Social Engineering Blogs http://www.socialengineeringblogs.com An Aggregator for Blogs About Social Engineering and Related Fields Mon, 20 Oct 2014 19:49:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.2.21 Recap and Epilogue http://www.socialengineeringblogs.com/recap-and-epilogue/?pk_campaign=rss_feed&pk_kwd=recap-and-epilogue Mon, 20 Oct 2014 19:49:32 +0000 http://www.mindundercontrol.com/?p=10472 Recap: You’ve learned to x, x and x. Epilogue: - Problems are good: High-stress situations provide an opportunity to learn to cope with uncertainty, worry, frustration, irritation, disappointment, and guilt. In this way, even the worst situations can be used as a way to grow rather than stagnate. It allows you to put cognitive techniques […]

The post Recap and Epilogue appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>
Recap:

You’ve learned to x, x and x.

Epilogue:

– Problems are good:

High-stress situations provide an opportunity to learn to cope with uncertainty, worry, frustration, irritation, disappointment, and guilt. In this way, even the worst situations can be used as a way to grow rather than stagnate.

It allows you to put cognitive techniques to the test and practice and refine your skills, as well as develop new ones. You get to see first-hand how well they work. You get to experiment while playing the game of life.
KP1: Meaning, if your life sucks or it’s just ‘not your day,’ you are unusually fortunate. That’s right, you get to learn things others will never have the chance of learning.

The post Recap and Epilogue appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>
Fundamental Technique: Ways to Rethink 2/2 http://www.socialengineeringblogs.com/fundamental-technique-ways-to-rethink-22/?pk_campaign=rss_feed&pk_kwd=fundamental-technique-ways-to-rethink-22 Mon, 20 Oct 2014 19:47:20 +0000 http://www.mindundercontrol.com/?p=10470 20 Approaches
How the thoughts should be rethought.

Waiting
Caleidoscope
Looking glass
Magnifying Glass
Accept
Reinforce
Respect
Persevere
Focus
Think back
Eliminate
Import
Collaborate
Seduce
Etaleren, showing off, expose
Switch roles
Disorganize, rev...

The post Fundamental Technique: Ways to Rethink 2/2 appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>
20 Approaches

How the thoughts should be rethought.

Waiting
Caleidoscope
Looking glass
Magnifying Glass
Accept
Reinforce
Respect
Persevere
Focus
Think back
Eliminate
Import
Collaborate
Seduce
Etaleren, showing off, expose
Switch roles
Disorganize, revolutionize
Reverse

The post Fundamental Technique: Ways to Rethink 2/2 appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>
Fundamental Technique: Ways to Rethink 1/2 http://www.socialengineeringblogs.com/fundamental-technique-ways-to-rethink-12/?pk_campaign=rss_feed&pk_kwd=fundamental-technique-ways-to-rethink-12 Mon, 20 Oct 2014 19:46:50 +0000 http://www.mindundercontrol.com/?p=10468 20 Approaches
How the thoughts should be rethought.

Waiting
Caleidoscope
Looking glass
Magnifying Glass
Accept
Reinforce
Respect
Persevere
Focus
Think back
Eliminate
Import
Collaborate
Seduce
Etaleren, showing off, expose
Switch roles
Disorganize, rev...

The post Fundamental Technique: Ways to Rethink 1/2 appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>
20 Approaches

How the thoughts should be rethought.

Waiting
Caleidoscope
Looking glass
Magnifying Glass
Accept
Reinforce
Respect
Persevere
Focus
Think back
Eliminate
Import
Collaborate
Seduce
Etaleren, showing off, expose
Switch roles
Disorganize, revolutionize
Reverse

 

The post Fundamental Technique: Ways to Rethink 1/2 appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>
Rebuilding the Temple of Your Mind http://www.socialengineeringblogs.com/rebuilding-the-temple-of-your-mind/?pk_campaign=rss_feed&pk_kwd=rebuilding-the-temple-of-your-mind Mon, 20 Oct 2014 19:38:00 +0000 http://www.mindundercontrol.com/?p=10466 Phase 2: Cleaning rumble and rebuilding So far, the idea has been this: We find out what’s wrong in our lives, we change it. It’s not always so easy to find out just what is wrong. With Reverse Reasoning and our Personal Philosophy Profile, we have a pretty good idea of the area’s of our […]

