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PROBLEMS,
ISSUES, AND SOLUTIONS
FROM A NATURAL
THERAPY VIEWPOINT
(For
further info on what natural psychotherapy is all about
please click here
and go to the Home Page)
ADDICTIONS, ALCOHOLISM, ETC.
Addictions are not diseases!
Addiction consists of learned and habitualized decisions
to give in to seemingly overwhelming urges.
In addictions - whether work addictions, drug,
alcohol, or cigarette and smoking addictions - one wishes to escape from
painful feelings and have good ones.
One is focused on making the present moment better -
this instant, now!
The immediate goal of every addiction is to "magically" substitute good
feelings of pleasure for one's bad feelings of stress and emotional
pain.
Most, so-called addicts, are just people who have not
learned to let the moment of desire pass.
They give in to momentary
feelings and give themselves reasons to continue with their addiction.
They think: I'll just do it one more time. Now is not the right
time to fight the urge. It's too much stress. I'll change tomorrow,
etc., etc.
****
For those in natural therapy it is easier to let
the moment pass because they realize they are on the road to find
and practice the naturally induced, self-enhancing and lasting highs of
genuine good feelings and genuine well-being.
In natural therapy everyone can indeed learn how
to accomplish genuine good feelings.
One finally realizes that in order to have genuine
good feelings, one needs to give up the unnatural, temporary highs of
damaging drugs and of destructive living.
CLICK HERE for CONTACT INFORMATION
****
The (false) good feelings of the so-called addictions:
Why do people decide to pursue the beckoning of the
addictive moment?
To a large degree because in such moments,
often under the influence of others, one decides just to get flooded
with good feelings, to experience the pleasures and delights
of the habitualized, automatic behavior labeled "addiction."
And, at the same time, one wishes to believe that the addicted state is really a good one;
the only available surcease of suffering and pain.
In such the futile quest of the addiction, one
generally "just doesn't care about" the harmful effects of the addictive substance,
the
addictive situation, or addictive behavior.
The serious eventual harm to oneself is denied!
And also denied is the serious harm to
others, especially the emotional pain and actual damage to those one
claims to love.
While in the midst of an addictive state, the
cessation of one's emotional suffering and spiritual emptiness is all
one cares about. And the "good feelings" with which one gets flooded are
all that is emphasized and focused on.
Addictions are thus active and perpetual states of
simultaneous pleasure pursuit, coupled with actual commitment to current, but short-lived intense pleasures.
* * *
Also, while in an addicted state, many are convinced
that they cannot stop the addictive behavior.
And in fact,
addicts are
convinced that without the addictive behavior life would become drab,
unbearably boring and too painful to be continued. They are totally
unaware of what a natural high is.
They just can't imagine what it would be like
to be free of the spiritual dependence, and often, actual emotional enslavement to
the addiction.
And mostly, they choose not to even try to imagine
this.
And behind
this seeming stubbornness of the adherence to the tenacious pursuit of
pleasure and cessation of suffering, there is often rage, fear and terror.
And it is this state that of course needs to be understood
and resolved in the course of therapy.
In nicotine addiction, for example, one gets essentially
caught up in smoking without clear, careful thinking; in alcoholism, one
gets caught up in drinking without thinking, and
so forth for all the behaviors one feels compelled to continue.
One can also get addicted to negative habits and
ways of thinking.
Thus, one can repeat behaviors and habits and
then feel that one's repetitions are caused by addiction. Some
habitually complain a lot, find fault a lot, seek perfection,
indulge in self-sabotage, indulge in guilt feelings and
self-recriminations, or addictively indulge in depressing self-talk.
Though
many (for example, those who use heroin, crack, nicotine, certain
foods, certain prescription drugs) are often conscious of the
long-term harmful effects, they see only worse suffering as the price
for stopping the addiction.
And most people just have not yet acquired the habit
(which they learn in natural therapy) of thinking in calm, reflective
and critical ways of the physical, psychological and spiritual positive
and negative effects the addiction causes them and others.
And most addicts are ignorant of the real, natural
ways of getting high on
creative well-being; they only become aware of
that possibility when they start natural psychotherapy.
And till they find out how be naturally high, many
choose an addictive substance or addictive behavior because it helps
them feel that they are OK. They believe that they are not responsible
for their actions and the quality of their relationships and their
environment.
Magical Distractions:
While addicted, most get "magically" distracted
from what is really negative in their lives.
Temporary analgesic and pleasurable effects are always
powerful distractions.
Most choose the distractions so that they can continue
to deny the need to face and resolve certain very real painful,
harmful, frightening or dangerous conditions in their lives.
And often the addiction, such as a sexual
addiction or the seemingly compulsive behavior of a sex offender, is
actually a symbolic and metaphoric way to deal with real
suffering in one's every-day life that one has not dealt with
constructively.
The addiction thus is an escape, an analgesic that temporarily
not only alleviates suffering but also brings pleasures. Yet, in the
long run addictions generally compound suffering. And the
pleasures fade and disappear.
What of course is necessary is active
and fully responsible recognition and resolution of one's persistent and
very real problems in living.
* * * * *
Moving from short-lived highs of an addiction to the
long-term highs of
natural happiness and well-being:
To attain a life of continued
well-being, one needs to face (almost always with the help of a caring,
compassionate and experienced guide and partner such as a natural
therapist) one's frightening state of denying the real horrors,
the psychological enslavements and lack of self-empowerment one may have gotten into.
One certainly does not need some "professional" as "helper" who
will drug one even more - even if the drug is called medication, and
even if the urging to become a passive, blindly obedient, complying
"patient" is called "treatment."
For many who have become habitualized to addictive
behaviors or substances, the addictive habits seem to be one's only option.
And in natural therapy, as in all constructive addiction therapies, one is enabled
to start to realize that the addiction can become an
escape that leads
to Nowhere.
A Nowhere of
failed personal relationships, work impairment, general psychological or
physical deterioration, and even death, of oneself or others.
*****
Once that
harsh reality of one's addiction is realistically, calmly, responsibly faced and
gently thought about, the
door is open for natural psychotherapy to be of help in making one's
life free and considerably happier.
One can make a constructive choice: to commit to
learn new ways, ways that lead to the perpetual natural highs of
creative well-being.
