The Ground Remembers You
Scene
There are mornings when I walk barefoot outside before the world wakes.
The air is soft, the ground still cool from night.
I press my feet into the soil and feel it press back — steady, silent, alive.
That’s when I remember: I don’t stand on the Earth. I stand with it.
It knows my weight. It has carried me longer than any person ever could.
Every time I touch the ground, it feels like the body of an old friend whispering, You made it back.
Reflection
We speak so much about rising — rising in purpose, rising in vibration, rising above.
But sometimes the holiest thing you can do is fall into alignment.
The body holds the memory of the Earth: patience, rhythm, regeneration.
When you ground, you don’t lose energy; you circulate it.
Every breath that leaves you returns to the same soil that feeds your next meal.
The artist who forgets to ground will mistake chaos for inspiration.
But the one who remembers the floor beneath their feet will never lose direction.
Nuances
Grounding is not standing still; it’s standing aware.
It’s how spirit teaches the body to listen.
The ground conducts more than weight — it conducts information.
Every step is a conversation: minerals trading messages, heartbeats syncing with subterranean pulse.
In HUEMUN language, this is frequency rooting — the act of rejoining the living grid of Earth’s intelligence.
When you walk consciously, you become a circuit of reciprocity.
You charge, you release, you remember.
Practice
When anxiety rises, go barefoot.
Even on tile, even indoors — touch the floor with skin.
Breathe until you can feel the temperature of where you are.
If you can, kneel and press one palm to the Earth (or to your heart if the ground is out of reach).
Say quietly: The ground remembers me.
Let that truth travel up through your spine.
Artists spend so much time reaching upward — this is how you return to source.
Through sole, through soil, through stillness.
HUEMUN Code:
Rooted is not slow. Rooted is sure.
About the Artist–Author
Binä Jō Suhé Gōnz Meji is the creator of HUEMUNS of PARADISE — a living artwork that bridges clarity, sound, and devotion.
A multidisciplinary artist, writer, and creative strategist, Binä explores what it means to live as art: to let every breath, meal, movement, and relationship become part of creation itself.
Through essays, sonic altars, and participatory rituals, Binä’s work transforms everyday life into ceremony — blending embodied spirituality with grounded creative practice.
Their writing invites readers to move beyond inspiration and into integration: where discipline becomes devotion, and clarity becomes beauty.
Binä also serves as the founder of GoodBread Inc., a creative agency dedicated to vision-driven storytelling and brand clarity for conscious organizations.
Their art, teachings, and reflections have been shared across exhibitions, digital experiences, and intimate gatherings around the world — from Miami to Kauaʻi to New York.
Current Focus: the HUEMUNS Lifestyle Journal — a field guide for living artists, seekers, and lil HUEMUNS learning to turn life itself into art.