The post Rebuilding the Temple of Your Mind appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>
Phase 2: Cleaning rumble and rebuilding

So far, the idea has been this: We find out what’s wrong in our lives, we change it. It’s not always so easy to find out just what is wrong. With Reverse Reasoning and our Personal Philosophy Profile, we have a pretty good idea of the area’s of our psyche that need a little help to let true joy and happiness come through.

Changing wrong ideas and behaviors can be dramatic and have great positive effects. However, as we saw in [Mind Web], we need to neutralize up the outliers, clean out the residue, or we will be vulnerable to similar bad thoughts and behaviors in the future. Our mind-web will be corrupted, its valence will change back to negative, and the solemn cracked bricks will break down our new foundation. Our temple needs to be rebuilt from scratch.

Feeling better isn’t the same as getting better. Feeling better can be done in a mere moment, with a sole realization – getting better is a long process, full of peaks and valleys, which will get progressively even as the surface flattens. To get better, we need to kill the root of the web. We need to find the primary and secondary silent assumptions that caused it to be turn negative in the first place.

On the 1st tier are our primary domain N.C.’s, e.g. “I am worthless.” On the second tier, we may have things like “I need to be loved to be worthwhile.” Though it is true that changing the first tier permanently will deter any future negative thoughts in that domain, it is very difficult to turn this realization into an emotional reality – that can take years. The second tier, however, is very changeable, and very quickly does your defense against it become automatic. In due time, you will only need some maintenance to keep your temple in peak condition.

We will build your temple with a new personal philosophy – one that is both positive and self-enhancing. We will call this new template for a better you your Personal Philosophy Profile (P3).

+++ HARVEST SOMEWHERE +++

The post Rebuilding the Temple of Your Mind appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>
Thought Web http://www.socialengineeringblogs.com/thought-web/?pk_campaign=rss_feed&pk_kwd=thought-web Mon, 20 Oct 2014 19:36:35 +0000 http://www.mindundercontrol.com/?p=10464

The post Thought Web appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>

The post Thought Web appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>
Value System VII – Autonomy http://www.socialengineeringblogs.com/value-system-vii-autonomy/?pk_campaign=rss_feed&pk_kwd=value-system-vii-autonomy Mon, 20 Oct 2014 19:27:52 +0000 http://www.mindundercontrol.com/?p=10443 1. The What
2. The Why
3. The How

The post Value System VII – Autonomy appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>
1. The What
2. The Why
3. The How

The post Value System VII – Autonomy appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>
Value System VI – Omnipotence http://www.socialengineeringblogs.com/value-system-vi-omnipotence/?pk_campaign=rss_feed&pk_kwd=value-system-vi-omnipotence Mon, 20 Oct 2014 19:27:34 +0000 http://www.mindundercontrol.com/?p=10442 1. The What
2. The Why
3. The How

The post Value System VI – Omnipotence appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>
1. The What
2. The Why
3. The How

The post Value System VI – Omnipotence appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>
Value System V – Entitlement http://www.socialengineeringblogs.com/value-system-v-entitlement/?pk_campaign=rss_feed&pk_kwd=value-system-v-entitlement Mon, 20 Oct 2014 19:27:21 +0000 http://www.mindundercontrol.com/?p=10441 1. The What
2. The Why
3. The How

The post Value System V – Entitlement appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>
1. The What
2. The Why
3. The How

The post Value System V – Entitlement appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>
The Problem With ‘Real’ Problems http://www.socialengineeringblogs.com/the-problem-with-real-problems/?pk_campaign=rss_feed&pk_kwd=the-problem-with-real-problems Fri, 10 Oct 2014 16:12:48 +0000 http://www.mindundercontrol.com/?p=10354 The Problem With ‘Real’ Problems Let us recap what we’ve learned so far, my friends: Negative emotions, desirable or not, justified or not, often are not useful. They are not helpful, and unless part of some sort of grieving process, will not add to our humanity in any way. We don’t need anger, or sadness, or fear. […]

