A consciousness-coaching framework that addresses identity-level beliefs through structured belief-revision processes. Combines coaching protocols with body-based regulation tools to shift recurring patterns at the substrate level.
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.
Glossophobia affects 25% of adults. Surface coping (deep breaths, picture them naked) addresses symptoms not causes. CBT and exposure work but slowly. EFT addresses the somatic charge. Consciousness coaching addresses the underlying belief, often "I am not significant" or "I am not worthy."
Acute uncomplicated grief responds well to talk therapy and time. Complicated grief that gets stuck in the body often needs body-based work. EMDR for grief, somatic experiencing, and consciousness coaching offer paths through grief that words alone cannot reach.
Glossary31 terms covering modalities, mechanisms, and conditions