The Gravity Doctors

Kurt Cobain and the Gravity of Child Development with Dr Mats Niklasson


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Dr Lachlan Kent is joined by Dr Mats Niklasson, developmental psychologist, visiting Research Fellow at the University of Greater Manchester, and co-founder of Sensorimotor Therapy, to explore how early vestibular development shapes both physical coordination and the narrative sense of self.

Drawing on nearly 40 years of clinical work with children and adults experiencing coordination and concentration difficulties, Mats explains how early reflexes—especially the Moro (startle/falling) reflex—connect infants to gravity. When these developmental processes are disrupted, the result may be delayed motor patterns, emotional dysregulation, learning challenges, and even later-life identity instability.

Using the life of Kurt Cobain as a psychobiographical case study, the conversation explores how gravitational insecurity may influence creativity, mental health, and the lifelong struggle to feel “at home” in one’s own body.


Check out Mat's book on the topic: "The discovery of international autoethnographical psychobiography"

https://bookstore.emerald.com/the-discovery-of-international-digital-collaborative-autoethnographical-psychobiography-hb-9781837083817.html


1. Sensorimotor Therapy & Gravity

A developmental approach grounded in movement and balance

Focuses on vestibular activation and early motor patterns

Links physiology and psychology through embodied development

Works by re-engaging early fetal-style movements

The goal:Reconnect the nervous system with gravity to release arrested development

Primary Reflexes & Early Development

All infants are born with survival reflexes

The Moro reflex is closely tied to the vestibular system

If not properly integrated:

  • Crawling patterns may be skipped
  • Walking and speech may be delayed
  • Concentration and coordination may suffer

Vestibular development sits on a continuum—not simply “normal” vs “impaired”

Reconnecting to Gravity

Therapy works by:

  • Recreating early fetal movement patterns
  • Engaging attachment between child and caregiver
  • Stimulating vestibular systems

Observed outcomes include:

Return of expected motor patternsImproved regulationReduction in headaches and stomach achesThis suggests a deep link between vestibular development and whole-body wellbeing

From Body to Biography

Mats connects early vestibular insecurity to later psychological outcomes:

Development is trajectory-based

Small early deviations may compound over time

Identity itself may emerge from embodied stability.

Kurt Cobain as Case Study

Niklasson’s analysis suggests:

Possible early developmental difficulties

Verified diagnoses included scoliosis and chronic bronchitis

Chronic stomach pain remained unexplained

He may have suffered from IBS—undiagnosed in his lifetime

Vestibular instability may have influenced:

  • Sensitivity
  • Withdrawal
  • Creativity
  • Search for equilibrium

Niklasson proposes Cobain may have been “a victim of his time,” lacking modern frameworks to understand syndrome-like conditions

Creativity & Instability

Drawing on Coleridge’s distinction between:

Fancy imagination (common)

Secondary imagination (rare, generative)

Some creative individuals may channel instability into talent.


Therapeutic balance is key:

Stability may reduce suffering

But may also alter creative expression

Resources

The Gravity Doctors: https://thegravitydoctors.com

Dr Brennan Spiegel: https://brennanspiegelmd.com

Dr Lachlan Kent: https://lachlankent.au

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The Gravity DoctorsBy Lachlan Kent