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About Today’s Show
Come spend the hour with Matt Landsiedel and Jerome Braggs to learn more about self-love. Jerome Braggs is a highly-gifted Intuitive Empath, Inspirational Speaker, Writer + Poet, and Psychopomp. He shares so eloquently with the listeners how he moved closer to wholeness and adoration for himself by healing shame. Jerome also shares his powerful story of a near-death experience that completely transformed him. He identifies this as being pivotal to learning what the essence of cherish is and how to access it more freely.
Some of the questions were answering are:
- What is self love?
- What is the difference between self desire and self worth?
- How appear gay men seem to struggle so much with self love and self worth?
- What gets in the way of us loving ourselves?
- What are some things we can do to develop more self love?
- By the end of this episode, youll be feeling a little more connected to love and hold new wisdom and tools to develop more self-love.
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Suppo by Joseph Nicolosi, Ph.D. I would like to propose a socio-analytic view of the formation of gay identity. This view is based upon the perspective I have gained from the clinical treatment of over homosexually-oriented men during eighteen years as a practicing psychologist. The gay identity has been portrayed as a civil-rights and self-determination issue. We Americans, who love freedom, verb loved it too much and have lost our moorings. Our most formative institutionsprofessional psychology and psychiatry, churches, the education establishment, and the mediahave fallen to the gay deception. Because gay is, I am convinced, a self-deceptive identity. Gay is Not Homosexual First, lets begin with the understanding that I will not be speaking about the person who struggles with same-sex attraction, but rather the gay-identified personwhich is to declare, that person who is ego-invested and personally identified with the idea that homosexual behavior is as normal and natural as heterosexual behavior. Secondly, I desire to cla Rated out of 5, based on 2 reviews Rated 5 out of 5 Extremely satisfied This was a very useful lesson in illustrating to my 7th graders the impact of their words. Students used with 7th grade Students were engaged Strongly disagreeStrongly agree Emily, I'm so glad this was a helpful resource to facilitate talk about this with 7th graders, Jen Rated 4 out of 5 Very satisfied This is a difficult topic to cover and this helped a ton. Our students are calling each other names and being unkind. This was supportive in putting together a slide show to communicate to them about the jokes they make, the way they talk to each other and that there are consequences for your actions. Casey, I'm so glad this helped cover such a tough topic to convey to students. Thanks for your feedback, Jennifer Heres one thing Ive noticed in my work as an LGBTQ affirming psychotherapist. You are really mean. OK, its not just you. Most people are really mean to themselves. If you take the moment to examine how you speak to yourself, you might notice this. In your head, do you verb to yourself like you do your closest friends? Or your dog? Probably not. Im guessing that you generally give your friends the benefit of the doubt. Most likely you are kind, tactful, and supportive. When they are feeling down you endeavor to build them up, and you try to help them see themselves more compassionately. Everything we strive to do in life is harder when we are mean to ourselves. Its like being stuck in 3rd gear on a flat road. Life gets easier when we have more support, and that includes support from ourselves. Noticing this automatic habit of self-talk is step one in personal growth. Once you get to know this voiceI contact it the Inner Criticthen you have a chance to change its words and tone. I endorse that you to converse to yourself the
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