In our culture, we sometimes think of physical healing as near magic. Take this potion, that magic pill, wave the x-ray wand, blast it with invisible radiation. Voila! You’re better. Our medical treatments are certainly advanced, but such a degree of technical progress can reduce our sense of agency in the process. Participating in treatment can feel analogous to taking the car into the shop for an adjustment.
We would often like personal, mental and spiritual healing to work that way. But, as John Donne said, “no man is an island”; we are intimately connected to others and healing is a relational endeavor. “Ok, that sounds great”, you say, “but what does it really mean?” What do we know about mental development that can help us understand healing?
For a moment, let’s put on our neuroscience lenses (realizing that this information is a generalization; the raw science – well there are whole other books for that!). The way that our brains develop, the very way in which our genes express themselves, is dependent on the type of interactions that we have with others. Read More →
There is a threefold dimension to the Advent season–past, present and future. Sometimes we forget that Advent is not simply a memory exercise of the Church contemplating the Christ event some 2000 years ago. Advent is also a time in which we prepare our hearts in expectation for Christ’s 
the fact that we share in the Divine Life by grace this phrase must have some relevance and meaning to those of us who do not yet have the Beatific Vision. So, Psyched Catholic is my chance to think deeply about God’s glory and living man. In this space I want to contemplate and explore lines given to us by the Church like “man cannot find himself, except through a sincere gift of self,” and “Christ…fully reveals man to man himself.” The wisdom of the Church and of her Saints has much to teach me about how to live the life of grace well. I have come to believe that solid psychology can assist in this venture as well. With Psyched Catholic I want to plunder Egypt’s gold and take what is true, good, and beautiful from psychology and explore how it can benefit our spiritual lives. From my own experiences and those of intimate friends and family I know that barriers to psychological and emotional health, whether they be traumas from the past, addictions, or mental disorders can often impeded our spiritual growth and relationship with God. Psychology can be used to help clear away the rubble that may be impeding grace, freeing us to flourish.
Advent is here.