The Paradigm Process: Transformation to Your Sacred Self Overview
The Paradigm Process: Transformation to Your Sacred Self. Welcome to our The Paradigm Process Book Resources page.
CONTENT ON THE PAGE : WHAT YOU WILL FIND HERE:
- Introduction to the book
- Audio and Video about the Paradigm Process Book
- F.A.Q. Frequently Asked Questions about the Process
- Study Guide for the Paradigm Process Book
- Glossary of Key Terms
- Timeline and Key Figures in the book
- A briefing of the Paradigm Process
- Important Ideas and Facts
- 50 Affirmations from the Paradigm Process
About the Book
The Paradigm Process Book – Your guide to the Alchemy of Transformation
Available in Paperback. Ebook. Audio Book.
If Your Life Transformation story could be a Bestseller. This would be it!
# 300 A4 Illustrated Pages
# 10 Miracle Pathways to learn the alchemy of self development
# 19 Chapters
# 3 Version formats. Printed copy. Ebook. Audiobook.
A Life-Changing Tool Experts and People world-wide can’t Stop Talking About
What if the key to healing yourself completely, to your new found success, and to total life transformation was something you could do for yourself?
Embark on a transformative journey and fundamentally reshape your reality with the bestselling guide, The Paradigm Process: Your Guidebook to the Alchemy of Transformation. Authored by Mark L. Lockwood, a visionary backed by over 25 years of dedicated research, this groundbreaking book offers the key to complete healing, newfound success, and total life transformation.
If you’ve ever felt stuck, overwhelmed, or frustrated, The Paradigm Process reveals that the problem isn’t you—it’s the power you’ve unknowingly given to limiting beliefs and external factors. Based on the core principle of letting go of what no longer serves you, this guide liberates you from the drama and judgments of others and the exhausting cycle of trying to control everything. Lockwood’s science-backed, no-nonsense approach uniquely offers 10 pathways out of suffering and 10 journeys back to your Sacred Self, drawing on an extensive body of global mindfulness research.
It’s time to STOP Searching. START Living.This essential book provides the map to your healing, growth and will unlock your inherent potential and embrace the extraordinary life that awaits you.
Learn how to:
- Become unstuck by Shifting from Personality to Spiritual Reality
- Start Cultivating Deep Awareness and Conscious Choice
- Break free from fear and self-doubt and recover self love
- Use your highest intellectual faculties for self-reflection, mindfulness, and introspection.
- Achieve a life of profound well-being
- Fundamental shift is from a fear-based existence to a love-centered consciousnessPursue what truly matters to you with confidence
- Build resilience against everyday stress, fear and uncertainty
- Discover the most powerful emotion and energy in the universe
- Define your own path to success, joy, and fulfillment
- Discover Practical Tools, Exercises and actionable steps to grow
- Unlock your inherent potential and embracing an extraordinary life
. . . and so much more.
Through the innovative framework of Contemplative Intelligence (CQ), you will learn to rewire your neurological landscape, enhance your emotional and social intelligence, and heal challenges from depression and trauma to chronic pain and anxiety, often in as little as six to eight weeks. By understanding and dissolving the hold of your “Ego Insurgents”—such as the Controller, Perfectionist, and Victim—you can recover inherent qualities like self-love, gratitude, resilience, and wisdom. It’s time to stop searching and start living. The Paradigm Process puts the power to create a life you love back in your hands, providing the essential map to unlock your inherent potential and embrace the extraordinary life that awaits you.
What Would Your Life Look Like If Every Part Accurately Reflected Your Soul’s True Perfection? Get beyond your personality and find out! Buy Now.
What you will find in the Book Resources Area
Understanding The Paradigm Process: Introduction to the book, its core concepts, and the author’s vision.
The Ten Pathways: A deeper dive into each of the 10 transformative pathways, including practical exercises and reflections.
Supporting Your Transformation: Guided meditations, recommended readings, and a video library to aid your journey.
Real-Life Application & Stories: Case studies, testimonials, and frequently asked questions.
Connect & Continue Your Journey: Information on how to connect with the community, explore professional support options (like inpatient treatment or coaching), and purchase the book.
The Paradigm Process, a methodology for personal transformation focusing on shifting from a “personality” driven by fear and ego to one’s “Sacred Self,” rooted in love and higher consciousness. The process, drawing on extensive mindfulness research, offers ten pathways designed to help individuals overcome “Ego Insurgents” like control, perfectionism, neurosis, and anxiety, which are seen as outdated survival mechanisms. Through “Contemplative Intelligence” (CQ), self-awareness, and “Loving Inquiry,” the program aims to alter brain chemistry, foster emotional regulation, and guide individuals towards a state of “God Consciousness,” where boundless potential, wisdom, and genuine connection are realized, ultimately leading to lasting healing and purposeful living.
Shifting from personality-driven responses to contemplative awareness is described as a Paradigm Shift that facilitates profound healing and growth by moving individuals from a state rooted in fear and limitation to one anchored in love, authenticity, and boundless potential.
Here’s how this shift facilitates healing and growth:
1. Understanding Personality-Driven Responses and Their Limitations:
Personality as a Mask: The “personality” is an outer self or “mask” developed in childhood, often unconsciously, to fit in, hide shame and fear, and protect against perceived threats. It is shaped by trauma, societal conditioning, and unmet needs, creating a “first self” that operates on shaky foundations of fear.
Ego Insurgents: These personality traits are also referred to as “Ego Insurgents” or “master insurgents” (Fear, Distrust, and Drama) that obscure the authentic self. They are the mind’s “outdated operating system” that once served for survival but now hinder growth. Examples include The Controller, The Perfectionist, The Neurotic, The Codependent, The Eccentric, The Victim, The Actor, The Pleaser, The Judge, and The Anxious Insurgent.
Negative Impacts: Personality-driven responses lead to stress, anxiety, depression, emotional turmoil, disinterest, disengagement, reduced creativity, strained relationships, and a feeling of powerlessness. They are rooted in a “survival mind,” a primitive “lizard brain” state that dictates choices, thoughts, and feelings, limiting potential. Problems appear insoluble when viewed from this limited perspective.
2. Embracing Contemplative Awareness (Contemplative Intelligence – CQ):
Definition of CQ: Contemplative Intelligence (CQ) is the application of one’s highest intellectual faculties and capabilities to facilitate a paradigm shift. It’s a neurobiologically grounded program that alters brain chemistry, moving beyond the limbic system (survival instincts) to the prefrontal cortex, where true potential resides.
Core of the Practice: CQ involves mindful awareness, critical thinking, intuition, and self-reflection. It’s about thinking about one’s thinking (metacognition) and cultivating inner peace by observing thoughts and emotions without judgment.
Benefits of CQ: CQ allows individuals to shift brain function from constriction to expansive openness, unlocking a limitless reservoir of possibilities. It recalibrates neurochemistry, reignites creativity, enhances emotional and social intelligence, and cultivates balance and well-being. It also helps reduce stress, stay present, and recognize reality undistorted by subjective experience.
3. The Shift and Its Mechanisms (The Paradigm Process): The Paradigm Process is a comprehensive approach to healing and life transformation that guides individuals through 10 pathways out of suffering and 10 journeys back to the Sacred Self. This involves a “scientific revolution of the self”.
Awareness as the First Step: The journey begins with self-awareness, recognizing when one is stressed, anxious, fearful, or in pain, signifying “work to do”. It’s about becoming conscious that one is on a “hero’s journey” to the Sacred Self.
Letting Go of Ego Insurgents (Masks): The process involves “meticulously peeling back” the ten layers of personality masks (Ego Insurgents). Each pathway focuses on “letting go” of a specific ego insurgent and “recovering” a corresponding quality of the Sacred Self:
Letting go of The Controller to recover Self-Love.
Letting go of The Perfectionist to recover Gratitude.
Letting go of The Neurotic to recover Surrender.
Letting go of The Codependent to recover Connection.
Letting go of The Eccentric to recover Certainty.
Letting go of The Victim to recover Resilience.
Letting go of The Actor to recover Presence.
Letting go of The Pleaser to recover Self-Regulation.
Letting go of The Judge to recover Wisdom.
Letting go of The Anxious to recover Courage.

Embracing Love and Transcending Fear: This shift is fundamentally a transition from fear and the unconscious to love consciousness. Love is presented as the most powerful emotion and the core antidote to fear. By consciously choosing love, fear diminishes and dissolves.
Cultivating New Qualities: As individuals shed fear-based masks, qualities like self-love, gratitude, surrender, connection, certainty, resilience, presence, self-regulation, wisdom, and courage are recovered and strengthened.
4. How it Facilitates Healing and Growth:
Holistic Healing: The Paradigm Process leads to profound healing across physical, psychological, emotional, and spiritual states, as observed in thousands of individuals over 25 years. It addresses conditions from depression and trauma to chronic pain and anxiety.
