I Lived There Before the Science is a gentle, immersive remembrance of a world that once breathed in harmony with its people. Through a voice both intimate and expansive, Tina Ketch revisits a civilization where sound, light, rhythm, and environment worked together to sustain emotional balance, communal well-being, and a deeper sense of human coherence. It is not a history, nor a metaphor, but a lived memory that rises from the body rather than the mind.
In this world, bells were felt rather than heard, tuned to the human nervous system and placed so precisely that their tones regulated the rhythm of daily life. Windows shaped living light, offering color not as decoration but as nourishment. Streets curved toward ease, water calmed without instruction, and buildings listened before they spoke. Illness was rare, not because bodies were perfect, but because imbalance was addressed before it became pain.
The narrative traces how this harmony faded, not through violence, but through subtle shifts in fear, urgency, and the desire for control. Sound was restrained. Light lost its purpose. The town ceased to listen. Yet the memory did not vanish. It migrated inward, becoming a quiet intelligence the body never forgot.
Ketch carries the reader through layers of remembrance, revealing how fragments of this coherence still surface today in our responses to silence, tone, space, and stillness. The return of this ancient knowing does not arrive as revelation, but as relief, awakening gently through the nervous system rather than through belief.
More than a book, I Lived There Before the Science is an invitation to recognize the places within us that still respond to harmony. It speaks to the part of the reader that has always sensed more, felt more, and remembered without knowing why. It is a testament to a truth that cannot be lost, only rediscovered: coherence lives wherever the human body remembers how to listen.