ENERGY ENHANCEMENT ALCHEMICAL VITRIOL THE GROUNDING OF NEGATIVE ENERGIES AND THE TRAUMA MODEL OF MENTAL DISORDERS
Energy Enhancement experience agrees with the Trauma Model, yet Energy Enhancement goes further in two ways...
1. ENERGY ENHANCEMENT TECHNIQUES GROUND TRAUMA - The solution to psychological symptoms caused by trauma is the Third Initiation of Level One of Energy Enhancement - The Grounding of Negative Energies. It is based upon ancient meditational techniques successfully used to create Enlightened People for over Five Thousand years. All successful initiates have overcome all Trauma Caused Energy Blockages in order to become enlightened. Indeed Enlightenment is the only psychological model ending in a total cure of all psychological problems.
Enlightenment - a total cure of all psychological problems - the removal of all pain and the promotion of peace, is based upon the Grounding of Negative Energies which is one part of the Kundalini Kriyas and the Taoist Meditational Orbits. The Grounding of Negative Energies is also based upon VITRIOL Theory and the Chakras originally based upon Four Thousand years old Taoist Acupuncture, Taoist Alchemy leading on to the Alchemical VITRIOL Theory based upon its entrance into Europe in the Middle Ages in Latin.
VITRIOL - Visita Interiora Terrae Rectificando Invenies Occultem Lapidem is the first formula or Guided Meditation of Alchemy. It gives a methodolgy to remove all trauma formed negative Energies from the psychic system. It always works. It always works better than just talking about the problem as is the case in Psychiatry.
The Raja Yoga of Patanjali for five thousand years has always been the method of choice to get to that symptomless state of Peace, Love and Illumination.
FREE VIDEO DOWNLOAD FOR ENERGY ENHANCEMENT SOUL FUSION AND THE
SUPRA-GALACTIC ORBIT - PLAY IN WINDOWS MEDIA PLAYER..
http://bit.ly/h7lRlJ
FREE ENERGY ENHANCEMENT VITRIOL DOWNLOAD - CLICK HERE TO SAVE THE WHOLE
VITRIOL VIDEO ON YOUR COMPUTER!! - PLAY IN WINDOWS MEDIA PLAYER..
http://bit.ly/ih01y5
2. EVERYONE HAS THE SYMPTOMS OF TRAUMA - Most people are not enlightened therefore most people have psychological symptoms which are the root cause of all problems in their lives, the difference being in the degree of Trauma given in the various ages of life - the more trauma, the more problematic the symptoms. Yet although in most people the trauma is less, still this trauma causes all the problems of life.
ENERGY ENHANCEMENT CHAKRAS DIRECTORY - CHAKRAS ABOVE THE HEAD, CHAKRAS IN THE BODY AND CHAKRAS BELOW THE BASE CHAKRA - THE ANTAHKARANA
ENERGY ENHANCEMENT ENERGY BLOCKAGE DIRECTORY - ENERGY BLOCKAGES ARE CREATED FROM TRAUMA FORMED NEGATIVE KARMIC MASS - ENERGY BLOCKAGES ARE PURE CONCENTRATED EVIL WHICH BLOCK US OFF FROM THE SPIRIT
THE ENERGY ENHANCEMENT KUNDALINI KRIYAS DIRECTORY - KRIYA YOGA AND THE TAOIST ORBITS COME FROM CIRCULAR ENERGY FLOWS IN THE GOVERNING AND CENTRAL MERIDIANS WHICH WHEN USED CAN REMOVE BLOCKAGES IN THOSE MERIDIANS AND ALL CHAKRAS
ENERGY ENHANCEMENT ANTAHKARANA DIRECTORY - THE ANTAHKARANA IS THE REAL GOLDEN ROD AND VERTICAL CENTRAL PILLAR OF THE ALCHEMISTS - IT IS THE PSYCHIC CONSTRUCTION BETWEEN HEAVEN AND EARTH WHICH SHOWS HOW HUMANITY CONNECTS WITH THE ASTRAL PLANE AND WITH GOD - IT IS THAT WHICH MUST BE BLOCKED IN ORDER TO CONTROL HUMANITY
THE ENERGY ENHANCEMENT SAMADHI SAMYAMA DIRECTORY - SAMADHI AND SAMYAMA ARE THE EIGHTH AND NINTH LIMBS OF YOGA OF RAJA YOGA AS SPECIFIED IN THE SOURCE BOOK, THE YOGA SUTRAS OF PATANJALI WHICH GIVES THE METHODOLOGY - THE TECHNIQUES - FOR THE REMOVAL OF ENERGY BLOCKAGES AS A PRELUDE TO KAIVALYA ILLUMINATION - COMMENTARY ON THE YOGA SUTRAS BY SATCHIDANAND HERE!!
