Dr. Michael Cørnwall

Dr. Michael Cørnwall Mental health counseling for children, adolescents, teens and adults. Accepting most insurance plans and private pay patients.

04/25/2026
When the Face Is No Longer the Person: Identity, Emotion, and Trust in an Era of Perfect MasksThere is a quiet agreement...
04/25/2026

When the Face Is No Longer the Person: Identity, Emotion, and Trust in an Era of Perfect Masks

There is a quiet agreement that governs human interaction: the face belongs to the person. No one announces this rule. No one teaches it. Yet it organizes nearly every social exchange. We look at a face and assume continuity—that what we see reflects who we are dealing with. Identity, intention, and emotion are inferred within seconds, often without awareness of the process itself.

Now imagine that assumption is no longer valid.

Imagine a world in which anyone can change their face at will—perfectly, undetectably, and as casually as changing a shirt. The person in front of you may not look the same from one moment to the next. Familiarity disappears. Recognition becomes uncertain. A smile may be selected rather than felt. A neutral expression may conceal more than it reveals.

At first, this sounds like a technological problem. It is not. It is a psychological one.

The disruption would not occur because faces change, but because of what we have always assumed about them. We do not simply see faces—we interpret them. We use them as shortcuts for understanding. We treat them as evidence of identity and indicators of internal state. When those assumptions fail, the system that depends on them fails with it.

What would be lost is not recognition alone, but trust. Not emotion, but the belief that emotion can be reliably seen. Not identity, but the confidence that identity is visible.

And yet, something more important would be revealed.

The face has never contained the person. It has only represented them.

[FIGURE 1]

Figure 1. The Emotional Activation Continuum: From Fear (Activation) to Calm (Regulation)

Placement rationale:
This appears early because it reframes emotion before you explain anything else. It answers:

“If faces aren’t reliable… what are we actually experiencing?”

From early development, humans demonstrate a preference for faces and rapidly acquire the ability to recognize and interpret them (Johnson et al., 1991). This capacity is supported by specialized neural systems, including the fusiform face area (FFA), which is selectively responsive to facial stimuli, and the amygdala, which assigns emotional salience and detects potential threat (Kanwisher et al., 1997; Adolphs, 2002).

These systems operate quickly and automatically, allowing individuals to navigate complex environments without continuous deliberation. Their efficiency depends on stability.

When the face no longer corresponds reliably to the person, prediction fails. The brain, which depends on consistent input to generate rapid interpretations, is forced into a more effortful mode of processing. What was once intuitive becomes analytical. What was once immediate becomes uncertain.

[FIGURE 2]

Figure 2. The Nervous System in Emotional Regulation: Bottom-Up and Top-Down Integration

Placement rationale:
Now that the reader understands the continuum, you show the mechanism:

“How does the system generate this experience?”

The immediate psychological consequence is not limited to confusion. It is the emergence of persistent ambiguity. Humans rely on rapid judgments to determine familiarity, safety, and intent. When those judgments cannot be trusted, vigilance increases. Research on uncertainty and threat perception demonstrates that ambiguous or unstable cues amplify stress responses and promote hypervigilance (Grupe & Nitschke, 2013).

Facial expressions compound the problem. They are among the primary mechanisms through which emotional states are inferred. The work of Paul Ekman demonstrated that certain expressions are widely recognized across cultures (Ekman & Friesen, 1971).

But this accuracy depends on an assumption that often goes unexamined: that the expression reflects the state.

When expressions can be manufactured with precision, that assumption collapses. Expression becomes selectable. Emotion becomes performative.

[FIGURE 0.1]

Figure 0.1. From Surface to Meaning: The Construction of Emotional Understanding

Placement rationale:
This is the turning point of the essay. You now show:

Emotion is not observed—it is constructed.

This distinction exposes a broader psychological truth. Facial expressions, like emotional language, do not contain emotion—they represent it. They are interpretive overlays placed on more basic physiological and cognitive processes.

What appears to be a breakdown in emotional communication is, more accurately, the removal of a shortcut.

[FIGURE 0.2]

Figure 0.2. Points of Distortion in Emotional Construction

Placement rationale:
Immediately follows construction to answer:

“If it’s constructed… where does it go wrong?”

