The Wise Mind

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The key takeaways are that the wise mind model describes the human mind as having three states - the reasonable mind, the emotional mind, and the wise mind. The wise mind represents a balance between logic and emotion. Developing the wise mind can help with emotion regulation, resilience, and interpersonal skills.

The three states of the human mind according to the wise mind model are the reasonable mind, the emotional mind, and the wise mind.

The reasonable mind relies on logic and facts, while the emotional mind is driven more by feelings and reactions. The reasonable mind can be cold and calculating, while the emotional mind can be unpredictable.

C O G N I T I V E

B E H AV I O U R A L T H E R A P Y
P R A C T I T I O N E R C O U R S E

THE WISE MIND


THE WISE MIND
The human mind can be our greatest ally or our most troublesome enemy if we don’t fully
understand it or how we can manage it. The wise mind model is a basic model which helps
us understand ourselves by looking at the mind not from a scientific perspective, but from
a more practical perspective. The human mind has three states: The Reasonable Mind, the
Emotional Mind, and the Wise Mind. We all possess each of these states, but the majority of
people operate in a specific one most of the time.

THE THINKING (REASONABLE) MIND: People who are highly academic or grounded in logic
tend to engage in power-dynamic orientated dialectic. They’re usually opinionated thinkers
who focus more on what’s right and what’s wrong and cushion their arguments and opinions
with facts and information. The reasonable mind relies on information and facts, it is cold,
calculating and plans without taking into consideration other human qualities, often to the
detriment of productivity or effectiveness. Whilst all this is admirable and worthy, facts,
opinions and information, these things are all worthless unless they’re incorporated into a
person’s life and acted upon.

An individual uses the rational part of their mind when approaching a situation intellectually,
but this often leads to a battle of the wits rather than seeking understanding. The reasonable
mind can be ‘unfeeling’, even cruel. It is often uncompromising and follows rules. There’s one
thing being knowledgeable, but it’s something else to be understanding and open-minded.

THE FEELING (EMOTIONAL) MIND: The emotional part of our mind triggers and gives voice
to the emotions we’re feeling, whether we’re feeling doubtful, fearful or happy. People who
act predominantly out of the emotional part of their mind are usually very easy to read and
tend to be more reactive in situations they find themselves in, investing less time into mental
processing than those who operate out of the thinking mind.

If the reasonable mind is something like a controlled, enclosed, scientific laboratory, the
emotional mind is more like the ocean where any weather can occur. The emotional mind
THE WISE MIND
is the place of feelings where emotions determine an individual’s thoughts and behaviours.
People who are emotionally driven can be a little unreliable and may act impulsively and
give little consideration to the consequences because the quality of their life is emotionally
dependable, meaning their lives lack a stable foundation and such instability goes onto
impact others directly or indirectly. The emotional mind doesn’t necessarily work with facts,
but it generally works on what it believes the truth is, or a perception of truth, or merely a
projection of what it thinks the truth might be.

THE WISE MIND: The wise mind is the balance between the reasonable and the emotional
mind. It exists when an individual recognises and respects their feelings, but is still able to
respond to them rationally and maturely. The wise mind is where the reasonable mind and
the emotional mind overlap; it’s the part of every person that can know and experience truth;
where order and chaos can mingle in a meaningful way and where one can experience a
feeling and understand the reasoning behind it.

THE WISE MIND EXERCISE

The Reasonable Mind

Can you think of a recent occasion when you were coldly rational? Perhaps you were making
a plan in a way that made absolute sense, but maybe didn’t take account of the feelings
of others? Perhaps you responded to a friend or family member who was emotional with a
rational piece of advice and they did not respond rationally? Can you analyse this scenario
and see what was happening with you and the person you were interacting with?

Situation:

Action/Behaviour:

Outcome:

Analysis:
THE WISE MIND
The Emotional Mind

Can you think of times recently in which you were acting from a place of emotion? Perhaps
you got angry or very happy? Can you think of decisions that you made whilst in that
heightened state of emotion? Describe the outcome and your analysis.

Situation:

Emotion:

Action/Decision:

Outcome:

Analysis:

The Wise Mind

Now can you think of a recent occasion where you managed to balance your rational and
emotional brain during an interaction? See if you can remember one and write down the
details:

Situation:

Emotion/Thoughts:
THE WISE MIND
Action/Decision:

Outcome:

Analysis:

Using the Wise Mind is like riding a bike: it takes effort, balance, and steering. We can learn
to use the Wise Mind just as we learned to ride a bike: through experience. Just as we must
pedal to start a bike rolling, we must be willing to make a little extra effort to initiate the wise
mind. By analysing our interactions, we make ourselves more mindful of our own balance and
whether we are achieving it. Once we have become competent at taming our own emotional
triggers, we consequently become efficient in helping other people to tame theirs.

Intuition steers us toward the wise mind. The onslaught of uncomfortable emotions (anxiety,
depression, anger, shame, guilt, etc.) is like speeding out of control and losing our balance.
We can learn to activate the wise mind to regain and maintain balance.

As we develop our wise mind, we naturally and gradually develop a sense of inner confidence
to move through the challenging moments. We can still make mistakes or lose our balance,
but we will maintain our sense of perspective and be quicker at recovering balance.

When we access Wise Mind we are able to:

•Maintain
• or regain calmness when attacked or confronted

•Intuitively
• sense what will calm emotions when in the heat of internal crisis or conflict

•Find
• clarity of choice when confused

•Be
• sensitive to the state of others in our decision making

Many benefits accompany developing the Wise part of your Mind (which just requires a
little bit of practice), and they are as follows:

•A
• more peaceful and pleasurable participation in life

•Increased
• capacity to identify, understand, and tame self-sabotaging beliefs, thoughts,
feelings, and habits
•The
• elimination of destructive thought patterns that feed future suffering

•The
• reinforcement of patterns that seed future happiness
THE WISE MIND

•Ongoing
• effective emotion-regulation (especially during times of extreme crisis and
challenge)
•Increased
• capacity to tolerate painful life events

•Emotional
• resilience

•Enhanced
• interpersonal and emotional intelligence

QUESTIONS FOR SELF-REFLECTION:

1) What steps can you take today to further develop the growth of the Wise part of your
Mind?

2) How might you encourage your future clients to further develop the wise part of their
mind?

3) How might your clients benefit from developing the wise part of their mind?

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