Sitting With the Mislead Before Analyzing It
Download MP3Once you have caught yourself in a mislead, the instinct is to immediately figure out what it means. That instinct is worth resisting. Jumping straight to analysis without enough information produces conclusions that feel solid but are actually just the next layer of avoidance, this time dressed up as insight. Brian walks through what the reflection phase actually looks like in practice and why it
Once you have caught yourself in a mislead, the instinct is to immediately figure out what it means. That instinct is worth resisting. Jumping straight to analysis without enough information produces conclusions that feel solid but are actually just the next layer of avoidance, this time dressed up as insight. Brian walks through what the reflection phase actually looks like in practice and why it functions as a data-collection exercise rather than a problem-solving one.
The Masonic framing here is the preparing room, a space defined by non-judgment and openness. In that spirit, reflection is about letting recurring themes surface without immediately deciding what they mean. Brian also draws on the secretary's apron as a metaphor for separating facts from feelings, a discipline that keeps the data clean before it goes into analysis. Whether you sit in meditation, write out a timeline, or simply trace back the sequence of events, the goal is the same: more information, not faster conclusions.
- Why rushing to analysis produces stratified conclusions that are hard to undo later
- The preparing room as a non-judgmental space for honest self-examination
- Using the secretary's apron to separate facts from feelings during reflection
- How to identify recurring themes without assigning meaning to them prematurely
- Practical approaches to reflection for people who are not drawn to meditation
- When and how external input can supplement internal data collection
The reflection phase is not passive. It takes real discipline to stay in data-collection mode when your mind wants to start solving, but that discipline is what makes the analysis phase trustworthy.
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Creators and Guests
Host
Brian Mattocks
Host and Founder of A Mason's Work - a podcast designed to help you use symbolism to grow. He's been working in the craft for over a decade and served as WM, trustee, and sat in every appointed chair in a lodge - at least once :D