Rewiring the Mind: Contemplative practices can reshape the neurological landscape more effectively than external interventions. This recalibrates neurochemistry, shifting brain function from constriction to expansive openness, and moving from the limbic system to the prefrontal cortex.
Unlocking Potential: By transcending primal survival instincts, individuals ascend to heightened awareness and functionality, reigniting creativity and enhancing emotional and social intelligence. This process unlocks dormant faculties and talents, enabling individuals to realize their true, unlimited potential.
Moving from Survival to Thriving: The shift empowers individuals to thrive, not merely survive. It facilitates rapid resolution of deep-seated blockages and continuous healing and growth at the highest level.
Enhanced Well-being: Individuals experience enhanced well-being, inner peace, joy, contentment, and fulfillment. This is often described as a return to one’s “Sacred Self,” a state of pure consciousness and non-duality.
Authenticity and Self-Mastery: The process encourages becoming authentically oneself. It emphasizes developing self-regulation, which means understanding, managing, and intentionally directing one’s thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. This self-mastery is considered mightier than controlling others.
Problem-Solving: The Paradigm Process offers a structured approach to problem-solving, moving from identifying triggers and analyzing problems with IQ to connecting with EQ and accessing CQ for intuition and revelation, leading to creative action and “loving consequences”.
Increased Resilience: Cultivating resilience allows individuals to withstand adversity, bounce back stronger, and actively seek constructive ways to navigate difficult situations, rather than succumbing to a victim mindset.
In essence, by consciously disengaging from the fear-based, ego-driven personality and instead embracing contemplative awareness, individuals can access their innate healing capacity, rewire their brains, unlock their true potential, and experience a life of profound peace, joy, and purpose rooted in love
Audio Summary of the Book
F.A.Q. Frequenty Asked Questions about the Process
What is The Paradigm Process?
The Paradigm Process is a comprehensive approach to healing and life transformation, developed by Mark L Lockwood and researched over 25 years at The Center for Healing and Life Transformation in South Africa. It offers “10 Pathways out of suffering and 10 journeys back to your Sacred Self.” The core idea is a “paradigm shift” from living primarily through one’s “personality” (a construct shaped by fears, past traumas, and societal conditioning) to embodying one’s “Spiritual Reality” or “Sacred Self,” which is rooted in love, authenticity, and unlimited potential. This process is backed by extensive research, including over 50,000 mindfulness studies and original observations, showing measurable long-term benefits for a wide range of physical, psychological, and emotional challenges.
What is the difference between “Personality” and “Sacred Self” in The Paradigm Process?
In The Paradigm Process, “Personality” refers to the constructed self, or “mask,” that individuals develop over time through experiences, societal conditioning, and particularly in response to stress and trauma. This persona is often driven by fear, a need for control, and a focus on external validation, leading to various “ego insurgents” like the Controller, Perfectionist, Neurotic, and Victim. It operates largely from the “survival mind” or limbic system, leading to limited awareness, disinterest, stress, and anxiety.
The “Sacred Self,” in contrast, is one’s authentic, unconditioned essence—a divine spark beyond the limitations of personality. It represents pure consciousness, wisdom, unconditional love, and boundless creativity. The journey of The Paradigm Process is to shift from identifying with the fear-based personality to embodying this boundless Sacred Self, which operates from higher brain functions (prefrontal cortex) and fosters peace, joy, connection, and purposeful living. It’s a shift from merely surviving to truly thriving.
What are “Ego Insurgents” and how does The Paradigm Process address them?
“Ego Insurgents” are specific personality types or internal voices that act as subconscious defence mechanisms, developed in childhood to protect the individual from perceived threats. These insurgents create “masks” or personas that, while initially serving a protective role, eventually hinder growth and perpetuate suffering. Examples mentioned include The Controller, The Perfectionist, The Neurotic, The Codependent, The Eccentric, The Victim, The Actor, The Pleaser, The Judge, and The Anxious Insurgent.
The Paradigm Process addresses these by:
- Awareness: The crucial first step is to recognize their existence and influence.
- De-masking: Consciously peeling back these layers of personality.
- Integration and Dissolution: Rather than “slaying” them (which is a fear-based approach), the process emphasizes “taming” and “integrating” these aspects into the divine light of the Sacred Self, thereby dissolving their fear-based power.
- Shift to Love: By understanding and releasing these fear-rooted patterns, individuals can recover corresponding qualities of the Sacred Self, such as self-love, gratitude, surrender, and courage.
How does “Contemplative Intelligence (CQ)” facilitate transformation?
Contemplative Intelligence (CQ) is a cutting-edge, neurobiologically grounded program central to The Paradigm Process. It represents the application of one’s highest intellectual faculties to facilitate a paradigm shift. CQ helps individuals:
- Rewire Neurochemistry: It guides the brain beyond the limbic system (survival instincts) to the prefrontal cortex (true potential, creativity, wisdom).
- Bypass Analytical Mind: Contemplative practices (like mindfulness and meditation) directly influence the body and subconscious, leading to profound healing.
- Self-Regulation: CQ empowers individuals to self-regulate their brain function from constriction to expansive openness, demonstrating superior outcomes compared to traditional medication approaches for conditions like anxiety, depression, and chronic pain.
- Deepen Awareness: It involves “thinking about your thinking” (metacognition), enabling individuals to witness lower, ego-driven thoughts and allow their true self-image to emerge.
What is the “Skyscraper of Consciousness” metaphor?
The “Skyscraper of Consciousness” is a central metaphor in The Paradigm Process that visualizes the human journey of spiritual awakening. Each floor of the 100-story building represents a distinct level of conscious awareness, from the “ground floor” of primal instincts to the “penthouse suite” of enlightened understanding.
- Ground Floor (Survival Zone, 100-200 Joules): Dominated by primal fear, anger, shame, and despair, focused on basic survival and reacting through “F9 responses” (fight, flight, freeze, etc.). Archetypes include the Victim and the Addict.
- Lower Levels (Reactive Zone, 300-400 Joules): Still reactive, but individuals begin to regulate emotions, driven by anxiety, attachment, and codependency. Archetypes like the Pleaser and Neurotic emerge, seeking external validation.
- Mid-Levels (Awakening & Empowerment Zone, 500-600 Joules): A significant shift where individuals question limiting beliefs, confront their “shadow side,” and begin to heal. Archetypes include the Seeker, Healer, and Creator.
- Upper Levels (Integration Zone, 700-800 Joules): Emphasizes connection, affiliation, and belonging, with individuals experiencing intuition, peace, and serenity. Archetypes include the Connector and the Sage.
- Penthouse (Transcendence Zone, 900-1000 Joules): The pinnacle of pure consciousness, characterized by unconditional love, profound peace, and a deep understanding of interconnectedness. Individuals embody resilience, gratitude, and wisdom, culminating in the “Self Love & Courage” archetype.
This model helps individuals “measure their ascent,” identifying their current “floor” and providing a roadmap for continuous spiritual growth by consciously choosing to “move up a floor” through contemplative practices and letting go of ego-driven patterns.
What is the concept of “Love vs. Fear” and how does it drive transformation?
The Paradigm Process posits that all human emotions fundamentally stem from either love or fear, which are described as the “two imposters.” Fear is presented as “False Evidence Appearing Real (F.E.A.R.),” a non-existent emotion that creates pain and suffering, rooted in the idea of separation (separation from love, self, and God). It fuels the personality, ego insurgents, and leads to distress, control, and judgment.
Love, conversely, is described as the “most powerful emotion/force in the universe,” the ultimate unwavering truth. The entire transformative journey of The Paradigm Process is a “fundamental paradigm shift from a fear-based existence to a love-centred consciousness.” By consciously choosing love over fear, individuals can dissolve negative emotional states, overcome limiting beliefs, and align with their authentic, Sacred Self. This shift is “alchemical” and is presented as the primary task for healing and transformation, ultimately leading to greater peace, joy, and purpose.
What are the “10 Pathways Back to Sacred Self” and what do they entail?
The “10 Pathways Back to Sacred Self” form the practical “how-to” of The Paradigm Process. Each pathway involves “letting go” of a specific fear-based “Ego Insurgent” (a negative personality trait or defence mechanism) and “recovering” a corresponding quality of the Sacred Self. While not all ten are detailed in the provided text, the examples given highlight the core principle:
- Pathway #1: Letting go of The Controller / Recovering a sense of Self-Love.
- Pathway #2: Letting go of The Perfectionist / Recovering a sense of Gratitude.
- Pathway #3: Letting go of The Neurotic / Recovering a sense of Surrender.
- Pathway #4: Letting go of The Codependent / Recovering a sense of Connection.
- Pathway #5: Letting go of The Eccentric / Recovering a sense of Certainty.
- Pathway #6: Letting go of The Victim / Recovering a sense of Resilience.
- Pathway #7: Letting go of The Actor / Recovering a sense of Presence.
- Pathway #8: Letting go of The Pleaser / Recovering a sense of Self-Regulation.