The consequences extend beyond individual interaction into institutional systems. Modern societies rely heavily on facial recognition for identification and verification. If faces can be altered at will, these systems become ineffective. Eyewitness testimony, already susceptible to distortion under stable conditions, would lose further reliability (Wells & Olson, 2003).

Everyday activities would require repeated confirmation of identity. What is currently implicit would become procedural.

Relationships would reorganize in parallel. Trust would become less visual and more pattern-based—language, behavior, and consistency over time.

Clinical Application: When the Face Cannot Be Trusted

For the clinician, this environment does not introduce a new problem—it intensifies an existing one. Even in current practice, discrepancies between expressed emotion and underlying state are common.

In a world where facial presentation can be intentionally altered, this process becomes central rather than occasional.

The clinician must rely less on visual inference and more on:

* linguistic patterns
* behavioral consistency
* pacing and context

The task shifts from reading emotion to examining representation.

[FIGURE 3]

Figure 3. The Correction Pathway: Interrupting Distortion in Emotional Construction

Placement rationale:
This comes after clinical framing because now the reader is ready for:

“What do we do about it?”

Emotional expressions—whether conveyed through the face or through language—function as masks. They provide structured representations of experience but do not constitute the experience itself.

The therapeutic stance shifts:

* away from correcting emotion
* toward clarifying interpretation

The question becomes:

“How is this experience being constructed?”

Case Vignette: The Unreadable Client

The client sat across from me, composed. His posture was steady, his tone measured. He described the recent loss of his partner.

“I’m managing,” he said.

His face reflected neutrality. No visible distress.

The content did not align.

“What happens when you’re not occupied?” I asked.

A pause.

“I don’t prefer that,” he said.

The emotional state was not absent. It was unlabeled.

Observe

The client’s emotional state was not missing—it was unrepresented. Facial neutrality did not indicate calm; it reflected controlled presentation.

What to Do Next

Shift from interpreting expression to identifying patterns. Clarify interpretation before assigning emotional labels.

Key Integration

If the face can no longer be trusted, then neither can the assumption that perception equals understanding.

Humans depend heavily on representations to simplify complex internal processes. Facial expressions and emotional language function as masks—efficient, useful, and often accurate, but ultimately indirect.

When those masks become unstable, the burden shifts. Individuals must move from automatic recognition to deliberate interpretation.

The face, once treated as a reliable indicator of identity and emotion, becomes what it has always been: a surface.

And when the surface can no longer be trusted, understanding must move deeper.

References

Adolphs, R. (2002). Recognizing emotion from facial expressions. Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience Reviews, 1(1), 21–62.

Ekman, P., & Friesen, W. V. (1971). Constants across cultures. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 17(2), 124–129.

Grupe, D. W., & Nitschke, J. B. (2013). Uncertainty and anticipation in anxiety. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 14(7), 488–501.

Haxby, J. V., et al. (2000). Neural system for face perception. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 4(6), 223–233.

Johnson, M. H., et al. (1991). Newborn facial tracking. Cognition, 40, 1–19.

Kanwisher, N., et al. (1997). Fusiform face area. Journal of Neuroscience, 17, 4302–4311.

Porges, S. W. (2011). The polyvagal theory.

Wells, G. L., & Olson, E. A. (2003). Eyewitness testimony. Annual Review of Psychology, 54, 277–295.

04/21/2026

. . . psychotherapy is, after all, a system of teaching people how to un-bake bread . . .

When Words Lose Their Function: Reclaiming Clarity in the Use of Gender, S*x, Masculinity, and FemininityAbstractContemp...
03/19/2026

When Words Lose Their Function: Reclaiming Clarity in the Use of Gender, S*x, Masculinity, and Femininity

Abstract

Contemporary discourse increasingly conflates the terms s*x, gender, masculinity, and femininity, leading to conceptual ambiguity and reduced analytical precision. Historically, gender referred to the social expression of masculinity and femininity, distinct from biological s*x. However, as the term has been repurposed in modern usage, its original meaning has been diluted without a clear replacement. This linguistic shift has created a functional gap, making it more difficult to examine and modify social constructs related to identity and behavior. This article argues for a return to clearer distinctions, proposing that socially constructed categories be explicitly labeled as masculine and feminine, rather than incorrectly attributed to biological classifications such as male and female.

