エピソード

  • Deep Evening Wind Down, 10 Minute Nervous System Reset, Release Stress, Mental Overload and Tension, Let Go of the Day, Settle into Calm Without Sleep
    2026/04/19

    This 10 minute evening wind down is designed to help you release the mental and physical momentum of the day without becoming drowsy. When the body slows but the mind keeps going, this session gives you a way to step out of that carryover and settle into a more calm, steady state.

    Through gradual release, simple awareness, and guided mental unwinding, your system begins to let go of accumulated stress, tension, and mental overload. Thoughts that were looping begin to quiet, and the pressure to stay engaged with everything from the day starts to fade.

    This is not about forcing relaxation or shutting down. It is about allowing what is already finished to remain finished, and what is unfinished to rest without needing your attention right now.

    Use this at the end of the day, after work, or anytime you feel like your mind is still carrying more than it needs to. It helps create a clear transition into the evening so you can move forward with less tension, less mental noise, and more space.

    You remain aware, present, and in control throughout.

    CenterPoint.app

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    10 分
  • 10 Minute Nervous System Reset, Calm Your Mind, Reduce Stress, Stay Focused and Clear, Anxiety Relief, Mental Reset, Grounding Meditation
    2026/04/17

    This 10 minute Nervous System Reset is designed to help you calm your mind, reduce stress, and regain clear focus without becoming drowsy. You can listen while commuting, working, or taking a break, with no need to close your eyes or step away from what you are doing. Through steady breath pacing, simple physical grounding, and mental clearing, this session helps your system release excess tension and return to a more balanced, stable state. Use it anytime you feel overwhelmed, distracted, or mentally overloaded. You remain calm, aware, and in control throughout. Safe for driving and daily activity. CenterPoint.app


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    10 分
  • Ep 4. Good Vibes Only
    2026/04/15

    “Good vibes only” sounds supportive. Sometimes it is. Sometimes it quietly shuts down what is real.

    In this episode of Wisdom vs Wallpaper, Kevin Allen Kerber sits down with Kamakshi Hart to explore the line between emotional boundaries and spiritual bypass.

    There are moments when protecting your energy is necessary. There are also moments when positivity becomes a way of avoiding grief, anger, and discomfort. The same phrase can come from very different places, and create very different outcomes.

    This conversation looks at how to tell the difference. What it means for a space to be genuinely safe. Why curated positivity often feels off. And how to stay honest with your experience without taking on what is not yours.

    If you have ever felt pressure to stay positive when something in you needed to be heard, this episode will land.

    At least: reach out to Kamakshi and schedule a complimentary conversation about receiving support and guidance in your life - kamakshihart.com

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    26 分
  • Ep. 3: The Invisible Agreements Running Your Life
    2026/03/26

    Why do people sometimes make a sincere decision, put in real effort, and still feel like their life is moving in another direction? This episode explores the hidden rules, inherited assumptions, and older internal agreements that can keep shaping behavior long after a conscious goal has been chosen. What gets called self-sabotage is not always weakness, inconsistency, or lack of sincerity. Sometimes the visible effort is real, but something older is still getting priority underneath it.

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    33 分
  • Ep. 2: Everything Happens for a Reason
    2026/03/26

    "Everything happens for a reason" may be one of the most common comfort lines in modern spiritual culture. This episode looks at what happens when that sentence arrives too early, before grief, anger, fear, or shock have had time to fully register. What sounds comforting can quietly become pressure. Pain gets turned into a lesson before the experience has even been honestly lived. This is a close look at the difference between presence and explanation, and why meaning forced too quickly can distort the truth of what happened.

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    31 分
  • Ep. 1: The Words You Never Questioned
    2026/03/26

    Why do certain sayings sound comforting, even when they leave people feeling interrupted, pressured, or unseen?

    This podcast examines familiar cultural catchphrases like “everything happens for a reason,” “good vibes only,” and other inherited bits of advice that can quietly shape belief, emotion, and behavior. Episode one lays out the premise of the show, how these lines lose their original context, and why language that sounds wise can sometimes function more like wallpaper than truth.


    Full episodes and clips at wisdomvswallpaper.com


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    36 分
  • Trance Meditation/Medical Hypnosis for Optimal Sports Performance and Mental Focus
    2022/05/25

    https://centerpoint.app Internal Martial Arts Scholar Barclay Powers leads a 30 minute trance meditation focused on peak performance and awareness.

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    32 分
  • Psychological Wholeness, Brain States and stimulating the Parasympathetic Nerve, Substance/Habit Recovery and effectively changing habitual patterns of destructive behavior
    2022/05/23

    Q: Let’s talk about cravings for psychological wholeness and how Center Point creates a gentle and functional path for recovery and healing.

    Barclay: The idea is that when people have substance use issues, as Jung put it out, they are actually seeking psychological wholeness, by using the substance so that if someone has a problem with drinking. Jung's framework was one where they were seeking to integrate the unconscious with the conscious mind and to unite male and female aspects of themselves, within themselves by focusing on drinking more and more and so it became well known at the end of the 1800s that what they called the thought cure, which was the use of over a strong religious conversion experience, often was highly effective in reducing smoking and drinking issues. And so it was noted by William James that the cure for dips of mania, which meant binge drinking was religious mania.

    And this has become part of many recovery groups and the modern 12 step programs as well, with the emphasis on the higher power that enables you to transcend your self destructive cravings. And so these frameworks work for some people. Other people have trouble because they're often poised in terms of a religious framework. And so where Center Point is different is that we're using the Meridian system of the body to balance dopamine and serotonin levels, which are pleasure and happinessI in terms of neurotransmitter function. And the idea is by integrating certain types of meditation certain types of movements, certain types of breathing practices, it's possible for the individual to rewire the nervous system and change the brain reward, cascade system, which is where the individual has gotten locked into a particular pattern of habitual behavior, which is destructive and which is causing problems based on this ancient meditation framework in which attachment results in discomfort or suffering.

    So the Center Point model differs from other recovery approaches because it enables the person to maintain whatever their own spiritual or religious belief system is or is not. But then it provides a set of tools and a methodology for the person to practice gradually and to integrate the conscious, unconscious and collective unconscious levels of the mind and of the body and to return to a state of psychological wholeness, which is what the person is actually seeking to begin with. So most of the substance abuse problems are revolving around trauma, a lack of meaning a lack of purpose, self-doubt, self-loathing, and all of those imbalances can be corrected. By running more and more Prana or Chi through the meridian system of the body and balancing out the connections between the sympathetic, parasympathetic and enteric nervous systems, which are determining how the person reacts to stress, emotional pain, sadness or personal loss.

    https://centerpoint.app


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    25 分