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Chetan
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Feb 10, 2021 08:54AM
Thanks for highlighting the importance of our choice and agency over HOW we experience what we're experiencing in the present moment. What is happening may or may not be in our control. How we interpret and react to it very much is.
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I would like to know how Melissa Bernstein would address the ever occurring issue of chemical imbalances in a child's body at birth that greatly influence childhood thought patterns and then color thought and mood process as the child grows. I have been afflicted with depression and gloom since early childhood. Through years of therapy emphasizing "how to interpret" experiences, I find that just trying to "change your mood" really never helps those who were born with a sense of imminent sadness, whether through parents who imbibed in drugs, or through hereditary connections in family blood lines. If your cell system is wired to experience deep depression, in utero, I would think it is expedient to correct one's soul at the cell level in order to aid this thinking process for brighter, sunnier outlook days.
Carol wrote: "I would like to know how Melissa Bernstein would address the ever occurring issue of chemical imbalances in a child's body at birth that greatly influence childhood thought patterns and then color ..."Please read Kazimierz Dąbrowski's (KD) "third factor" to understand what I learned when Melissa suggested this psychologist/psychiatrist/physician to me. Quoted below from Wikipedia on KD's concept of Positive Disintegration:
...'the third factor', is a drive toward individual growth and autonomy. The third factor is critical as it applies one's talents and creativity toward autonomous expression, and second, it provides motivation to strive for more and to try to imagine and achieve goals currently beyond one's grasp. Dąbrowski was clear to differentiate third factor from free will. He felt that free will did not go far enough in capturing the motivating aspects that he attributed to third factor. For example, an individual can exercise free will and show little motivation to grow or change as an individual. Third factor specifically describes a motivation—a motivation to become one's self. This motivation is often so strong that in some situations we can observe that one needs to develop oneself and that in so doing, it places one at great peril. This feeling of "I've gotta be me" especially when it is "at any cost" and especially when it is expressed as a strong motivator for self-growth is beyond the usual conceptualization ascribed to free will.


