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Why do some people doubt others when they share experiences of something bad or traumatic happening to them?
Here are a few reasons: cognitive dissonance, bias and prejudice, fear of consequences, social conditioning, and the influence of authority figures.
Providing a safe space, listening, and believing someone when they say they have been hurt or experienced something science can’t explain can be transformative for the person trying to wrap their mind around a traumatic experience.
Alien abductions or exceptional experiences consist of people living with this every day—not being believed.
I sat down with John Priestland, Founder and Chairman of uNHIdden, along with Dr. Daniel Stubbings, Clinical Psychologist and part of the uNHIdden Medical Advisory Board, to dive deep into the experiencer phenomenon from a clinical perspective and how organizations like Unhidden can create pathways for government officials and society to understand better that the human experience is not one-dimensional but complex, through the eyes of the experiencer.
Join us as we get rebelliously curious.
Watch the YouTube interview - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3oq6-yjbp98
Study finds ufo witnesses may have personality traits that increase the likelihood of sightings - https://thedebrief.org/study-finds-ufo-witnesses-may-have-personality-traits-that-increase-likelihood-of-sightings/
Follow Chrissy Newton:
Winner of the Canadian Podcast Awards for Best Science Series.
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCM32gjHqMnYl_MOHZetC8Eg
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/beingchrissynewton/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/chrissynewton?lang=en
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BeingChrissyNewton
Chrissy Newton's Website: https://chrissynewton.com
Top Canadian Science Podcast: https://podcasts.feedspot.com/canadian_science_podcasts/
4.7
3333 ratings
Why do some people doubt others when they share experiences of something bad or traumatic happening to them?
Here are a few reasons: cognitive dissonance, bias and prejudice, fear of consequences, social conditioning, and the influence of authority figures.
Providing a safe space, listening, and believing someone when they say they have been hurt or experienced something science can’t explain can be transformative for the person trying to wrap their mind around a traumatic experience.
Alien abductions or exceptional experiences consist of people living with this every day—not being believed.
I sat down with John Priestland, Founder and Chairman of uNHIdden, along with Dr. Daniel Stubbings, Clinical Psychologist and part of the uNHIdden Medical Advisory Board, to dive deep into the experiencer phenomenon from a clinical perspective and how organizations like Unhidden can create pathways for government officials and society to understand better that the human experience is not one-dimensional but complex, through the eyes of the experiencer.
Join us as we get rebelliously curious.
Watch the YouTube interview - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3oq6-yjbp98
Study finds ufo witnesses may have personality traits that increase the likelihood of sightings - https://thedebrief.org/study-finds-ufo-witnesses-may-have-personality-traits-that-increase-likelihood-of-sightings/
Follow Chrissy Newton:
Winner of the Canadian Podcast Awards for Best Science Series.
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCM32gjHqMnYl_MOHZetC8Eg
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/beingchrissynewton/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/chrissynewton?lang=en
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BeingChrissyNewton
Chrissy Newton's Website: https://chrissynewton.com
Top Canadian Science Podcast: https://podcasts.feedspot.com/canadian_science_podcasts/
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