<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><oembed><type>video</type><version>1.0</version><html>&lt;iframe src=&quot;https://www.loom.com/embed/cbe88d15d9da419b8a077a3b355ca92f&quot; frameborder=&quot;0&quot; width=&quot;1920&quot; height=&quot;1440&quot; webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen allowfullscreen&gt;&lt;/iframe&gt;</html><height>1440</height><width>1920</width><provider_name>Loom</provider_name><provider_url>https://www.loom.com</provider_url><thumbnail_height>1440</thumbnail_height><thumbnail_width>1920</thumbnail_width><thumbnail_url>https://cdn.loom.com/sessions/thumbnails/cbe88d15d9da419b8a077a3b355ca92f-480a6e0c74aab536.gif</thumbnail_url><duration>645.133333</duration><title>Why Knowing More Is Not Change</title><description>This Loom explains why knowing about healing and alignment is not enough and introduces sensory design as the path to real change. The speaker says information stays in the mind while patterns and safety gaps live in the body, where pressure, shallow breath, tired shoulders, freezing, fawning, bracing, or collapse can take over. They describe sensory design as moving what you know from the head into felt changes in the body, emphasizing practices that teach saturation, defined as blood, heat, and intensity filling dark tissue, to reveal numb or walled-off areas. They invite viewers to stop studying the person they could be and instead practice in the Archive community, where coaching and somatic sessions support embodiment.</description></oembed>