Introduction

Language shapes perception, and when key terms lose precision, the concepts they represent become difficult to examine. The modern use of the word gender illustrates this problem. Once used to describe socially constructed patterns of masculinity and femininity, gender is now frequently used interchangeably with biological s*x or as an undefined identity construct (American Psychological Association [APA], 2020). In this process, the term has been stretched beyond its original function.

As a result, a critical gap has emerged: there is no longer a widely accepted word that clearly identifies the social constructs that gender was originally intended to describe. This absence makes it increasingly difficult to examine, critique, or modify those constructs in a meaningful way.

Defining the Terms

Clarity begins with definition:
• Male/Female: Biological classifications based on reproductive anatomy and chromosomal patterns (APA, 2020).
• Men/Women: Social categories typically aligned with biological s*x, though culturally mediated.
• Masculine/Feminine: Socially constructed traits, behaviors, and roles shaped by cultural expectations (Bem, 1981).
• Gender (historical usage): A term intended to describe the social expression of masculinity and femininity (Money, 1955; West & Zimmerman, 1987).

When these categories are blurred, analysis becomes imprecise. When they are separated, patterns become observable.

Everyday Language as Evidence

The confusion is most visible in ordinary speech:
• “Men’s shoes”
• “Women’s hairstyles”
• “Men’s jobs”
• “Girls’ colors” / “Boys’ colors”

These phrases imply biological ownership of objects and behaviors. In reality, they describe socially assigned meanings, not biological facts.

A more accurate framework would be:
• “Masculine-style shoes”
• “Feminine hairstyles”
• “Masculine-associated occupations”
• “Feminine-coded colors”

The shift is subtle but significant. It relocates meaning from biology to social construction—where it actually belongs.

The Linguistic Gap Problem

As the word gender has expanded in meaning, it has simultaneously lost specificity. It is now used to describe identity, expression, social roles, and sometimes biological s*x. In doing so, it no longer clearly identifies any one of these domains.

This creates a functional absence:

There is no longer a precise, widely used term that consistently refers to the social construction of masculinity and femininity.

Without such a term:
• Social patterns become harder to isolate
• Cultural norms become harder to critique
• Behavioral expectations become harder to modify

In effect, the very concept of gender as a social construct becomes more difficult to examine because the language needed to define it has become unstable.

Conceptual Consequences

This linguistic confusion has broader implications:
1. Reduced Analytical Precision
When biological and social terms are conflated, research and discussion lose clarity.
2. Increased Social Tension
Disagreements often stem from people using the same words to mean different things.
3. Barrier to Behavioral Change
If we cannot clearly identify what is socially constructed, we cannot effectively modify it.
4. Misalignment in Identity Discussions
Conversations about identity become reactive rather than structured, due to unclear terminology.

Application to Public Spaces

Retail provides a practical example:
• “Men’s Department”
• “Women’s Department”

These labels imply biological necessity. However, the organization is based on style, not anatomy.

Reframing as:
• “Masculine Department”
• “Feminine Department”

would more accurately reflect the nature of the products and allow for broader accessibility without redefining biological terms.

Counterargument

Resistance to this linguistic shift is understandable. Several concerns are commonly raised:
• Tradition and Familiarity: Existing language is deeply embedded in culture and commerce.
• Perceived Overcomplication: Some argue that introducing new distinctions adds unnecessary complexity.
• Identity Concerns: Others worry that separating terms may invalidate personal identity frameworks.

These concerns reflect the role language plays in stability and identity. However, clarity does not erase identity—it refines understanding. The goal is not to eliminate existing terms, but to use them more precisely.

Conclusion

The evolution of language is inevitable, but precision must be maintained. The current use of gender has expanded to the point that it no longer reliably identifies the concept it once defined. In doing so, it has left a gap in our ability to describe and analyze social constructs related to masculinity and femininity.