*****
And with a serious addiction, natural
therapy may need to be complemented with a concomitant change to an
addiction-free living and work environment as well as participation in
constructive group
support, such as Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous.
And gradually, in natural therapy, most discover that
an addiction-free, naturally happy life can be deeply satisfying - forever.
They discover that an alternative, addiction-free,
psychologically fulfilling and love-filled existence can make one feel
as if on a continuous high; a life-long creative and productive high of
being in a state of natural happiness.
And what does such a "high" empower one to produce?
One's own coming fully alive, one's own unique creative and naturally
happy life!
Top of page
CLICK HERE for CONTACT INFORMATION
ANGER and ANGER MANAGEMENT:
The Nature of Anger:
When angry, most people desire to hurt someone they
feel has wronged them, insulted them or hurt them. And when they just act out
their desire for revenge, they can become violent and destructive,
belligerent, relentlessly fault-finding, wrathful or
bitter.
If they suppress or deny the natural reaction
of feeling anger, the feeling of anger can simmer and wreak havoc with
their psychological and physical well being.
If they act out their anger through outbursts
of temper and rage it may disturb their physical well-being and health
and, in fact, stir up more anger in them and escalate into ever-angrier
exchanges with others.
Natural Anger Management:
On the other hand, if people use their natural feeling
of anger, not for more anger-arousing thoughts and fantasies, nor for
angry actions such as retaliation, nor for an excuse to take drugs or
"medications" they can use their angry feelings constructively and in a natural way.
HOW?
They can use the feelings of anger as
a signal for the need to evaluate in a thorough and calm
manner the context and nature of the situations and relations that
caused the anger.
And then, they can plan which
approaches and actions would be in their best short-term and long-term interest.
In other words, they
can learn anger management: how to (1) manage their feelings of anger
so as to improve the quality of their life, and
how to (2) manage their thoughts, acts and behavioral expressions of anger
in order to improve their life. They are thus really learning how
to manage their life in better ways: Anger management
thus basically is life management.
And in natural therapy
this is done by the practice of active and constructive
problem solving conversation with the natural therapist.
They learn how to to
become free from anger-arousing situations by substituting new
constructive solutions for their old patterns of blame of others
or blame of self.
They learn to free themselves naturally rather than with drugs from crippling and damaging denial of
justified anger. They learn how to free themselves from temper outbursts
of anger and rage. They learn and practice how to be themselves.
* * *
Analysis of the causes of one's feeling of anger can
be complicated because people often displace their anger from those who
may have actually harmed or wronged them, to others who are innocent and
whom they use as scapegoats.
And often, people misconstrue that others have wronged
them, when actually they may not have. And often also, people
misconstrue the behavior of others as being good, when in actuality it
is quite bad since they are being wronged, hurt and harmed by those
others.
* * *
Anger thus is a powerful emotion that
can be one's best friend or worst enemy:
Anger an enemy if it becomes impulsive acting
out.
Anger a friend if it is seen a a signal, a
wake-up call, for constructive and
practical planning.
* * *
One often forgotten source of feeling anger may be a
desire to avoid facing problems by generating anger about other situations -
situations one cannot do
anything about.
This kind of diversion to situations other than the
ones that need to be improved, occurs if one indulges in focusing on
past suffering or on current issues one cannot change.
Such diversion also occurs if one does what is very
common in our society - one expects instant and perfect performance in
situations in which learning over time is realistically necessary to do
well.
Using Feelings of Anger Constructively:
Anger is also often generated by frustration in
relationships - feelings of disappointment, injustice, deprivation, hopelessness,
humiliation, shame, or fear.
If one is radically honest about the real roots of
one's angry feelings, one can often find intense and long-existing frustration behind the
anger. This is the point at which one can finally free oneself from the
pervasive anger or rage.
How?
One can learn how to make intelligent and
fully responsible decisions
and choices about issues that need to be addressed rather than evaded
by
distracting oneself by indulging in angry behaviors and actions.
And it is at this point that natural psychotherapy
can be of definite help.
Natural therapy can help one decide whether the
situation can be dealt with realistically and constructively, or not.
If not, then one can learn how to let go of it, move
on, and not focus on it.
If, on the
other hand, one can deal with the anger arousing issues calmly, responsibly
and realistically, then one can focus on what one can actually
do and what the situation realistically and morally calls for.
One can practice how to calmly evaluate and discuss one's
angry
feelings and refrain from angry actions.
Sometimes
this new and alternative approach may require dialogue, sometimes self-assertion, sometimes
actual force and assertive action, and sometimes avoidance of a
relationship or situation, and most often, a combination of these
approaches.
Interestingly, once one has enacted these choices
responsibly and constructively, it is almost impossible to stay angry.
Then, the impulse to act with anger will remain just
that - an impulse - and the otherwise devastating effects of intense or
lingering feeling of anger and desire to act out one's anger will
disappear, over time.
Natural psychotherapy thus focuses on the importance
of using feelings of anger in constructive and responsible ways so that
one truly improves the quality of one's life.
CLICK HERE for CONTACT INFORMATION
THE ROLES OF ANGER IN GOOD AND IN POOR RELATIONSHIPS:
If the anger is not
just an escape and has to do with real issues in a relationship, this means something
very specific.
In a good relationship it means using the feeling of
anger as a signal to
talk honestly and constructively - and absolutely without blame.
In such
conversation with the person who makes one feel angry one learns
calmly to talk about what it was that made us feel so angry.
In a relationship that is basically not good this may
not be possible. Thus in a situation in which the other person doesn't
care at all about what we may or may not like, and may in fact be glad
that we are angry or that we suffer, something else may be called for.
Then it may be important to face that truth and free
oneself from what may have been a harmful, truly damaging,
anger-arousing relationship from way back.
Though angry and disappointed in such an
event, one may also be grateful that one finally sees the truth
that one's anger correctly points to.
The feeling of anger can help
one remove the veil from one's eyes and leave a relationship that
regularly disturbs one's equanimity and well-being.
In such a damging situation
the
truth can really make us free - free to
continue self-growth and the development of a joyful and spiritually
fulfilling life - a life of natural happiness.
However, in a good relationship, whether friendship,
work relationship, marital interaction, couple relation or any social interaction,
feelings of anger can be used as a signal to assert oneself, to start constructive,
non-angry, problem-solving dialogue.
