Shame Kills Sensation: Why the West Got Embodiment Wrong
with Alexandra Roxo & Eli Buren
Human Garage Experience
Real conversations at the edge of fascia, consciousness, physiology, and what it means to heal from the inside out.
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Show Notes
Episode Description
What does it actually mean to stay awake with another person? Alexandra Roxo and Eli Buren—two teachers of sacred intimacy—join Jason Van Blerk to explore the gap between performing a relationship and actually being in one. They discuss the feminine as life force in motion (not performance), the masculine as the witness that never changes, and the single practice that separates couples who grow together from those who slowly die beside each other: the courage to turn toward discomfort instead of away. This episode isn't about sex or feminine energy as concepts. It's about why most relationships collapse in the moments that matter most, and what it takes to choose the same person on purpose, over and over.
The Brazil-Georgia Wound: Sensuality vs. Spirituality — Alexandra shares how growing up between Brazil's embodied freedom and the American South's sexual repression created a lifelong conflict—and ultimately her life's work reconciling sexuality and spirituality.
Feminine Is Movement, Masculine Is the Witness — Eli reveals that the part of you aware of all change—the consciousness that watched ten years ago and will watch ten years from now—is the deep masculine. The feminine is everything that moves, feels, and transforms.
Emotion Without Story: The Practice That Changes Everything — Alexandra teaches the radical practice of feeling emotions fully without explanation, blame, or narrative. Most couples spend half an hour rationalizing feelings before they can actually cry or be seen.
The Collapse: Why Unpracticed Couples Can't Stay Awake Together — Eli names the central teaching: when difficulty arises, unpracticed people disassociate or collapse. Intimacy is the practice of feeling the excruciating discomfort without leaving.
The Restaurant Image: The Slow Death of Connection — Alexandra describes couples sitting together in complete disconnection—bodies slumped, attention on phones—a haunting image of what happens when two people stop learning from each other.
Fighting as the Edge: Conflict as Intimacy Practice — Eli teaches that conflict is specifically designed to activate your wounds. The practice isn't avoiding it—it's staying present with the discomfort that wants to make you run.
The Armpit Hair Rebellion: The Cost of Swimming Upstream — Alexandra tells the story of a woman at a Brazilian wedding who refused to shave—and the family shame that erupted. A perfect metaphor for what it costs to break formation and reclaim your aliveness.Ready to unlock your body's intelligence? Explore the Human Garage programs here: https://humangarage.net/programs
Learn more about Human Garage: https://humangarage.net
Learn more about Alexandra Roxo: https://www.alexandraroxo.com/ Instagram: @alexandraroxo
Learn more about Eli Buren: https://eliburen.com/ Instagram: @eliburen