The Anchor Point

A trained mind suffers less. That's not an affirmation — it's what the history shows, what the science confirms, and what the practice proves every time you do the actual work. Hosted by Alexandria Quinn Love — historian, educator, and practitioner — The Anchor Point is where evidence-based mindfulness meets lived experience. No aesthetics. No corporate wellness packaging. No routines designed to be abandoned. Just the real history of the practice, the honest science behind it, and the disciplined work of learning to stay. Episodes move through the history of mindfulness, the neuroscience of resilience, the gap between knowing and doing, the emotions that surface when you finally get quiet, and the moments when practice alone isn't enough. The Anchor Point is also the companion to Alexandria's upcoming book — The Historian's Anchor: Sifting Fact from Myth to Find Peace — continuing the work of connecting research, reflection, and practice into something you can actually live inside. The Anchor Point is the heaviest part of the vessel. Not meant to be seen — meant to be felt in the lack of drifting.

  1. MAY 8

    The Anchor Point Season 2-Episode 1: Willow Wolf Self-Compassion and the Identities We Discover by Surviving

    Identity is not something you decide once. It’s something you keep discovering — through the choices that surprise you, the ones that humiliate you, the degree that led somewhere unexpected, the family that turned out to be larger than you knew, the beliefs you inherited before you could choose. And every discovery asks you to update the story you’ve been telling about yourself.   Episode 13 of The Anchor Point is about what that updating actually requires: the neuroscience of self-compassion, the shame spiral that one bad night can trigger and why it overshoots, the science of narrative identity and why the self is a story we are always revising, the remarkable research on expressive processing — why the body will find its way to release whether we plan it or not — and what post-traumatic growth research says about the identity that survives being tested.   This episode does not promise resolution. It offers something more useful: the scientific basis for treating yourself the way you would treat someone you actually love. Which includes, crucially, the person you were on your worst night. Who was also, it turns out, doing the best they could.   With research from Kristin Neff, Paul Gilbert, Dan McAdams, James Pennebaker, and Richard Tedeschi. And a guided practice for meeting the version of yourself that surprised you — not to excuse them, but to recognize them as human and keep going anyway.  “Stillness isn’t silence. It’s coming home to yourself — and in a world that rushes, that’s rebellion.”  ⚠️ CRISIS RESOURCES —  988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline: Call or text 988 (US) Crisis Text Line: Text HOME to 741741 (US) SAMHSA National Helpline: 1-800-662-4357 (free, confidential, 24/7) International Association for Suicide Prevention: https://www.iasp.info/resources/Crisis_Centres/

    40 min
  2. APR 29

    When Their Healing and Your Wound Are the Same Place

    Some wounds heal. Not perfectly, not without leaving a mark, but they quiet. The nightmares ease. The weight becomes manageable. You find your way to something that feels, genuinely, like peace.   And then something happens — not because you went looking for it, not because you failed at anything — that pulls it all back open. Not something harmful. Something legitimate. The need of someone you love, arriving through a door you had no way to close against it.   This episode is for anyone in that place.   Episode 12 of The Anchor Point addresses one of the most complex and least named experiences in human emotional life: what happens when someone else’s healing journey requires you to stand near your own wound in order to support it. When love and trauma share the same object. When the person you are trying to help is, through no fault of their own, the reason the past is present again.   Host Alexandria Quinn Love draws on current neuroscience and psychological research to illuminate what is actually happening in the body and brain during this experience — and to make clear that it is not backsliding, not weakness, not evidence of incomplete healing. It is a proportionate response to an impossible situation.   In this episode: • The neuroscience of trauma reactivation — why the body does not experience the passage of time the way the conscious mind does, and what that means for wounds that were genuinely quiet • Pauline Boss’s framework of ambiguous loss — grief without a recognized shape, mourning without a socially acknowledged endpoint, and why this kind of pain is so resistant to resolution • Jennifer Freyd’s betrayal trauma theory — the compounding injury of harm that comes from within a context of trust, and the additional wound of institutional silence • The legitimate developmental need behind an adult child’s search for biological origin — and why supporting that search does not require the erasure of your own experience • The difference between supporting someone’s healing and being conscripted into it — what the research says about limits, caregiver burden, and the sustainability of love • Stephen Porges’ polyvagal research on co-regulation — what a steady, calm presence does to the nervous system at a biological level, and why a hand in the dark is not a small thing   The episode closes with a guided practice for holding what cannot be set down — for sitting with contradictory feelings without resolving them prematurely, for offering yourself the permission to find this hard, and for finding the small steadiness that carries you through to the next hour.   No easy answers here. Only honest ones. And the science to show you that what you’re feeling makes complete sense.  “Stillness isn’t silence. It’s coming home to yourself — and in a world that rushes, that’s rebellion.”  ⚠️ CRISIS RESOURCES —  988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline: Call or text 988 (US) Crisis Text Line: Text HOME to 741741 (US) SAMHSA National Helpline: 1-800-662-4357 (free, confidential, 24/7) International Association for Suicide Prevention: https://www.iasp.info/resources/Crisis_Centres/

