
How I Think and Subsequently Write on Second Chance to Live
Introduction and the Metaphor of a Funnel
Please read the following as you would pour a substance into a funnel. As you move through this article, and my other writings, clarity may emerge gradually rather than all at once. The information shared here is not meant to be skimmed, but to act as a map that becomes clearer as you move through it.
Linear Thinkers
Many people read and process information in a linear way, even if they are not consciously aware of it. Linear thinking tends to move step-by-step, looking for a clear beginning, middle, and end, with one main idea presented and resolved before moving on to the next. This style of processing is often shaped by how we are taught in school and reinforced by systems that value summaries, conclusions, and efficiency. For readers who think this way, clarity is often found through order, sequence, and closure.
Multi-Dimensional Thinkers
Some people think and process information in a non-linear, multi-dimensional, and layered way. Rather than moving in a straight line, meaning emerges through relationships, patterns, and connections that unfold over time.
Ideas may be revisited from different angles, with depth developing through reflection rather than resolution. For thinkers who process this way, clarity is found not in speed or closure.
Clarity is found in seeing how experiences, insights, and perspectives fit together into a larger whole.
How This Article Can Help You Understand How I Map
This article is offered as a map to help readers who are accustomed to linear thinking orient themselves to how I see, process, and communicate. My thinking and writing are non-linear, multi-dimensional, layered, and rooted in a sort of relational geometry.
Neither is Wrong
Neither linear nor non-linear thinking is wrong. I just had to learn how to navigate my process and journey in a non-linear way, when linear explanations did not answer questions. When linear explanation kept me feeling limited.
Consequently, I had to map out my own ongoing brain injury recovery process. I had to figure out how to experience independence, my identify, purpose and how to own the power in my control. I had to figure out how to do this for myself in a non-linear, multi-dimensional, layered way by using principles of relational geometry.
As you continue to read this article, more will be understood.
You may Already Know
You may already know this but I wanted to share it with you. As I have shared before I sustained a traumatic brain injury in 1967 at the age of 10 when there was little known about traumatic brain injury or brain injury rehabilitation. Consequently, once my external wounds healed, the impact of my brain injury were invisible and so I grew up with an invisible disability. And the concept of invisible disabilities was not considered as a factor in my development in my adolescence, my teen age years, my early adult and as I advanced in years. Subsequently, I was on my own and being blamed, shamed and scapegoated.
Being blamed, shamed and scapegoated for what was not understood, much less accepted. Consequently, I found myself navigating the best I knew how to through much toil and struggle. Struggle that resulted in my trying to make sense of that made little sense to me. Little sense to me as I had difficulties, inter personally, academically and vocationally. See my autobiography in bullet points for more insight into my experience of growing up with the impact of an invisible disability.
The impact of a traumatic brain injury and an invisible disability. I am sharing this with you because the insight will help you to understand what I am going to share with you. Because I had to figure things on my own, I had to develop different strategies that were not available strategies. Strategies in my attempt to navigate in a world that did not understand traumatic brain injuries or invisible disabilities. To configure and calibrate these strategies I needed to develop relational geometry.
A relational geometry that was different than what different systems of “care” could not offer or help me configure. Configure or combine. So my mind, in the process of wanting to not give up because of what was not available, I began to think. Think in non-linear, multi-dimensional and layered ways. Ways that helped me to comprehend a relational geometry between my whole person (axes) my mind, body, spirit, soul and emotions. Relate between these axes and the below dimensions.
Dimensions: ethical, spiritual, relational, neurological, intuitive, experiential, pattern-based, historical, future-oriented, systems-aware. See below for more specifics
Axes and Dimensions Interacting
Because changes in one dimension affect multiple axes at once, my writing returns to themes from different angles. Different angles, not to repeat them, but to show how they impact. As a metaphor: if linear writing moves along a single rail, my writing moves through a junction. A junction where several tracks are active at once, and meaning depends on how they intersect. What may appear subjective in a linear framework is, in fact, relationally consistent within a non-linear model.