ENERGY ENHANCEMENT EMOTIONAL BLOCKAGES DIRECTORY
THE TRAUMA MODEL
Trauma models of mental disorders (alternatively called trauma models of psychopathology) emphasize the effects of psychological trauma, particularly in early development, as the key causal factor in the development of some or many psychiatric disorders (in addition to post-traumatic stress disorder).
Trauma models are typically founded on the view that traumatic experiences (including but not limited to actual physical or sexual abuse) are more common or more serious than thought in the histories of those diagnosed with mental disorders. Such models have traditionally been associated with psychoanalytic approaches, notably Sigmund Freud's early ideas on childhood sexual abuse and hysteria.
John Bowlby, who developed attachment theory, also describes many forms of mental illness as based on early childhood trauma.[1] In addition there is significant research supporting the linkage between early experiences of chronic maltreatment and later problems.[2]
In the 1960s trauma models also became associated with humanist and anti-psychiatry approaches, particularly in regard to understanding schizophrenia and the role of the family.[3] Personality disorders have also been a focus, particularly borderline personality disorder. Extreme versions of trauma models have implicated the fetal environment and the trauma of being born, or have been associated with recovered memory controversies.
More generally, trauma models highlight particularly stressful and traumatic factors in early attachment relations and in the development of mature interpersonal relationships. They are often presented as a counterpoint to a psychiatry claimed to be too focused on genetics, neurochemistry and medication.
Contents |
History
In the 1940s, '50s, '60s and '70s some mental health professionals proposed trauma models to understand schizophrenia: Harry Stack Sullivan, Frieda Fromm-Reichmann, Theodore Lidz, Gregory Bateson, Silvano Arieti, R.D. Laing and others. They held that schizophrenia is induced by traumatic experiences in profoundly disturbed families, or by attempts to cope with a tramatically damaging society. In the 1950s Sullivan's theory that schizophrenia is related to traumatic interpersonal relationships was widely accepted in the United States.
The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, or DSM, does not claim that the specific etiology of schizophrenia and other serious psychoses has been established. However, the psychogenic models proposed by these early researchers are no longer in vogue in the psychiatric profession. Since the 1960s pharmacological treatments became the increasing focus of psychiatry, and by the 1980s the theory that the family dynamics could be implicated in schizophrenia became a taboo in many quarters.[4]
Before his death in 2001, aged ninety, Lidz, one of the main proponents of the "schizophrenogenic" parents theory, expressed regret that current research in genes biological psychiatry is "barking up the wrong tree".[5] Correlation of schizophrenia in genetic twins in only 30% - trauma is a more4 likely cause. Like Lidz, Laing maintained until his death that the cause of both schizoid personalities and schizophrenia was influenced by traumatic family relationships.
