovering parts of the human body we thought we knew.

Learn more:
“The tubarial salivary glands: A potential new organ at risk for radiotherapy.” Radiotherapy and Oncology, 2021.

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