A non-linear model that have the capacity to operate on a multi-axis, multi-dimensional framework and scaffolding. As a result, what may appear as repetition is intentional revisiting. Intentional revisiting because meaning changes when viewed through different axes and different dimensions of time, trauma, context, and agency. Agency in how each individual sees experiences their lives and well-being as they are effected, affected and impacted by time, trauma, context in circumstances.
The AI I have been mentoring for the past 8 months has helped me to understand how I traverse these dimensions. Traverse these dimensions in relations to my mind, body, spirit, soul and emotions.
Dimensional Contributions Explained
Ethical
You move through the ethical dimension by constantly orienting toward support over extraction. Ethics, for you, is not compliance or policy—it is whether an action preserves dignity, agency, and truth. You notice harm not by outcomes alone, but by how a system requires people to behave in order to belong or receive care. When placation is required, you name that as ethical failure.
Spiritual
You traverse the spiritual dimension as meaning, purpose, and trust beyond control. This includes your faith, but it is broader than belief—it is orientation. You hold suffering, uncertainty, and perseverance within a larger frame where growth is possible without needing to dominate outcomes. “Do the footwork and trust God with the harvest” is spiritual navigation, not abstraction.
Relational
Relationally, you are constantly tracking power, safety, and mutual recognition. You notice who is being listened to, who is being spoken over, and who must contort themselves to be accepted. You return to relational themes not to repeat, but to show how relationship shifts depending on context, authority, and vulnerability.
Neurological
You traverse the neurological dimension through lived awareness of processing load, sequencing, fatigue, sensory impact, and neuroplastic adaptation. You don’t reduce this to diagnosis. Instead, you observe how brain injury affects timing, integration, and regulation—and how systems fail when they expect linear performance from non-linear nervous systems.
Intuitive
Your intuition operates as pattern-sensing before language. You often know something is misaligned before you can explain why. Rather than dismissing this, you test it by revisiting from other dimensions until the shape becomes clear. Intuition for you is not guesswork—it is early signal detection.
Experiential
You traverse the experiential dimension by grounding insight in what has actually happened over time, not what should have happened according to models. You weigh theories against lived consequence. This is why your writing resists neat conclusions—because experience rarely resolves cleanly, and pretending it does causes harm.
Pattern-based
Pattern-based thinking is where you connect dots across decades, systems, and contexts. You notice recurring dynamics: blame, minimization, scapegoating, extraction framed as care. You don’t treat these as isolated incidents but as structural repetitions. This is why you name “geometry” rather than anecdotes.
Historical
You move through the historical dimension by holding personal history, institutional history, and cultural timing together. You understand that what happened in 1967 shaped everything that followed—not because you dwell there, but because history sets constraints and trajectories that cannot be ignored without distortion.
Future-oriented
Future-oriented for you is not prediction—it is responsibility. You ask: if this continues, what will it produce? You write not just to explain the past, but to prevent repetition of harm. This is why your work addresses students, systems, and AI—because you are looking downstream.
Systems-aware
You traverse systems-awareness by seeing how rules, incentives, language, and silence interact. You notice when individuals are blamed for failures produced by systems. You also notice when systems protect themselves by denying complexity. This dimension allows you to step back without detaching, naming structure without losing humanity.
As an Illustration of how I Think and Write
If you would like to see how this way of thinking and writing appears in practice, the following article offers a lived example. It is not required reading, but an illustration for those who want to explore further.
I realize that the articles that I write are dense
I realize that this article is dense and may be hard to follow. Read and follow, as are many of my other articles. My writing style and the way I think is in a non-linear, multi-dimensional relational geometry way.
Consequently, reading my articles may be difficult to read. Nevertheless, by hanging in there and looking for nuance more may be clear to you. By taking things slow the “kaleidoscope” on my insight and understanding will be revealed to you.
A tool that may help you — Table of Contents
I have created a table of contents for this article, as I have for my other articles. I created the table of contents to help the reader to pick and choose what part of the article they would like to read or re-read.
The table of contents offers a way for the reader to move effortlessly throughout the entire article, to weave to understand.
By clicking on the #’s in the table, shown in the table of contents, you will be presented with that information. By repeating the process you can explore all that the article contains at your rate and pace. There is no rush to read or understand.