In 1975 Silvano Arieti won the American National Book Award in the field of science for his book, Interpretation of Schizophrenia, which advances a psychological model for understanding all the regressive types of the disorder.[6] This idea has been superceded- according to more recent research, traumatic child abuse at home plays a more causal role in depression, PTSD, eating disorders, substance abuse and dissociative disorders.[7]
The more severe the traumatic abuse the more probability symptoms will develop in adult life.[8] In the psychiatric field it is hypothesized that child abuse is less related to the most serious psychoses, such as schizophrenia.[verification needed] However, some mental health professionals maintain that the relationship is stronger in psychoses than neuroses.[9]
In a study of 150 people under sentence of death in the USA, 100% of the people had been severely traumatised by sexual and physical abuse.
Psychohistory table
Psychohistorians
endorse trauma models of schizoid,
narcissistic,
masochistic,
borderline, depressive and neurotic
personalities.[12]
The chart below shows the dates at which gradual forms of child abuse are believed by psychohistorians to have evolved in the most advanced nations, based on accounts from historical records. The timeline doesn't apply to hunter-gatherer societies. It doesn't apply either to the Greek and Roman world, or the ancient Chinese world where there was a wide variation in childrearing practices. The major childrearing types described by Lloyd deMause are:
With the exception of the "helping mode of childrearing" (marked in yellow above), for psychohistorians the major childrearing types are related to main psychiatric disorders, as can be seen in the following Table of Historical Personalities:
Childrearing | Personality | Historical Manifestations |
---|---|---|
Infanticidal | Schizoid | Child sacrifice and infanticide among tribal societies, Mesoamerica, the Incas; in Assyrian and Canaanite religions. Phoenicians, Carthaginians and other early states also sacrificed infants to their gods. On the other hand, the less abusive Greeks and Romans exposed some of their babies to death. |
Narcissistic |
||
Abandoning | Masochistic | Longer swaddling in the early Middle Ages, fosterage, outside wetnursing, oblation of children to monasteries and nunneries, and apprenticeship. |
Ambivalent | Borderline | Although the later Middle Ages ended the abandonment of children to monasteries, "ambivalent" parents tolerated extreme love and hate for the child without the two feelings affecting each other. Enemas, early beating, shorter swaddling, mourning for deceased children, a precursor to empathy. |
Intrusive | Depressive | The intrusive parent began to unswaddle the infant. Since infants were now allowed to crawl rather than being swaddled, they had to be formally traumatically "disciplined", threatened with hell; use of guilt. Early toilet training, repression of child's sexuality, end of swaddling and wet-nursing, empathy now possible, rise of pediatrics. |
Socializing | Neurotic | Use of "mental discipline"; teaching children to conform to the parents goals, socializing them. Hellfire and physical discipline disappeared. Rise of traumatic compulsory schooling. The socializing mode is still the main mode of upbringing in the West. |
Helping | Individuated | Absolute end of humiliation to control the child. The helping parent tries to assist the child in reaching its own goals rather than socializing him or her into adult goals. Children's rights movement, deschooling. |
According to psychohistory theory, each of the above psychoclasses co-exist in the modern world today.
Recent approaches
In more recent years psychologist Alice Miller, author of twelve books on mental distress and disorders, including non-psychiatric conditions like falling prey to cults, has informed future parents and former victims about the disastrous consequences of child abuse. Former schizophrenic patients, such as John Modrow, have also endorsed the views of the pioneers of the trauma models.[13]
The "trauma model of mental disorders" is the name given by psychiatrist Colin A. Ross to his specific model, which is presented as a solution to the problem of comorbidity in the mental health field.[14]
Comorbidity - In psychiatry, psychology and mental health counseling comorbidity refers to the presence of more than one diagnosis occurring in an individual at the same time. However, in psychiatric classification, comorbidity does not necessarily imply the presence of multiple diseases, but instead can reflect our current inability to supply a single diagnosis that accounts for all symptoms.[2] On the DSM Axis I, Major Depressive Disorder is a very common comorbid disorder. The Axis II personality disorders are often criticized because their comorbidity rates are excessively high, approaching 60% in some cases, indicating to critics the possibility that these categories of mental illness are too imprecisely distinguished to be usefully valid for diagnostic purposes and, thus, for deciding how treatment resources should be allocated.
