Judith Orloff

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Judith Orloff

Judith Orloff (born June 25, 1951)[1] is an American board-certified psychiatrist, self-claimed clairvoyant (psychic),[2][3][4] and the author of five books.

Judith Orloff MD is the NY Times bestselling author of The Genius of Empathy and The Empath’s Survival Guide. Her upcoming children’s book The Highly Sensitive Rabbit, helps sensitive kids embrace their empathic gifts as a strength. Dr. Orloff is a psychiatrist, an empath and intuitive healer, and is on the UCLA Psychiatric Clinical Faculty. She synthesizes the pearls of traditional medicine with cutting edge knowledge of intuition, energy, and spirituality and passionately believes in the power of integrating this wisdom for total wellness.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KqBmJe5KMQI

Dr. Orloff has been called “the godmother of the empath movement.” She specializes in treating empaths and highly sensitive people in her private practice. Dr. Orloff’s work has been featured on The Today Show, CNN, Oprah Magazine, the New York Times and USA Today. She has spoken at the American Psychiatric Association, Fortune Magazine’s Most Powerful Women’s Summit, Google, TEDx U.S. and TEDx Gateway Asia. The New England Journal of Medicine writes, “Dr. Judith Orloff advises physicians on improving their intuitive powers. Her simple but powerful message is ‘Listen to your patients.’”

https://drjudithorloff.com/about-dr-orloff

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judith_Orloff

https://www.youtube.com/@JudithOrloffMD

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https://www.instagram.com/judith.orloff.md/?hl=de


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DVD Alberto Villoldo

DVD The Healing of the Astral Body | Alberto Villoldo

In his mid-20s, Alberto Villoldo was the youngest clinical professor at San Francisco State University. He headed the Laboratory for Biological Self-Regulation and investigated how energy medicine could alter brain chemistry. One day, Alberto realized in his work that his research needed to be bigger, not smaller—that he was looking through the wrong end of the microscope. He needed to find a system larger than the brain’s neural networks. Many others were already learning the hardware—Alberto wanted to learn how to program the mind to create psychosomatic health.

Anthropological histories indicate that there were people all over the world who claimed to know such things, including the few remaining “shamans” in today’s modern world.

Alberto traded his lab for a pair of hiking boots and a ticket to the Amazon, determined to learn from researchers whose gaze wasn’t limited to the lens of a microscope, from people whose knowledge encompassed more than the measurable, material world he’d learned was the ONLY reality. He wanted to meet the people who sense the spaces between things and perceive the luminous strands that animate all life. Throughout the Andes and the Amazon, there were a number of wise men, or “earth guardians,” who remembered the ancient customs. Alberto traveled through countless villages and hamlets, meeting with numerous medicine men and women. The lack of a written body of knowledge meant that each village brought its own flavor and style to the healing practices that still exist today.

For more than 10 years, Alberto trained with the medicine men of the jungle. In healing his own emotional wounds, Alberto followed the path of the wounded healer and learned to transform old pain, grief, anger and shame into sources of strength and compassion.

From the Amazon, Alberto hiked along the coast of Peru, from Nazca, the site of gigantic markings on the desert floor depicting spirit animals and geometric figures, to the fabled Shimbe Lagoons in the north, home to the country’s most famous shamans. Then, at Lake Titicaca—the sea on the roof of the world—Alberto collected the stories and healing practices of the people from whom, according to legend, the Incas originated.

Along the way, Alberto discovered a series of technologies that can transform the body, heal the soul, and change the way we live and die.

These ancient teachings explain that a Luminous Energy Field (LEF) surrounds us and acts as a matrix or blueprint that maintains the health and vitality of the physical body.

Alberto is the founder of the world-renowned Four Winds Society and the Light Body School. In his teachings and writings, he shares the experience of infinity and its ability to heal and transform us, freeing us from the temporal chains that bind us to sickness, old age, and infirmity.

https://www.youtube.com/@TheFourWindsSociety


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Carl Wickland

Carl August Wickland (born Carl August Wicklund, 14 February 1861 – 13 November 1945)[1] was a 20th-century Swedish-American psychiatrist and psychical researcher.

Wickland turned away from conventional medical psychology and toward the belief that psychiatric illnesses were the result of influence by spirits of the dead. Wickland came to believe that a large number of his patients had become possessed by what he called “obsessing spirits”, and that low-voltage electric shocks could dislodge them, while his wife Anna acted as a medium to guide them to “progress in the spirit world”. Spiritualists considered him an authority on “destructive spirits” and he wrote a book in 1924, Thirty Years Among the Dead, detailing his experiences as a psychical researcher.[3]

In his book “30 years among the dead” (DOWNLOAD below!) he protocols the dialogues with the deceased souls who entered in a medium (Wickland´s wife!). His work should be standard literature for medical students! Especially the electro convulsive therapy would be useless treating te patients as Wickland did.