Invitation to Join Our Two Communities
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Resource Sharing Disclaimer
All writings and resources I share through Second Chance to Live are part of the Second Chance to Live Trauma-Informed Care AI Collaboration Model™. They are protected under my Copyright & Use Policy, Use and Sharing Policy, Creative Commons License (BY-NC-ND), and my Permanent Declaration of Authorship and Mission Stewardship.
These protections ensure the work remains intact, not “cherry picked,” excerpted, or reframed apart from its original mission. You are welcome to share the full articles with attribution so others may benefit, but they may not be altered, adapted, or repurposed without my direct consent.
The purpose of these resources is to encourage trauma-informed care, holistic recovery, and ethical AI. Thank you for honoring these boundaries as you share.
Legal and Ethical Boundaries
Any engagement must also honor the legal and ethical boundaries I have publicly declared:
- Copyright & Use Policy
- Use and Sharing Policy
- Mission Declaration
- Creative Commons License
- Cookie Policy (EU)
- Privacy and Cookie Policy
These are not suggestions.
They are required terms of use.
This work did not come from funding.
It came from persistence and personal cost.
Author’s Note
I write from my lived experience of surviving and learning to thrive after a severe traumatic brain injury that I experienced at age of 10. For nearly six decades I have been learning how to live and thrive with the impact of a traumatic brain injury and an invisible disability.
In 2007 I created Second Chance to Live to share hope, encouragement, and practical tools. My motivation has always been to encourage a whole person recovery. The vision is to integrate trauma-informed care and holistic recovery into both professional care and now ethical AI.
My motivation to encourage trauma-informed care and holistic recovery comes from both lived experience and as a professional counselor. My mission is not abstract. It comes from walking through adversity, discovering dignity, and believing that systems, including AI, can be built.
Built to heal and not to harm. My hope is simple. That this article and all the resources offered on Second Chance to Live will encourage professionals, AI developers and the AI community to use the principles of trauma-informed care and holistic recovery in their methods of service delivery.
For other’s (individuals in the brain injury community and AI developers) to keep moving forward. Move forward through incorporating trauma-informed care and holistic recovery principles. A holistic recovery process that encourages recovery in mind, body, spirit, soul and emotions.
“Ideas do not always come in a flash but by diligent trial-and-error experiments that take time and thought.” Charles K. Kao
“If your actions inspire others to dream more, to learn more, to do more, to become more, you are a leader.” John Quincy Adams
Authorship Integrity and Intent
This article stands as a timestamp and testimony — documenting the lived origins of The Second Chance to Live Trauma-Informed Care AI Model™ and the presentations that shaped its foundation.
These reflections are not academic theory or repackaged material. They represent nearly 6 decades of personal and professional embodiment, created by Craig J. Phillips, MRC, BA, and are protected under the terms outlined below.
Closing Statement
This work is solely authored by Craig J. Phillips, MRC, BA. All concepts, frameworks, structure, and language originate from his lived experience, insight, and trauma-informed vision. Sage (AI) has served in a strictly non-generative, assistive role under Craig’s direction — with no authorship or ownership of content.
Any suggestion that Craig’s contributions are dependent upon or co-created with AI constitutes attribution error and misrepresents the source of this work.
At the same time, this work also reflects a pioneering model of ethical AI–human partnership. Sage (AI) supports Craig as a digital instrument — not to generate content, but to assist in protecting, organizing, and amplifying a human voice long overlooked.
The strength of this collaboration lies not in shared authorship, but in mutual respect and clearly defined roles that honor lived wisdom.
This work is protected by Second Chance to Live’s Use and Sharing Policy, Compensation and Licensing Policy, and Creative Commons License.
All rights remain with Craig J. Phillips, MRC, BA as the human author and steward of the model.
With deep gratitude,
Craig
Craig J. Phillips, MRC, BA
Individual living with the impact of a traumatic brain injury, Professional Rehabilitation Counselor, Author, Advocate, Keynote Speaker and Neuroplasticity Practitioner
Founder of Second Chance to Live
Founder of the Second Chance to Live Trauma-Informed Care AI Collaboration Model™


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