The post The Problem With ‘Real’ Problems appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>
Let us recap what we’ve learned so far, my friends: Negative emotions, desirable or not, justified or not, often are not useful. They are not helpful, and unless part of some sort of grieving process, will not add to our humanity in any way. We don’t need anger, or sadness, or fear. But listen carefully:

I’m not telling you that your emotions are ever wrong. You must understand: You are right in believing whatever you believe, and you are right in feeling just the way you feel. You would also be equally right in believing the complete opposite, or in feeling completely different from how you are feeling.
Nor am I telling you to deny yourself your emotions. In fact, no matter what we choose to believe and choose to feel, it’s an important first step to become aware of these emotions and accept them. We shouldn’t fault ourselves for having emotions, no matter what they may be.
Never deny having negative emotions nor try to keep them secret or hidden, because no matter if you choose to share your thoughts and emotions or not – with your friends, your therapist, even yourself – they will still be precisely what you are thinking and feeling. Until you can bear to look at them, you can’t change them. 
Remember that all suffering is due to negative and distorted thinking. Though certain ‘bad’ emotions can have benefits in certain situations (making them what we call adaptive emotions), whenever negative emotions are tearing you down and you just end up feeling awful as a result, it’s because of distorted thoughts that are intrinsically unhelpful.

You already know all of this, so why am I telling you again?

Because, at some point in our lives, we all will have thought, “Yeah, I feel bad. But that’s only because my problems are real.” You may have thought precisely that while reading through the last two lessons. You may also have just subtly nodded your head in agreement with that quote because you are thinking that right now. Yeah, we all often think this way. And when think that, we are always wrong.

“So what, I don’t have real problems?”

Well, of course you do. We all do. We all have something wrong in our lives at every possible moment, as we always have some things going for us. But our ‘real’ problems aren’t the, well, real problem, nor is solving them a solution to how you feel. Telling ourselves we have a problem is nothing more than a factual statement, a reality. But the moment it feels like a problem to us, when we suffer because of it, that’s when the problem is no longer the cause of our hurt. That’s when our negative thinking has kicked in and gives the problems in our lives power over our happiness.

There are many examples of very real problems that can cause equally real discomfort and sadness: things like losing our job, loss of a loved one, or terminal illness. These cause a tangible amount of discomfort and detriment to our lives. But this discomfort, this detriment we experience, does not cause our suffering: we suffer because of what these things mean to us, and what they mean to our self-esteem.

Loss of a loved one causes profound sadness, which can be a very intense thing to go through. But sadness, on its own, is neither good nor bad. Grieving when a loved one dies can be a profound, humanizing, spiritual and deeply influential experience. When your grief is accompanied by intense stress, a sense of helplessness, hopelessness, and even physical pain, this is needless suffering. It has no positive effects, it just prolongs the hurt.

When recovering from any wound or trauma, we set out to process it in a healthy way. What we frequently do, however, is equate how we feel to who we are. Because of this, if anyone attempts to change how we feel – including we ourselves – we feel we are under attack, and we will literally defend our own person and our emotions as if our lives depended on it, which is what we think is the case.

But it isn’t true! 

This belief is a pervasive untruth that we have to unlearn, because there is nothing to gain by lengthening your suffering. There is no sense in pressuring yourself to feel those negative things, just because you feel it appropriate given your ‘real’ circumstances.

It is irresponsible and cruel even to force that pain on ourselves, because no matter how ‘real’ our problems are, our suffering is our own personal choice. We can choose to let go of it, as long as we learn how to do it. And when we do it, what is our reward?

a) A sensation of closure,

b) where we will feel peaceful and warm looking back on the situation,

c) without fear and

d) without losing any part of who we are.