Wickland was convinced that he was in contact with a group of spirits known as the “Mercy Band” who would remove the possessors, and help them in the spirit world. Psychologist Robert A. Baker listed Wickland and Arthur Guirdham as early psychiatrists who preferred to “ignore the science and embrace the supernatural”.[4]

Wickland founded the National Psychological Institute in Los Angeles, California to study psychic phenomena.[3] A letter published in a 1918 issue of the journal Science criticized the institute’s promotion of psychic research “under the name of psychology” as an example of “pseudo-psychology”, adding that “the use of such a name involves bad taste and delusion.”[5]

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DOWNLOAD 30 Jahre unter den Toten DE!
DOWNLOAD 30 years among the dead EN!


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Michael Crichton

4/11/02 Michael Crichton ’64, HMS ’69 speaks on “The Media and Medicine” at Harvard Medical School in Boston, MA on Thursday, April 11, 2002. staff photo by Jon Chase/Harvard University News Office

John Michael Crichton (/ˈkraɪtən/; October 23, 1942 – November 4, 2008) was an American writer and filmmaker. His books have sold over 200 million copies worldwide, and over a dozen have been adapted into films. His literary works heavily feature technology and are usually within the science fictiontechno-thriller, and medical fiction genres. 

youtube collection Jurassic Parc

Crichton was also involved in the film and television industry. In 1973, he wrote and directed Westworld, the first film to use 2D computer-generated imagery. He also directed Coma (1978), The First Great Train Robbery (1978), Looker (1981), and Runaway (1984). He was the creator of the famed television series ER (1994–2009), and several of his novels were adapted into films, most notably the Jurassic Park franchise.

John Michael Crichton[1] was born on October 23, 1942, in Chicago, Illinois,[2][3][4][5] to John Henderson Crichton, a journalist, and Zula Miller Crichton, a homemaker. He was raised on Long Island, in Roslyn, New York,[1] and he showed a keen interest in writing from a young age; at 16, he had an article about a trip he took to Sunset Crater published in The New York Times.[6][7]

Crichton later recalled, “Roslyn was another world. Looking back, it’s remarkable what wasn’t going on. There was no terror. No fear of children being abused. No fear of random murder. No drug use we knew about. I walked to school. I rode my bike for miles and miles, to the movie on Main Street and piano lessons and the like. Kids had freedom. It wasn’t such a dangerous world… We studied our butts off, and we got a tremendously good education there.”[8]

Crichton had always planned on becoming a writer and began his studies at Harvard College in 1960.[6] During his undergraduate study in literature, he conducted an experiment to expose a professor who he believed was giving him abnormally low marks and criticizing his literary style.[9]: 4  Informing another professor of his suspicions,[10] Crichton submitted an essay by George Orwell under his own name. The paper was returned by his unwitting professor with a mark of “B−”.[11] He later said, “Now Orwell was a wonderful writer, and if a B-minus was all he could get, I thought I’d better drop English as my major.”[8] His differences with the English department led Crichton to switch his undergraduate concentration. He obtained his bachelor’s degree in biological anthropology summa cum laude in 1964[12] and was initiated into the Phi Beta Kappa Society.[12] He received a Henry Russell Shaw Traveling Fellowship from 1964 to 1965 and was a visiting lecturer in anthropology at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom in 1965.[12] Crichton later enrolled at Harvard Medical School.[9][page needed] Crichton later said “about two weeks into medical school I realized I hated it. This isn’t unusual since everyone hates medical school – even happy, practicing physicians.”[13]

According to Crichton’s brother Douglas, Crichton was diagnosed with lymphoma in early 2008.[118] In accordance with the private way in which Crichton lived, his cancer was not made public until his death. He was undergoing chemotherapy treatment at the time of his death, and Crichton’s physicians and relatives had been expecting him to recover. He died at age 66 on November 4, 2008.

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Orchestra Nova LA

Category : OrchestraDocs

former Los Angeles Doctors Symphony Orchestra LADSO

Founded in 1953, the Los Angeles Doctors Symphony Orchestra is one of the oldest medically-oriented community orchestras in the United States. Our mission is to offer high-quality affordable concerts to the diverse communities of Southern California, to support important medical causes, to support volunteer musicians, including youth, in their pursuit of the discipline and joys found in musical expression, to support emerging professional musicians, and to provide musical growth and fellowship for its performing members. LADSO was the 2020 first prize winner, nationwide, in the American Prize category of community orchestras.

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