A Mason's Work

Brian Mattocks

In this show we discuss the practical applications of masonic symbolism and how the working tools can be used to better yourself, your family, your lodge, and your community. We help good freemasons become better men through honest self development. We talk quite a bit about mental health and men's issues related to emotional and intellectual growth as well.

  1. -1 J

    Becoming the Architect of Your Own Response

    The composite order in classical architecture does not invent something new. It takes the scrolls of the Ionic and the acanthus leaves of the Corinthian and synthesizes them into the most integrated of the orders. In the framework Brian has built across this week, the composite represents the point where the Ouroboros closes, where the sophisticated understanding developed through labeling, reflection, and emotional awareness finally reunites with the raw Tuscan sensation it started from. You have the same awareness you had at the beginning, only now it is informed by everything the journey taught you. Brian walks through the difficult-conversation example one final time to show what composite-stage awareness actually looks like in practice. You feel the heat in your chest. You recognize the label you are reaching for. You understand its history. You appreciate the emotional complexity of the moment. And you hold all of that simultaneously, without being driven by any one layer of it. You become what Brian calls the conscious architect of the experience, neither reacting blindly like the Tuscan nor drowning in the drama of the Corinthian, but choosing how to respond from a position of genuine agency. The episode also addresses something worth sitting with: your level of conscious awareness is not uniform across all areas of your life. An athlete may reach Corinthian-level awareness of their own physiology through the pressures of training while remaining in early Doric when it comes to emotional relationships. The composite in one domain becomes a resource you can draw on to accelerate development in others. The work is not a single climb to a single summit. It is a set of transferable skills. What the composite order represents in the architecture of conscious awarenessHow integrated agency differs from the awareness of each earlier stageThe Ouroboros completed: pure sensation reunited with complex understandingApplying the difficult-conversation example at the composite levelWhy conscious awareness levels differ across life domains and what that means for developmentHow mastery in one domain can be used to open up growth in anotherThe goal was never to escape sensation or to perfect the story. It was to hold both at once and choose what to do next. Thanks to our monthly supporters Tim Dedman Jorge ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

    8 min
  2. -3 J

    Where Meaning Blooms Into Aesthetic

    If the Ionic stage is where you trace the roots of your labels, the Corinthian is where those roots produce flowers. The most ornate of the classical orders, the Corinthian column is characterized by its acanthus leaves and its slender, elaborated proportions. In the mapping of conscious awareness Brian has been building this week, the Corinthian represents the stage where experience stops being a data-analysis problem and becomes something aesthetically and emotionally alive. Returning to the difficult-conversation example, Brian shows how the Corinthian stage transforms what was first a physical sensation, then a label, then a causal analysis, into something richer. You begin to see the beauty in vulnerability, the complexity of the emotional landscape, the way empathy and shared experience weave together. This is the stage where people tend to develop deep personal narratives about who they are, narratives that often carry genuine insight and hard-won meaning. The danger is that those narratives can become more real to you than the present circumstances that originally generated them. You may still be decorating a story whose source material no longer applies. Brian is clear that this stage is necessary, not something to skip past or dismiss. The Corinthian ornamentation is not vanity. It is how we build identity and express ourselves outward into the world. But like every previous stage, it has a trap, and recognizing that trap is part of moving toward the composite stage that closes out the week. What the Corinthian order represents in the architecture of conscious awarenessHow emotional flourishing and aesthetic appreciation emerge from Ionic analysisApplying the difficult-conversation example at the Corinthian levelThe role empathy and mutual expression play at this stageThe trap of becoming so attached to your story that it outlives its sourceHow Corinthian awareness sets up the final integration of the compositeThe stories we build about ourselves are among the most powerful tools we have, which is exactly why they deserve careful examination before we let them run the show. Thanks to our monthly supporters Tim Dedman Jorge ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

