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In this episode of Pivot Point: Strategy for Change, I sat down with clinical psychotherapist Nishant Patel who’s work bridges decades of clinical experience with timeless wisdom, offering a path to awareness, choice, and emotional freedom. For anyone standing at a crossroads—facing pressure, fear, or uncertainty—this episode is an invitation to examine the beliefs shaping your experience and to see what happens when they’re met with curiosity instead of control.
Nishant came across Byron Katie’s method of inquiry, adeceptively simple process built on asking four questions that cut straight to the heart of belief. What happened next wasn’t an intellectual shift—it was a visceral unraveling. By questioning the thoughts he’d never thought to question—the ones about worth, anger, and self—he experienced something extraordinary. The suffering didn’t need to be fixed. It dissolved the moment the belief holding it in place collapsed.
His story proves that real change often happens not throughfixing who we are but through understanding how our mind creates our suffering.
By Nik MichaelIn this episode of Pivot Point: Strategy for Change, I sat down with clinical psychotherapist Nishant Patel who’s work bridges decades of clinical experience with timeless wisdom, offering a path to awareness, choice, and emotional freedom. For anyone standing at a crossroads—facing pressure, fear, or uncertainty—this episode is an invitation to examine the beliefs shaping your experience and to see what happens when they’re met with curiosity instead of control.
Nishant came across Byron Katie’s method of inquiry, adeceptively simple process built on asking four questions that cut straight to the heart of belief. What happened next wasn’t an intellectual shift—it was a visceral unraveling. By questioning the thoughts he’d never thought to question—the ones about worth, anger, and self—he experienced something extraordinary. The suffering didn’t need to be fixed. It dissolved the moment the belief holding it in place collapsed.
His story proves that real change often happens not throughfixing who we are but through understanding how our mind creates our suffering.