- Pathway #9: Letting go of The Judge / Recovering a sense of Wisdom.
- Pathway #10: Letting go of The Anxious / Recovering a sense of Courage.
These pathways as explained in our The Paradigm Process Book Resources are not sequential but represent continuous areas of inner work, leading to an authentic and fulfilling life. Each involves awareness, acceptance, and action, moving from “contracted consciousness to expanded consciousness, to pure consciousness.”
How does The Paradigm Process view the journey from 3D to 5D reality?
The Paradigm Process describes a shift from “3D Awareness” to “5D Consciousness” as a fundamental evolution of perception and interaction with reality.
- 3D Awareness: This is our familiar physical, material world, interpreted primarily through the five senses. It’s characterized by duality (good/bad, us/them), a focus on external circumstances, fear-based survival instincts, ego dominance, linear time, external focus for happiness, and a potential victim mentality.
- 5D Consciousness: This higher state moves beyond the purely physical into energetic, vibrational, and spiritual realms. Perception involves extrasensory abilities (intuition, synchronicities) and a deep understanding of interconnectedness. It’s characterized by unity and oneness, operates from unconditional love, is soul-led, perceives time more fluidly, finds happiness internally, and embraces co-creation and personal responsibility.
The “shift” is not a physical relocation but a “spiritual awakening” achieved by raising one’s vibration through practices like meditation and mindfulness, shedding ego-driven patterns, cultivating self-awareness, living heart-centered, and embracing uncertainty. It’s about recognizing that “everything is energy, frequency, vibration and interconnected consciousness,” and that true reality exists beyond the immediate sensory grasp.












Study Guide for the Paradigm Process Book
The Paradigm Process: A Study Guide for Healing & Life Transformation
Quiz: Short Answer Questions
- What is the core premise of The Paradigm Process? How long has research been conducted on it, and what kind of shift does it aim to facilitate?
- Explain the concept of “Ego Insurgents.” How do they relate to the personality and the process of healing in The Paradigm Process?
- Describe the difference between “slaying the dragon” and “taming the dragon” in the context of confronting fears as discussed in the text. Which approach does The Paradigm Process advocate, and why?
- According to The Paradigm Process, what is the fundamental purpose of human existence and how does it relate to the evolution of consciousness?
- What are the three “Master Insurgents” identified in the text, and what is their role in an individual’s life before conscious awareness is cultivated?
- Explain the concept of “Loving Inquiry” as a practice within The Paradigm Process. How does it help individuals overcome fear and false beliefs?
- Outline the “Skyscraper of Consciousness” metaphor. What do the different “floors” represent, and what is the significance of reaching the “penthouse”?
- How does The Paradigm Process differentiate between “3D awareness” and “5D consciousness”? What are some characteristics of each, and what facilitates the shift between them?
- Describe the “i7X” framework and list at least four of its components. How do these “I’s” contribute to personal growth and transformation?
- What is the significance of the phrase “perfect love casts out all fear” in The Paradigm Process? How does this idea relate to the transformation from personality to Sacred Self?
Answer Key
- The core premise of The Paradigm Process is to facilitate a shift from personality to spiritual reality, leading to healing and life transformation. Research has been conducted for over 25 years, gathering insights from thousands of individuals, testifying to a new global paradigm of healing that addresses a wide spectrum of physical, psychological, and emotional challenges.
- Ego Insurgents are internal saboteurs, or specific personality types/internal voices (e.g., The Controller, The Perfectionist, The Victim), that protect the ego and obscure connection to the authentic self. Healing in The Paradigm Process involves diligently identifying, confronting, healing, and ultimately transforming or integrating these insurgents to unleash dormant faculties and talents, liberating individuals from what holds them back.
- “Slaying the dragon” implies renouncing parts of oneself that harbor valuable insights, akin to defeating fears. “Taming the dragon,” conversely, involves building a relationship that fosters collaboration and sharing wisdom, embracing rather than defeating fears. The Paradigm Process advocates for taming the dragon, integrating all facets of being through “shadow work” or spiritual awakening, as slaying parts of oneself leads to denial.
- The fundamental purpose of human existence, according to The Paradigm Process, is the continuous evolution of consciousness. This journey is about expanding awareness, realizing our full potential, and moving from a state of contracted consciousness rooted in fear to an expanded awareness grounded in love, ultimately leading to God consciousness or the Sacred Self.
- The three “Master Insurgents” are Fear, Distrust, and Drama. They are described as the guardians of the mind’s galaxy, protecting individuals and often becoming so ingrained that they seem natural. They contribute significantly to stress and unhappiness by consuming potent energy and keeping individuals embroiled in crises and distractions.
- Loving Inquiry is a practice of questioning one’s thoughts and beliefs to discern truth and self-love, facilitating a shift from fear to love. It involves a “Contemplative Pause” to critically examine thoughts and emotions, recognizing that fear is “False Evidence Appearing Real” and that truth lies beyond the analytical mind, ultimately setting individuals free.
- The “Skyscraper of Consciousness” metaphor illustrates different levels of awareness, from primal instincts (Ground Floor/Survival Zone, 100-200 Joules) to enlightened understanding (Penthouse/Transcendence Zone, 900-1000 Joules). Reaching the penthouse signifies a state of greater self-awareness, peace, and fulfillment, where pure consciousness, unconditional love, and interconnectedness are experienced, and individuals radiate joy, compassion, and wisdom.
- 3D awareness focuses primarily on the physical, material world, relying on the five senses and characterized by duality, separation, and ego dominance, often driven by fear. 5D consciousness moves beyond the physical into energetic and spiritual realms, involving extrasensory perception, unity, and a love-based, soul-led existence. The shift is an evolution of consciousness achieved through practices like meditation, shedding ego patterns, and heart-centered living.
- The “i7X” framework refers to the seven dimensions of the extrasensory self, representing pathways to unlock inner potential. Four components include: Intention (pure purpose, blueprint for evolution), Intuition (deep seeing, direct knowledge without rational thought), Imagination (creative power, envisioning possibilities beyond circumstances), and Insight (revelation, sudden realization shifting perspective). Other components are Intellect (CQ), Inspiration (Sacred Self), and Innovation (Action).
- The phrase “perfect love casts out all fear” is central to The Paradigm Process, emphasizing that fear is an illusion and that only perfect love is truly real. This idea suggests that fear dissipates as love enters, and that the transformation from personality (rooted in fear) to Sacred Self (rooted in love) leads to an unshakeable sense of peace, bliss, and freedom, as love is the fundamental purpose of creation.
The Paradigm Process Book Resources: Essay Format Questions
- Discuss how the concept of “masks” and “persona” is presented as both a necessary survival mechanism in childhood and a hindrance to adult transformation within The Paradigm Process. How does the book propose individuals “de-mask the dragon” and what are the implications of this process for self-love and authentic connection?
- Analyze the role of “suffering” in The Paradigm Process. How is suffering framed as a catalyst for awakening and transformation, particularly in relation to “necessary suffering” and the “dark night of the soul”? Use examples from the text to support your answer.
- Compare and contrast the “Fear: Letting Go Emotions” and “Love: Recovering Emotions” outlined in the various pathways of The Paradigm Process. How does the process of “letting go” and “recovering” facilitate the shift from a personality-driven existence to a spiritually-led one? Provide examples from at least three different pathways.
- Elaborate on the significance of “Contemplative Intelligence (CQ)” in The Paradigm Process. How does CQ enable individuals to move beyond the limitations of the analytical mind and the limbic system, and what are its practical applications in achieving personal transformation and addressing societal challenges?
- The Paradigm Process emphasizes that “there are no ordinary people and you’ve never once met a mere mortal.” Discuss how this statement reflects the ultimate goal of the journey to the Sacred Self. How does the book argue for the inherent divinity and unlimited potential within every individual, and what does this mean for personal responsibility and collective evolution?
Glossary of Key Terms
- 5D: A state of being beyond the five senses, characterized by infinite potential, expanded consciousness, interconnectedness, and a shift from lack to abundance.
- Alpha Point: A metric used to gauge an individual’s current level on the “Skyscraper of Consciousness” by comparing their strongest Sacred Self element to their weakest ego insurgent.
- Archetypes: Recurring patterns or character types associated with different levels of consciousness (e.g., Pleaser, Controller, Seeker, Self Love & Courage).
- Awareness: The initial stage of growth and agency, involving mindful recognition of one’s internal state (stress, pain, fear) as a signal for personal work. It’s the first of three thresholds (awareness, acceptance, action) to access the Sacred Self.
- Becoming Unlimited: A state of consciousness where ego limitations dissolve, leading to acceptance, peace, joy, and a sense of oneness.
- Binary System: The foundational language of nature (zeros and ones) reflecting existence’s inherent duality.
- Christ Consciousness: A divine level of consciousness, representing visible image of the invisible God, existing before creation and revealing truth and interconnectedness.