In authentic, responsible relationships of good
will one can avoid using actions of anger destructively and the anger
as signal can truly help.
One can learn to avoid expressing anger
destructively through actions which hurt the other psychologically or
physically: temper outbursts, blaming, name-calling, insults,
fault-finding, withdrawal, letting it simmer, leaving the
relationship, compulsive complaining, etc.
Using feelings of anger constructively as a signal to think, to calmly
evaluate, to talk and act in responsible and moral ways are possible,
but experienced as very difficult
tasks for most people.
Such a positive and constructive approach is probably one of the hardest
achievements to attain for some, until they actually learn how to do it.
And interestingly, they find out in natural
psychotherapy, often for the first time, that anger management is a
very necessary skill to have if one strives for greater well-being
and happiness. And fortunately it is a learnable skill.
And further, they find out that they do not need
drugs, alcohol, or "medications" to handle their anger constructively.
They find out that anger management
skills and better life-management skills can be acquired through the natural learning processes of
natural psychotherapy.
Top of page
ANXIETY
The Nature of Anxiety:
What it is
Anxiety is simply a warning that something in one's
life has gone - or is about to go - amiss. It is a signal that a problem
has gone unattended, often suppressed from conscious awareness or just
denied.
While anxiety is unpleasant, and severe anxiety most
unpleasant and painful, anxiety always represents an opportunity to examine those
elements of one's psychological life that have been left un-addressed.
Anxiety is a call to pay attention, to become
aware, to become conscious of problems one needs to deal with
constructively.
The Treatment of Anxiety:
How to Cure Anxiety Constructively
The best treatment and cure of anxiety and panic
attacks still is psychotherapy. But for anxiety therapy to really work
and not just to mask the symptoms the best approach
to cure anxiety is psychotherapy without
psychiatric drugging, street drugging, or alcohol.
Natural therapy of anxiety brings relief and cure:
Real relief of anxiety not only in the present, but long term cure of
painful anxiety and panic as well.
CLICK HERE for CONTACT INFORMATION
Top of page
AUTOMATICITY
Some are dominated by their impulses and others by
ideas as to what they "should" and "should not" do, or even think or
feel.
An Automatic "should" can so dominate one's life that
all can appear bleak, boring and depressing.
What "should" I do? is the
question a person dominated by the "Tyranny of the Shoulds" asks
automatically. And then, many a person will automatically, and without
thinking, repeat a learned automatic
command, or will automatically obey and carry out whatever he or she has
been taught by one's family or culture.
Such automatic responses are quite different from a
creative response to a more thoughtful question: What do I really
deeply desire and want?
Here one has to step back before answering: one has to think, evaluate,
deliberate and then choose what one wishes and what one thinks
and judges to be in one's best
interest.
It is important to keep in mind that a person dominated by impulses and
automatic stereotyped responses in situations that require judgment and
evaluation will eventually experience life in as bleak, boring,
frightening, threatening, and depressing.
Top of page
BIPOLAR DISORDER
So-called bipolar disorders are characterized by
pervasive and intense moodiness, going to extremes between optimism and
pessimism, elation and dejection, manic hopefulness and depressive
hopelessness.
In such labile emotional states, the constraints of
one's social world, one's economic situation, socio-cultural and
religious ways of life, and consideration of what is prudent, are ignored
- often in extreme ways.
In the manic phase of a bipolar disorder one can become swayed
into foolhardy, socially inappropriate, extremely unacceptable, illegal
and self-damaging actions.
If one has, over time, become
habituated to such ups and downs in mood and the socially inappropriate acting out
during a "high", such a state of behavior and manic mood has become
labeled as mania or manic disorder.
During an intense mood disorder a person may feel powerless to resist not only the
intense feelings of depression, elation, or manic actions, but
also may feel powerless to resist the urge to act on these
experiences of overpowering emotions - whether feelings of despair and
depression, or feelings of "anything goes" adventure and boldness.
At
such times, natural therapy can help.
Natural therapy's in-depth understanding, together with calm and mutually agreed
limit
setting, in
an
atmosphere
of empathy, care and love, can have dramatic therapeutic effects.
In some cases (as
in insistent suicidal, homicidal, "manic," or mutilating behaviors) tranquilizing drugs may be necessary
on a temporary basis. Drugs prescribed for just a few days often achieve initial calming of the
very intense feelings and urges to act out.
Thereafter, with the
calm reassurance of natural psychotherapy real healing of the inner
emotional turmoil resulting from an understanding of the
psychological reasons for the very intense
emotions, can take place. And mostly does. (see also DEPRESSION)
Thus,
if one is committed to natural psychotherapy one can learn how to achieve positive, constructive and
lasting resolution of the so-called bipolar disorders, manic disorders,
as well as of the disabling mood swings of the mood disorders.
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BRAIN SURGERY
Brain surgery should obviously never be performed as a
substitute for psychotherapy.
Such procedures should only be used
if medically called for to treat otherwise untreatable organic,
physically demonstrable
disturbances of the brain, such as tumors, abscesses, hematomas,
certain head trauma, etc.
CARE AND LOVE
What every human being wants and needs to give and to
receive on a regular basis. When people don't give or receive care and
love they become angry, sad, suspicious and often violent.
CHEMICAL IMBALANCES
The professional and popular literature is replete
with references to chemical imbalances. Empirical research does not
support the popular idea that generally chemical imbalances precede and cause
psychological disturbance or disorders.
The facts are the opposite:
Psychological problems and situations that
are not in balance can cause chemical imbalances and bio-social problems.
* * *
Thus, there are no chemical imbalances causally preceding psychological and
social problems, oppression or injustice.
Any chemical or physiological
disturbances or imbalances that exist, generally follow and do not precede
one's
psychosocial problems.
And, of course, there are no laboratory tests in existence for
the so called "chemical imbalances" supposed to cause "mental illness."
If anyone claims such a lab test exists and that anyone can take
such a laboratory test, get
the name of it and send an e-mail with the information to Dr. Riss, and
he'll have it checked out by a qualified professional and let you know
if the test is valid.
Top of page
COMPULSIONS
Habits which one feels that one is compelled to do and
repeat. Actually these habits are unconsciously chosen to distract one
from solving serious problems one has. Compulsions are often metaphors
of one's un-faced and unsolved problem.