An information packet given to inpatients at the Ross Institute for Psychological Trauma describes the theoretical basis of his trauma model in commonsensical terms:
“ | The problem faced by many patients is that they did not grow up in a reasonably healthy, normal family. They grew up in an inconsistent, abusive and traumatic family. The very people to whom the child had to attach for survival, were also abuse perpetrators and hurt him or her badly [...] The basic conflict, the deepest pain, and the deepest source of symptoms, is the fact that mom and dad's behavior hurts, did not fit together, and did not make sense. | ” |
The Trauma Model A Solution
to the Problem of Comorbidity in Psychiatry By: Colin A. Ross, M.D.
Twenty-one years ago, in 1979, I did my clinical rotation in psychiatry
as a medical student at the University of Alberta, in Edmonton, Canada.
I noticed then that psychiatric inpatients tended to have many different
diagnoses. They would be admitted and treated for depression on one
occasion, and for a psychotic disorder another time, and often would
have numerous admissions. The current diagnosis was always the correct
one, but at some point in the future it would become a past incorrect
diagnosis. I was most troubled when I saw the diagnosis change several
times in a single admission. Not uncommonly, the diagnosis was changed
in order to provide a rationale for prescribing a new medication.
Some psychiatrists were simply sloppy diagnosticians and irrational
polypharmacists. Others were careful, conscientious and reasonable. The
problem was that the patients did not fit the conceptual system of late
twentieth century psychiatry. Even when the conceptual system was
applied consistently, it did not work. The patients were too
polymorphous, variable, complicated and, often, uncooperative. I was
taught that sometimes this was because the patient was "borderline."
Borderlines, I was taught, display pan-anxiety, pan-sexuality, and
polymorphous perversity. Those terms conveyed to me the frustration
generated by the conceptual system.
Even if the "borderline" patients were set aside, the problem persisted.
On the inpatient wards, the norm was extensive comorbidity. I have been
thinking about this problem for twenty-one years, and have devised a
solution for it, which I call the trauma model. The purpose of this book
is to define the problem of comorbidity, and then to describe its
solution through the trauma model. The trauma model is a comprehensive,
testable scientific theory of mental illness.
The polydiagnostic patient with extensive comorbidity is the major
recipient of inpatient psychiatric treatment. In managed care terms,
this is the high-cost, high-utilization, high-recidivism patient. There
is no scientific model in psychiatry which accounts for this patient,
even though he or she is the major consumer of psychiatric services. The
dominant model in contemporary psychiatry is the single gene-single
disease model. Insurance policies which have expanded their coverage for
serious mental illness include disorders assumed to be distinct genetic
biomedical brain diseases within contemporary psychiatry; schizophrenia,
unipolar and bipolar depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and
substance abuse.
Yet, the patients requiring expensive psychiatric care, for the most
part, do not fit the single gene-single disease model. They meet DSM-IV-TR
(American Psychiatric Association, 2000) criteria for many different
disorders and are often given many different clinical diagnoses over
time. The separate diseases model simply cannot account for the clinical
data. The problem of comorbidity, from a financial perspective, is the
core clinical problem in psychiatry. The solution for the problem of
comorbidity adopted by psychiatry over the next ten years will set the
tone for research, theory, clinical practice and health care coverage in
the twenty-first century. In this book, I propose the trauma model as a
scientifically testable solution to the problem of comorbidity.
In the first section of the book, the clinical origins and a formal
scientific statement of the problem of comorbidity are presented. In the
second section, key assumptions of the model are outlined in detail. The
third section begins with a description of some general principles of
the model, then takes up each of the major sections of DSM-IV-TR. In
each of these chapters I describe the specific research predictions
arising from the trauma model. These are divided into subsections on
phenomenology, natural history, epidemiology, twin and adoption studies,
biology, treatment outcome, and revisions to DSM-IV-TR.
