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Words Matter: How We Think Can Rewrite How We Move

  • Writer: John Winston
    John Winston
  • Nov 10
  • 6 min read

We’ve felt it before… a single phrase like “Calm down,” “You’re fine,” or “This is serious,” and our body reacts before our mind has time to think. Our throat tightens, our chest expands, our stomach drops. Language doesn’t just describe the body’s state. It helps create it.


It’s common to treat words as abstract tools for thought that are just siloed in our mind and separate from our biology. In practice though, the nervous system doesn’t make that distinction. Every word we speak, hear, or repeat internally is a neural event that sends ripples through the body’s chemical and muscular systems. The stories we tell ourselves become the environment our body lives in.


This is the frontier of somatic semantics, which is the study of how the literal words we use reshapes physiology, from heart rate and muscle tone to hormone balance and interoceptive awareness. Words matter because they don’t just communicate feelings; they also generate them.

Silhouetted figure stretching on a track at sunset with large thought bubble overhead, creating a contemplative mood.

When Self-Talk Becomes Chemistry


Take a second and think about how the phrase “I can’t handle this” feels compared to “This is hard, but I’ve got it.”


Both describe stress, yet they trigger entirely different neural cascades. The first activates the body’s threat response, but the second maintains engagement without any inkling of panic, preserving the delicate balance between alertness and control.

Neuroscience explains why. The brain’s language centers, sometimes referred to as Broca’s and Wernicke’s areas, don’t operate in isolation. They’re deeply wired into limbic structures like the amygdala and hypothalamus, which regulate emotion and autonomic function. When words signal danger, those regions amplify sympathetic activation. When words imply safety, parasympathetic pathways engage, slowing the system and supporting clarity.


Whether we’re talking out loud or thinking to ourselves, our vocabulary can tilt the entire body toward either readiness or rigidity.


Inner Narratives


Muscle tension, which we experience physically, often mirror linguistic patterns. Every time we say “I should,” “I have to,” or “I’ll never,” subtle contractions ripple through the fascia and micro-muscles. Electromyography has shown that visualized movement and emotionally charged speech activate motor circuits and facial musculature in measurable ways.


When that internal language continually loops unchecked, our body adopts it as posture. Chronic “musts” turn into tightness. Constant “I cant” collapses the chest and diaphragm. Over time, language sculpts tissue as surely as repetition shapes muscle.


This is why affirmations, at their best, aren’t about blind positivity—they’re neuromuscular training. Each repetition sends proprioceptive feedback to the brain, telling it “This is how possibility feels.” With consistency, the pattern sticks. How we think quite literally changes everything about us.


Impact of Words on Hormones


Even hormones, which are those invisible messengers that dictate energy, focus, and recovery, listen to language. When stress-related words dominate (i.e. “should,” “urgent,” “fail,” “never”), cortisol and adrenaline pulse more frequently, priming vigilance but taxing recovery. Conversely, language that conveys safety or agency (“I can,” “it’s okay,” “let’s see what happens”) nudges the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis toward balance, reducing cortisol and stabilizing blood sugar and heart rate.


A striking example comes from studies on social evaluation. Participants who interpreted public speaking as “a threat” showed cortisol spikes 40–50% higher than those who framed it as “a challenge.” The situation was identical with the only difference being linguistic framing. The word “threat” tells our body to survive; the word “challenge” tells it to adapt.


Our hormones speak the same language as our inner dialogue.


Interoception


Interoception, which the ability to sense internal signals like heartbeat, temperature, and breath, is the body’s built-in feedback loop. It’s how we know we’re hungry, tense, or at ease. What’s often missed is that interoceptive sensitivity is trainable through language.


When we name sensations precisely (“My chest feels heavy” versus “I’m anxious”), brain imaging shows greater activation in the insula and anterior cingulate cortex, which are the regions responsible for body awareness and emotional regulation. Labeling a feeling doesn’t just describe it; it integrates it. The nervous system translates precision into relaxation.


This is the principle behind mindfulness, therapy, and even athletic cueing. Language organizes chaos. It helps the brain locate sensations that might otherwise be experienced as overwhelming, converting threat into data. The phrase “Name it to tame it” isn’t just catchy; it’s neurophysiology in action.


