This is an important aspect in understanding why much healing work has limited benefits, and this includes most psychotherapy. It is not looking at the belief systems of the client but only their perspectives, attitudes, and discussion of the emotional fallout and how best to handle it, using that as a guide only and not the fact there might be deeply held inner beliefs, even ones that are in conflict with one another having opposite natures. This is quite common and leaves a person unstable and vulnerable to being triggered by new stressful situations and without inner resources to overcome the constraints of the dark inclinations defined by their corrupt beliefs. That is why, among many other reasons, the DSMR protocol represents a breakthrough for human healing and the healing of other beings as well. Only a direct belief replacement has any hope of changing people, materially, in how they think, feel, and behave, because everything they do will be a reflection of inner beliefs to some extent, as those are the guardrails and will keep everyone in a narrow channel of possible responses based on faulty thinking as life unfolds. People cannot expand, learn, and grow in ways truly helpful unless their beliefs are forward-looking and allowing of that expansion and not constraining it. So working on the emotions is all well and good, because they are immediate and powerful and often crippling when felt inappropriately and with great intensity. But we would say the long-term outcomes will be more dependent on the inner beliefs, because they construct the walls of the personal fortress, and if not based on an enlightened character-building edifice of wisdom, will be the opposite in some respect and will create more negative experiences and failings constraining the person to limit their growth.
Please login or Register to submit your answer