The Magnetic Mind Method is a consciousness-coaching framework that combines belief-revision processes with body-based regulation. The work focuses on the identity layer: the underlying beliefs that drive recurring patterns even after surface changes.

The framework draws on neuroplasticity research, cognitive-behavioural principles, and the Matrix Energetics 2-Point heritage. Sessions typically combine identification of a specific limiting belief, tracing its origin, examining its accuracy against current evidence, and revising it through structured belief-replacement processes that include both verbal and somatic components.

Common applications: imposter syndrome, self-worth issues that block career or relationship progress, public-speaking fear that has not responded to surface coping, recurring relationship patterns, money beliefs, and parenting patterns inherited from family of origin.

The method's distinguishing feature is the identity-layer focus. Most coaching frameworks address goal-setting, behavioural change, or accountability. The Magnetic Mind work assumes that conscious-decision behavioural change has limited durability when the underlying identity belief remains intact, and so targets the belief layer directly through specific processes.

Sessions typically run 75 to 90 minutes. A typical course is 6 to 12 sessions. Session pricing reflects coaching rather than clinical-therapy norms.

Evidence base: the framework draws on mainstream neuroplasticity and CBT research but has not been independently RCT-tested as a discrete intervention. Practitioner reports and case-study evidence are the primary current evidence type.

References

  • Doidge, N. (2007). The Brain That Changes Itself.

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