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All Learning Reimagined with Teresa

All Learning Reimagined with Teresa

By: Teresa (Aussie educator)
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All Learning Reimagined, where passion meets possibility, one story at a time. All Learning Reimagined is a global gathering place for parents, educators, and lifelong learners who are ready to question—and transform—the outdated systems of education. This podcast dares to reimagine learning by placing heart, intuition, and creativity at its core. Grounded in common sense, connection to nature, community, and the wisdom of indigenous traditions, each episode offers practical, intuitive, and self-directed approaches that inspire confidence and awaken self-mastery in both mentor and learner. Through heartfelt conversations, reflections, and skill-sharing from around the world, we spotlight real-life stories and ideas that break free from rigid educational models. From early childhood through every stage of life, we explore what it means to learn in alignment with our inner knowing and natural curiosity. Our guests include parents, educators and changemakers who are living examples of heart-centered, life-honoring approaches to education. Together, we build a bridge between traditional pedagogy and more flexible, holistic, and skill-based learning pathways. Whether you're a parent seeking new ways forward or an educator ready to evolve, All Learning Re-imagined offers inspiration, tools, and an optimistic vision for the future of learning—one that begins with the heart. "Learning is not a system to fix — it’s a living journey to nurture."Copyright 2026 Teresa Hygiene & Healthy Living Personal Development Personal Success Psychology Psychology & Mental Health
Episodes
  • All Learning Reimagined, June 25, 2026
    Jun 26 2026
    All Learning Reimagined with Teresa Songbird Episode 4 of series on Embodied Intelligence Memory The Body Remembers Life: Memory, Learning, and the Intelligence Held Beneath the Mind Reimagining Memory Beyond the Brain In this episode of All Learning Reimagined, host Teresa continues the Embodied Intelligence series with episode four, focusing on memory and the possibility that the body carries experiences beyond conscious recall. After reviewing earlier episodes on the physical body, safety, and fascia, Teresa asks whether experiences can leave imprints beyond the mind and whether the body may store memory through sensation, emotion, nervous system response, and embodied patterns. She frames this as an especially important topic for parents, educators, mentors, and learners of all ages. A Childhood Boat Memory That Still Lives in the Body Teresa shares a childhood memory of being around five or six years old and needing to cross a narrow plank onto a boat during stormy weather. Although decades have passed and she now consciously knows she is safe when boarding boats, her body still reacts to similar situations. She remembers the rocking plank, rough water, fear of falling, and uncertainty beneath her feet. This becomes her personal example of body memory: a memory not stored merely as information, but as a lived experience that continues to echo through the body. The Nervous System as Protector, Not Obstacle Teresa explains that the body’s responses are not necessarily irrational or obstructive; they may be protective signals from the nervous system. She describes bodily reactions such as a tight stomach before difficult news, tense shoulders during conflict, clenched jaws under stress, or a lighter chest after meaningful connection. These responses, she suggests, show that the body is constantly responding to experience and communicating what it has learned. For Teresa, the question becomes not “Why is my body blocking me?” but “What is my body remembering?” Learning as Embodied Experience The episode then turns directly toward education. Teresa observes that memory is often treated as brain-based recall: names, facts, information, and stored events. But she broadens this view by pointing to examples such as riding a bike, dancing, gymnastics, music, athletic training, and muscle memory. She asks whether emotional experiences can also create patterns in the body, especially in learning environments. A child who was laughed at while reading aloud, told they were bad at math, or repeatedly criticized may later approach learning from a protective stance shaped by those earlier experiences. Creating New Pathways for Learning and Life Using the image of a garden path or a cow path worn into a field, Teresa explains that repeated thoughts, emotions, behaviors, and experiences create familiar routes that become easier to follow. But she emphasizes that new paths can always be created. Learning, therefore, is not only about taking in information; it is about creating new experiences, new evidence, and new stories that can be embodied. She also highlights how smell, taste, sound, movement, and emotion can trigger memory, reminding listeners that the body does not simply remember information — it remembers life. Micro-Practices for Body Memory Awareness Teresa offers a simple practice for exploring body memory. She invites listeners to choose a meaningful memory, sit quietly without distractions, notice what happens in the body, and observe changes in posture, breathing, warmth, tension, ease, or curiosity. She suggests placing a hand on the heart, breathing slowly, journaling what arises, and asking what one chooses to do with the information. She also offers reflection questions: how does the body communicate comfort, how does it communicate stress, what patterns keep repeating, and what new experiences are ready to be created? Awareness, Choice, and Learning That Comes Alive The episode closes by connecting body memory to universal laws such as cause and effect and association. Teresa asks how long past experiences continue shaping present responses and whether people are ready to release old patterns, reshape their stories, and create new possibilities. She reminds listeners that the body is not simply a “meat suit,” but an intelligent, adaptive, protective, remembering partner in learning. Her final message is that experience shapes us, but new experiences can also reshape us, especially when learning becomes alive, embodied, curious, and connected to life itself.
