EPISODE · Apr 13, 2026 · 7 MIN
Why Self-Trust Is So Hard to Build
from A Mason's Work · host Brian Mattocks
Self-trust is not a feeling you stumble into. It is something built through a deliberate process, and most people never start that process because they do not have a stable enough sense of self to filter the advice coming at them from every direction. Brian Mattocks opens this week by addressing a specific pattern he sees repeatedly: men navigating major life transitions without any underlying foundation of self-knowledge, which leaves them perpetually reactive to whatever the people around them say they should do.A core premise here is uncomfortable but necessary. We routinely mislead ourselves, not out of malice, but out of a very human tendency to avoid discomfort. Until you account for that, any attempt at self-improvement is built on unreliable data. Brian introduces the ARAA sequence from his book, A Mason's Work, as a practical cycle for moving through awareness, reflection, analysis, and action in a way that actually surfaces truth rather than reinforcing avoidance.Why life inflection points erode a man's sense of purpose and directionThe difference between well-meaning external guidance and grounded self-knowledgeWhy self-deception is not the same as lying, and why that distinction mattersHow social pressure fills the void left by an undeveloped sense of selfThe ARAA sequence as a repeatable structure for building self-trustWhy you cannot trust yourself if you simply believe everything you tell yourselfThis episode sets the foundation for everything that follows this week, establishing that the work of self-trust begins not with motivation, but with honesty about how we operate internally. Thanks to our monthly supporters Tim Dedman Jorge ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
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Why Self-Trust Is So Hard to Build
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