CREATIVE IMAGINATION
The imagination is creative when one lets it be free,
playful, original, inventive, and at the same time, expressive of,
and guided by truth and by the realities of one's life.
And it is especially important to use one's
imagination creatively when focusing on the important life task of
discovering, developing and then fulfilling one's true self.
CRYPTIC SYMBOLIZATION AND COMMUNICATION
A symbol's meaning can be clear and understood, or the meaning can be
hidden and cryptic. The same with communication: a person can
communicate clearly by means of words and concepts those around her
understand, or communicate with symbols that are cryptic and that need
to be interpreted.
DELUSIONS AND
HALLUCINATIONS
In natural psychotherapy, delusions and
hallucinations are regarded as natural adaptational responses and not,
as they have been mainly regarded throughout history, expressions of
"psychiatric diseases" or of the "devil" or "gods".
Why have they been regarded strange, "crazy," or
"supernatural"? They
appear these ways because generally their meanings are hidden; they are
cryptic, their meanings are denied, secret and mystifying.
However, in the safety of a clarifying and self-empowering
psychotherapeutic situation all one's hallucinations and
delusions can be discussed, explored
and gradually understood. They come to be understood as what they
are: creative skills and not failings; strengths of the creative
imagination and not diseases to be squelched
by psychiatric drugs!
In natural psychotherapy delusions and hallucinations are seen as
adaptive
and imaginative responses that can be either expressive and constructive, or just
expressive.
Delusions are considered as the cognitive, and
hallucinations as the perceptive responses by imaginative and creative people to
heightened emotions or to overwhelming stress.
Both are adaptive expressive responses when, like
weeping, temper outbursts or grief, they express the emotions that are
overwhelming but that are relieved by the emotional release.
They are
adaptively expressive and constructive when they ameliorate
overwhelming feelings and counteract painful experiences in the
manner that emotions aroused by humor, music, drama or religion
do: by evoking good and comforting feelings while clarifying the very
painful problems from which one suffers.
Thus, through therapy even
frightening and terrorizing hallucinations or delusions can be
understood and used constructively to improve one's life situation.
The cognitive aspects of delusions and the
perceptual ones of hallucinations are always based on some realistic
features of reality and on some illusory ones.
In natural psychotherapy both the negative and
positive aspects are explored in terms of their psychosocial effects on
oneself and on others.
And in natural therapy they are further explored in terms of
temporal factors - whether they are immediate and current responses to
overwhelming stress, or whether they have become habitual and automatic
over time and are rooted in one's personal, family, or cultural history.
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Top of page
DEPRESSION FACTS AND
INFORMATION:
Depression is Not a
Medical Disease:
What depression is:
Depression is a bio-psycho-social reaction to a
depressing situation. But, it is not a disease - as so many
psychiatrists claim.
And the best remedy for depression is psychotherapy.
All types of depression - no matter how severe - can be successfully treated with
psychotherapy.
Alternative Treatment and
Therapy for Depression
Work:
The Depression and Panic
Treatment Center of New York uses
holistic alternative treatment and therapy for depression, panic and
anxiety.
It
does not use medication, or any kind of drugs in its effective
healing processes. And the important facts are that psychotherapy for
depression is the best treatment; it consistently brings positive results.
*****
In natural psychotherapy depression is not
regarded as a medical disease; depression is seen as what research shows it to be: a natural and expected normal
emotional biological and psychological
reaction to depressing situations.
Depression is a clear signal that something
constructive needs to be done to alleviate and treat one's depression
situation.
*****
Depression
can be immediately alleviated and then completely cured with
constructive holistic therapy! Depression therapy brings positive
results.
Thus, although depression is a real and
very
painful experience, depression can be both
alleviated and completely cured by psychotherapy.
Psychotherapy
for depression works not only for mild and moderate depression, but
psychotherapy works successfully for even the most severe forms of
clinical depression that have resisted other treatments.
HOW?
To be alleviated and then to be cured, depression must be
conceptualized as what the evidence shows it to be.
In natural and holistic therapy depression is always
conceptualized as a signal
that one should respect and attend to.
This means putting as much
effort as necessary into exploring which factors in one's life
underlie feeling sad, helpless, hopeless, down, and in despair.
Thus it is always important to get to understand
the depressing aspects of one's life, one's situation and one's total
environment.
WHY?
Understanding is far better than masking
depression with drugs.
It is better to get the facts that can
help, rather than hiding
what is going on from oneself by seeking the false quick fixes
seemingly offered
by street drugs, prescription drugs, alcohol or false hopes.
* * * * *
The scientific evidence now is overwhelming that depression is
not a physical disease or illness; the evidence is clear that depression therapy truly
works.
*( Please read the recent excellent review article
of what depression really involves:
"The bright side of being blue: depression as an adaptation for
analyzing complex problems" by Paul W. Andrews and J. Anderson
Thomson, Jr. that appeared in the Psychological Review,
2009, Vol. 116, No. 3, 620-654 )
The misinformation that depression is a
physical disease, is based on the
bad science, the illogical thoughts and the arrogance
of the psychiatric community and the greed of the pharmaceutical industry.
In mild depression one feels down in the dumps,
lethargic and blue.
In severe depression there is an intense and all-consuming
feeling of loss, of lack, of dark despair, regret and guilt that one has
done something "wrong." One is convinced that one has reached a dead
end, has run out of options, is physically sick, and deteriorating.
Often severely depressed people feel that the spark of life has gone out,
they feel nothing, just lifeless. They feel empty and hopeless! They
feel dead!
And often the meaning behind feeling
dead is symbolic of "not being" - not being and not
living as the human beings they really are: persons empowered to shape,
and actually shaping life in meaningful,
loving, fulfilling ways.
Natural therapy - focused on constructive, positive
psychological change - can help depressed people come alive
again.
Holistic therapy for depression is a thoroughly natural
depression treatment
that can bring long lasting positive results.
And most important, natural and holistic treatment and therapy of
depression provides healing help that works for severe depression,
moderate depression, and mild depression.
Complete recovery from depression is not only
possible, but with natural psychotherapy is highly probable.
Natural
psychotherapy is the ideal alternative treatment for depression.