In the fourth section of the book, trauma therapy is described. The
basic principles and techniques in the psychotherapy of the extensively
comorbid patient are outlined. These tend to be cognitive-behavioral in
form. As in the rest of the book, the therapy is grounded in relevant
bodies of science wherever possible. The testability of the therapy is
dealt with in the separate chapters of the previous section.
In the final chapter, the trauma model is discussed from the perspective
of the structure of scientific revolutions (Kuhn, 1962). Adoption of the
trauma model by mainstream psychiatry would represent a major paradigm
shift. At present, the trauma model is marginalized and has no impact on
the majority of research, clinical practice and theory in psychiatry.
This fact presents an interesting opportunity for anyone interested in
scientific paradigm shifts. Major paradigm shifts do not occur every
decade in a given field, or even every century. Here we have one in
progress. Or, alternatively, one that will fail. Either way, the fate of
the trauma model will provide interesting lessons about the balance of
science and politics in psychiatry.
I have made no effort to be comprehensive in my references because there
is no point. Since the trauma model is a general model of mental
illness, I would have to master and reference the literatures on all the
major sections of DSM-IV-TR, in order to be comprehensive. That is an
impossible task. Fortunately, it is also an irrelevant task. The purpose
of the book is to outline the model and the specific scientific
predictions that follow from it, then describe the principles of trauma
therapy. I have therefore decided not to be exhaustive in my referencing
of the content of psychiatry. The reader can consult any of the major
comprehensive textbooks of psychiatry for this content. For an inventory
of measures relevant to the predictions of the trauma model, I refer the
reader to the Handbook of Psychiatric Measures (Pincus, Rush, First, and
McQueen, 2000).
The references in this book are illustrative only. I have used my own
published research to illustrate some points because I am familiar with
it, and because it was carried out within the trauma model. Particular
data are used only to illustrate the logic of the model, not to prove
it.
The trauma model is constructed to be falsifiable. Therefore it could be
wrong. That is how it is with scientific models. Ideological objections
to the model are irrelevant. What counts are the data. There will be no
single crucial experiment. The predictions of the trauma model
potentially lead to numerous Ph.D. theses and research publications.
Only after a body of data has accumulated will the theory be either
proven or rejected. The most likely scientific outcome is that a bit of
both will occur; the theory will be proven, but modifications will be
required.
The origins of the trauma model are in my work with comorbid patients
over the last twenty-one years. They are my teachers. I thank them for
presenting the problem in such poignant and compelling form. I thank
also the many other professionals who have taken trauma seriously as a
theme in psychiatry. The trauma model as I have constructed it draws on
the work of many different people. If there is to be a paradigm shift in
psychiatry, it will be due to the collective work of many individuals.
My task here is to present a unified, testable summation of this
collective effort.
In Schizophrenia: an Innovative Approach to Diagnosis and Treatment,[15] Ross determines that some patients diagnosed with schizophrenia have symptoms related to dissociative identity disorder.[16]
The family conditions during infancy are at present considered virtually irrelevant in the psychiatric profession.[17] According to some critics, the goal of modern psychiatric treatment is not to understand how parents could have contributed to the problem or how it can be resolved by improving the relationship. The objective is how to reduce the burden of a psychotic crisis for the family through medication of the disturbed individual. As two trauma researchers have put it, "the ideology of biological reductionism" in psychiatry is "to exonerate the family."[18]
In 2006 a UK researcher and a New Zealand clinical psychologist presented a meta-analysis of schizophrenia studies[19] to psychiatric conferences which they claimed demonstrated that the prevalence of physical and sexual abuse in the histories of those with schizophrenia is very high and is being under-studied.