Reintroducing clear distinctions—using male/female for biology and masculine/feminine for social expression—restores conceptual clarity. This shift is not ideological; it is functional. It allows society to better understand, examine, and ultimately modify the patterns that shape human behavior.

The Psychology of Small Change: How Three New Actions a Day Can Improve Mental HealthMichael Cornwall, PsyD, PhDAbstract...
03/01/2026

The Psychology of Small Change: How Three New Actions a Day Can Improve Mental Health

Michael Cornwall, PsyD, PhD

Abstract

Mental health improvement is often framed as requiring large, sustained changes, yet behavioral science suggests that small, consistent novelty can significantly improve emotional regulation and psychological resilience. This essay explores the idea that performing three new actions daily for two weeks can enhance mental health management. Drawing from research on neuroplasticity, behavioral activation, habit formation, and cognitive flexibility, the paper argues that structured novelty promotes adaptive brain functioning, reduces rumination, and strengthens perceived self-efficacy. The intervention is simple, scalable, and consistent with evidence-based psychological models including cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), behavioral activation, and neuroplasticity research.

Many individuals seeking improved mental health assume that change must be dramatic to be meaningful. In practice, the brain responds more reliably to small, repeated behavioral shifts than to large, unsustainable transformations. A simple framework — doing three new things every day for two weeks — illustrates how incremental novelty can support emotional stability and improved psychological functioning.

While the concept appears simplistic, it aligns closely with decades of research in neuroscience and clinical psychology. Novel experiences stimulate neuroplasticity, disrupt maladaptive cognitive loops, and foster a sense of agency that supports mental health recovery (Doidge, 2007; Garland et al., 2010).

Novelty and Neuroplasticity

The human brain is designed to adapt to new stimuli. Exposure to novel experiences promotes synaptic remodeling and strengthens neural pathways associated with learning and adaptability (Kolb & Gibb, 2011). Neuroplasticity research demonstrates that even minor environmental changes can alter neural firing patterns and support emotional flexibility.

Novelty also activates dopaminergic pathways involved in motivation and reward processing (Bunzeck & Düzel, 2006). This activation is particularly relevant for individuals experiencing depression or anxiety, as these conditions are often associated with reduced behavioral engagement and diminished reward sensitivity.

Engaging in three small new behaviors daily creates repeated neurological “interrupts” that reduce cognitive rigidity. Over time, this encourages a more flexible and resilient brain state.

Behavioral Activation and Mood Regulation

Behavioral activation, a core component of cognitive behavioral therapy, emphasizes structured engagement in meaningful activity to reduce depressive symptoms (Jacobson et al., 2001). The mechanism is straightforward: behavior often precedes emotional change rather than the reverse.

Doing three new things each day functions as a micro–behavioral activation protocol. These actions do not need to be dramatic. Examples might include:
• Taking a new walking route
• Trying a new food
• Starting a conversation with someone unfamiliar
• Listening to a new genre of music
• Writing a paragraph about an unfamiliar topic

Each new action interrupts avoidance patterns and reduces behavioral stagnation, which is a known contributor to mood disorders (Martell et al., 2010).

Cognitive Flexibility and Emotional Regulation

Mental health struggles frequently involve cognitive rigidity — repetitive thinking patterns, rumination, and black-and-white interpretations of experience. Introducing novelty promotes cognitive flexibility, the brain’s ability to shift perspectives and generate alternative interpretations (Kashdan & Rottenberg, 2010).

Cognitive flexibility is strongly associated with resilience and lower levels of anxiety and depression. When individuals intentionally introduce small new experiences, they train the brain to tolerate uncertainty and ambiguity. Over time, this reduces threat reactivity and promotes adaptive emotional responses.

This aligns with cognitive models suggesting that emotional distress is often maintained by rigid appraisal systems rather than external events themselves (Beck, 1976).

Self-Efficacy and Psychological Momentum

Another overlooked benefit of daily novelty is the development of self-efficacy — the belief in one’s ability to influence outcomes (Bandura, 1997). Mental health challenges frequently erode perceived control, leading to passivity and learned helplessness.

Completing three new actions daily provides repeated mastery experiences. These experiences accumulate quickly. Within two weeks, an individual completes 42 novel behaviors, creating measurable psychological momentum.

