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A Mason's Work
Brian Mattocks
190 episodes
1 day ago
In this show we discuss the practical applications of masonic symbolism and how the working tools can be used to better yourself, your family, your lodge, and your community. We help good freemasons become better men through honest self development. We talk quite a bit about mental health and men's issues related to emotional and intellectual growth as well.
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Mental Health
Society & Culture,
Philosophy,
Health & Fitness
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All content for A Mason's Work is the property of Brian Mattocks and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
In this show we discuss the practical applications of masonic symbolism and how the working tools can be used to better yourself, your family, your lodge, and your community. We help good freemasons become better men through honest self development. We talk quite a bit about mental health and men's issues related to emotional and intellectual growth as well.
Show more...
Mental Health
Society & Culture,
Philosophy,
Health & Fitness
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts211/v4/7f/bc/14/7fbc14e8-a21e-7bd6-56d2-fd23324a851b/mza_2018525665622395979.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
As Above, So Below: Behavioral Patterns as Mirrors
A Mason's Work
6 minutes
1 week ago
As Above, So Below: Behavioral Patterns as Mirrors

This episode examines the behavioral application of the principle of correspondence, focusing on how outward actions can be read as indicators of underlying thought and emotional patterns. The emphasis is on using behavior as a mirror for diagnosis, not as proof of hidden metaphysical causes.

🔑 Key Takeaways

  • Behavior can be examined as data rather than judged as failure.
  • Most behaviors are the result of unexamined causal chains, not isolated choices.
  • Outcomes-focused change fails without understanding behavioral mechanics.
  • Correspondence is framed as a useful lens, not a factual rule.
  • The tool is inappropriate for survival responses, but effective for patterns and habits.

đź’¬ Featured Quotes

  • “When you look across your behavior, that should tell you something of the way you think or the way you feel.” (0:37–0:46)
  • “The vast majority of the things that we do behaviorally are largely the function of an unexamined cause or causal series.” (1:36–1:49)
  • “The principle of correspondence allows us to start to examine that behavioral chain.” (1:49–1:57)
  • “People don’t simply overeat, for example, because they’re hungry.” (1:22–1:29)
  • “Focusing on the outcomes themselves doesn’t yield a sustainable change.” (2:52–3:04)
  • “It’s really for examining behavior patterns and thought and emotional patterns.” (4:30–4:42)

Creators & Guests

  • Brian Mattocks - Host
Click here to view the episode transcript.
A Mason's Work
In this show we discuss the practical applications of masonic symbolism and how the working tools can be used to better yourself, your family, your lodge, and your community. We help good freemasons become better men through honest self development. We talk quite a bit about mental health and men's issues related to emotional and intellectual growth as well.