Suppression Wears Discernment's Clothing

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Here is the problem with telling men to look inward and notice where they are paying hidden costs: most of those costs are buried inside behavior that feels genuinely virtuous. Keeping it together under pressure feels like maturity. Filtering your first response feels like professionalism. Not saying the thing your body wanted to say feels like self-control. And sometimes that is exactly what it i

Here is the problem with telling men to look inward and notice where they are paying hidden costs: most of those costs are buried inside behavior that feels genuinely virtuous. Keeping it together under pressure feels like maturity. Filtering your first response feels like professionalism. Not saying the thing your body wanted to say feels like self-control. And sometimes that is exactly what it is. Genuine discernment, a choice made from a clear place, carries a real but proportionate physiological cost and then it resolves. Brian Mattocks draws a hard line between that and something that looks identical from the outside but operates entirely differently on the inside.

Suppression masquerading as discernment does not resolve after the moment passes. It carries. It defers the transaction rather than completing it, and what gets deferred accumulates interest in the body. The distinction is not philosophical; it is physical. There is a specific quality of sensation, a compression in the chest or throat or gut, that follows suppression and does not follow genuine discernment. Building the ability to feel that difference is the central skill this episode develops. Brian uses the image of an archaeological dig, looking for the parts of the ground that are sticking up or sinking in, as a practical metaphor for the kind of attention required to find where your real responses went.

Key topics this episode:

  • Why the most expensive self-betrayals feel like good behavior
  • The functional difference between discernment and suppression
  • How to use a specific physical sensation as the entry point for interoceptive awareness
  • The debt that suppression defers versus the cost that discernment completes
  • The archaeological metaphor: finding the tender material under layers of adaptive choices
  • What it means when you still need the car to decompress after doing nothing physically demanding

You cannot distinguish between these two until you can feel the difference. That is the whole task this episode is building toward.


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Creators and Guests

Brian Mattocks
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
Suppression Wears Discernment's Clothing
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