What if the voice in your head is not who you are-but a story your brain is telling?
In The Storytelling Monkey & The Web of Life, Steve Brandl explores how modern neuroscience, embodied practice, and ancient philosophy converge on a startling insight: the self we take to be solid and permanent is a constructed narrative. Drawing on research from thinkers such as Michael Gazzaniga, Anil Seth, Thomas Metzinger, and David Chalmers, Brandl examines how the brain generates the experience of ""I""-and where scientific explanations reach their limits.
But this is not only a book about theory.
As a fascia-focused clinician, Brandl brings the discussion into the body itself, showing how identity, emotion, and belief are not merely mental events but lived patterns woven into connective tissue. The ""Web of Life"" is not metaphorical-it is biological. The division between physical and psychological, he argues, is one of the mind's most persistent illusions.
Engaging deeply with the Daodejing while remaining grounded in contemporary science, the book follows inquiry all the way to the ""hard problem"" of consciousness: why experience feels like anything at all. Rather than offering spiritual dogma or reductive certainty, it invites readers into intellectual honesty-and into direct practice.
Part philosophical exploration, part embodied guide, The Storytelling Monkey & The Web of Life is for readers interested in consciousness, neuroscience, somatic practice, and the fertile boundary where science meets lived experience.
This is not a book that tells you what to believe.
It is a book that teaches you how to look.
By:
Steve Brandl Imprint: Steve Brandl Dimensions:
Height: 216mm,
Width: 140mm,
Spine: 11mm
Weight: 222g ISBN:9798233190872 Pages: 186 Publication Date:26 February 2026 Audience:
General/trade
,
ELT Advanced
Format:Paperback Publisher's Status: Active