This momentum fosters a shift from passive coping to active engagement, reinforcing adaptive identity narratives such as:
“I am someone who can change things.”

Such shifts in self-perception are strongly associated with improved mental health outcomes (Bandura, 1997).

Interrupting Rumination and Emotional Looping

Rumination — repetitive, self-focused negative thinking — is a major risk factor for depression and anxiety (Nolen-Hoeksema et al., 2008). Novel behavior serves as a behavioral interruption that shifts attentional networks away from internal loops and toward external engagement.

Even small acts of novelty demand attentional resources, reducing the cognitive bandwidth available for rumination. Over repeated exposures, this can weaken entrenched rumination pathways and support more adaptive attentional patterns.

Why Two Weeks Matters

The two-week timeframe is psychologically significant. Research on habit formation suggests that while full habit consolidation takes longer, noticeable psychological shifts can occur within days of consistent behavioral change (Lally et al., 2010).

Two weeks is long enough to:
• Generate repeated neuroplastic stimulation
• Build behavioral momentum
• Produce early mastery experiences
• Shift attentional habits

Importantly, it is also short enough to feel achievable. Interventions that feel finite are more likely to be attempted and completed, increasing adherence.

Practical Implementation

The effectiveness of this strategy lies in its simplicity. The novelty requirement should remain intentionally modest. The goal is not intensity but consistency.

Guidelines include:
• The actions should be safe and manageable
• They should differ from routine behavior
• They do not need to be impressive
• Curiosity should be prioritized over performance

This low-pressure structure reduces avoidance and encourages experimentation, which is central to psychological growth.

Clinical Implications

From a therapeutic perspective, this framework can function as a bridge intervention. It is especially useful for:
• Individuals resistant to formal therapy
• Clients experiencing mild to moderate depression
• Early-stage behavioral activation
• Emotional intelligence training

It also aligns with strength-based approaches that emphasize agency and experiential learning rather than symptom focus (Seligman, 2011).

For clinicians, the exercise can be framed not as a cure but as a behavioral experiment — a stance consistent with CBT and REBT traditions that emphasize empirical self-testing (Ellis & Dryden, 1997).

Mental health improvement does not always require complex interventions. Small, structured novelty can create meaningful psychological shifts by engaging neuroplastic processes, disrupting rumination, and strengthening self-efficacy.

The practice of doing three new things daily for two weeks offers a simple yet evidence-aligned approach to mental health management. Its strength lies in accessibility: it requires no specialized tools, minimal planning, and little psychological preparation.

In a field often dominated by complexity, the power of small, consistent behavioral change remains one of the most reliable — and underutilized — tools for improving emotional well-being.

References

Bandura, A. (1997). Self-efficacy: The exercise of control. Freeman.

Beck, A. T. (1976). Cognitive therapy and the emotional disorders. International Universities Press.

Bunzeck, N., & Düzel, E. (2006). Absolute coding of stimulus novelty in the human substantia nigra/VTA. Neuron, 51(3), 369–379.

Doidge, N. (2007). The brain that changes itself. Viking.

Ellis, A., & Dryden, W. (1997). The practice of rational emotive behavior therapy. Springer.

Garland, E. L., et al. (2010). Upward spirals of positive emotions counter downward spirals of negativity. Clinical Psychology Review, 30(7), 849–864.

Jacobson, N. S., et al. (2001). Behavioral activation treatment for depression. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 69(3), 255–264.

Kashdan, T. B., & Rottenberg, J. (2010). Psychological flexibility as a fundamental aspect of health. Clinical Psychology Review, 30(7), 865–878.

Kolb, B., & Gibb, R. (2011). Brain plasticity and behavior. Annual Review of Psychology, 62, 287–309.

Lally, P., et al. (2010). How habits are formed. European Journal of Social Psychology, 40(6), 998–1009.

Martell, C. R., Dimidjian, S., & Herman-Dunn, R. (2010). Behavioral activation for depression. Guilford Press.

Nolen-Hoeksema, S., et al. (2008). Rethinking rumination. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 3(5), 400–424.

Seligman, M. E. P. (2011). Flourish. Free Press.

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Las Vegas, NV
89121

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