- Clarity Corridor: A level within the Skyscraper of Consciousness marked by increased self-awareness and introspection.
- Clinging: The act of holding onto beliefs, stories, or emotions, driven by fear and the ego, which impedes growth.
- Contemplation: A state signifying the end of duality, the cessation of a divided mind, and the embrace of all-encompassing inclusion, linking to an extrasensory worldview.
- Contemplative Pause: A technique within Loving Inquiry, involving stopping and questioning the absolute truth of one’s beliefs, often in writing, to bypass the analytical mind.
- Control: A fear-driven response to powerlessness and uncertainty, often originating from the personality and hindering self-love; letting go of this need is the first pathway to self-love.
- Controller Insurgent: An Ego Insurgent characterized by an overwhelming need to control external circumstances and others.
- Creativity: A key aspect of spirituality and the Sacred Self, fostered by imagination in receptive states, enabling innovative solutions and expression beyond the limbic system.
- Deconstructing the Persona: The process of dismantling the false masks and roles adopted by the personality to hide fears and protect the ego, leading to authentic self-discovery.
- Divine Presence: A higher force or process that individuals can learn to trust through surrender and by letting go of control.
- Duality: The perception of division (e.g., “us vs. them,” “right vs. wrong”), which The Paradigm Process aims to dissolve through contemplation and embracing oneness.
- Emotional Regulation: The ability to identify, understand, and manage one’s emotions in healthy and constructive ways.
- Energetics Scale of Transformation: A visual model measuring the healing journey from personality to spirituality, quantifying energetic states (in Joules, 100-1000) based on emotions, behaviors, and consciousness levels.
- Energetics Units (Joules): The measurement unit (equivalent to SI Joules) used in the Energetics Scale to quantify conscious energy output and reflect levels of consciousness.
- Equanimity: A state of mental calmness and composure, particularly in difficult situations, exemplified by the Buddha.
- Extrasensory Self / Extrasensory Perception: The inherent human capacity to transcend the five physical senses and access higher dimensions of consciousness (5D reality), enabling heightened perception and unique talents (e.g., intuition, imagination).
- False Evidence Appearing Real (FEAR): An acronym used to describe overwhelming negative emotions and perceptions that are illusory rather than factual.
- Fear: A fundamental human state, contrasted with love, representing a core emotion and metaphorical “dragon” that limits individuals; its dissolution is central to the Paradigm Process.
- Five Sensory World: The limited perception of reality based solely on the five physical senses (sight, sound, touch, smell, taste). The Paradigm Process aims to move beyond this.
- Genesis: In the problem-solving context, the initial sensory stimulus or perception that triggers a problem.
- God Consciousness: A state of divine awareness, understanding of reality beyond the material, and realization of profound interconnectedness and love.
- Gratitude: A powerful emotion and practice for accessing new energy, shifting perspective, and aligning with universal flow.
- Implicit Bias: Subconscious feelings, attitudes, prejudices, or stereotypes that influence decision-making without conscious awareness.
- Impulse Control: The capacity to resist immediate urges and make thoughtful, considered decisions rather than reacting impulsively.
- Inner Compass: A metaphor for the inherent capacity for self-regulation, guiding individuals through life with greater grace and conscious intention.
- Innovation (Action): The practical implementation of ideas; taking concrete, bold steps to manifest intentions and create tangible change. One of the 7X I’s.
- Insight (Revelation): The “aha!” moment, a sudden and deep understanding that shifts perspective and leads to significant breakthroughs. One of the 7X I’s.
- Inspiration (Sacred Self): A connection to one’s higher purpose and sacred self, fueling passion and enthusiasm with neurobiological effects. One of the 7X I’s.
- Intellect (CQ): Refers to Contemplative Intelligence (CQ), the meta-cognitive ability to think about one’s thinking, enabling higher intelligence and problem-solving. One of the 7X I’s.
- Intention: Pure purpose, the energetic and magnetic force behind choices that directs energy towards desired experiences and outcomes. One of the 7X I’s.
- Interrogation: The process of challenging limiting beliefs and unconscious biases during problem-solving, leading to new perspectives.
- Intuition: The ability to acquire knowledge immediately without conscious rational thought, bypassing linear thinking to perceive truth directly. One of the 7X I’s.
- IQ (Intelligence Quotient): Represents the rational, analytical mind used for problem analysis, often contrasted with higher forms of intelligence like EQ and CQ.
- Judge Insurgent: A relentless internal critic that operates through judgment, blame, and negative reinforcement, hindering gratitude and inner peace.
- Letting Go: The practice of releasing attachments, particularly limiting emotions, beliefs, and the need for control, to facilitate transformation.
- Limbic System: The “survival mind” or “lizard brain,” the center of primal instincts and “fight or flight” responses, which Contemplative Intelligence helps to transcend.
- Loving Consequences: Positive outcomes resulting from the problem-solving process, characterized by high energy, progress, growth, and evolution.
- Loving Inquiry: A practice of questioning one’s thoughts and beliefs, often through writing and a “Contemplative Pause,” to discern truth, rooted in self-love, and shift from fear to love.
- Love Consciousness: A state of being achieved through a Paradigm Shift, where everything is understood to be ultimately rooted in love, dispelling fear and duality.
- Mara: In Buddhist narrative, a demonic entity representing internal temptations and forces that threaten peace, which the Buddha confronted with equanimity.
- Masks of Personality: The personas or outward presentations adopted by individuals to hide fears, protect the ego, and conform to societal expectations.
- Master Insurgents: The three core negative forces in the mind: Fear, Distrust, and Drama.
- Metacognition: The ability to think about one’s own thinking, observing mental processes from a higher vantage point, leading to experiential knowing.
- Mindfulness: A practice of maintaining non-judgmental awareness of the present moment, including thoughts, feelings, and bodily sensations.
- 10 Pathways back to Sacred Self: A structured framework within The Paradigm Process consisting of ten steps, each involving letting go of a specific ego/personality aspect and recovering a corresponding quality of the Sacred Self, guiding individuals from suffering to authentic presence.
- Non-duality: The understanding of interconnectedness and the dissolution of the illusion of separation, where all aspects of existence are unified.
- Oneness: A state of profound interconnectedness with all beings and existence, where the illusion of separation fades.
- Other: In the “Managing Your Business” framework, refers to other people’s thoughts, feelings, and behaviors, which are outside of one’s control.
- Paradigm Process: A comprehensive program and guidebook for healing and life transformation, offering 10 pathways to shift from a personality-driven existence to spiritual reality, based on extensive research.
- Paradigm Shift: A fundamental change in thinking, perception, or underlying assumptions, representing a “scientific revolution of the self” that moves from fear to love consciousness.
- Perfectionist Insurgent: An Ego Insurgent characterized by an unrelenting striving for flawlessness and an inability to tolerate imperfection, often fueled by fear of failure.
- Persona: See “Masks of Personality.”
- Personality: The constructed self, a composite of mental, emotional, and physical selves, molded by societal conditioning and past experiences, often driven by fear and external validation, which The Paradigm Process seeks to transcend.
- Pleaser Insurgent: An Ego Insurgent driven by an intense need for external approval and validation, often leading to neglecting one’s own needs and boundaries.
- Presence: A state of conscious awareness and complete engagement in the current moment, acting as an “Inner Observer” without judgment or internal chatter.
- Prefrontal Cortex: The higher regions of the brain associated with true potential, creativity, and wisdom, which Contemplative Intelligence helps to access, transcending the limbic system.
- Pyramid of Conscious Awareness: A visual model depicting consciousness as an inverted pyramid, with basic instincts at the base and the Sacred Self at the apex, illustrating the journey from contracted to pure consciousness.
- Reactive Zone: A level on the Skyscraper of Consciousness (300-400 Joules) where individuals begin to regulate emotions but are still reactive to external stimuli.
- Real World: The present moment, presented as the only true reality, in contrast to past regrets or future anxieties.
- Recovering Emotions: The practice of consciously cultivating and embodying empowering emotions (e.g., self-love, gratitude, surrender) to replace fear-based ones.
- Resilience: The capacity to withstand adversity and bounce back stronger, actively cultivated through mindfulness and self-love, allowing individuals to navigate challenges effectively.
- Sacred Self: One’s authentic, unconditioned, and divine essence, the ultimate goal of The Paradigm Process, characterized by wisdom, unconditional love, and boundless creativity, existing beyond personality limitations.
- Self-Acceptance: Embracing one’s imperfections and perceived flaws without harsh judgment, forming a foundation for growth and moving beyond denial.
- Self-Awareness: The keen sense of understanding one’s own thoughts, emotions, and behavior patterns, leading to conscious and empowered choices.
- Self-Compassion: The practice of treating oneself with kindness, understanding, and acceptance, reducing stress and enhancing well-being.
- Self-Expression: Authentically sharing one’s unique gifts, talents, and passions, fostering fulfillment and genuine connection.