And as research shows (see the quote by Antonuccio four paragraphs down
on this page) psychotherapy is the strongest medicine in the treatment of
depression.
The following is the important fact to remember in the
treatment of depression:
Depressed people can actually get rid of their depression by clearly seeing and
patiently learning how "to be." How to
be reborn, how to come alive through the positive acts of life they have
given up, or have never had.
CLICK HERE for CONTACT INFORMATION
The Role of Anger:
Also, in
the throes of a stormy depression or one of total passivity and
withdrawal, there is mostly no awareness of the anger and rage that is
often being
suppressed, denied, and turned back onto oneself. This frequently occurs in the form of
relentless self-blame and guilt. And this is done quite automatically:
one generally has no awareness of the unconscious
destructive agendas at work.
Further, if instead of acting constructively one
stays passive and unaware of the very real and
serious relationship and situational issues behind the depression, then generally one compounds the
already utterly overwhelming conviction of guilt, paralysis and
hopelessness.
* * * * *
Why Psychotherapy
is the Best
Cure for Depression
and Why Medication and
Electroshock are Not Necessary
The current general psychiatric view is that with severe
depression medication or electro-shocking is absolutely necessary if one does not want the
depression to get worse.
However, according to many researchers and
clinicians, and as is so clearly
expressed by Antonuccio, who has done
extensive research on depression, the overwhelming scientific evidence indicates
that "there is no stronger medicine than psychotherapy in the treatment
of depression, even if severe."
If you are now interested
in some of this evidence, I suggest the article by Antonuccio, Danton and
DeNelsky that appeared in The American Psychologist, the official
journal of the American Psychological Association, in 1995 (see reference
on the Readings page), entitled: "Psychotherapy Versus Medication for
Depression: Challenging the Conventional Wisdom With Data."
There is another research finding that indicates why
one should not be using medication, especially for severe
depression.
Research has shown that antidepressants are the most common
agents used in suicide by poison. They also account for over half of the
serious overdoses in adults. Medication, touted as "treatment" may, as Antonuccio, et.al. point out, actually "become the agent of death."
*****
It is important to keep in mind that
natural therapy's self-empowerment and the unlearning of
learned helplessness
in a consistently loving atmosphere of deep caring and utmost respect
are able to help with the process of overcoming
the unconscious resentments underlying depression.
Since natural
therapy focuses on self-empowerment, it is especially effective in helping
one get rid of feelings of helplessness.
People learn how to stop
the ways they have acquired to distract themselves from
the constructive actions they need to take.
* * * * *
Natural therapy is also effective in the treatment of
depression because it does not
further damage the depressed person with the serious and often very
harmful
physical and psychological side effects of antidepressant drugs or the
uses of
electro-shocking, brain implants, various patches, brain surgery etc.
And furthermore, in the process of natural psychotherapy
for depression,
one
learns how to
restore one's inner strengths and natural resilience.
One learns how to cope constructively and
decisively with the
psychological problems, the emotional distress, the exploitation, injustice, conflicts, dilemmas,
depression-manufacturing habits, self-damaging superstitions, distraction, lies and false assumptions that may be causing and fueling one's
depression and despair.
One can learn how to specifically and regularly
substitute positive, constructive actions to actually become able to rid
oneself of one's feelings of despair, helplessness and hopelessness.
In natural psychotherapy one learns to do this: how
to permanently rid oneself of Holiday Depression, Seasonal
Depression, Early Morning Depression, or
just Daily Depression and Despair.
* * * * *
In natural therapy for
depression one always can
learn
constructive change:
how to move
from one's passive state of depression and panic to an active state of
constructive actions and positive well-being.
Psychotherapy for
depression works; it can provide definite help and truly alleviate one'
suffering!
* * * * *
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ECT
As far as ECT (electro-convulsive-shocking) is concerned, as one
neurologist (Sydney Samant, M.D.) put it:
"As a neurologist and electroencephalographer, I
have seen many patients after ECT, and I have no doubt that ECT produces
effects identical to those of a head injury.
After multiple sessions of ECT, a patient has symptoms
identical to those of a retired, punch-drunk boxer... After a few
sessions of ECT the symptoms are those of moderate cerebral contusion,
and further enthusiastic use of ECT may result in the patient
functioning at a subhuman level. Electroconvulsive therapy in effect may
be defined as a controlled type of brain damage produced by electrical
means."
Has ECT gotten better and less harmful, as many
psychiatrists claim?
According to Peter Breggin, M.D. who has
strong evidence-based views on this, ECT has become more dangerous since the current
doses are larger than those used in earlier clinical and research
studies.
Let us remember ECT is fundamentally traumatic in
nature.
ECT produces delirium and global mental dysfunction, memory loss
and potentially severe neuropathology and brain damage.
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GENETICS AND INHERITANCE
Genetics is the science and study of the mechanisms of
hereditary transmission and variation of biological characteristics. In
genetics, to inherit means to come into possession of biological,
physical characteristic from an ancestor.
It is important to recognize
that what is actually inherited is always a physical characteristic, not
ever a psychological trait or characteristic. Thus a person may have
"high intelligence" if the kinds of brain cells, their structure and
capacity for physiological function are of one type, and may have "low
intelligence" if of another type.
The psychological trait is not
inherited, but the underlying anatomic and physiological characteristics
are inherited, and of course, continually modified and influenced in
their manifestations by the environment. This is elementary, but often forgotten.
When biological psychiatrists speak of schizophrenia,
or depression or any of the so called "psychiatric diseases" as being
inherited they make the mistake of confusing the physical and biological
with a way of life and with the psychological. Actual and
observable biological factors could be inherited
and it would then have to be investigated to what degree.
But the
scientific facts are that a
way of life cannot be inherited. It is learned and acquired and
continually modified by, and interactive with, its environment.
HAPPINESS
MENTAL ILLNESS
Thomas Szasz has maintained that all so-called
"mental illness" is a myth.
And before him, H.S. Sullivan also regarded what is
today called "serious mental illness" like "schizophrenia," as being not
a physical disease, but actually being caused by social and
psychological "problems in living."
Both expressed the conviction in their writings that
these very interpersonal and human problems, respond to interpersonal
and human approaches of therapy.
