Being there for your kids - Mind Your Own Business
Episode Date: February 13, 2026Sorry for messing with you to get your attention. Your business is your own, but I do want to talk about your mind and how you can traverse stages on your healing journey, actually changing how our br...ain functions. There are 4 stages to your healing journey. Making the commitment to healing change, your brain develops brand new neuropathways. This process, called neurogenesis, is the source of hope and change with counseling and psychotherapy. Check out my new book, The Healing Journey: Overcoming Adversity on the Path to the Good Life. Buy your copy at amazonbooks.com by clicking over to https://www.amazon.com/Healing-Journey.../dp/B0CY9PQXMZ Blessings, Dr. Jon
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I'm Dr. John Robinson, and this is Teachable Moments.
I'm going to lovingly tell you to mind your own business.
Your mind is minding your own business all of the time.
Like computers, there are plenty of moving parts.
Mentintelligence, a new psychology of thinking by my colleague, Kristen Lee,
provides the foundation for my strategic practice of mental intelligence psychotherapy,
which I call MPT.
Mental is the software of our brains, how we size up situations
and respond. Intelligence is the hardware of our brains, the capacity we bring to the table
that defines our ability to respond to our environment. Focus on the interaction of the two,
and we have man-intelligence. The substance of our brains are neurological pathways,
how we receive and respond to stimuli. Conventional wisdom, back in the day, told us that our brains
mature to full function at around age 25. We grow and learn until then, and then that's the hand
that were dealt. Thankfully, research over the past 20 years tells us that the brain's capacity
for neurogenesis extends throughout our lifetime. With counseling and psychotherapy, neurogenesis is
the source of hope and change. You can identify hope and change on your healing journey by noticing
how you are thinking. We've identified four stages of healing on the journey. We are living our lives,
doing what we always do, and thinking little about the impact of our words and actions on
others. I'm sorry if you don't like it, but this is just who I am. What you see is what you get.
This first stage is one of unconscious ignorance. We don't know that there's a problem, and we don't
know that we don't know. During this stage, your neurological pathways are unchallenged and continue
to fire from habit without question. The second stage of our healing journey begins with a
precipitating event. Something happens that gets our attention, and we know we need to do something
about it, but we don't know what to do. This stage is defined as conscious ignorance. With this
stage, you decide, or are forced, to begin psychotherapy. Too often your motivation is to get
someone off your back. While it takes time and commitment for change to last, you are challenging
your habitual neuropathways. You resist change, relapse to old habits, distance yourself from
well-intentioned family and friends. Nonetheless, you become more aware of your conscious ignorance
and choose to invoke new neuropathways.
With time and practice, trying on new ways of thinking, feeling, and behavior, your brain begins
to challenge your conscious ignorance, and new pathways emerge and grow stronger.
The old habitual neural pathways wither and die.
As you continue your new journey, the stage of conscious ignorance transforms into one of conscious
awareness.
You notice the difference between old and new habits and choose new habits.
This is scary because your brain follows the old adage.
This is how we've always done things.
Yet friends and family notice and reinforce your changes.
You understand what used to be and fumble a bit with being awkward because the new you is very different.
Yet, as you persist, the new becomes more familiar.
New neuropathways formed from neurogenesis become stronger and more reliable.
Finally, as your new normal becomes habitual, your healing journey enters the final stage, that of unconscious awareness.
Your new healing neuropathways firm up.
Your downward spiral of stuckness is becoming distant history.
You continue upward spiraling and soaring, even when encountering adversity.
With new neuropathways secured, your healing journey continues.
For more, go to Amazonbooks.com and buy my new book, The Healing Journey, Overcoming Diversity,
on the Path to the Good Life.
If my comments stir questions of your own, contact me through my website at www.
or email me at John Robinson 0.0.0.Belsouth.net. I'm Dr. Jonathan C. Robinson, licensed
clinical psychologist, and clinical author of Teachable Moments, Building Blocks of Christian
Parenting, and my new book, The Healing, The Healing, Overcoming Adversity on the Path
to the Good Life. Blessings, Dr. John.
Teachable Moments, Building Blocks of Christian Parenting, is available online at Amazonbooks.com
and in local and national bookstores. More on Dr. Robinson at
TMC-P-I-N-C dot com.
