Using some help from modern neuroscience, the mind does not control the body but the body controls the mind. You can read more from Descartes Error by Damasio. But for reference, I'll just quote from https://www.amazon.com/Prefrontal-Cortex-Joaquin-Fuster/dp/012407815X
>Consequently, at a given moment in our daily life, a host of internal and external influences enter in competition with one another, demanding attention from our executive cortex to shape decisions and actions. The majority of these influences are processed simultaneously, in parallel, and out of consciousness. Only a minority will lead to action, sometimes only one action (“winner takes all”). Presumably, in neuroeconomic terms, the action will be selected after a probabilistic estimate of maximum benefit and minimum risk. The other actions must wait for their chance. The action can take many routes and many expressions. There is the movement processed by the basal ganglia and motor cortex. Then, there is the visceral and emotional action, processed by the same structures and by the limbic brain. And then, there is the cognitive action that engages the prefrontal cortex together with other cortical regions and leads to myriad forms of language, spoken or written, and to artistic production or scientific discovery. The following, therefore, seems a reasonable proposition. The prefrontal cortex is constantly subjected to a multitude of signals from the external and internal milieu. These signals engage in competition for action. The decision to act depends on the probability and strength of each of these signals, as well as the probability of benefits and risks from it. Therefore, freedom of action at a given time is defined literally and statistically by the degrees of freedom of the inputs and outputs of the prefrontal cortex. Thus, in neural terms, both determinism and freedom of action are relative and probabilistic. The old argument between the two becomes idle. All actions are the result of conscious or unconscious efforts to maintain, in a broad sense, the adaptation of the organism to its environment – homeostatic equilibrium as Bernard (1927) and Cannon (1932) understood it. (To the extent that these efforts are unconscious, we feel free to act, although in accord with Freudian dictum we may not be.)
So are you going to be biased to your consciousness/mind? Modern society is heavily biased against our emotions, sex drive, etc. A lot of it is using the consciousness to suppress all these "feelings". When animals get angry, even if they are weak, they might just try to release their anger and act on violence. This is life. There might be regret, but it is still life. This universe isn't created by humans. Language does not represent the ultimate truth. We are just animals in this universe.