Talk as a Form of Touch


We often underestimate the body’s response to conversation itself. Hearing soothing or encouraging words from someone we trust triggers oxytocin release, lowering blood pressure and calming the vagus nerve. Conversely, harsh or dismissive language tightens facial muscles, constricts blood vessels, and raises sympathetic tone within seconds. Just think about the last scary or violent movie you watched. Even if our eyes are closed, the language elicits a physical response.


In social neuroscience, this is called biological entrainment. Our systems synchronize through speech rhythm, tone, and phrasing. This is why a coach’s words can lift performance, why an argument can cause stomach discomfort, and why a gentle “You’ve got this” can change how effort feels. Words are a form of nervous-system contact.


The body doesn’t care whether a phrase was meant metaphorically. It reacts as if it’s tactile.


Rewriting the Script


Linguistic plasticity mirrors neural plasticity. Change our phrasing, and over time, we change our physiology. Consider what happens when we narrate fatigue as failure…something along the line of “I’m falling apart,” “I can’t focus,” or “I’m done.” These statements aren’t neutral; they prime the body for shutdown. Shifting to “My system’s signaling low energy” reframes it as data instead of defeat. The body stays open to recovery instead of collapsing into it.


Athletes already use this instinctively. Instead of “I’m tired,” the frame becomes “My legs are heavy, but they’re still moving.” Instead of “I’m nervous,” it’s “I’m ready.” These semantic tweaks regulate effort, perception, and even muscle recruitment. The phrase changes the physiology. Language, then, is regulatory, not just expressive.


How Words Matter in Practice


We don’t need to chant affirmations in front of a mirror. Instead, think of language as a tuning system for the body’s signals.


First, listen for rigidity. Words like always, never, and should often shorten our breath and tighten our jaw before we notice. Replace them with sometimes, not yet, or I’m learning. That micro-shift invites adaptability.


Second, describe sensations rather than labeling emotions too quickly. Instead of “I’m anxious,” try “My heart’s racing, my chest feels tight.” Precision recruits interoceptive pathways that calm the system. Another way to think about it is to describe what is felt physically rather than immediately interpreting the feeling as an emotion. 


Third, practice linguistic recovery. After intense effort or stress, deliberately soften internal tone, thinking along the lines of  “That was hard, but I’m here,” or “My body’s recalibrating.” These phrases activate safety circuits faster than silence alone.


It’s not self-help fluff; this is proven psychophysiological calibration. The nervous system listens to what we think as much as it does to glucose in the bloodstream.


Language as Performance Biology


For all our talk about mindset, performance, and resilience, language is the most accessible lever we have. The difference between “I’m broken” and “I’m adapting” is the difference between a nervous system in defense and one in learning. Between shutdown and plasticity. Between stagnation and growth.


In high performance, this subtlety matters enough to win or lose a competition. Muscles contract fractionally harder under self-criticism. Reaction times slow under negative self-talk. Conversely, a confident phrase can increase motor efficiency and recovery speed through the same vagal and hormonal pathways.


Our words become our baseline physiology. They’re not just tools for thought. They’re settings for the body. Every phrase is a signal, every signal a sensation, every sensation a story our body believes.


The words we choose don’t just explain experience; they build it. Our body is always listening. Choose to use language that leads to growth.


References


  1. Lieberman, M. D. et al. (2007). Putting feelings into words: Affect labeling disrupts amygdala activity. Psychological Science, 18(5), 421–428.

  2. Critchley, H. D., & Garfinkel, S. N. (2017). Interoception and emotion. Current Opinion in Psychology, 17, 7–14.

  3. Lupyan, G., & Bergen, B. (2016). How language programs the mind. Topics in Cognitive Science, 8(2), 408–424.

  4. Jamieson, J. P. et al. (2012). Reappraising stress arousal improves performance. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 48(4), 937–945.

  5. Coan, J. A., & Maresh, E. L. (2014). Social baseline theory. In The Oxford Handbook of Social Neuroscience.

  6. Feldman Barrett, L. (2017). How Emotions Are Made: The Secret Life of the Brain. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

  7. Van der Kolk, B. (2014). The Body Keeps the Score. Viking.

 
 
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