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result(s) for
"Badouk-Epstein, Orit"
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Ritual Abuse and Mind Control
2011,2018
People who have survived ritual abuse or mind control experiments have often been silenced, accused of lying, mocked and disbelieved. Clinicians working with survivors often find themselves isolated, facing the same levels of disbelief and denial from other professionals within the mental health field. This report - based on proceedings from a conference on the subject - presents knowledge and experience from both clinicians and survivors to promote understanding and recovery from organized and ritual abuse, mind control and programming. The book combines clinical presentations, survivors' voices, and research material to help address the ways in which we can work clinically with mind control and cult programming from the perspective of relational psychotherapy.
Ritual Abuse and Mind Control
The book combines clinical presentations, survivors' voices, and research material to help address the ways in which we can work clinically with mind control and cult programming from the perspective of relational psychotherapy.
How far have we come?
2014
This conclusion presents some closing thoughts on the concepts covered in the preceding chapters of this book. The book describes that having Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) is like \"a whole necklace but it may be made up of any number of different colours and types of beads. It provides a brave and moving account of dissociation as a survivor of satanic ritual abuse. The book explains the validity of a DID diagnosis from a medical and scientific perspective. It presents DID as a real response to life-threatening events and makes it hard to argue against the evidence. Rather than classifying it as a disorder, DID is a normative response to overwhelming experiences such as torture and abuse. The book focuses on the mirror images of the condition as it is perceived from the inside and outside and how this feels.
Book Chapter
Working with the Incredible Hulk
2011
The Hulk was born when Bruce was nine years old. Prior to the Hulk, there was Leo, who was the first alter to protect Bruce from trusting anyone. Leo would sometimes lash out, kicking an adult who was trying to be nice to little Bruce, warning him that humans are not to be trusted even if they appear to be kind. Although the Hulk’s colouration has varied throughout the character’s publication history, the most consistent shade is green. As the Hulk, Banner is capable of significant feats of strength, which increases in direct proportion to the character’s anger. Strong emotions, such as anger, terror, and grief are also triggers for forcing Banner’s transformation into the Hulk. As with some female survivors who self harm, releasing tension and anxiety as the Hulk did is a way of gaining control over the experience and the loss. At the neurological level, the brain will experience an analgesic effect through the production of opioid or morphine-like substances.
Book Chapter