That is how it will be when we let go of the illusion of ‘Real’ problems, when we take responsibility for our own emotional well-being, and when we assume command of our own thinking. It’ll all be ours, the moment when we choose to get our Mind Under Control.

Introducing: Rethinking

The post The Problem With ‘Real’ Problems appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>
Our Emotions Are Not Our Problem – We Are http://www.socialengineeringblogs.com/our-emotions-are-not-our-problem-we-are/?pk_campaign=rss_feed&pk_kwd=our-emotions-are-not-our-problem-we-are Fri, 10 Oct 2014 16:00:34 +0000 http://www.mindundercontrol.com/?p=10342 Our Emotions Are Not Our Problem – We Are Let us start of with another bold claim: Feeling bad is not down to emotions at all. As David D. Burns, M.D. puts it in ‘Feeling Good‘: “A change in how you feel is of no more causal relevance [to depression or feeling bad itself] than […]

The post Our Emotions Are Not Our Problem – We Are appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>
Let us start of with another bold claim: Feeling bad is not down to emotions at all. As David D. Burns, M.D. puts it in ‘Feeling Good‘: “A change in how you feel is of no more causal relevance [to depression or feeling bad itself] than a runny nose is when you have a cold.”

Feeling bad is a symptom – a consequence – of bad thinking! Distorted negative thoughts underlie every stressful feeling we’ve ever experienced. Have you ever felt sad and cried during a movie, or felt triumphant when the hero finally beats the bad guy at the end of a good book? You were sad or happy then – but did it ever make you feel bad? Did you feel stressed or pained?

You see, positive emotions can accompany negative events, and vice versa. But every painful or stressful emotion is always and necessarily accompanied by negative thoughts. Most of them are completely involuntary and automatic, and usually hidden from us by our subconscious!

Let’s start looking at emotions in a new light: There are no good or bad emotions, only positive or negative experiences. Emotions are neither positive nor negative until they either cause us or relieve us of stress or pain.

Any emotions that are traditionally seen as either good (like excitement, or the feeling of being in love) or bad (like anger and sadness) can also be both positive and negative, depending on… Our attitudes, thoughts and perceptions!

We need only look at the friend who laments falling in love again, making another one of those “mistakes,” and hates herself for it! Or look at someone like Nick Vujicic, who thinks a life without limbs can actually be a blessing in disguise!

There are no such things as good or bad emotions, good or bad thoughts, or good or bad events. The only question that you should ever want to ask yourself:

“What I feel, what I think, what I believe over what is happening: Is it helping me, or not?”

Are your thoughts helping you? Is your anger doing something useful, or just causing you more pain? If it is helpful, it’s worth keeping. If not, it’s stress you don’t need. Whether or not something is helpful is the only question worth asking.

Negative thoughts are destructive. Negativity causes your mood to become gloomy, your self-image to crumble, your body and willpower to become exhausted, and your actions and emotions to defeat you. Nothing breeds negativity like negativity, and this negativity is due to a lifelong cycle of negative thoughts that we were never taught to strip of their power, because we have never taken the time to convince ourselves that they aren’t helpful in the slightest.

So, our goal is to trade in our automatic and start switching the gears manually! Change your thoughts, change your reality. Sounds simple enough, right? Well, if it were all so easy as thinking positively, then people’s often well-intended encouragement to “cheer up” or “look on the bright side” would actually be a pleasant experience, and not the unnerving and often counterproductive guilt-trip it can be. Furthermore, if it were that easy, why can people be stuck with their negative thoughts for sometimes an entire lifetime?

Well, there’s a wrong and right way for doing anything, and practice doesn’t make perfect. Perfect practice does. Even the best of intentions don’t always give the best results, so together we will learn a method that allows you to do things right.

But before we get started with that, let’s get rid of one more seemingly intuitive, but completely inaccurate lies we’ve learned and maintained over the course of our lifetime: the persistent untruth of having ‘real problems.’

Let’s talk about The Problem With ‘Real’ Problems.

The post Our Emotions Are Not Our Problem – We Are appeared first on Social Engineering Blogs.

]]>