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Control, Fear, and Faith | The Neuroscience of Worry, Anxiety, and Trusting God

Control, Fear, and Faith | The Neuroscience of Worry, Anxiety, and Trusting God

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Episode 14, Season 1SHOW NOTESWhy is it so hard to let go?Why do we replay conversations, overthink decisions, strive for perfection, try to keep everyone happy, worry about tomorrow, and attempt to manage outcomes that haven’t even happened yet?In today’s episode of The Christian Mind Reset, Dr. April Joy explores the connection between fear, control, anxiety, perfectionism, people-pleasing, neuroscience, psychology, and biblical faith.Many of us believe that if we can just plan enough, prepare enough, perform well enough, keep everyone happy enough, analyze enough, or worry enough, we will finally feel safe. Yet neuroscience shows that the brain often seeks control to reduce uncertainty and calm fear. Unfortunately, control rarely produces lasting peace.In this episode, you’ll learn about the psychology of control, the neuroscience of uncertainty, and the fascinating concept known as the illusion of control—a cognitive bias first described by psychologist Ellen Langer that explains why humans often overestimate their ability to influence outcomes that are actually beyond their control.We’ll also explore what Scripture says about surrender, trust, and faith through the story of Sarah, the wisdom of the Psalms, and Jesus’ powerful teaching:“Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about its own things” (Matthew 6:34).Together we’ll discuss:• The connection between fear, anxiety, and control• How perfectionism and people-pleasing can be attempts to create safety• The neuroscience of uncertainty and the brain’s need for predictability• The amygdala, fear, and threat detection• The neuroscience of worry, rumination, and overthinking• The Illusion of Control (Ellen Langer, 1975)• Why control often feels safer than trust• Sarah’s struggle with God’s timing• Psalm 131 and the quieted soul• Psalm 46:10 and the biblical invitation to let go• The difference between preparation and worry• How faith differs from certainty• Practical declarations for renewing your mind• A guided Christian breath prayer for surrenderWhether you struggle with anxiety, overthinking, perfectionism, people-pleasing, fear of the future, uncertainty, intrusive thoughts, worry, trust issues, or difficulty surrendering control to God, this episode will encourage you to shift your focus from controlling outcomes to trusting the God who holds them.Key ScripturesPsalm 46:10Psalm 55:22Psalm 131:1–3Proverbs 3:5–6Isaiah 26:3Matthew 6:25–34Matthew 11:28–301 Peter 5:7Romans 8:282 Timothy 1:7ResourcesThe 28-Day Christian Mind Reset Guide: A Psalms-Based Journey Through Biblical Meditation, Neuroscience, and Renewing Your MindThe Christian Mind Reset PodcastSubstack articles on neuroscience, psychology, neuroplasticity, biblical meditation, anxiety, fear, perfectionism, people-pleasing, and renewing the mindFollow Dr. April Joy for Christian mental health education, neuroscience insights, and biblical encouragement.Connect with Dr. April Joy:Connect with Dr. April Joy:Substack: The Christian Mind ResetIf you liked today’s episode, please subscribe, leave a review, follow, like, or share. You can find me on Instagram at @thechristianpsychnp and also on Instagram and Substack at The Christian Mind Reset for more Scripture, neuroscience, and practical tips for renewing your mind.My eBook, The Christian Mind Reset: A 28-Day Psalms Guide to Biblical Meditation, Neuroscience, and Renewing Your Mind, is available in my Stan Store at https://stan.store/thechristianpsychnpDisclaimerDisclaimer: This podcast/letter is for informational purposes only. It contains general information, drawn from my experience, research, and best practices. It is not health care advice, and is not intended to replace the counsel of your health care provider. Consult your provider before starting any new treatments or making changes to your health routine. This message does not constitute a provider-patient relationship between us.If you are experiencing significant anxiety, distress, or need support, please seek care from a qualified healthcare professional. You may also consider reaching out to a licensed Christian counselor or pastor for additional support.Emails, portal messages, text messages, and other communications are not monitored and will not receive a response in an emergency or crisis, or regarding medical or therapy advice. These methods should never be used for medical advice, therapy, urgent, crisis, emergent, or time-sensitive concerns. If you are experiencing a medical or psychiatric emergency, are in crisis, having thoughts of harming yourself or others, or feel unsafe, call 911 (US), or contact your local emergency services, or go to the nearest emergency room or hospital immediately.ReferencesLanger, E. J. (1975). The illusion of control. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 32(2), 311–328. https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-3514.32.2.311Thomas Nelson. (1982). The Holy ...
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