- Self-Love: The cornerstone of personal growth and empowerment, involving appreciation, affinity, and positive regard for oneself, enabling true love for others.
- Self-Regulation: The ability to understand, manage, and intentionally direct one’s thoughts, feelings, and behaviors in alignment with goals and values; an “inner compass.”
- Self-Talk: The internal dialogue or narrative one has with oneself.
- Sensory Sapiens / Five Sensory World: Refers to human beings relying solely on their five physical senses for perception, a limited mode of understanding reality.
- Separation: A core theme linked to anxiety, stemming from a perceived disconnection from love, self, or God, which The Paradigm Process aims to dissolve through inclusion and oneness.
- Shadow Self: The unacknowledged or suppressed aspects of oneself, containing “venom and toxins,” which need to be confronted and integrated for healing.
- Skyscraper of Consciousness: A central metaphor for understanding different levels of perception, truth, and reality within oneself, from primal instincts (ground floor) to enlightened understanding (penthouse).
- Spirituality: The cultivation of a connection with something greater than oneself, providing meaning, purpose, and interconnectedness.
- Story: The personal narrative constructed about one’s experiences, often based on past pain or trauma, which can limit growth if clung to.
- Stress: Pervasive manifestations of physical, psychological, and emotional strain, often stemming from personality traits and the “survival mind,” which The Paradigm Process aims to alleviate.
- Surrender: The graceful act of relinquishing the need for absolute control and embracing the present moment with trust in the flow of life, leading to serenity and deeper self-trust.
- Survival Mind: The primitive, “lizard brain” state that dictates choices, thoughts, and perceptions, focused on threat detection and survival.
- Survival Zone: The lowest level of the Energetics Scale (100-200 Joules) and the Skyscraper of Consciousness, dominated by primal instincts and fear.
- Ten Ego Insurgents: Specific, dominant personality types (e.g., Controller, Perfectionist, Neurotic, Codependent, Eccentric, Victim, Actor, Pleaser, Judge, Anxious) that fortify the persona and hinder transformation.
- The Center for Healing and Life Transformation: The South African organization founded by Mark L Lockwood, where The Paradigm Process research and programs are conducted.
- The Dragon: A metaphor for fear, representing internal adversaries to be confronted and either “slain” or “tamed.”
- The Paradigm Process: See above, main entry.
- The Victim Role: A chronic psychological state of perceiving oneself as helpless and blaming external factors, distinct from transient experiences of being victimized.
- Theta State: A receptive brainwave state associated with profound relaxation, dreaming, accelerated learning, and spiritual experiences, activated during CQ meditations.
- Thinking-Feeling-Acting Sequence: The natural process of processing experiences, where thoughts lead to emotions, which then inform actions, contrasted with impulsive reactions.
- Transcendence Zone: The highest level of the Skyscraper of Consciousness (900-1000 Joules), representing pure consciousness, unconditional love, peace, and self-awareness.
- Transcending Personality: The process of moving beyond the limitations and dominance of one’s ego-driven personality traits and behaviors.
- Traumatised Self: The aspect of oneself deeply impacted by past stress and trauma, from which one must “misidentify” to truly heal.
- Uncertainty: The inherent paradox of true transformation, where embracing the unknown is necessary to recover a sense of genuine certainty.
- Victim Insurgents: Ego Insurgents characterized by a victim mentality, perpetual distrust, and a focus on external blame.
- Visualisation: The practice of creating vivid mental images of desired outcomes and feelings, used to cultivate certainty and inspire action.
- Yin and Yang: The harmonizing energy representing the dynamic interplay and balance of opposing forces in the universe, reflecting inherent duality.
Timeline and Key Figures
Here’s a detailed timeline of the main events and a cast of characters based on the provided sources:
Timeline of The Paradigm Process
Pre-Founding (Before 2010):
- Over 25 Years of Research: Mark L. Lockwood and his team dedicate themselves to understanding the scientific research underpinning the “Paradigm Process,” drawing from over 50,000 mindfulness studies and half a million scholarly papers globally.
- Development of Contemplative Brain Fitness: Mark L. Lockwood and his team develop a comprehensive formula for real-time life transformation and Contemplative Brain Fitness, based on extensive research and observation of individuals achieving extraordinary results as you will see in these The Paradigm Process Book Resources.
- Early Inspirations: Insights from thinkers like Aristotle, Einstein, Dostoevsky, Socrates, and Newton, and modern figures such as Dr. Joe Dispenza, Dr. Deepak Chopra, and Dr. Andrew Huberman, inform the development of the Paradigm Process.
- Recognition of “Survival Mind”: Research identifies the “survival mind” (lizard brain) as a primitive state dictating choices, thoughts, feelings, and perceptions for many, contributing to suffering.
- Understanding of Personality Formation: It is understood that individuals develop personalities (personas/masks) as a defense mechanism against childhood trauma, stress, and unmet needs. These personalities, while initially protective, can later hinder growth and lead to disorders like addictions, depression, and anxiety.
Founding and Initial Operations (Approx. 2010):
- Establishment of The Center for Healing and Life Transformation: Mark L. Lockwood founds The Center for Healing and Life Transformation in South Africa, marking the beginning of formalized programs and events related to the Paradigm Process.
Ongoing Development and Research (2010 – Present):
- 15 Years of Research at the Center: The Center meticulously gathers insights from thousands of individuals participating in transformative programs, measuring their physical, psychological, and emotional states through assessments. This ongoing research consistently reveals remarkable stories of transformation, testifying to a new global paradigm of healing.
- Observation of Short-Term Healing: Within focused 6-8 week periods, individuals from diverse backgrounds experience profound healing from a wide spectrum of challenges (e.g., depression, trauma, arthritis, grief).
- Validation of Contemplative Practices: Studies from esteemed institutions like Yale, Harvard, Stanford, and Brown University document the profound effects of mindfulness, meditation, and contemplative practices on physical, psychological, and neuro-cognitive states, corroborating the Paradigm Process’s approach. These studies highlight the efficacy of mind-based interventions for conditions like anxiety, mild depression, chronic pain, asthma, ADHD, and high-functioning autism.
- Uncovering Long-Term Benefits: Research reveals astonishing long-term advantages of contemplative practices by integrating concepts from neuroscience, epigenetics, psychoneuroimmunology, and quantum physics.
- Discovery of Inherent Power to Reshape Neurological Landscape: The research emphasizes individuals’ inherent power to reshape their neurological landscape, surpassing external interventions like chemical drugs, through concepts like neuroplasticity and Contemplative Brain Fitness.
- Confirmation of Self-Regulation’s Superiority: Evidence consistently demonstrates that self-regulation yields superior outcomes compared to external medication approaches for healing and life transformation.
- Development of “Contemplative Intelligence (CQ)”: This neurobiologically grounded program is developed to alter brain chemistry, guiding individuals beyond the limbic system to the prefrontal cortex for true potential.
- Mapping of Personality Masks and Ego Insurgents: The research identifies and maps “ten layers” or “Ego Insurgents” of the personality that hinder growth, such as The Controller, The Perfectionist, The Neurotic, The Codependent, The Eccentric, The Victim, The Actor, The Pleaser, The Judge, and The Anxious.
- Formulation of 10 Pathways Back to Sacred Self: A structured framework of ten pathways is developed to guide individuals out of suffering and back to their authentic, Sacred Self, involving the letting go of specific egoic traits and recovering corresponding positive qualities.
- Introduction of “Loving Inquiry”: This practice is developed as a tool for self-healing, encouraging individuals to question their thoughts and beliefs, shifting from fear to love, and managing their “business” (thoughts, feelings, behaviors) while releasing what is outside their control.
- Development of The Skyscraper of Consciousness Model: This metaphor is developed to illustrate the evolution of consciousness through various floors (levels of awareness), from the “Survival Zone” (100-200 Joules) to the “Transcendence Zone” (900-1000 Joules), providing a measurable framework for personal growth.
- Identification of 7 “I” Dimensions (Extrasensory Self): The I7X model (Intention, Intuition, Imagination, Insight, Intellect, Inspiration, Innovation) is developed to define and cultivate extrasensory perception and unlock human potential.
- Understanding of God Consciousness and Mind Beyond Matter: The process aims to guide individuals toward “God consciousness,” understanding the interconnectedness of all things and transcending the limitations of the material world.
Future (2025):
- Publication of “The Paradigm Process of Healing & Life Transformation”: The book, authored by Mark L. Lockwood, is slated for first publication in 2025, serving as a comprehensive guide and map for the transformative journey.

Cast of Characters
Principal People Mentioned in the Sources:
- Mark L. Lockwood BA(hons)(psy): The author of “The Paradigm Process of Healing & Life Transformation” and founder of The Center for Healing and Life Transformation in South Africa. He has dedicated over 25 years to researching and developing the Paradigm Process, focusing on healing and life transformation through contemplative intelligence and a shift from personality to spiritual reality.
