『The Congruence Check: Authenticity, Self-Concept, and Showing Up Whole as a Clinician』のカバーアート

The Congruence Check: Authenticity, Self-Concept, and Showing Up Whole as a Clinician

The Congruence Check: Authenticity, Self-Concept, and Showing Up Whole as a Clinician

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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

What happens when two clinicians stop talking about their clients and start talking about themselves?

In this year-end conversation, Jazz sits back down with returning guest Dr. Jennifer Kaufman Walker, and the session flips. What unfolds is a candid, clinically-informed dialogue about why traditional goal-setting frameworks often fail to account for the psychological weight they carry — and what a more adaptive, ego-syntonic approach to aspiration actually looks like in practice.

They unpack:

The clinical case against New Year's resolutions — including the negative self-schema reinforcement that comes with unmet behavioral targets, and why framing change as deficit-based is a setup for cognitive distortion cycles.

Contrasting regulatory styles — Jazz and Jennie explore their divergent approaches to goal pursuit: macro-level visioning vs. present-moment task immersion, and how both function as protective mechanisms against overwhelm and motivational collapse.

Authenticity as a clinical competency — Moving beyond the buzzword, they examine how genuine congruence between personal and professional self-presentation impacts the therapeutic relationship, rupture and repair, and long-term clinician sustainability.

Appropriate self-disclosure in clinical practice — Jennie reflects on how intentional, boundaried transparency with clients — showing up to a meet-and-greet with post-procedure facial swelling included — deepens relational trust rather than compromising it.

The isolation variable in private practice — Jazz speaks openly about the structural loneliness of solo practice and how intentionally constructing a peer consultation network and professional community has functioned as a direct intervention for burnout and role diffusion.

Manifestation, vision work, and the neuroscience of intention — A grounded look at how visualization practices, when paired with psychological flexibility and non-attachment to outcome, parallel evidence-based approaches to values-based living.

This episode is a permission slip — to be a clinician and a person, to set aspirations without pathologizing your process, and to build a practice that actually reflects who you are.

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