And both, although doctors of medicine and professors
of psychiatry, had no problem at all in fully accepting and
advancing that important truth in the many scholarly books and articles
they published. (Please see bibliographic section on Sidebar by clicking
Readings).
The basic concepts of natural psychotherapy are based,
to a large degree, on their findings, their very extensive experience,
and their very logical and carefully thought out conclusions that were
confirmed over and over again since then.
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PANIC ATTACK
A panic attack is a severe sudden
experience of intense fear, anxiety, and feeling of impending danger
or doom.
In natural psychotherapy panic attacks are not
regarded as medical disorders but as psychological signals. Therefore,
in natural therapy we speak of "panic signals" rather than "panic
disorders."
These
signals, and the accompanying intense feelings of anxiety, are
conceived as having very important adaptive meaning expressed in
cryptic symbolic form.
Generally, panic attacks can have the following two meanings:
1. They are either a crie du coeur (cry from one's
heart) about serious issues and problems in one's life which one
has not realistically faced and dealt with constructively.
Panic attacks
are signals that one has important problems to solve and important
issues to deal with in constructive ways
2. Or, the intense feelings of panic are an indication that one is making
significant progress and starting to face one's problems. One may then
feel intense panic as one moves along a totally new road toward
totally new territory: Freedom Road toward the new territory of being
truly free, independent and self-reliant.
And, as can be the case with really severe panic
attacks, they may symbolically express both of the following at the
same time:
First, one is on a road that leads to the
realization that one must change. And secondly, one, at the same time,
goes through a state of intense fear.
And the fear is about the "dire consequences" that
may happen if one actually undertakes the necessary constructive and
positive changes to truly improve one's life.
But, even though a panic attack is
experienced as a disorder, and is in fact labeled psychiatrically as a panic disorder, panic attacks are
simply very important signals.
Thus, panic attacks are signals that are actually alerting reactions to move
forward - toward a better and more productive life.
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So what then can you say to yourself that
will help you understand the panic that overwhelms you?
You can remember the following:
Panic attacks are very
powerful, emotional signals and metaphors that tell you that you need
finally to become aware of certain negative aspects of you life, so
that you can resolve them successfully .
They are signals that call attention to aspects
you may have denied and been too
fearful to face, for a long, long time.
In such cases the panic
attack may be an adaptive natural wake-up
call to address your denied problems constructively.
But this can be difficult because the panic attack
is generally characterized by an experience of severe fear and intense
emotions.
The emotions of a panic attack are often so intense
that they can result in powerful and very frightening physical
reactions such as difficulty in breathing, crying, sweating,
palpitations, fainting, etc.
And very often, the scary physical reactions one
experiences during a panic attack then result in new fears - fears
that one has something actually going wrong physically.
But in actuality, of course, the physical reactions
are simply temporary products of one's intense panic.
As with general anxiety, panic is
a call (though
more insistent and frightening) to pay attention!
So please remember:
Panic is not a disease, not a disorder, but a
call to become aware, to become conscious of problems one needs to face
and deal with constructively.
And by having natural therapy you can
fully stop having panic attacks by
learning how to deal with your panic in positive ways. So keep
in mind that natural and holistic treatment and therapy of panic
attacks can truly help on both an immediate basis and for the long
term.
* * *
In natural therapy, panic attacks become less intense
and less frequent as one gets to understand what the panic is all about.
The panic attacks become less frequent as soon as the underlying causes are identified.
As one starts, and
then continues to deal with them in a straightforward, self-caring and
gentle manner positive results start. One's panic ceases, and one's powerful fear that one may get a
panic attack also gets less and less intense.
* * *
But in all situations, it is not advisable to rush or be
impatient.
First of all, it takes time to fully understand the truth
behind one's signal of panic.
Secondly, once one is in touch with what factors may be
behind one's panic attacks, it also takes time to develop a new
perspective.
And lastly, it takes time to practice a more constructive way of life.
It is important to remember that if one
takes the time and focuses on the practice of new and more constructive ways,
one can be assured that one's panic attacks will evaporate and
disappear.
And in sharp contrast to the short-lived quick fixes of
psychiatric drugs or street drugs, the panic attacks are gone forever from
one's life.
But should panic return, one knows how to handle the
attack of panic
in more constructive ways.
Then, if the panic does come back again, one is already practiced in
seeing and understanding that the panic attacks are
signals which need to be interpreted so that one truly
deal with their causes in constructive ways.
Through natural therapy one gets to knows that one's
panic is an adaptive and alerting signal: A signal that one must deal with one's life
crises realistically.
Thus one learns in natural psychotherapy that with the
right help all
crises really can be solved constructively.
And one learns that if one does that, one has no need for the panic
anymore.
Panic attacks will then stop completely.
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PARANOIA
Paranoia is psychiatrically defined as a mental
disease or disorder characterized by delusions of persecution and/or
delusions of grandeur.
But from a natural psychotherapeutic view, paranoia
is neither a disease nor a disorder.
In natural therapy it is understood rather as
historically based in one's childhood and family history and/or in a
present socially and societally oppressive or unjust situation. Usually
it has its roots and causes in very
real and very painful experiences of despair. Experiences in
which one feels alone, not cared for, not loved and not cherished.
People who become paranoid were or are in situations in which, no matter how much one
has been
actually mistreated, one was not, or is not, permitted to voice one's pain,
resentments, rage and despair.
The paranoid person thus feels
despairingly alone, and always in danger of getting further harmed, hurt,
persecuted, damaged, or killed. And, above all - not ever
understood!
As a way of survival, of not getting annihilated,
one becomes suspicious and mistrustful of others.
The paranoid mistrust is a way of assuring one's
survival, in the best way one knows.
It's a powerful emotional attitude of: beware,
be careful, watch your every step!
At times, one becomes very suspicious and frightened
of certain others and at times of all others, including people one used
to feel close to, as well as of strangers.
The world then becomes a dangerous place. One feels
totally alone!
The first goal of natural therapy is to help such a
person to feel understood.
Not questioned, not judged, not "diagnosed" as
abnormal, but totally feeling that it's completely OK to express one's
pervasive suspicions, paranoid convictions and intense rage.
The primary goal is to enable the paranoid person to
simply feel just understood.
