Spirituality & Practices

Spirituality & Practices

  • Practice definition clarity: What exactly is done—steps, posture, duration, frequency, sequencing.
  • Intended outcome specification: Calm, insight, emotional regulation, compassion, attentional stability—distinctly defined.
  • Phenomenological claim discipline: What is reported as experience vs asserted as truth about reality.
  • Mechanism plausibility: How the practice plausibly affects attention, emotion, cognition, or behavior (without reductionism or mysticism). 
  • Progression and dosage: Beginner vs advanced stages; intensity escalation rules. 
  • Variability and individual differences: Temperament, trauma history, mental health, cultural background. 
  • Psychological risk screening: Dissociation, depersonalization, anxiety amplification, resurfacing trauma. 
  • Boundary to clinical care: Clear signals for when professional support is required.
  • Ethical framing: Avoidance of superiority, bypassing, or moral elevation through practice. 
  • Integration into daily life: How insights translate into behavior, relationships, and responsibility. 
  • Authority claims: Whether teachers/practices assert infallibility or exclusive access to truth. 
  • Evidence posture: What is experiential, what is empirically supported, and what is unknown. 
  • Misuse risk: Practices used to justify passivity, avoidance, or withdrawal from obligations. 
  • Exit and stop criteria: When to pause, reduce, or stop practice.