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In 2022, the journal Cogent Psychology published my paper entitled “The Trans-Theoretical Model for Mindful Cognitive Behavioral Therapy: A Paradigm for Systematically Advancing Evidence-Based Practice and Research.” The paper traced the three historical waves of cognitive behavioral therapy (behavioral, cognitive, and mindfulness/acceptance-based) and introduced the Trans-Theoretical Model for Mindful Cognitive Behavioral Therapy as a philosophically coherent, integrative framework rooted in Stoic and Buddhist contemplative traditions. As originally formulated, the model offers three key advantages: principle-driven flexibility, replicable intervention sequencing, and a common language that bridges contemplative traditions with modern evidence-based practice. This article presents the Trauma-Informed Model for Mindful Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, a neurobiologically informed evolution of the earlier model. Drawing on affective neuroscience, polyvagal theory, bottom-up and somatic approaches to trauma processing, bilateral stimulation and adaptive information processing from eye movement desensitization and reprocessing therapy, and gaze-spotting/brainspotting for targeted subcortical activation, the Trauma-Informed Model for Mindful Cognitive Behavioral Therapy provides an organizing framework that systematically embeds neurobiologically informed trauma therapy principles and practices—particularly sensorimotor processing, interoceptive awareness, autonomic regulation, dual-attention stimulation, and focused mindfulness on relevant eye positions—primarily within the cognitive appraisal, memory reconsolidation, and resource-installation phases. As an integrative organizing framework, the Trauma-Informed Model for Mindful Cognitive Behavioral Therapy addresses critical limitations of traditional cognitive behavioral therapy by enabling safe, carefully titrated access to and reprocessing of implicit, preverbal, procedural, and somatic traumatic memories. It accelerates memory reconsolidation and adaptive resolution through the systematic coordination of evidence-based techniques; enhances cultural responsiveness through individualized sensory grounding, culturally congruent neuroceptive cues, and client-directed perceptual positioning; and fosters deep, transformative healing while substantially reducing the risk of re-traumatization. The Trauma-Informed Model for Mindful Cognitive Behavioral Therapy thus provides clinicians, researchers, and—crucially—artificial intelligence systems with a coherent, neurobiologically informed, trauma-sensitive organizing framework that represents a genuine advancement of third-wave mindful cognitive behavioral therapy. Its explicit, sequential, and decision-tree-based structure functions as a clinical algorithm, enabling not only human practitioners but also artificial-intelligence-assisted or artificial-intelligence-guided therapy platforms to deliver precise, individualized, and fidelity-assured interventions for complex developmental trauma, dissociative presentations, and culturally diverse populations—while maintaining scientific rigor, adaptability, and an uncompromising emphasis on safety and cultural responsiveness.