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The UnScripted Mind

Podkast av Jim Cunningham, LPC

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"Welcome to The Unscripted Mind — honest mental health insight from a working therapist."Hosted by Jim Cunningham, Licensed Professional Counselor, this podcast tackles the topics that show up in your daily life — anxiety, depression, grief, toxic relationships, anger, avoidance, parenting, trauma, empathy, and the psychology behind why we do what we do.Each episode delivers practical tools and honest strategies to help you gain more self-awareness, make better choices, and take back control.No influencer advice. No wellness hype. Just straight talk from a working therapist.New episodes regularly — subscribe so you never miss one.

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23 Episoder

episode Trauma Doesn't Damage People. Here's What Actually Does. cover

Trauma Doesn't Damage People. Here's What Actually Does.

Most people have heard of EMDR. Very few actually understand what it does — or why it works when years of talk therapy haven't moved the needle. In this episode, Jim Cunningham, LPC breaks it down in plain language: what trauma actually is (it's not what most people think), why you can't always see your own patterns from inside them, and what EMDR does to a traumatic memory that insight alone cannot do. You'll come away understanding why the past lives in the present — and what it actually takes to change that. Topics covered: • Big-T vs. small-T trauma — and why the small ones often do the most damage • Why understanding your patterns isn't the same as processing them • The fish, the cage, the cult — why you can't always see your own water • The bookshelf analogy — how EMDR actually works on a traumatic memory • The mountainside/binoculars image — what 'zooming out' looks like in a session • The difference between a wound and a scar • What EMDR treats beyond PTSD — anxiety, depression, phobias, chronic pain, performance issues • Why people avoid starting EMDR — and what happens when they push through SHOW NOTES / REFERENCES EMDR International Association (EMDRIA). About EMDR Therapy. emdria.org/about-emdr-therapy/ EMDR International Association (EMDRIA). Experiencing EMDR Therapy — Eight Phases. emdria.org/about-emdr-therapy/experiencing-emdr-therapy/ Shapiro, F. (2018). Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) Therapy: Basic Principles, Protocols, and Procedures (3rd ed.). Guilford Press. Van der Kolk, B.A., et al. (2007). A randomized clinical trial of EMDR, fluoxetine, and pill placebo in treatment of PTSD. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 68(1), 37–46. Maxfield, L. (2019). A clinician's guide to the efficacy of EMDR therapy. Journal of EMDR Practice and Research, 13(4), 239–246. Shapiro, F., & Forrest, M. (2016). EMDR: The breakthrough therapy for overcoming anxiety, stress, and trauma. Basic Books. The Unscripted Mind — real therapy, real talk, no fluff. Hosted by Jim Cunningham, Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC). Each episode delivers practical tools and honest mental health insight to help you gain self-awareness, make better choices, and feel more in control.

12. mai 2026 - 21 min
episode When Avoidance Becomes Your Identity: Victim Mindset, the Fear Ladder, and How to Finally Break the Pattern cover

When Avoidance Becomes Your Identity: Victim Mindset, the Fear Ladder, and How to Finally Break the Pattern

There's a version of avoidance so sophisticated that the people living inside it never see it for what it is — because it doesn't feel like avoidance. It feels like the truth. In Part 2 of this series, Jim unpacks the Tendency for Interpersonal Victimhood (TIV) — a 2020 personality construct from Tel Aviv University that explains why some people organize their entire identity around being wronged, and why that makes accountability feel impossible. He also delivers the full clinical picture of the Fear Ladder, including the two things most people miss when they try to use it on their own: safety behaviors and pacing. Finally, Jim walks through five concrete strategies for going into hard conversations with a plan instead of a reaction. This episode is about what it costs you to keep playing not to lose — and what it actually looks like to start playing to win. Topics covered: * The four dimensions of Interpersonal Victimhood (TIV) * Why victimhood identity is a nervous system pattern, not a character flaw * The Fear Ladder: full clinical picture and common mistakes * Safety behaviors and why they cancel your progress * Five strategies for high-stakes conversations * Playing to win vs. playing not to lose * Your three-part homework assignment References: Gabay et al. (2020), Craske et al. (2008), Foa & Kozak (1986), Nolen-Hoeksema et al. (2008), Gollwitzer (1999), Ok et al. (2021) The Unscripted Mind — real therapy, real talk, no fluff. Hosted by Jim Cunningham, Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC). Each episode delivers practical tools and honest mental health insight to help you gain self-awareness, make better choices, and feel more in control.

14. april 2026 - 25 min
episode Avoidance Makes It Worse (And How To Stop It) cover

Avoidance Makes It Worse (And How To Stop It)

You know the conversation you've been putting off for three weeks. You've rehearsed it. You've run it in your head. And then you just don't do it. That's not weakness. That's avoidance — and it's costing you more than you realize. In this episode, I break down the psychology behind why we avoid the things that matter most, what it's actually doing to your brain and your life, and four research-backed tools to start breaking the pattern. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ IN THIS EPISODE: → Why 1 in 3 people meet the clinical threshold for avoidance-driven anxiety → The Little Albert experiment — how fear is learned (and spreads)→ Seligman's learned helplessness research and what it means for you → The difference between discomfort and actual danger → Why "I'll deal with it eventually" is a trap → 4 tools that actually work  ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🔔 PART 2 IS COMING — Subscribe so you don't miss it. Next episode: What happens when avoidance becomes an identity. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━  REFERENCES - Watson & Rayner (1920) — Journal of Experimental Psychology - Seligman & Maier (1967) — Journal of Experimental Psychology  - Pittelkow et al. (2020) — PLOS ONE (7-country social anxiety study) - Levin et al. (2022) — Journal of Contextual Behavioral Science - Gollwitzer (1999) — American Psychologist - Hofmann & Smits (2008) — Journal of Clinical Psychiatry ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━  Jim Cunningham is a Licensed Professional Counselor based in Monument, Colorado. This podcast explores real psychology, real research, and real talk — without the fluff.  The Unscripted Mind — real therapy, real talk, no fluff. Hosted by Jim Cunningham, Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC). Each episode delivers practical tools and honest mental health insight to help you gain self-awareness, make better choices, and feel more in control.

