Behavioral & Mental Health Conditions Series
- 1. 1.1 Recognizing Your Unique Mind Patterns 00:04:46
- 2. 1.2 Breaking the Cycle of Compulsive Thinking 00:03:44
- 3. 1.3 Balancing Logic and Emotion in Decision Making 00:03:29
- 4. 1.4 Identifying Behavioral Triggers and Responses 00:03:30
- 5. 1.5 Grounding Techniques for Racing Thoughts 00:04:03
- 6. 1.6 Creating Healthy Mental Routines 00:03:02
- 7. 1.7 Understanding Perfectionism and Control Urges 00:03:24
- 8. 1.8 Mind-Body Connection in Behavior Change 00:03:14
- 9. 1.9 Building Tolerance for Uncertainty 00:03:11
- 10. 1.10 Cognitive Flexibility and Adaptation Skills 00:02:55
- 11. 1.11 Responding Instead of Reacting 00:02:50
- 12. 1.12 Managing Intrusive Thoughts Functionally 00:03:02
- 13. 1.13 Tracking Behavior Patterns Over Time 00:03:05
- 14. 1.14 Building Emotional Resilience Through Practice 00:02:59
- 15. 1.15 Integrating Mind Awareness Into Daily Life 00:03:04
Lesson Overview
1.7 Understanding Perfectionism and Control Urges: Perfectionism feels like you must always get everything right, and control urges make you feel unsafe when things don’t go your way. You learn that these patterns come from fear of failure or fear of being judged. But the truth is, mistakes help you grow and prove your courage. You explore ways to set realistic expectations that support success without pressure. You practice letting small things go, giving yourself permission to be human. Each time you relax control, you discover life doesn’t fall apart and you still move forward. Accepting that “good enough” is healthy frees your energy for what really matters. Confidence grows not from perfection, but from showing up even when things aren’t perfect.
About this course
A structured and empowering learning path that helps individuals understand, manage, and balance complex behavioral and mental health patterns. Through guided topics on OCD, ADHD, anxiety, trauma, depression, and other conditions, this series teaches self
This course includes:
- Guided behavioral and emotional training