- Dr. Joe Dispenza: A modern figure whose insights align with the research underpinning the Paradigm Process, particularly in areas related to rewiring the mind and creating reality through energy.
- Dr. Deepak Chopra: A modern figure whose insights align with the research underpinning the Paradigm Process, noted for his ideas on intention and its role in transforming energy into reality.
- Dr. Andrew Huberman: A modern figure whose insights align with the research underpinning the Paradigm Process, suggesting a connection to neuroscience and brain function.
- Carl Jung: A renowned psychologist cited for his understanding of the shadow self, the concept that problems are insoluble and can only be outgrown, and the idea of neurosis as a substitute for legitimate suffering. His quote on the evolution of ego in the first and second half of life is featured.
- Fyodor Dostoevsky: A Russian novelist and philosopher, quoted for his emphasis on daring and the idea that “beauty will save the earth.”
- Aristotle: An ancient Greek philosopher quoted for his emphasis on self-awareness (“Knowing yourself is the beginning of all wisdom”) and the value of contemplation over mere survival.
- Albert Einstein: A theoretical physicist, referenced for his quote that “Imagination is more important than knowledge,” aligning with the book’s emphasis on creative potential beyond the analytical mind.
- Socrates: An ancient Greek philosopher, mentioned for his insights on wisdom and the idea that it cannot be directly taught, which led to his troubles.
- Sir Isaac Newton: A groundbreaking physicist and mathematician whose wisdom aligns with the principles explored in the Paradigm Process.
- Pema Chödrön: A Tibetan Buddhist nun and author, quoted for her perspective on the crumbling of a fixed identity as a cause for celebration during personal transformation.
- Sun Tzu: An ancient Chinese military strategist, author of “The Art of War,” quoted for his emphasis on knowing oneself and the enemy for success.
- Don Miguel Ruiz: A Mexican author known for his “Four Agreements,” quoted on the lie of human imperfection and being born in truth.
- Jed McKenna: An author and spiritual teacher, quoted on the nature of fear as an emotion based on nothingness and the idea that “the desire to slay fear is itself a fear-based emotion.”
- Mara: A demonic entity in Buddhist narratives who tempted Buddha, used metaphorically to represent internal forces (lust, greed, anger, fear, doubt) that threaten peace. Buddha’s response to Mara (inviting him for tea) is presented as an example of equanimity.
- The Buddha (Siddhartha Gautama): The founder of Buddhism, mentioned for his encounters with Mara and his teaching on equanimity and the value of a single day in contemplation, reflection, or determination over a hundred years of mischief, ignorance, or idleness.
- Saint George: A legendary dragon slayer, used metaphorically to represent the courageous conqueror willing to face life’s challenges.
- Jiminy Cricket: Pinocchio’s conscience in the story, used metaphorically as the “echo of our own inner knowing” or moral compass.
- Geppetto: Pinocchio’s creator, part of the Pinocchio analogy where Pinocchio’s journey is about rescuing Geppetto (symbolizing the self-sacrifice for others).
- Charles C. Finn: The author of the poem “Please Hear What I’m Not Saying,” which powerfully describes the masks people wear to hide their true selves.
- Wumen: A Zen master, quoted on the clarity and best season of life when the mind is not clouded by unnecessary things.
- Shunryu Suzuki: A Zen monk, quoted on allowing thoughts to come and go without serving them tea (i.e., not engaging with them).
- Nietzsche: A German philosopher, quoted for his powerful statement “he who has a why to live can bear almost any how,” emphasizing the importance of purpose.
- Yuval Noah Harari: A historian and author, quoted for suggesting that “Questions you cannot answer are usually far better for you than answers you cannot question.”
- Tara Brach: A psychologist and meditation teacher, who advocates for distinguishing between “Real But Not True” to free oneself from harmful beliefs and recommends investigating beliefs with mindful presence.
- Paulo Coelho: A Brazilian novelist, author of “The Alchemist,” quoted for his line “Wherever your heart is, that is where you’ll find your treasure” and “Don’t give into your fears, if you do, you won’t be able to talk to your heart.”
- Krishnamurti: A philosopher and spiritual teacher, quoted on the waste of energy in conforming to patterns and the importance of observing without evaluating as the highest form of intelligence.
- Swami Vivekananda: A Hindu monk and chief disciple of Ramakrishna, quoted for his belief that one must grow from the inside out and that the soul is the only true teacher.
- Deng Ming-Dao: A Taoist philosopher and author, quoted for his perspective that “Spirituality is creativity. Only with creativity can you remould your personality into a spiritual vehicle.”
- Truman Burbank: The main character from “The Truman Show,” used as an analogy for someone living a programmed or scripted reality based on personality.
- Neo: The main character from “The Matrix,” used as an analogy for someone in a programmed reality, striving for awakening.
- Alice (in Wonderland): A character from “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland,” used as an analogy for someone entering a journey into the unknown.
- Henry Cloud: A Christian psychologist and author, quoted on the difficulty and necessity of setting boundaries in relationships, especially when dealing with codependency.
- Bruce Lee: A martial artist and philosopher, quoted on the hindrance of self-consciousness in physical action.
- Tom Robbins: An American novelist, quoted on being our own dragons and heroes, and the evolution of consciousness.
- Gary Zukav: An American spiritual teacher and author, quoted on authentic empowerment occurring when personality serves the soul’s energy, and the solution to challenges being emotional awareness and acting from loving aspects.
- Thomas Merton: A Catholic writer and mystic, quoted on inner silence and peace, and anxiety as a mark of spiritual insecurity.
- Jiddu Krishnamurti: A philosopher and speaker on spiritual and philosophical subjects, quoted that “Intuition is the whisper of the soul.”
- Suzy Kassem: An Egyptian-American writer and poet, quoted on humans having more than five senses, including the gut (feeling) and third eye (intuition/foresight).
- Captain Kirk: A character from “Star Trek,” used in an analogy to question who is truly in control of one’s life.
- Victor Frankl: An Austrian neurologist, psychiatrist, Holocaust survivor, and author of “Man’s Search for Meaning,” who posited that humans are fundamentally spiritual beings and used an analogy of a three-dimensional glass to explain limited perception.
- José Silva: A parapsychologist and author, known for the Silva Method, quoted on the imagination’s role in psychic powers.
- Patanjali: A Hindu sage, traditionally considered the compiler of the Yoga Sutras, quoted on how inspiration expands consciousness and awakens dormant faculties and talents.
- Leonardo da Vinci: An Italian polymath of the Renaissance, quoted for his statement “Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.”
- Søren Kierkegaard: A Danish philosopher, theologian, and poet, quoted on the importance of personality making truth its own and the need for clarity in life’s direction.
- Brené Brown: A research professor and author, quoted for her statement “Clear is kind. Unclear is unkind.”
- Byron Katie: An American speaker and author who teaches a method of self-inquiry called “The Work,” quoted on being clear about what one wants.
- Hafiz (Hafez): A Persian lyric poet, whose poem “Tripping Over Joy” is quoted to illustrate the profound joy found in surrender and understanding life’s grand design.
- Melody Beattie: An American author known for her work on codependency, quoted on codependency being one’s own problem to solve and codependents being reactionary.
- Oriah Mountain Dreamer: A Canadian poet, storyteller, and teacher, quoted on becoming a determiner by recognizing choices and shifting from a victim mindset.
- Anthon St. Maarten: An author and spiritual teacher, quoted on empaths being warriors rather than victims.
- Jodi Picoult: An American novelist, quoted on the flexibility of human capacity for burden, like bamboo.
- Ram Dass (Richard Alpert): An American spiritual teacher, quoted on identifying with being the witness to the story rather than the actor, and the understanding that the journey’s destination is “HERE” and arrival is “NOW.”
- Sarah Ban Breathnach: An American author, quoted that “The authentic self is the soul made visible.”
- Joseph P. Kauffman: An author, quoted on being a limitless ocean of Consciousness.
- Aldous Huxley: An English writer and philosopher, author of “The Island,” quoted on the importance of living “lightly” and avoiding self-pity and despair.
- Lecrae: An American rapper, singer, songwriter, and record producer, quoted that if “you live for people’s acceptance, you will die from their rejection.”
- Lao Tzu: An ancient Chinese philosopher and writer, considered the founder of Taoism, quoted on self-mastery being mightier than controlling others, and that believing in oneself negates the need for others’ approval.
- Elizabeth Parker: An author, quoted on the impossibility of pleasing everyone.
- Marcus Aurelius: A Roman Emperor and Stoic philosopher, quoted on having power over one’s mind, not external events.
- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow: An American poet, quoted that “We judge ourselves by what we feel capable of doing, while others judge us by what we have already done.”
- William Shakespeare: An English playwright and poet, quoted on the fool thinking he is wise, while the wise man knows himself to be a fool.