    41 min
  3. APR 7

    The Anchor Point Episode 11: The Long Game — What Decades of Meditation Research Reveal About Lasting Change

    What actually happens to a human being who meditates not for a week, not for an eight-week course — but for years? For decades? In Episode 11 of The Anchor Point, host Alexandria Quinn Love zooms way out to explore the science of long-term contemplative practice: what changes structurally in the brain, how the resting nervous system shifts, and what longitudinal research reveals about the kind of transformation that doesn't arrive like a lightning bolt — it accumulates. Drawing on landmark studies from Sara Lazar at Harvard, Richard Davidson at the Mind & Life Institute, and Judson Brewer's default mode network research, Alexandria walks through findings that genuinely changed how neuroscience thinks about the adult brain — including evidence that sustained practice may offset age-related cortical thinning, reshape resting-state neural networks, and produce gamma wave coherence that persists beyond formal sitting. She also addresses what the research says about individual variability, the honest science on practice-related challenges (including Willoughby Britton's groundbreaking work), and why consistency may matter more than intensity. The episode closes with a guided contemplative practice on locating yourself in the long arc of your own change — and a reflection on what the long game actually looks like in real human lives. This one is for everyone who kept going.  “Stillness isn’t silence. It’s coming home to yourself — and in a world that rushes, that’s rebellion.”  ⚠️ CRISIS RESOURCES —  988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline: Call or text 988 (US) Crisis Text Line: Text HOME to 741741 (US) SAMHSA National Helpline: 1-800-662-4357 (free, confidential, 24/7) International Association for Suicide Prevention: https://www.iasp.info/resources/Crisis_Centres/

    23 min
  4. FEB 24

    The anchor Point- Episode 9: When the Practice Isn't Enough — Knowing When You Need More Support

    There's something the wellness world doesn't say often enough, so we're going to say it here. Meditation is powerful. It is genuinely, measurably, life-changingly powerful. And it has limits. Some of what surfaces in the quiet — the grief that keeps returning, the anxiety that doesn't soften no matter how skillfully you sit with it, the weight that seems to live in your body in ways the breath can't reach — some of that is asking for something a solo practice cannot provide. This episode of The Anchor Point is about learning to tell the difference. Not to frighten you. Not to undermine what you've been building. But because the same honest attention you've been practicing on the cushion deserves to be applied to the question of your own care. We'll talk about what meditation can and cannot hold, what trauma-sensitive practice actually means, the signs that it might be time to reach for more support, and how to think about therapy not as an alternative to practice — but as its most courageous extension. This isn't a detour. This is the work.  “Stillness isn’t silence. It’s coming home to yourself — and in a world that rushes, that’s rebellion.”  ⚠️ CRISIS RESOURCES —  988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline: Call or text 988 (US) Crisis Text Line: Text HOME to 741741 (US) SAMHSA National Helpline: 1-800-662-4357 (free, confidential, 24/7) International Association for Suicide Prevention: https://www.iasp.info/resources/Crisis_Centres/

    23 min
  5. JAN 28

    The Anchor Point Episode 8 - Off the Cushion: Mindfulness in Real Life

    You can sit on a cushion for 20 minutes and follow your breath. But then someone texts you something irritating. Traffic is terrible. Your boss emails at 8 PM. You're triggered in a conversation. And suddenly all that beautiful mindfulness? Gone. This is the gap that breaks most practices—not the formal sitting, but the moment-to-moment application when life is actually happening. This episode bridges that gap. You'll learn the difference between formal practice (training) and informal practice (where the real work happens), plus six micro-practices you can use throughout your day: doorway breathing, red light meditation, hand washing with awareness, pausing before responding, monotasking, and body check-ins. We'll cover mindfulness at work (email reactivity, meeting presence, the afternoon crash), mindfulness in conflict (the four-step process when you're triggered), and what to do when you're completely overwhelmed (5-4-3-2-1 grounding, physiological sigh, permission to do less). Plus, a simple integration challenge: pick ONE micro-practice and do it daily for a week. That's how mindfulness becomes your life instead of something you add to your life. If you've been practicing formally but struggling to stay present in daily life, this episode gives you the tools to wake up in the moments that actually matter.  “Stillness isn’t silence. It’s coming home to yourself — and in a world that rushes, that’s rebellion.”  ⚠️ CRISIS RESOURCES —  988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline: Call or text 988 (US) Crisis Text Line: Text HOME to 741741 (US) SAMHSA National Helpline: 1-800-662-4357 (free, confidential, 24/7) International Association for Suicide Prevention: https://www.iasp.info/resources/Crisis_Centres/