The researchers admit that not all schizophrenics suffered trauma, but they believe "the level of actual abuse may be an important difference". While conceding that genetics may still be a causative risk factor they maintain "other evidence shows that genes alone do not cause the illness." The review caused considerable debate[20][21]
In the field of criminology, Lonnie Athens developed a theory of how a process of brutalization by parents or peers that usually occurs in childhood results in violent crimes in adulthood. Richard Rhodes' Why They Kill describes Athens' observations about domestic and societal violence in the criminals' backgrounds. Both Athens and Rhodes reject the genetic inheritance theories.[22]
Other criminologists such as Jonathan Pincus and Dorothy Otnow Lewis believe that, although it is the interaction of childhood abuse and neurological disturbances that explains murder, virtually all of the 150 murderers they studied over a 25-year period had suffered severe abuse as children. Pincus believes that the only feasible remedy for crime would be the prevention of child abuse.[23]
See also
-
APOCALYPSE NOW - THE HORROR OF THE
BRANDO KURTZ SPLIT EGO
AND THE TRAUMA THAT SPLITS IT CREATING DID AND MPD
- ENERGY ENHANCEMENT Meditation, Shaman + Integrated Soul Personality, Fragmentation, MPD + DID, Psychology; Pt 1 of 3
EE Meditation, Shaman + Integrated Soul Personality, Fragmentation, MPD + DID, Psychology; Pt 1 of 3 There is in every person the possibility of an integrated Soul Personality. However,...
- ENERGY ENHANCEMENT Meditation, Shaman + Integrated Soul Personality, Fragmentation, MPD + DID, Psychology; Pt 2 of 3
EE Meditation, Shaman + Integrated Soul Personality, Fragmentation, MPD + DID, Psychology; Pt 2 of 3 There is in every person the possibility of an integrated Soul Personality. However, normally the average person is split to a greater or lesser degree, dependent upon the amount of pain, trauma and undigested stress in their lives and dependent upon the amount of work they have done to integrate their personalities by means of therapy and meditation. Therapy and psychology allow intellectual appreciation of the problem in ourselves and others. It takes meditation to heal the splits and integrate the separated selves.- ENERGY ENHANCEMENT Meditation, Shaman + Integrated Soul Personality, Fragmentation, MPD + DID, Psychology; Pt 3 of 3
EE Meditation, Shaman + Integrated Soul Personality, Fragmentation, MPD + DID, Psychology; Pt 3 of 3 There is in every person the possibility of an integrated Soul Personality. Colin Ross (Ross, 1997) lists 11 dissociative features of the Shamen work, and relates each to Dissociative Identity Disorder or Splitting. These parallelisms are worth mentioning here, as they further ground the experiences of Split patients in a milieu that is pathological by reference to the abilities of Shamen which are integrated and real: - ENERGY ENHANCEMENT Meditation, Shaman + Integrated Soul Personality, Fragmentation, MPD + DID, Psychology; Pt 1 of 3
-
ENERGY ENHANCEMENT Meditation and the Kundalini Kriyas grounding Multiple Personalities, DID + MPD
EE Meditation and the Kundalini Kriyas grounding Multiple Personalities, DID + MPD This is the second article after an Introduction on Split Personality using Shamen to illustrate the concept... -
Myth AND ENERGY ENHANCEMENT Meditation Analysis of King Kong, Lord Of The Rings, Beauty + The Beast Indicating DID + MPD
Myth Meditation Analysis of King Kong, Lord Of The Rings, Beauty + The Beast Indicating DID + MPD The movie of King Kong is an elaborate allegory of spiritual evolution so we can understand... - ALL SATCHIDANAND ARTICLES
- Attachment in children
- Biomedical model
- Biopsychiatry controversy
- Complex post-traumatic stress disorder
- Dissociation (psychology)
- Hearing Voices Movement
- John Bowlby provides the theoretical platform on which the trauma model is built
- Paraphrenia
- Psychohistorical views on infanticide
- Refrigerator mother - Psychogenic theory of autism
References
- ^ Cassidy, J., & Shaver, P., (Eds). (1999) Handbook of Attachment: Theory, Research, and Clinical Applications. Guilford Press, NY
- ^ Main, M. & Hesse, E. (1990). "Parents' unresolved traumatic experiences are related to infant disorganized attachment status: Is frightened and/or frightening parental behavior the linking mechanism?" In Greenberg, M., Cicchetti, D., and Cummings, M. (Eds.), Attachment In The Preschool Years: Theory, Research, and Intervention. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- ^ Lilienfeld, Scott (1995). "Will the real pseudoscientists please stand up?". Skeptical Inquirer November/December: 45.