2. april 2026 - 18 min
episode Why Kids Don't Listen Anymore: 7 Ways Parenting & Authority Have Changed cover

Why Kids Don't Listen Anymore: 7 Ways Parenting & Authority Have Changed

Most parents aren't imagining it — something has genuinely  shifted. Authority used to be automatic. Today it has to be  earned every single day, and the culture around you isn't  helping. In this episode, Jim Cunningham LPC breaks down seven ways  parenting and authority have changed in just one generation  — and what calm, confident leadership actually looks like now. You'll hear about: - Why "because I said so" no longer lands the way it used to - How screens and dopamine are rewiring your child's brain    against you - The way culture — from sitcoms to influencers — has quietly    undermined parental authority - Why guilt-driven parenting is costing your kids more than    you realize - How to rebuild influence without power plays or punishment - Why structure and warmth aren't opposites — and why kids    need both - The one thing that makes kids actually want to listen The goal isn't to raise compliant kids. It's to raise  self-governing adults who choose what's right even when  nobody's looking. This episode gives you a road map to  get there. 🎧 Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts. 💬 Have a topic you'd like Jim to cover? Leave a comment     or reach out through the link below. The Unscripted Mind — real therapy, real talk, no fluff. Hosted by Jim Cunningham, Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC). Each episode delivers practical tools and honest mental health insight to help you gain self-awareness, make better choices, and feel more in control.

3. des. 2025 - 16 min
episode Why People Snap: The Psychology of Rage and Protest cover

Why People Snap: The Psychology of Rage and Protest

Why do some movements change the world while others disappear without a trace? What drives someone to stand in the rain holding a sign instead of staying home? In this episode, we break down the real psychology behind protest — what actually turns frustration into action, why anger alone isn't enough, and what separates movements that win from ones that just make noise. We cover the role of hope versus fear, how emotional contagion pulls individuals into something larger than themselves, and why learned helplessness keeps millions silent despite their deepest convictions. From the laser-focused strategy of the Montgomery Bus Boycott to the passionate but directionless energy of Occupy Wall Street — the difference isn't passion. It's psychology. You'll also walk away with eight practical strategies for amplifying your voice — whether you're marching in the streets or just trying to be heard in your own home. No political agenda. Just the science of human behavior under pressure. New episodes regularly — subscribe so you never miss one. Topics covered: protest psychology | collective action | social movements | anger and motivation | fear and learned helplessness | emotional contagion | bandwagon effect | identity and group behavior | Montgomery Bus Boycott | Occupy Wall Street | influence and persuasion | advocacy strategies | making your voice heard | psychology of change References: American Psychological Association. (2020). Publication manual of the American Psychological Association (7th ed.). Bandura, A. (1997). Self-efficacy: The exercise of control. W.H. Freeman. Chan, C., Lee, F. L. F., & Chen, H.-T. (2020). Hong Kong’s Anti-Extradition Bill Movement: Mobilization and outcomes. Journal of Democracy, 31(4), 132-147. Chenoweth, E., & Stephan, M. J. (2011). Why civil resistance works: The strategic logic of nonviolent conflict. Columbia University Press.    Cialdini, R. B. (2007). Influence: The psychology of persuasion (Rev. ed.). Harper Business. Festinger, L. (1957). A theory of cognitive dissonance. Stanford University Press. Hatfield, E., Cacioppo, J. T., & Rapson, R. L. (1994). Emotional contagion. Cambridge University Press. Klandermans, B. (1997). The social psychology of protest. Blackwell Publishers. Kunda, Z. (1990). The case for motivated reasoning. Psychological Bulletin, 108(3), 480–498. McAdam, D. (1982). Political process and the development of Black insurgency, 1930-1970. University of Chicago Press.  McAdam, D., & Su, Y. (2002). The war at home: Antiwar protests and congressional voting, 1965 to 1973. American Journal of Sociology, 108(3), 696-733. Muñoz, J., & Anduiza, E. (2019). ‘If a fight starts, watch the crowd’: The effect of violence on popular support for social movements. Political Studies, 67(2), 485-504.    National Action Network. (n.d.). Rev. Al Sharpton. Retrieved from https://www.nationalaction.network/ [https://www.nationalaction.network/] PBS NewsHour. (2020, August 26). Decades later, Al Sharpton still insists: No justice, no peace. Retrieved from https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/decades-later- [https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/decades-later-al-sharpton-still-insists-no-justice-no-peace] The Unscripted Mind — real therapy, real talk, no fluff. Hosted by Jim Cunningham, Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC). Each episode delivers practical tools and honest mental health insight to help you gain self-awareness, make better choices, and feel more in control.

14. april 2025 - 17 min
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