The Gavel Is for Beliefs, Not Just Behaviors
Download MP3Four episodes in, the pattern is mapped and the origin is understood. Now comes the part most people skip to first and wonder why it does not work. Brian introduces the gavel, the Masonic tool designed to chip away at the rough edges of the stone, and argues that its application extends well beyond the obvious vices. Clearing a false belief is legitimate work for the gavel, but only if the clearin
Four episodes in, the pattern is mapped and the origin is understood. Now comes the part most people skip to first and wonder why it does not work. Brian introduces the gavel, the Masonic tool designed to chip away at the rough edges of the stone, and argues that its application extends well beyond the obvious vices. Clearing a false belief is legitimate work for the gavel, but only if the clearing goes all the way down to the foundation rather than layering something new on top of something unstable.
The trap here is seductive. Swapping out the phrase I should feel grateful for I deserve abundance feels like progress because it is positive and forward-facing. But if it is sitting on the same foundation of unexamined discomfort, it inherits all the instability underneath. Brian calls this gilding the belief rather than removing it, and it is one of the more common places where genuine self-development work stalls.
The actual work, he argues, is earlier and less comfortable than any affirmation. It requires sitting in the original discomfort without immediately reaching for the transmutation. The wanting itself, the twinge of envy or desire, is not the problem. It is the information. And learning to sit with it rather than cover it is what makes any subsequent action real rather than cosmetic.
- How the gavel applies to false beliefs, not only to visible vices
- Why affirmations built on unexamined foundations inherit the instability
- The difference between gilding a belief and actually clearing it
- What it feels like physiologically to sit with a suppressed signal
- Desire as information rather than as a character flaw
- The fight-or-flight reflex and how labeling it kills the signal
The work here is not comfortable, but the episode makes a strong case that skipping it is exactly what keeps the cycle running.
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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