Mind & Heart — Mindset, Identity, Emotional Healing & Relationships
Most of what looks like a money problem is actually a worthiness problem. Most of what looks like a confidence problem is actually an identity problem. Most of what looks like a sales problem is actually a nervous-system problem. The Mind & Heart pillar is where we work on the layer that produces the patterns — not just the symptoms.
What you’ll find on this page
- 4 category deep-dives covering the full territory of the Mind & Heart
- Hand-picked top articles per category, drawn from the full library
- How this pillar connects to the Three Pillars, CLARITI, 6-Layer Model frameworks
- FAQ for the questions readers most often arrive with
The frame
In the Three Pillars, Mind & Heart holds the inner architecture: mindset, identity, emotional patterns, and relational dynamics. The CLARITI framework moves through it in six steps — Construct identity, Liberate beliefs, Acquire skills, Reinforce traits, Identify roadblocks, Transformational work. The 6-Layer Model maps where resistance lives (Essence, Ego, Narrative, Somatic, Behavioral, Relational). Together they let you stop fighting the surface and start rewiring the source.
Mindset & Inner Programming
Mindset is the layer most people start with — and the layer most people stay stuck in. Not because mindset doesn’t matter, but because the affirmations-and-vision-boards version skips half the work. This category is the other half.
Browse the full Mindset & Inner Programming category →
Featured articles
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What Is the Post-Threshold Review in Self-Sabotage Pattern Work?
The post-threshold review is a specific five-minute practice performed immediately after any threshold event — a pricing conversation, a significant visibility action, a moment of consolidation — that… Read →
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What Is the Belonging-Expansion Conflict in Self-Sabotage Patterns?
The belonging-expansion conflict is the central organizing structure of a significant category of self-sabotage patterns. It describes the nervous system’s prediction that expansion — economic success, increased visibility,… Read →
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What Is the Protective Function in Self-Sabotage Pattern Work?
The protective function is what the self-sabotage pattern is actually doing — the specific threat it is preventing through its behavioral expressions. Understanding the protective function is not… Read →
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The Founder Who Kept Disrupting Her Own Best Months
There was a pattern she had noticed but didn’t have a name for. Read →
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The Coach Who Understood Everything and Changed Nothing
By the time he found the somatic threshold work, he had read everything. Read →
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The Healer Who Charged Differently for Different Clients
The official position was that she had one rate, with occasional flexibility for genuine financial hardship. In practice, what she noticed — once she started paying attention —… Read →
Identity & Self-Concept
You don’t get the life that matches your goals. You get the life that matches your identity. Identity work is the difference between people who stay where they are and people who actually move. This category is the manual.
Browse the full Identity & Self-Concept category →
Featured articles
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10 Signs Your Worthiness and Self-Worth Pattern Is Running Things
The worthiness deficit is a nervous system pattern — a learned prediction that claiming your full professional worth will threaten the relational belonging you need. It doesn’t announce… Read →
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The Body Keeps the Price Low (Part 2)
The somatic architecture of the worthiness deficit has a characteristic that makes it particularly resistant to purely cognitive approaches: it pre-empts conscious decision-making. By the time the practitioner… Read →
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The Worthiness Deficit in Enrollment Conversations (Part 2)
The enrollment conversation has a post-conversation dimension that shapes how the practitioner approaches future enrollment conversations — and the worthiness deficit operates there too. Read →
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Worthiness Work Is Not the Same as Self-Love Work (Part 2)
The distinction between worthiness work and self-love work has a practical implication for how practitioners sequence their inner work and professional development. Understanding the sequence helps practitioners invest… Read →
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What Your Rate Says About Your Relationship With Yourself (Part 2)
The self-relationship dimension of the worthiness deficit has a specific quality that distinguishes it from self-esteem work: it’s not primarily about how the practitioner feels about themselves in… Read →
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Why the Worthiness Pattern Reasserts After Breakthroughs (Part 2)
The reassertion of the worthiness pattern after a breakthrough has a specific emotional texture that’s important to recognize: it typically feels like regression or failure rather than like… Read →
Emotional Healing & Shadow Work
The parts of you that you’ve hidden run more of your life than the parts you’ve polished. Shadow work isn’t dark or scary — it’s the deliberate practice of befriending the disowned. This category is how.