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    31 mins
  • All Learning Reimagined, June 19, 2026
    Jun 20 2026
    All Learning Reimagined with Teresa Songbird Episode 3 of series on Embodied Intelligence Fascia: Connected by Design Fascia, Embodiment, and the Living Web of Learning A Hidden Web Beneath Learning Teresa opens part three of the Embodied Intelligence series by introducing fascia as a hidden web of connection throughout the body. After recapping earlier episodes on the physical body and the nervous system, she explains that this episode asks whether the body contains an internal communication network that education has largely ignored. She frames the conversation as an invitation rather than a fixed doctrine, encouraging listeners to explore what resonates with them. The Body as a Spiderweb of Communication Using the image of a spider’s web, Teresa describes the body as an interconnected system where tension or change in one area can influence another. She explains fascia as a continuous web of connective tissue surrounding muscles, bones, organs, nerves, and blood vessels. She suggests that fascia may be part of the body’s communication system and invites listeners to consider its relationship to capacity, identity, consciousness, and learning. Emotion, Safety, and Somatic Experience The episode connects fascia to emotional experience by considering how stress, grief, uncertainty, and overwhelm can show up in the jaw, stomach, chest, shoulders, or other areas of the body. Teresa clarifies that she is not claiming emotions are stored in one fixed place for everyone, but she does suggest that lived experience may influence bodily patterns of tension, protection, and movement. She also links fascia to the nervous system and the felt sense of safety needed for expansion and learning. Why Learning Cannot Be Brain-Only Teresa challenges the idea that learning happens only through the brain, especially in mainstream schooling. She argues that children learn through movement, sensation, emotion, environment, relationships, breath, comfort, and safety. From this perspective, sitting still for long periods and treating movement as a brief interruption rather than a central part of learning can disconnect education from the body’s natural intelligence. Questioning Conformity in Education Reflecting on her own decades as an educator, Teresa questions how the industrial model of schooling measures success through grading, productivity, and conformity. She contrasts that with qualities such as complexity, creativity, innovation, and pattern recognition, asking where the body fits into a system that mainly champions the mental plane. She connects this concern to the law of oneness and the law of harmony, describing health and growth as whole-system processes. A Practice for Listening to the Body The episode closes with a simple body-listening practice in which listeners sit or stand comfortably, roll the shoulders back, open the chest, reach the arms overhead, and gently twist from side to side. Teresa invites listeners to notice where the body feels free, where it feels restricted, and what it may be communicating. She encourages adults and children to build self-trust through interoception, gentle movement, reflection, grounding, and a deeper relationship with the body.
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    29 mins
  • All Learning Reimagined, June 12, 2026
    Jun 13 2026
    All Learning Reimagined with Teresa Songbird Episode 2 of series on Embodied Intelligence Safety Creates Space Safety Creates the Space Where Real Learning Can Begin Safety as the Gateway to Learning Teresa Songbird opens the episode by introducing the second part of the Embodied Intelligence series, focusing on how safety creates the internal space needed for learning. She explains that while education often emphasizes intelligence, attention, effort, and brain-based learning, the nervous system plays a central role in determining whether a learner can remain curious, engaged, and open to growth. The episode frames safety not only as physical security, but also as calm, ease, trust, and psychological readiness. A Classroom Fight That Changed the Teaching Lens Teresa shares a story from her teaching career about two grade-seven boys who returned to class after a serious lunchtime fight. Although the conflict had been treated as resolved by the playground teacher, the boys’ bodies were still carrying the energy of the incident. During a science activity, they struggled to focus, withdrew, and could not engage normally. Teresa later realized that their nervous systems were still in protection mode, and this experience changed how she approached post-lunch transitions, class discussions, circle time, breathing, yoga, and emotional repair. The Nervous System Is Always Scanning The episode explains that the nervous system constantly scans for danger, often without conscious thought. Teresa says that in modern classrooms, children may not be scanning for physical dangers like saber-toothed tigers, but they are often scanning for psychological safety. Criticism, rejection, embarrassment, conflict, uncertainty, and untrusted feedback can all trigger a threat response. When learners do not feel safe, attention narrows, thinking becomes rigid, and the body prioritizes protection overgrowth. Relationship, Belonging, and Ancient Wisdom Teresa connects modern nervous system awareness with ancient wisdom and Indigenous understandings of learning through relationship. She emphasizes that learning is built through relationship with self, family, community, nature, land, and the surrounding environment. She says belonging helps regulate the nervous system and that story, observation, participation, and connection have long been central to meaningful learning. She also links the nervous system to the universal law of rhythm, describing cycles of activation, recovery, expansion, and contraction. Compassion for Learners in Different States Teresa contrasts two learners receiving the same lesson under the same conditions, with one feeling safe and the other anxious. She argues that their outcomes may differ not because of intelligence, but because their nervous systems are operating from different states of being. She encourages educators and parents to shift their interpretation of resistance, laziness, or lack of motivation, because those behaviors may actually signal overwhelm or a nervous system asking for safety. She also stresses that adults’ own groundedness affects the learning environment. Practical Examples and a Safety Scan The episode closes with real-life examples of students freezing during exams, Teresa’s childhood encounter with a growling dog, and her experience teaching children in difficult living conditions in London. She explains that learners need practice feeling safe under pressure and that basic needs must be acknowledged before academic expectations can be realistic. Teresa offers a simple safety scan involving breath, posture, grounding, sensory noticing, and appreciation. She ends by noting that a child’s own voice can feel safe to the body, making self-talk a useful tool for regulation.
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    32 mins
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