Behavior Guidance

The historical focus of behavioral guidance has been on passing moral judgement on how a person acts. This perspective labels what a person does, i.e. their behavior, as right or wrong and then continues to say that the temporal occurances that happen next are consequence of the behavior. This vector of approach is particularly misguided when judgement of behavior is used to justify the following human behavior.

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The practical, actually useful, and not narrow-minded method of approach to behavioral guidance is a different approach than what is been found in traditional culture. The Behavior Guidance approach is to provide the sequential process that one should do with their behavior for the purpose of attaining the stated goal.

The difference is exemplified in this simple equation regarding the dictum “Get Married.”

In the traditionalist approach, “Get Married” expresses the expectation that the follower of the rule become married after receiving the guidance.

In Behavior Guidance, “Get Married” is given by the sequence of 1. notice the desire to be married, 2. acquire all the ingredients, 3. have the marriage ceremony, 4. be married.

The guidance of BG passes no moralistic judgement, and does provide the time-sequence of event one must necessarily take to acquire the subject. Where traditionalist use of behavior is used as a rule set, BGA is given as a vector of approach.

Historical behavior guidance has come down to the judgements and whims of a select few individuals who sat at the top of some hierarchical balance. Such a use of behavioral guidance has, for centuries, been used to impose power imbalance. My new approach to Behavior Guidance saves the world.

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