Post-traumatic stress disorder: why some treatments work so fast
In this article, Joe Griffin suggests that technqiues which can yield
immediate success, may share an underlying mechanism. >> Read
including: The 'rewind' technique
Great Expectations
Joe Griffin goes back to basics to arrive at a some powerful new insights into the givens of human nature. >> Read
The APET model: standing cognitive therapy on its head
The theoretical understanding for why human givens therapy is so effective.
>> Read
The fast cure for phobia and trauma: evidence that it works
Counsellors who use it know that the 'rewind technique' is fast, safe, painless and effective for dealing with trauma. Keith Guy and Nicola Guy
have tested it in research. >> Read
including: Falklands veteran case study
How to lift depression safely and quickly
Joe Griffin and Ivan Tyrrell explain how and why a human givens approach can help therapists shift depression in just a few sessions — or less.
>> Read
Dreaming to forget: the real reason why
Joe Griffin explains why dreaming, and forgetting our dreams, fulfils a vital human need. >> Read
Food for thought — and feelings: nutrition's role in restoring
mental health
Patrick Holford argues that therapists can help people handle their problems even more effectively if they understand how to boost brain function with vital nutrients. >> Read
Why psychiatrists should be more like plumbers
Dr Farouk Okhai opens his casebook to show how the human givens approach can best help severely distressed people. >> Read
including: The power of deep relaxation and guided imagery
The Trickster: Medicine's forgotten character
Therapy in all its forms can be confusingly capricious and unpredictable. We should not try to deny this, but learn to accept it, says Larry Dossey MD.
>> Read
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