This reminds me a lot of what I would do when I was trying to access the Spirit of God to get divine guidance, back when I was Mormon. The essential distinction is in your sentence:
Of course, the fact that you’ve accurately expressed your brain’s sense of what’s going on doesn’t mean you’ve found the bona-fide truth.
In the process of getting my mind untied from my Mormon upbringing, I became a lot more connected with my rational mind and more untrusting of my subconscious. This is a good reminder that you have to pay attention to that subconscious processing when it comes to understanding what’s happening in your head.
Edit: I’d like to add a point that another exmormon friend made to me:
I think there’s a lot of value in this sort of thinking, but as an untrusted starting point that you want to confirm or disprove as fast as possible, because it engages systems that can be hijacked
In my experience, it is not safe to rely on this sort of subconscious exploration when you have been taught to have a strong fear of certain “unsafe” or “sinful” thoughts. It brings you too close to emotional reasoning.
This reminds me a lot of what I would do when I was trying to access the Spirit of God to get divine guidance, back when I was Mormon. The essential distinction is in your sentence:
In the process of getting my mind untied from my Mormon upbringing, I became a lot more connected with my rational mind and more untrusting of my subconscious. This is a good reminder that you have to pay attention to that subconscious processing when it comes to understanding what’s happening in your head.
Edit: I’d like to add a point that another exmormon friend made to me:
In my experience, it is not safe to rely on this sort of subconscious exploration when you have been taught to have a strong fear of certain “unsafe” or “sinful” thoughts. It brings you too close to emotional reasoning.