It is only after that difficult goal of
being understood and feeling understood begins to be achieved that
the natural therapist can start to become an ally in the battle
"against" the persecutors.
And that is is the time when the actual dialogic, holistic,
natural, psychosocial therapy can begin. But that is generally a
long and difficult road to travel. Yet it can be traveled and
can succeed.
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SCHIZOPHRENIA
The problems, confusion, and false
ideas that prevail in modern biological psychiatry about the
concept of "schizophrenia" cannot be ignored if one wishes to
have a balanced and realistic view of the experience of "madness" or
what has been labeled schizophrenia.
There of course have always been psychiatrists and
psychologists who have
vigorously attacked the current, common false views of biological
psychiatry about madness.
Natural psychotherapy is an effective, alternative
psychological approach for the treatment and therapy of "schizophrenia".
In fact, natural therapy makes it clear why the conclusions of the following seven
world-renowned physicians and psychiatrists makes such good sense. Even
though they have been a minority, their arguments are powerful and they
are truly encouraging and convincing.
Each of the following psychiatrists and psychoanalysts
have held that schizophrenia
is not a medical disease and that it is thoroughly treatable by
psychosocial therapy.
Their evidence is central to natural psychotherapy's
holistic alternative and effective treatment of schizophrenia.
These world-renowned authorities on mental problems are: Peter Breggin, R.D. Laing, Adolph Meyer, Loren Mosher,
Harold Searles, Thomas Szasz, H.S. Sullivan (For further info, please
click on Readings and References on the left Sidebar). They have
made it clear what the psychological and social roots, as well as
treatments, of schizophrenia are.
It is encouraging to know that with natural therapy complete recovery from
"schizophrenia" is not only possible, but can be achieved with a high
degree of probability.
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SPIRITUAL
In natural psychotherapy the spiritual refers
to those experiences people have which enliven, animate, make them
feel connected.
When someone feels spiritually involved one feels
in harmony, close, connected. The feeling can be general and vague,
or specific. Thus, one can feel in harmony with oneself, another,
as well as with the infinite mysteries and truths of life.
A deep spiritual experience makes us feel
keenly aware: psychologically awake and perceptive.
In a spiritual moment one experiences not just
life but also meaning, purpose, inner joy.
In a deep spiritual state we feel a connection,
a sense of compassion, love, understanding and inner wisdom.
A spiritual experience feels wholly different from the
ordinary and mundane.
The spiritual in us thus has to do with feeling
united with, in communion with, in a deep relationship with someone or
something we love, admire, are in awe of.
In such a state we feel in harmony with and
connected to all around us.
When in the midst of a spiritual experience one
feels in harmony with all that is alive, with others,
and with the wholly mysterious
universe.
An example: A spiritual experience can occur when one when one looks, by oneself or with someone close, into the vast
deep sky on a clear starry night.
Often in such an emotional experience, ethical and moral strivings
become strong.
In such an experience one feels a convincing sense of having been brought
together with something deeply mysterious and powerful - beyond the senses
and the tangible, beyond our material make-up.
In such a state one sees
the reality of, and also transcends, the suffering and horrors of all
existence.
And what this spiritual experience actually
involves, is a holistic
psychological merger of human imagination, thought, feeling,
reason, strivings, values and will.
And also, when the spiritual is
experienced, it is deeply and peacefully joyful;
fulfilling; love-filled; integrating!
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THEORY
Although Aristotle’s philosophy is a philosophy of
theoria, we must remember that his concept is not that of theory in
the modern sense. What Aristotle meant, was that to be a full human
being one must devote oneself to contemplative activity and a life of
the intellect.
TRUE LOVE
True love refers to a love that is an amalgam of
caring, loving, erotic attraction and excitement that one has, and is
honest about, with another.
True love can start as just erotic passion. Or, it can
start as
erotic passion and evolve into honest communication, commitment, and trust. And
as trust increases, so erotic
excitement.
However, when mistrust or resentment are unexpressed, both the
feelings of love and of erotic attraction will decrease, and may eventually die.
They can generally be resurrected though, by means of consistent, loving
and honest communication.
For some individuals loving and honest communication may be difficult at first, but they find that it gets easier with practice,
especially with the coaching of a natural psychotherapist.
TRUE SELF
Each human being has unique ways of relating to
the world.
Empirical research shows that such a natural
uniqueness is present even in genetically identical twins in the
womb.
When one's unique ways of relating to the world are
interfered with in infancy (or at any time in one's life) severe
stress reactions occur.
And natural bio-social stress reactions can then mistakenly labeled as "mental
illnesses." The interferences that may block actualization
of one's true self may of course be due to inner unresolved conflict or outer
pressures and oppression.
In natural psychotherapy one learns
how to maintain and further develop one's natural true self, in all
its complexity.
Since the world is in constant flux, the adaptational true self is
essentially one's unique, natural and authentic ways of response and
relationship to the ever-changing world. And these ways are, of course, always related to one's
values, goals and purposes in life.
The true natural self is thus the multiplicity of
one's unique, complex and infinitely varied ways one relates to others
and to one's infinitely varied environment.
The true self is
characterized by one's ever-evolving and ever-changing
perceptions, intentions and plans regarding one's conceptions of
ever-changing reality. Both Martin Buber's
ideas and some of the concepts of Zen Buddhism have especially
influenced the approaches of natural psychotherapy to these issues.
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TRUST
Trust is a complicated process. What makes it so complicated and
difficult to experience is that in its natural form it is always
intertwined with mistrust.
And since true love cannot exist without trust, just
as even the actual psychotherapy process cannot exist without it, how
does one develop trust?
To learn to trust someone one must first use one's
natural capacities of observation and reasoning and conclude logically
whether that person actually exhibits trustworthy behavior. Thus one
must become naturally aware, without
inhibition, defensiveness, or wishful thinking what logical conclusions one can draw from one's
observations. One must, in a sense, at first, sort of mistrust the other person
sufficiently to observe whether she or he can be trusted.
One cannot
trust blindly or automatically.
But at the same time one must trust oneself sufficiently
to trust one's observations and one's capacity to draw logical
conclusions from them. This of course is an integral part of natural
psychotherapy: getting in touch with one's natural and innate capacities
to observe and draw logical conclusions about oneself and one's
relationships to others.