    8 min
  3. -4 J

    Thinking About Your Thinking

    There is a significant difference between labeling an experience and asking why you gave it that label. The Ionic stage of conscious awareness is where that second move becomes possible. Characterized by the scrolled volutes at the top of the Ionic column, this stage is where metacognition enters the picture. You are no longer just sensing or naming. You are analyzing the names themselves, tracing their origins, and beginning to identify the stories you have been telling yourself as stories rather than facts. Brian walks through the difficult-conversation example that runs across the whole week. At the Tuscan level, it was heat in the chest and tingling in the fingers. At the Doric, it became the label frustrated or he is mean. At the Ionic, you step back and ask what the history behind that label actually is, what the cause-and-effect relationship is between the raw experience and the name you assigned it. This is where genuine agency begins to form, because once you can see the label as a construction, you can revise it. The trap here is intellectualization. The Ionic stage can become a hall of mirrors where the analysis grows so elaborate and internally consistent that it loses contact with the original sensation entirely. You end up following a story that no longer reflects the data you are actually receiving. The goal is to stay anchored to the Tuscan while developing the Ionic, keeping the scroll connected to the column beneath it. What the Ionic order represents in the architecture of conscious awarenessHow reflective intellect differs from the labeling function of the Doric stageApplying the difficult-conversation example at the Ionic levelHow to begin correcting misidentifications from earlier stages of developmentThe trap of over-intellectualization and losing contact with sensationWhy the Ionic is a necessary bridge rather than a destinationQuestioning the label is not the same as rejecting the experience, and knowing the difference is what keeps the analysis honest. Thanks to our monthly supporters Tim Dedman Jorge ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

    7 min
  4. -5 J

    How the Ego Builds Its Operating System

    Once you can notice a sensation without immediately categorizing it, the next question becomes: what happens the moment you do categorize it? That is the territory of the Doric stage. Building on the Tuscan foundation introduced earlier in the week, this episode examines the layer of consciousness where the mind starts doing what it is designed to do, sorting experience into named, functional categories and drawing the boundary between self and world. Brian describes this as the construction of the self's operating system. The Doric is where you stop sensing brightness and start recognizing the sun. It is structurally strong and functionally necessary, but like the Doric column itself, it is heavy and plain. The same categorization process that lets you navigate the world efficiently is also where misconceptions get locked into the system. If you misidentified a Tuscan-level sensation early in life and gave it the wrong Doric label, that mislabeling will distort every layer of analysis built on top of it. The episode closes with a practical exercise: notice moments in your day when you move from raw sensation to a named experience. Sit with the gap between those two things. That gap is where the Tuscan ends and the Doric begins, and understanding it is what makes later stages of development possible. What the Doric order represents in the architecture of conscious awarenessHow the mind moves from sensation to categorization and why this is both necessary and riskyThe binary, black-and-white quality of early Doric consciousnessHow early mislabeling corrupts later analysisThe trap of staying in rigid Doric thinking and missing nuanceA daily awareness practice for locating the Tuscan-to-Doric transitionStructure is not the enemy of growth, but structure that goes unexamined eventually becomes a cage. Thanks to our monthly supporters Tim Dedman Jorge ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

    7 min
  5. -6 J

    Pure Sensation Before the Story Begins

    Most of us move through our days labeling experiences so quickly that we never actually sit with what is happening before the label arrives. In his book A Mason's Work, Brian Mattocks argues that the tools of Freemasonry offer practical frameworks for exactly this kind of self-examination. This episode opens a week-long exploration of conscious awareness by mapping the five classical orders of architecture onto stages of human consciousness, starting with the Tuscan. The Tuscan stage is pre-evaluative. It is the sensation of brightness before you call it sunlight, the feeling of cold before you name it cold. Brian makes the case that cultivating this baseline level of awareness, without imposing labels or judgments on top of it, functions like calibrating an instrument. The more you practice sitting with raw sensation, the more sensitive you become to the subtleties and nuances that higher-order thinking tends to smooth over. The week's arc moves toward what Brian calls integrated agency, where pure awareness and conscious choice finally operate together. There is also a clear warning here. Staying at the Tuscan level indefinitely is not enlightenment. Without the evaluative layers that come later, awareness alone leaves you in a state of perpetual reaction, with no real ability to choose your response. This episode lays the foundation everything else this week builds on. What the Tuscan order of architecture maps to in terms of human consciousnessThe distinction between sensation and the naming of sensationWhy pre-evaluative awareness is a trainable skill, not a passive statePractical entry points for cultivating Tuscan-level awareness, including body scans and time in natureThe Ouroboros as a metaphor for where the week's arc is headedThe risk of staying stuck in pure awareness without developing agencyIf you want to understand where your interpretations of experience come from, you first have to get beneath them. Thanks to our monthly supporters Tim Dedman Jorge ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

    7 min
  6. 24 AVR.

