Integrity in Action: Alignment, Momentum, and the Power of Clean Choices

Devon Hornby LMT, ABT

So far, we’ve looked at integrity as connection in the body, in movement, and in energy.

Now we arrive at the layer where all of this becomes visible:

Action.

Because no matter how refined your awareness is, or how well your system is organized internally, your life is shaped by what you actually do.

And what you do—repeatedly—creates momentum.


Karma as Momentum

Set aside the metaphysics for a moment.

Think of karma in the simplest possible way:

Action → repetition → pattern → trajectory

Every choice you make reinforces something:

  • a way of thinking
  • a way of responding
  • a way of moving through the world

Over time, these accumulate.

Not abstractly, but concretely—in your nervous system, in your habits, in your relationships, and in the opportunities that come your way.

This is momentum.

And momentum has direction.


Alignment vs. Internal Conflict

You already know when something is aligned.

There’s a sense of clarity.
A lack of internal friction.
A quiet “yes” behind the action.

And you also know when it isn’t.

You hesitate.
You justify.
You override something deeper to make it work.

These moments might seem small, but they are not neutral.

Each one either:

  • strengthens coherence
  • or reinforces fragmentation

This is integrity in action.

Not about being perfect—but about whether your actions are in agreement with what you know to be true.


The Cost of Misalignment

When actions are out of alignment, the cost shows up in multiple ways.

Internally:

  • increased tension
  • mental noise
  • reduced clarity

Physically:

  • compensatory patterns
  • fatigue that doesn’t match the workload
  • difficulty recovering

Clinically, this is something you see often.

A person can be doing all the “right” things—exercising, receiving treatment, following protocols—and still not progressing.

Because something in their life is working against them.

Chronic stress.
Unresolved conflict.
Patterns of overextension or avoidance.

The body doesn’t separate these from physical function.

It reflects them.


Integrity as Conservation of Energy

When your actions are aligned, something very practical happens:

You stop wasting energy.

There’s less second-guessing.
Less internal resistance.
Less need to compensate for conflicting choices.

Energy that was previously tied up in managing contradiction becomes available.

This is one of the most overlooked aspects of integrity.

It’s not just about doing the right thing.

It’s about freeing up capacity.


Trust as a Form of Power

There’s another layer to this.

When you act in alignment consistently, you begin to trust yourself.

And other people begin to trust you as well.

This builds something that’s hard to measure, but easy to feel:

reliability.

Your words and actions match.
Your direction becomes clear.
Your presence has weight.

This is a form of power.

Not forceful, but grounded.

And it comes directly from integrity.


Clinical Implications: Where Change Actually Happens

In practice, lasting change often hinges on this layer.

Not just what happens in a session—but what happens between sessions.

  • Does the person follow through on what they’ve identified?
  • Do they continue patterns that undermine their progress?
  • Are they willing to make small, consistent shifts in behavior?

You can help someone reorganize their structure.
You can support their nervous system.
You can create the conditions for change.

But if their actions remain misaligned, the system will keep reverting.

This isn’t a failure of treatment.

It’s a reflection of momentum.


Small Choices, Real Direction

The good news is that momentum doesn’t require dramatic change.

It builds through small, consistent actions.

  • telling the truth in a moment where it would be easier not to
  • following through on something you said you would do
  • choosing not to engage in a pattern that you know drains you

Each of these strengthens alignment.

Each of these reinforces integrity.

Over time, the direction of your life begins to shift.

Not suddenly.

But steadily.


Purpose: The Organizing Principle

All of this is shaped by one deeper factor:

What you are orienting toward.

Purpose acts like gravity.

It organizes decisions, attention, and behavior.

When it’s clear, alignment becomes easier.
When it’s absent or distorted, fragmentation increases.

This is where the idea of service becomes relevant.

When your actions are oriented toward something beyond immediate self-interest, they tend to organize more cleanly.

Not because of ideology, but because the system stabilizes around a larger aim.

When purpose is driven by fear, greed, or short-term gain, the opposite happens.

More conflict.
More instability.
More leakage.


A Simple Practice

At the end of the day, take a few minutes to review:

  • Where was I aligned today?
  • Where did I go against what I knew to be true?

No judgment.

Just clarity.

Then choose one small adjustment for tomorrow.

Not everything.

Just one.

This is how integrity is built in action.


What This Changes

As alignment becomes more consistent, you may notice:

  • clearer decision-making
  • less internal conflict
  • more stable energy
  • a growing sense of direction

And importantly:

A feeling that your life is moving somewhere.


Where This Leads

We’ve now looked at integrity across four layers:

  • Structure
  • Movement
  • Energy
  • Action

Next, we bring it all together through one final piece:

Purpose.

Not just as an idea—but as a unifying force that organizes every level of your system.

Because when integrity is present across all layers, something becomes possible that isn’t available otherwise:

Real, usable power in the world.

Virtue as Alignment

Devon Hornby LMT, ABT

Virtue, for the warrior, is not a code to obey. It is the natural alignment that arises when we stop betraying ourselves. Trungpa Rinpoche described virtue as the expression of one’s basic goodness. Juan Matus framed it as acting from impeccability—doing what is required without wasting energy on self-importance. In many Indigenous traditions, virtue is understood as right relationship: with oneself, one’s community, the land, and the unseen forces that support life.

Virtue is coherence.

It is what happens when our inner knowing and our outer behavior match. When we live this way, we feel a kind of internal click—a sense that we are not at odds with ourselves.


“Virtue is not about obeying rules; it is the expression of your own sanity”
Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche

Virtue and Trustworthiness

A warrior’s virtue is not meant to impress others. It is meant to stabilize one’s own heart.

When we act in alignment, we trust ourselves more. Our decisions become clearer. Our relationships become cleaner. There is less background noise. And because we are not spending energy managing guilt or hiding from our own contradictions, we become more available to the present moment. It is a form of energetic hygiene.

Practice: Inner Alignment Scan

This is a somatic check-in to sense when actions and values diverge.

  1. Bring to mind a current decision or relationship dynamic.
  2. Feel your breath. Let your body soften slightly.
  3. Notice sensations in the chest, belly, throat, and jaw.
  4. Ask gently: Is this aligned?
  5. Notice what the body says—tightening, expansion, warmth, collapse, steadiness.

The body has an immediate, honest opinion.

Returning to this practice builds integrity at the deepest level.

Practice: The Impeccable Act (Juan Matus Inspired)

Each day, choose one simple action to complete with total presence.
For example:

  • washing a dish
  • greeting someone
  • taking out trash
  • making a commitment and following through

Do it with precision, presence, and sincerity.

This teaches the nervous system to taste what alignment feels like.

Further Resources

  • The Myth of Freedom — Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche
  • The Fire From Within — Carlos Castaneda
  • Works on “right relationship” in Indigenous philosophies (e.g., Robin Wall Kimmerer)
  • Somatic integrity work from Peter Levine or generative somatics