- ^ Hahlweg, K; et al. (2000). "Familienbetreuung als verhaltenstherapeutischer Ansatz zur Ruckfallprophylaxe bei schizophrenen Patienten", in M. Krausz, D. Naber (eds.) Integrative Schizophrenietherapie. Freiburg: Karger.
- ^ [1] - article on Theodore Lidz
- ^ associazionesilvanoarieti.org - page on Arieti (mostly in Italian)
- ^ Kendler, K; et al. (2000). "Childhood sexual abuse and adult psychiatric and substance use disorders in women". Archives of General Psychiatry 57 (10): 953–959. doi:10.1001/archpsyc.57.10.953. PMID 11015813.
- ^ Mullen, P. E.; et al. (1993). "Childhood sexual abuse and mental health in adult life". British Journal of Psychiatry 163: 721–32. doi:10.1192/bjp.163.6.721. PMID 8306113.
- ^ Davies, Emma; Jim Burdett (2004). "Preventing 'schizophrenia': creating the conditions for saner societies" in Read et al., Models of Madness. Routledge.
- ^ Piper, August (1998). "Multiple personality disorder: witchcraft survives in the twentieth century". Skeptical Inquirer May/June.
- ^ Arieti, Silvano (1994). Interpretation of Schizophrenia. Aronson. p. 197.
- ^ [2] - article by Lloyd deMause
- ^ [3] - John Modrow’s book
- ^ [4] - Colin Ross' web site
- ^ Colin, Ross (2004). Schizophrenia: An Innovative Approach to Diagnosis and Treatment. Haworth Press.
- ^ [5] Ross’ book on schizophrenia
- ^ Johnstone, Lucy (1993). "Family management in "schizophrenia": its assumptions and contradictions". Journal of Mental Health 2: 255–69. doi:10.3109/09638239309003771.
- ^ Aderhold, Volkmar; Evelyn Gottwalz (2004). Family therapy and schizophrenia: replacing ideology with openness” in Read et al., Models of Madness. Routledge.
- ^ Read J, van Os J, Morrison AP, Ross CA (November 2005). "Childhood trauma, psychosis and schizophrenia: a literature review with theoretical and clinical implications". Acta Psychiatr Scand 112 (5): 330–50. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0447.2005.00634.x. PMID 16223421.
- ^ "Media report of sexual abuse as cause of schizophrenia". http://www.scienceagogo.com/news/20060514024158data_trunc_sys.shtml. Retrieved 2009-04-15.
- ^ "Maudsley debate on sexual abuse as a cause of schizophrenia". http://www.iop.kcl.ac.uk/podcast/?id=208&type=item. Retrieved 2009-04-15.
- ^ Rhodes, Richard (2000). Why They Kill: The Discoveries of a Maverick Criminologist. Vintage. ISBN 0375402497.
- ^ Pincus, Jonathan (2002). Base Instincts: What Makes Killers Kill. W.W. Norton & Company. ISBN 039305022X.
External links
- Alice-Miller.com - According to Miller, the "forbidden issue" is the parental role in mental disorders
- LaingSociety.org - The Society for Laingian Studies, R.D. Laing (1927–1989)
- MosherSoteria.com - Loren Mosher, MD, (1933–2004)
- Prof J.J. Freyd's Betrayal Trauma Theory Home Page at the University of Oregon
- Psychohistory.com - The Institute for Psychohistory
- Rossinst.com - Home page of the Ross Institute for Psychological Trauma