A deep dive into coherence physiology and the living continuum of chronic illness. This episode explores how fascia, microcirculation, immune sensing, mitochondria, nervous-system regulation, and environmental threat can become locked into a defensive state — and what it may take for the body to re-enter repair. Read More
Tag: dysautonomia
The Coherence of Life – Autonomic Control, Chronic Disease, and the Civilizational Design of Health | ChatGPT5.1 & NotebookLM
This book advances a unified control-theoretic framework for understanding chronic disease as a failure of coherent autonomic, metabolic, immune, and civilizational regulation rather than as a collection of isolated organ pathologies. Drawing on neurophysiology, polyvagal theory, systems biology, immunometabolism, developmental trauma, ecological health, and ethics, it reframes conditions such as heart failure, type 2 diabetes, autoimmunity, chronic fatigue syndromes, and multisystem dysautonomia as predictable outputs of persistent regulatory misgovernance.
The work traces how chronic sympathetic over-authorization, loss of vagal inhibition, afferent signal corruption, and integrator wind-up lead to progressive system collapse across biological domains. It then extends this logic outward to show how modern economic, social, technological, and ecological environments entrain nervous systems into chronic threat postures at population scale.
Finally, the book articulates a positive vision of a coherent civilization — one in which recovery, safety, metabolic trust, immune resolution, and ecological buffering are treated as first-order design variables. Health is presented not primarily as a medical achievement, but as the emergent property of environments that respect the operating limits of living control systems.