What especially helps in natural therapy is learning that
trust is a result, an interactive product.
Trust is always a product.
But trust is a special
type of product. It is what I call an interactive product – a product
that changes in relation to one’s interaction with another human being.
Thus if one finds –over time – that one can trust someone, trust starts
to evolve. But once the other person starts to lie, cheat, betray, or
perform any action that is untrustworthy, the feeling of trust starts to
erode.
People who mistrust others often
believe that trust is just a state of feeling that one either has or
does not have. They try to just decide to trust someone, feeling they
“should” trust someone because of a certain social status in relation to
oneself – a parent, teacher, sibling, relative, authority, friend,
lover, spouse, partner, professional, socially successful person, etc. – should
always be trusted.
Of course, they have a hard time trusting. They think trust should just
be there, without realizing that it is always an interactive product
– a product, a result, that comes about only with trusting interactions over time.
One of the most harmful admonitions
one can be told as one grows up is have a parent say: “Don’t trust
anyone.” What they should say is, “Don’t trust blindly, automatically.”
The Buddha committed this error to
some degree when he said (supposedly, his dying
words), “Don’t trust anyone, just yourself; don’t even trust me.” What
he might have said with more psychological validity is “Don’t trust
automatically, but always observe and evaluate whether someone or
something can be trusted.”
Those who are in lonely despair
and feel utterly hopeless because they are afraid to get involved with
anyone since they
mistrust everyone. They too can learn in natural therapy how to get rid of their
aloneness and despair by learning how and when to trust..
They learn this by coming to realize
through the therapeutic process with a trustworthy therapist, that
the natural human condition involves both trustworthy and untrustworthy
relationships.
It's not just as simple as believing no one at all can be
trusted. As a general example one can say that the mother-infant
relation, if it is, in the words of Winnicott, one that is “good
enough,” it is one in which trust can develop.
On the other hand, one’s relation to
a con-artist and habitual liar is one where trust cannot develop, no
matter how hard and persistently one may attempt to do so.
It is
especially difficult to permit oneself to develop trust over time if one
has been repeatedly in relationships in which one was hurt and
disappointed by lies, obfuscations and betrayals. One then
naturally dreads getting
deeply hurt again and again.
At such times one often feels one is destined to be
always alone because of the seeming truth one believes: that no one at all can ever
be truly trusted.
The therapeutic tasks one then has
are the following: to start to reach out to, and interact with,
others; to learn how to become empowered to shape one's life positively;
to know how never to be a victim; and then to choose to be bold and
leave one’s isolation and loneliness by starting to truly and joyfully relate to others.
And as one starts to seek out persons
one can eventually feel one can trust, one has to remember how important
it is also, for oneself to be someone others can trust. Many learn -
often for the first time in their life - that to be honest and worthy of
trust oneself, is necessary if one ever wants a satisfying
relationship of mutual trust.
To achieve a mutual relationship of
trust one thus needs to be bold and reach out
to others, to relate naturally to others, to get involved with and communicate
freely and honestly
with others, while fostering one’s powers to observe clearly, to reason
clearly, and to judge calmly – over time – whether
someone or something can be trusted.
A parent who just tells a child that
it is bad to trust others is actually lying to the child by not telling
it the whole truth. In fact, the parent is showing the child how to
manufacture paranoia and mistrust.
The whole truth that should always be
expressed seems to be: "Don’t trust blindly, but always observe,
reason and judge with as much clarity and honesty as you can muster."
That, of course, includes the application of that process to one’s own
intuitions, reasons and judgments.
And once someone does that and
concludes, over time, that it is safe to trust another person, and that
the other person can safely also be trusting, one can begin to have deeply
satisfying relations. Relationships based on mutual trust.
One then realizes that one
actually can achieve
what is most important in life – a trusting relationship.
One starts to realize that in order
to have good, loving and caring relations – to oneself and others –
trust needs to be there.
One realizes that for the good,
worthwhile life, trust is what it’s all about!
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TRUTH
Truth is elusive, can only be approximated, and is
most likely to change with ongoing scientific research and increased
accumulation of what seem to be the best descriptions of reality, at a
particular period in human history.
Most people, especially infants and children, dislike
finding out that they have been lied to. Yet, most people also seek stories that will
comfort them, give them a sense of meaning, give them a sense of security of being part of
a group, make them feel accepted, loved and cared for, and
help them feel less alone and fearful.
For many there is conflict
between the desire for truth and the desire for comfort of acceptance
and approval by a group to which one belongs. Such a group of
others, can be family, friends, or any other type. And such
acceptance and approval by others is desired because it alleviates the pain and suffering of life in a vast,
impersonal, awesome universe.
When
reality is oppressive, exploitative, filled with pain and suffering, the
conflict between the quest for opiates and the quest for truth can
become acute for some. And the quest is too often resolved by choosing opiates over
the truth.
Yet
the conundrum that arises in every natural psychotherapy session is the
following: lies and stories that are opiates are deceiving and breed
ignorance and powerlessness, while truth is freeing, empowering, and the
only road to a meaningful, truly good and satisfying life. (See the
Theory and Practice page on Truth and Reality)
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WU WEI
Wu wei is a concept that is highly relevant to natural
psychotherapy, both in theory and in practice.
Wu
wei (pronounced woo way) is a Mandarin Chinese word meaning
spontaneous action occurring in a natural way. Almost like a
reflex; an action as spontaneous response to something.
It's a
kind of natural activity, a "letting go." It is
an approach that makes it more possible to take charge of one's life in
a positive and constructive way. Literally,
wu wei means action with no action. Letting oneself relax, sort of
not acting, yet everything is accomplished, naturally and
easily.
Wu wei implies that if you relax and take it easy,
things get naturally done. The
closest in English may be "Easy, does it," since that
expression also implies that if you relax and take it easy everything
gets naturally done. The martial art of Wu-Wei
Gung Fu regards wu wei as being relaxed physically while mentally
alert and natural: awake, aware, and ready to do what is necessary. It does not mean inaction, but absence of
rushed, agitated
action. Wu wei is doing what comes
naturally, what the reality of the situation requires.
It is the kind of
natural action that occurs when one permits oneself to experience a
quiet awareness of what is really going on, and then going where the
reality of the situation takes one when one is authentic and aware.
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