We Are Biological Machines
Programmed By Our Caregivers
What We Need To Know About
The Reprog of Our Mind
Together We Can
For Prog The Mind, a secure relationship between the therapist and the client is the most essential part of the therapeutic process. It is the cradle of self-development.
Indeed, the reprog can only be accomplished in an adequate relational context, and a psychologist can offer such a context.
Three principles inspire the establishment of such a solid relationship:
- Authenticity.
- Cooperation.
- Reflectivity.
This is how we feel a psychologist needs to be.
Prog The Mind can make a difference. Therapists informed by our principles and theory are able to facilitate the reprog.
Until you make the unconscious conscious,
it will direct your life, and you will call it fate
– C.G. Jung –
Real Change
Makes a Difference
The silent beliefs that characterize who we are lay out of the reach of our conscious thought.
They get imprinted in our mind – especially in the early years of our life when we have no awareness at all of what is going on.
We can know more about ourselves by looking at our closest relationships.
What We Need To Know About
The Reprog of Our Mind
F.A.Q.
Together We Can
In general, these terms can indicate very different things. A therapist can be a physician who has no psychological knowledge for example, and a psychologist can have no clinical training. However, in the context of this website, the two terms are used interchangeably.
Therapists differ in many ways from each other. First, the fact of being different individuals is per se relevant since therapy is founded on the relationship between two persons. Different dyads interact differently, and such differences can produce different therapeutic outcomes. Another significant difference between therapists is given by the theory they adopt. A cognitive-behavioral therapist and a psychoanalyst, for example, can have a very different therapeutic approach. Prog The Mind is informed by the MAPP theory, which provides a guide for all its therapists.
Some general principles – such as the primary attention to the wellbeing of the client and their privacy – belong to every therapist. However, therapists with different trainings can have different psychological conceptions and, therefore, adopt different therapeutic principles.
No. The therapist is not there to decide what the client should do or be. By contrast, the therapist is there to listen to the client’s needs, identify a common goal, and work with the client to pursue it. What the therapist can do is refuse to pursue a goal as it is proposed by the client. When this happens, usually, a cooperative discussion leads to agree upon a new common goal to pursue. When it comes to reprogramming the mind, the therapist acts as a guide, and the process follows the needs felt by the client.
In general, real change is a long and challenging process. However, it is entirely subjective, and there are no rules in terms of duration. Reprog is not just about a procedure to be applied. We need to be prepared to do that. The context of the problem needs to be identified, and an adequate distance from it to be taken. Personality dimensions are imprinted as non-verbal knowledge and cannot be directly accessed. Moreover, the whole process is beneficial for us, not just the reprog itself.
No, we can’t. Personality cannot be chosen, but we can choose to change for the better. We can identify the dysfunctional dimensions of our personality and work on them, especially in therapy. The result cannot be decided a priori, but it can be far beyond our current expectations.