- Henri J.M. Nouwen: A Dutch Catholic priest, professor, and writer, quoted on the “dreadful emptiness” of spiritual fatherhood as a place of true freedom and non-judgmental love.
- Jack Kornfield: An American author and teacher of Buddhism, quoted on the three things that matter most: living well, loving well, and learning to let go.
- Natalie Goldberg: An American author and teacher of writing and Zen Buddhism, quoted that “Stress is an ignorant state. It believes that everything is an emergency.”
- Robert Frost: An American poet, whose poem “The Road Not Taken” is quoted to illustrate a critical divergence point in life’s journey.
- Margery Williams: An English children’s author, whose story “The Velveteen Rabbit” is used to illustrate the transformative power of genuine experience and becoming “real.”
- Helen Keller: An American author, disability rights advocate, political activist, and lecturer, quoted on gaining courage by facing fear and that “Life is a daring adventure or nothing.”
- C.S. Lewis: A British writer and lay theologian, whose analogy of transforming a tin soldier into a real man is used to illustrate resistance to spiritual transformation.
- Meister Eckhart: A German theologian, philosopher, and mystic, quoted on the eye through which one sees God being the same eye through which God sees them, and love separating all things from the soul.
- Thomas Aquinas: An Italian Dominican friar, philosopher, Catholic priest, and Doctor of the Church, quoted on the only appropriate question being “is it true?”
- Wayne Dyer: An American self-help author and motivational speaker, quoted on not judging others when spiritually connected and awakening the dormant inner energy of the Sacred Self.
A briefing of the Paradigm Process
Briefing Document: The Paradigm Process – A Shift from Personality to Spiritual Reality
Overview
“The Paradigm Process: The Transformation to your Sacred Self” by Mark L. Lockwood outlines a comprehensive system for deep healing and life transformation. Developed over 25 years at The Center for Healing and Life Transformation in South Africa, this process aims to guide individuals from a state of suffering and a personality-driven existence to one of profound well-being and spiritual reality, embodying their “Sacred Self.” It integrates scientific research from neuroscience, epigenetics, psychoneuroimmunology, and quantum physics with ancient wisdom traditions, emphasizing the power of contemplative practices.
The core idea is a “Paradigm Shift” – a fundamental change in thinking and being from fear-based unconscious reactions to love-centered conscious responses. This transformation is presented as a journey through “10 Pathways out of suffering and 10 journeys back to your Sacred Self,” involving the recognition, integration, and dissolution of “Ego Insurgents” (personality masks rooted in fear) and the cultivation of “Contemplative Intelligence (CQ).”
Key Themes and Concepts
1. The Paradigm Shift: From Personality to Sacred Self
The central theme is the “Paradigm Shift,” a profound internal movement from a self-concept defined by personality and its limitations to one’s boundless “Sacred Self.”
- Definition: “A paradigm shift is a fundamental change in thinking from one way to another. It’s a scientific revolution of the self—the physical, psychological, emotional, and spiritual self.” (Page 26)
- Goal: To move from “fear and the unconscious to love consciousness, to understanding that everything is ultimately rooted in love.” (Page 26) This shift allows individuals to “thrive, not merely survive.” (Page 4)
- Necessity: The transformation “will become necessary when you have endured enough suffering to let go of your need to control and let Life have you.” (Page 20, 224)
2. The Nature of Suffering and the “Ego Insurgents”
Suffering is presented as an inherent part of the human experience, often stemming from the “personality” and its “Ego Insurgents.”
- Origin of Suffering: “The trauma we encounter in childhood often lingers into adulthood.” (Page 19) These experiences lead to the development of “defence mechanisms” and an “outer self and an inner self, one that is seen by the world and one that is a shadow that we can no longer see.” (Page 20)
- The “Masks”: The personality is seen as a “mask” or “persona” developed to navigate social interactions and protect from perceived threats. “The mask, a powerful symbol of concealment, can be both a protective shield and a self-imposed prison.” (Page 33)
- Ego Insurgents: These are “ten strong personality types, ten dominant ego insurgents that fortify and protect our persona, our masks, our personalities.” (Page 26) Examples include “The Controller Insurgent, The Perfectionist Insurgent… The Neurotic, The Codependent, The Eccentric, The Victim Insurgent, and The Actor, The Pleaser, The Judge, and The Anxious Insurgent.” (Page 26)
- Consequences of Personality/Ego: Living in “survival mode” (Page 40) fueled by these insurgents leads to “diminished creativity, innovation and initiative,” “disinterest, disconnection and disengagement,” “strained relationships,” and “a facade of strength masking vulnerability.” (Page 20-21)
3. Love as the Core and Antidote to Fear
Love is posited as the fundamental truth of the universe and the ultimate force for healing and transformation.
- Love’s Primacy: “Love is the most powerful emotion that exists, there’s no stronger force or energy in the universe other than love. In the end, only love will remain.” (Page 22) The ultimate reality is that “we and everything surrounding us is, in essence, is Love.” (Page 17)
- Fear as Illusion: “Fear is the idea that you are separate from love, from self and from God.” (Page 44) It is “False Evidence Appearing Real (F.E.A.R), because the very nature of fear does not exist.” (Page 44)
- Dissolving Fear: Fear “cannot be confronted or slain because it is fear of nothing… Fear can only be surrendered to; the thing feared, faced with courage – with heart.” (Page 44) “Perfect love casts out fear.” (Page 111, 228)
- Self-Love: “Self-love is the cornerstone of personal growth and empowerment.” (Page 121) It is the “most direct path to helping us to let go of our personalities need for control.” (Page 121)
4. Contemplative Intelligence (CQ) and the Path to Extrasensory Perception
The process emphasizes developing higher forms of intelligence beyond IQ and EQ, specifically Contemplative Intelligence (CQ).
- Definition of CQ: “The application of our highest intellectual faculties and capabilities to facilitate a Paradigm Shift.” (Page 4) It is the “ability to recognise, understand, and executively manage our own mind, body and emotions.” (Page 87)
- Brain Chemistry: CQ is a “neurobiologically grounded program that alters your brain chemistry,” guiding beyond the limbic system to the prefrontal cortex, where “true potential resides.” (Page 4)
- Beyond the Five Senses: The process aims to move individuals “from being five-sensory to multi-sensory and then to extra-sensory perception, where we can see beyond seeing.” (Page 22) This involves tapping into “intention, imagination, creativity, and more.” (Page 73)
- i7X – The Power of the I’s: These are seven dimensions of the extrasensory self: Intention, Intuition, Imagination, Insight, Intellect (CQ), Inspiration, and Innovation. (Page 77-79)
5. The “Skyscraper of Consciousness” and Energetics Scale
A metaphorical model is used to illustrate the journey of conscious evolution.
- Skyscraper Metaphor: Our lives are like a skyscraper with “numerous floors, each representing a distinct level of consciousness.” (Page 57) “As we ascend the building, our perspective broadens, and our understanding of reality deepens.” (Page 57)
- Levels of Consciousness: The model identifies five zones:
- 100-200 Joules: The Survival Zone: Primal instincts, fear, anger, shame, despair, limited awareness. Archetypes: Victim, The Lost Soul. (Page 65)
- 300-400 Joules: The Reactive Zone: Beyond mere survival, emotional instability, driven by external validation, fear of uncertainty. Archetypes: Pleaser, Controller, Perfectionist, Actor. (Page 66)
- 500-600 Joules: The Awakening and Empowerment Zone: Beginning to question limiting beliefs, awareness of emotional patterns, confronting shadow side. Archetypes: Seeker, Healer, Creator. (Page 67)
- 700-800 Joules: The Integration Zone: Connection, affiliation, love, belonging, joy, gratitude. Archetypes: Connector, Sage, Lover. (Page 68)
- 900-1000 Joules: The Transcendence Zone: Highest state of pure consciousness, unconditional love, profound peace, deep understanding of interconnectedness. Archetypes: Peaceful, Wise, Self Love & Courage. (Page 69)
- Energetics Scale: Consciousness, emotions, and behaviors are tangible forms of energy measured in “Joules.” “Higher energy levels, associated with positive emotions and spiritual practices, lead to more fulfilling experiences.” (Page 63)
6. The 10 Pathways to Sacred Self
The book provides a structured “how-to” for transformation, with each pathway addressing a specific “Ego Insurgent” and cultivating a positive quality.