Browse the full Emotional Healing & Shadow Work category →
Featured articles
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How Long Does It Take to Shift Forgiveness and Release? What Practitioners Say
Q: From a clinical perspective, what’s a realistic timeline for the practitioner’s own forgiveness work? Read →
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What’s the Fastest Way to Work With Forgiveness and Release? The Spiritual Path
Q: I’ve been on a spiritual path and working with forgiveness for a long time. What would actually move this most efficiently? Read →
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Can Forgiveness and Release Be Resolved Permanently? A Practitioner’s Perspective
Q: As a practitioner, can I expect my own forgiveness work to eventually be complete — or is it always ongoing? Read →
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Is Forgiveness and Release Something You’re Born With or Something That’s Shaped? A Spiritual View
Q: From a spiritual perspective, is the capacity for forgiveness something inherent to the soul, or is it something that develops through experience? Read →
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Can I Make Progress With Forgiveness and Release Without a Therapist? The Spiritual Path
Q: I work within a spiritual practice framework rather than a therapeutic one. Can the forgiveness and release work be done within that container? Read →
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Why Does Forgiveness and Release Feel More Intense When Things Are Going Well? The Spiritual Explanation
Q: I notice that my forgiveness and release pattern activates most strongly right when things are going well spiritually or professionally. Is there a spiritual explanation for this? Read →
Relationships & Community
You can’t out-grow your environment. The fastest way to change your trajectory is to change the room you’re in. This category is the architecture of doing that deliberately.
Browse the full Relationships & Community category →
Featured articles
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Working With Your Shadow Around Boundaries and Difficult Conversations
You know what you want to say. And you know why you don’t say it. That’s the honest place to start: you have enough self-awareness to see the… Read →
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The Integration Practice for Boundaries and Difficult Conversations
You’ve been collecting insights. You know the pattern. You have had the realisation — sometimes more than once — about why boundaries are hard for you specifically. You… Read →
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A Visualisation Sequence for Boundaries and Difficult Conversations
You have probably used visualisation for other areas of your life — for goals, for healing, for clarity of direction. And something about applying it to difficult conversations… Read →
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The Inner Child Dialogue Applied to Boundaries and Difficult Conversations
You have done enough work to know that the difficulty you have with limits and hard conversations has roots that go back further than your adult life. You… Read →
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Somatic Regulation for Boundaries and Difficult Conversations
The concept of somatic regulation sounds technical. What it means, in lived experience, is much simpler and much more important: your body needs to feel safe enough before… Read →
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Belief Inquiry Applied to Boundaries and Difficult Conversations
Behind every persistent pattern of boundary avoidance or conflict aversion, there is a belief. Usually more than one — and usually one that has never been directly examined. Read →
Frequently asked questions
Why isn’t mindset work alone enough?
Because mindset is one of six layers (Essence, Ego, Narrative, Somatic, Behavioral, Relational). Affirmations work on the Narrative layer. They don’t move the Somatic or Relational layers, which is where most stuck patterns actually live.
What’s the difference between identity work and self-improvement?
Self-improvement asks you to do more of what you’re already doing. Identity work asks you to become someone for whom the new behavior is natural. The articles in Identity & Self-Concept unpack this.
Is shadow work safe to do alone?
The lighter layers usually are. The deeper layers — trauma, abandonment, ancestral patterns — are better done with support. The articles in Emotional Healing & Shadow Work tell you which is which.
How does this connect to my business?
Your business is a mirror. The relationships you have with clients reflect the relationship you have with yourself. The income ceiling usually matches an internal worthiness ceiling. Fix one, the other moves.
Related pillars and frameworks
Inside the Abundance GPS community
Reading is one thing. Working with people who’re on the same path is another. Inside the Abundance GPS community on Skool, conscious entrepreneurs, coaches, and lightworkers do this work together — month by month, using the GPS+I cycle to turn breakthroughs into business outcomes. If anything on this page felt like it was written for you, come see what’s happening on the inside.
About David
David Cameron Gikandi was a creative consultant on The Secret and wrote A Happy Pocket Full of Money — the book millions of people credit with rewiring how they think about wealth, identity, and what life is actually for. Today he runs the Abundance GPS community, where conscious entrepreneurs and lightworkers do the inner work that makes the outer work finally pay.