Culture Club
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Pack up your tents to travel
Through lowland countryside
Lay down your hammers, brother
Through open passageways
I felt my breath grow shallow
Lend me your voice, oh God
To scream and shout and bellow
Chew up your love then swallow
And sometimes how you use a word changes the word a lot and that's gonna happen to the word body. It will also happen to the word IMPLICIT. Because the implicit usually means something that's all formed and it’s under there and all you have to do is dig it up. I’m going to talk about the body across. So plants have body, living body is what I’m talking about. Of course plants have living bodies and so do animals and so do we. And then there's even the further use of the word body for that implicit consciousness that produces Focusing.
Eugene T. Gendlin (born Eugen Gendelin; 25 December 1926 – 1 May 2017) was an American philosopher who developed ways of thinking about and working with living process, the bodily felt sense and the "philosophy of the implicit".[1] Though he had no degree in the field of psychology, his advanced study with Carl Rogers, his longtime practice of psychotherapy and his extensive writings in the field of psychology have made him perhaps better known in that field than in philosophy. He studied under Carl Rogers, the founder of client-centered therapy, at the University of Chicago and received his PhD in philosophy in 1958. Gendlin's theories impacted Rogers' own beliefs and played a role in Rogers' view of psychotherapy.[2 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugene_Gendlin