- Structure: “10 Pathways out of suffering and 10 journeys back to your Sacred Self.” (Page 1) These pathways are “accessible only when the personality’s ego-insurgents are recognised and integrated.” (Page 33)
- Examples of Pathways:Pathway #1: Letting go of The Controller / Recovering a sense of Self-Love (Page 117, 250)
- Pathway #2: Letting go of The Perfectionist / Recovering a sense of Gratitude (Page 130)
- Pathway #3: Letting go of The Neurotic / Recovering a sense of Surrender (Page 136)
- Pathway #4: Letting go of The Codependent / Recovering a sense of Connection (Page 149)
- Pathway #5: Letting go of The Eccentric / Recovering a sense of Certainty (Page 157)
- Pathway #6: Letting go of The Victim / Recovering a Sense of Resilience (Page 164)
- Pathway #7: Letting go of The Actor / Recovering a sense of Presence (Page 174)
- Pathway #8: Letting go of The Pleaser / Recovering a sense of Self-Regulation (Page 181)
- Pathway #9: Letting go of The Judge / Recovering a sense of Wisdom (Page 194)
- Pathway #10: Letting go of The Anxious / Recovering a sense of Courage (Page 206)
7. Practical Tools and Practices
The Paradigm Process offers actionable steps for personal transformation.
- Loving Inquiry: A practice for questioning thoughts and beliefs, ensuring they are rooted in truth and self-love. It involves “Self-Awareness,” “Self-Discipline (the Contemplative Pause),” “Self-Inquiry,” “Self-Connection,” “Self-Reflection,” and “Self-Love.” (Page 48-49)
- Contemplative Pause: Taking 3 seconds before responding to question the truth of a thought or belief. (Page 47, 234)
- Visualisation: Creating a vivid mental image of desired outcomes to “ignite a spark” and “elevate your emotional state.” (Page 160)
- Self-Care and Boundaries: Essential for those recovering from people-pleasing tendencies. (Page 183-184)
- Daily Practice: The transformation is a “process than a once off deal. Daily practices of conscious contemplation will wake us up to what is instead of what was.” (Page 15)
Important Ideas and Facts
- Research Basis: The Paradigm Process is backed by “over 25 years” of scientific research, including insights from “thousands of individuals” at The Center for Healing and Life Transformation in South Africa. (Page 3)
- Broad Healing: Individuals experiencing a wide range of challenges, from depression and trauma to arthritis and grief, have reported “profound healing” within 6 to 8 weeks. (Page 3)
- Neuroplasticity: The process emphasizes the “inherent power to reshape your neurological landscape more effectively than any external intervention.” (Page 4)
- Self-Regulation: “Self-regulation consistently demonstrates superior outcomes compared to external medication.” (Page 4) It is the “cornerstone of a resilient mindset and robust mental health.” (Page 191)
- Mind-Body Connection: Contemplative practices “bypass the analytical mind, directly influencing the body and the subconscious.” (Page 3) The heart’s electromagnetic field affects those around us, and positive emotions “can enhance the brain’s ability to make sound decisions.” (Page 52)
- Paradoxical Nature of Life: The book frequently highlights paradoxes, such as “problems are insoluble. They can only be outgrown.” (Page 4) And “Wisdom… adheres to no fixed model or formula.” (Page 201)
- Universal Samsara: Life is a “journey through life unfolds across distinct stages, guided by a metaphorical clock that maps our spiritual awakening.” (Page 116) The “dark night of the soul” is a necessary passage. (Page 116)
- Responsibility: “Solving your problems is your responsibility.” (Page 149) We are “conscious authors of your own lives, rather than being passively swept away.” (Page 189)
- The “End of Two”: Contemplation leads to the “end of duality,” where “there is no separation. No duality. No races. No genders. No religions. No believers. No wars. No defence. No ego. No judgement. The contemplative Mind is the End of Two!” (Page 223)
Conclusion
“The Paradigm Process” presents a holistic and deeply personal path to transformation, urging individuals to shed the limiting constructs of their fear-based personalities and embrace their innate Sacred Self. Through self-awareness, contemplative practices, and a conscious shift from fear to love, individuals can unlock their full potential, cultivate inner peace, and contribute to a more interconnected and harmonious world. It is a journey of self-discovery, emphasizing that true freedom and healing come from within, by consciously choosing to embody love and align with the inherent wisdom of the universe.

We hope you enjoyed The Paradigm Process Book Resources. For any additional information please contact us.
50 Inspirational and Spiritual Affirmations from The Paradigm Process
Pathway 1: Letting Go of The Controller / Recovering Self-Love
1. I release the clenched fist of control, choosing the deep, empathic love that is my true power.
2. I nourish the wellspring of self-love within, recognizing my infinite, unbounded nature.
3. My journey inward is the truest act of courage; I surrender the need to play God with my environment.
4. I am worthy of love and trust, dismantling the shame that fuels my need to manage external outcomes.
5. I choose to act from inner abundance, not from the fear of being unloved or exposed.
Pathway 2: Letting Go of The Perfectionist / Recovering Gratitude
6. I open my heart to the flow of gratitude, recognizing the perfection in the unfolding present moment.
7. The pursuit of flawlessness is broken; I embrace the grace of imperfection and celebrate small victories.
8. I am shifting from self-loathing to light, knowing that I am enough, just as I am.
9. My self-worth is rooted in blessings, allowing me to let go of self-criticism and fear of judgment.
10. I use gratitude as my key, transforming the fear of failure into resilient self-acceptance.
Pathway 3: Letting Go of The Neurotic / Recovering Surrender
11. I release the grip of worry, surrendering to the vast, persistent current of life’s inherent wisdom.
12. I breathe in the beauty of my fleeting life, finding contentment in the grand, unsearchable design.
13. I choose to ride the waves of life’s tempests, anchored in the soulful serenity of acceptance.
14. I am not condemned to have a thousand serious moves; I embrace the profound joy of “I Surrender”.
15. I trust my internal connection, allowing thoughts and emotions to pass without internal battle.
Pathway 4: Letting Go of The Codependent / Recovering Connection
16. My worth is inherent, a sacred birthright, not contingent on external approval or validation.
17. I set boundaries with firm yet gentle hands, honoring my true self and liberating others.
18. I embrace authenticity, transforming neediness into genuine, wholehearted connection.
19. I am capable, complete, and autonomous, allowing the love I offer to be an overflow, not a transaction.
20. I release the fear of abandonment by trusting the quiet hum of my own being.
Pathway 5: Letting Go of The Eccentric / Recovering Certainty
21. I embrace the exhilarating uncertainty of the unknown, knowing it is the birthplace of all creation.
22. My Certainty is a surrender to the mystical, transcending the limitations of the five-sensory world.
23. I allow myself to be seen, truly seen, letting go of the cloak of the eccentric need to be separate.
24. I cultivate a mindset of childlike wonder, tapping into the creative inspiration of the Theta state.
25. Perfect love casts out all fear, rooting me in a certainty beyond what my physical senses can grasp.
Pathway 6: Letting Go of The Victim / Recovering Resilience
26. I release the cloak of helplessness, choosing to be the creative force and conscious author of my life.
27. I am bamboo, flexible enough to bear the burden of life’s curveballs and bounce back stronger.
28. Adversity is my forging ground; I actively seek lessons and opportunities for growth within challenge.
29. I embody genuine control over my internal state, moving past the anchor of emotional repression.
30. My resilience is unshakeable, built on self-love and the unwavering belief in my own capabilities.
Pathway 7: Letting Go of The Actor / Recovering Presence
31. I dissolve the need to perform for external validation, resting in the power of my authentic presence.
32. I choose to be the witness to my story, not merely the frantic actor caught in the drama.
33. I am here, grounded and centred in this moment, allowing peace to flow beyond all understanding.
34. I express my truth from the heart, letting go of the shame and dissonance of the false self.
35. Presence is my catalyst for healing; I observe my inner experience without the distorting lens of judgment.
Pathway 8: Letting Go of The Pleaser / Recovering Self-Regulation
36. I honour my own needs and boundaries, allowing my inner compass to guide my conscious choice.
37. I cultivate inner awareness, responding with intention rather than reacting from old impulse.
38. Self-regulation is my self-mastery; I acknowledge my emotions without letting them dictate my actions.
39. I am developing a growth mindset, knowing my capacity for peace and joy is unlimited and can be developed.
40. I practice the contemplative pause and conscious breath, anchoring myself against the cycle of stress.
Pathway 9: Letting Go of The Judge / Recovering Wisdom
41. I release the relentless internal critic, choosing compassion and deep understanding over judgment.
42. I embrace imperfection as the natural, necessary part of the human experience, transcending the need for moral superiority.
43. I seek insight beyond the analytical mind, allowing wisdom to reveal the interconnectedness of all things.
44. I look with the eyes of the Sacred Self, recognizing that what is real does not change or need to defend.
45. The end of duality is my goal; I move beyond right-doing and wrongdoing into the field of peace.
Pathway 10: Letting Go of The Anxious / Recovering Courage
46. I acknowledge the echo of fear, but I do not let the illusion of danger control my present moment.
47. Courage is the heart’s choice; I move forward in spite of my fears, embracing vulnerability as immense strength.
48. I am safe and capable, shifting my focus from hyper-vigilance to the unlimited possibilities of the now.
49. I choose love as my frequency, knowing that the anxiety created by separation is ultimately not true.
50. I am a divine being, destined to thrive, choosing the path of courage that leads me back to my Sacred Self