    The Commitments You Made With Your Future Self

    Oaths feel different from ordinary agreements because there is no external party to hold you accountable when you break them. No invoice arrives. No relationship visibly suffers in the short term. But Brian Mattocks argues that these one-sided commitments — the oaths taken at the altar, the personal declarations about who you intend to become — are not one-sided at all. The requester is the future version of yourself, and every time you break an internal commitment, you are running up a debt that compounds invisibly until it becomes the exact kind of self-deception the week's earlier episodes were built to address. The same anatomy that applies to any external agreement applies here. The future self holds the requester position. The present self is the recipient. The behavioral changes required to close the gap between who you are and who you committed to become are the discrete actions. Brian brings the ARAA sequence into this context as well, showing how structured self-dialogue — whether on paper or in your head — can move identity commitments out of vague aspiration and into actual contracted behavior. This also means enrolling the people around you as support in holding those commitments, which connects the internal work of self-knowledge back to the relational work the week opened with. Why internal commitments carry the same structural weight as external agreementsHow the cost of breaking oaths accumulates invisibly over timeReframing the oath as a contract between your present and future selfApplying the requester-recipient anatomy to identity commitmentsUsing the ARAA cycle to build discrete behavioral steps toward a stated identityHow to enroll others in supporting commitments you have made to yourselfThe relationship you build with yourself is the one every other relationship depends on. Thanks to our monthly supporters Tim Dedman Jorge ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

    6 min
  7. 23 AVR.

    Yes, No, and the Responses That Actually Mean Something

    Saying yes to something you cannot deliver is not kindness. It is a slow erosion of trust, and Brian Mattocks makes that case plainly here. This episode focuses on closing the commitment conversation — what it looks like to reach a response that is clear, honest, and actionable, whether that response is agreement, a conditional acceptance, a counter offer, or an outright decline. Brian connects the role of the Senior Warden from the operative Masonic tradition as a symbol for this kind of fair accounting: bringing work to a proper conclusion with integrity on both sides. The framework comes from Kaufman's Conscious Business approach to responses that are not a straight yes. A conditional yes makes explicit the requirements that must be met for delivery to happen. A counter offer addresses honest capacity limits — time, bandwidth, availability — without leaving the other person hanging. And a clean decline, stated without hedging, without a door left ambiguously open, is identified as among the most trustworthy things you can offer someone who needs help. It frees them to find what they actually need instead of waiting on a promise that will not materialize. Why compliance masquerading as agreement erodes trust over timeThe four possible responses to a commitment request and when each appliesWhat a conditional acceptance makes explicit and why that mattersHow a counter offer differs from an ambiguous hedge or vague deflectionWhy a clean decline is more productive than an uncertain yesThe Senior Warden as an operative model for bringing agreements to fair conclusionGetting to a clear answer — whatever that answer is — is the whole point of the commitment conversation. Thanks to our monthly supporters Tim Dedman Jorge ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

    11 min
  8. 22 AVR.

    Stop Deciding in Your Head and Say It Out Loud

    Commitments break most often not because people are dishonest, but because they respond on autopilot. Brian Mattocks tackles the gap between the speed of real conversation and the slower process of genuine self-assessment, and offers a practical way to close it. The solution is to stop treating reflection and analysis as purely internal processes and bring them into the open. Stating what you think you heard, naming what you think you are agreeing to, and surfacing your assumptions out loud is not a negotiating tactic — it is the foundation of honest contracting. Brian applies the Awareness, Reflection, Analysis, and Action sequence he introduced in earlier episodes to the live context of making commitments with another person. The key move is extroverting the middle steps: reflection and analysis become shared rather than private. This allows both parties to surface the downstream realities of a commitment before it is made — including things like personal limitations, likely friction points, and the conditions that would make delivery more realistic. He draws on his own patterns of distraction and difficulty with large, unbroken tasks as an example of the kind of self-knowledge that belongs in a contracting conversation. Why autopilot responses are the primary way commitments fail at the outsetHow to extrovert the reflection and analysis stages of the ARAA sequenceThe role of mutual vulnerability in building agreements that holdSurfacing assumptions and downstream effects before consent is givenWhen it is appropriate to pause and return to a commitment conversation laterHow naming your own limitations inside a commitment strengthens rather than weakens itHonest agreement requires that what happens in your head also happens in the room. Thanks to our monthly supporters Tim Dedman Jorge ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

    10 min

Notes et avis

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À propos

In this show we discuss the practical applications of masonic symbolism and how the working tools can be used to better yourself, your family, your lodge, and your community. We help good freemasons become better men through honest self development. We talk quite a bit about mental health and men's issues related to emotional and intellectual growth as well.

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