    19 min
  6. JAN 12

    The Anchor Point Episode 7 - Beyond the Breath: Body Scan Meditation

    Most of us live from the neck up. We treat the body like transportation for the brain—numbing it, ignoring it, overriding it, pushing through it. Then we wonder why we're anxious, disconnected, and exhausted. Your body is constantly sending you information: tension, ease, pain, temperature, energy. But that information stays below conscious awareness, influencing your mood and stress response without you knowing it. This episode teaches body scan meditation—systematically bringing attention to different parts of your body to build interoceptive awareness. You'll learn why embodiment matters (your nervous system can override logic every time), what body scan actually is, and how to work with common challenges like feeling nothing, falling asleep, or feeling too much. Plus, a complete 12-minute guided body scan practice you can return to again and again. This isn't about relaxation. It's about building body literacy—learning to read the data your body is giving you so you can catch stress earlier, regulate more effectively, and stop living entirely in your head. If you've been practicing breath meditation and are ready to expand your awareness, this is the next step.  “Stillness isn’t silence. It’s coming home to yourself — and in a world that rushes, that’s rebellion.”  ⚠️ CRISIS RESOURCES —  988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline: Call or text 988 (US) Crisis Text Line: Text HOME to 741741 (US) SAMHSA National Helpline: 1-800-662-4357 (free, confidential, 24/7) International Association for Suicide Prevention: https://www.iasp.info/resources/Crisis_Centres/

    21 min
  7. JAN 5

    The Anchor Point Episode 6 -When the Feelings Hit: Working With Emotions in Meditation

    Nobody tells you this when you start meditating: you're going to feel things. A lot of things. Things you didn't know were there. Things you've been successfully avoiding for years. You sit down, close your eyes, follow your breath—and suddenly emotions you've been outpacing for months catch up with you. Anger. Grief. Anxiety. Shame. And your first thought is: "I'm doing this wrong." You're not. This episode explains why emotions surface during meditation (your nervous system finally has time to deliver the mail), what NOT to do when they show up (suppression, dramatization, believing every story), and how to actually work with them using the RAIN technique: Recognize, Allow, Investigate, Nurture. You'll learn the difference between being swept away BY an emotion and being WITH an emotion. Plus, a guided practice for meeting difficult feelings without getting destroyed by them. This is practical guidance for one of the most challenging—and most common—aspects of meditation practice. If you've ever felt overwhelmed during practice, this episode reframes everything.  “Stillness isn’t silence. It’s coming home to yourself — and in a world that rushes, that’s rebellion.”  ⚠️ CRISIS RESOURCES —  988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline: Call or text 988 (US) Crisis Text Line: Text HOME to 741741 (US) SAMHSA National Helpline: 1-800-662-4357 (free, confidential, 24/7) International Association for Suicide Prevention: https://www.iasp.info/resources/Crisis_Centres/

    18 min

About

A trained mind suffers less. That's not an affirmation — it's what the history shows, what the science confirms, and what the practice proves every time you do the actual work. Hosted by Alexandria Quinn Love — historian, educator, and practitioner — The Anchor Point is where evidence-based mindfulness meets lived experience. No aesthetics. No corporate wellness packaging. No routines designed to be abandoned. Just the real history of the practice, the honest science behind it, and the disciplined work of learning to stay. Episodes move through the history of mindfulness, the neuroscience of resilience, the gap between knowing and doing, the emotions that surface when you finally get quiet, and the moments when practice alone isn't enough. The Anchor Point is also the companion to Alexandria's upcoming book — The Historian's Anchor: Sifting Fact from Myth to Find Peace — continuing the work of connecting research, reflection, and practice into something you can actually live inside. The Anchor Point is the heaviest part of the vessel. Not meant to be seen — meant to be felt in the lack of drifting.

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