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A Different Kind of Psychiatry
A Different Kind of Psychiatry
66 episodes
3 weeks ago
Orgonomy.org

This podcast features the care of patients by the ACO doctors who practice a different kind of psychiatry.
Medications address symptoms, but not their underlying cause. For most people, the word “psychiatrist” conjures up a doctor who prescribes medications for a biochemical mental disorder. The American College of Orgonomy (ACO) trains psychiatrists in medical orgone therapy, a unique approach that focuses on helping you achieve the best way to function not dependent on medication but by looking more deeply into what sets off your anxieties, fears and negative thinking.
Healthy expression is essential for satisfaction in life. Medical orgone therapists are trained to be keen observers of how people express themselves both verbally and with body language. They can help you become aware of and understand the consistent, automatic ways you handle your emotions—your individual character—and how that impacts your life. They also work with you to identify and express healthy aspects of your nature that can help you overcome your problems.
An awareness of the connection between mind and body forms a foundation for the therapeutic approach taught at the ACO. It addresses the underlying emotional reasons why some people are stiff-necked, tight-lipped, tight-assed, scatter-brained and a host of other ways that emotions are held and processed in the body. You may act out of rage or sadness and not even be aware that those feelings fuel your actions. To handle your emotions more constructively, this therapy improves your capacity for better contact with yourself.
We invite you to listen in on the therapy of some of our patients and see for yourself what's different about this kind of psychiatry.
Show more...
Mental Health
Health & Fitness,
Sexuality,
Medicine
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Orgonomy.org

This podcast features the care of patients by the ACO doctors who practice a different kind of psychiatry.
Medications address symptoms, but not their underlying cause. For most people, the word “psychiatrist” conjures up a doctor who prescribes medications for a biochemical mental disorder. The American College of Orgonomy (ACO) trains psychiatrists in medical orgone therapy, a unique approach that focuses on helping you achieve the best way to function not dependent on medication but by looking more deeply into what sets off your anxieties, fears and negative thinking.
Healthy expression is essential for satisfaction in life. Medical orgone therapists are trained to be keen observers of how people express themselves both verbally and with body language. They can help you become aware of and understand the consistent, automatic ways you handle your emotions—your individual character—and how that impacts your life. They also work with you to identify and express healthy aspects of your nature that can help you overcome your problems.
An awareness of the connection between mind and body forms a foundation for the therapeutic approach taught at the ACO. It addresses the underlying emotional reasons why some people are stiff-necked, tight-lipped, tight-assed, scatter-brained and a host of other ways that emotions are held and processed in the body. You may act out of rage or sadness and not even be aware that those feelings fuel your actions. To handle your emotions more constructively, this therapy improves your capacity for better contact with yourself.
We invite you to listen in on the therapy of some of our patients and see for yourself what's different about this kind of psychiatry.
Show more...
Mental Health
Health & Fitness,
Sexuality,
Medicine
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts125/v4/28/b2/bb/28b2bb6f-3692-3688-c337-5b3699d76d36/mza_3824370421346259202.jpeg/600x600bb.jpg
To Sleep, Perchance to Dream: A Conversation with Dr. Crist
A Different Kind of Psychiatry
1 hour 22 minutes 30 seconds
1 year ago
To Sleep, Perchance to Dream: A Conversation with Dr. Crist
This episode features a discussion with Peter A. Crist, M.D. about sleep. Dr. Crist talks with Dr. Burritt about the latest research, outlines a way to look at sleep functionally, and gives examples from literature, his practice and his own life about how sleep is so often ignored and yet vital to human functioning.
Dr. Crist quotes from the episode:

"Sleep is a spontaneous process."

"There is no such thing as a bad dream."

"What we don't understand we ignore, neglect, or treat with contempt."

"Sleep is essential for physical and emotional health."

Journal of Orgonomy Issues mentioned during the episode:

Volume 41 Issue 1

Volume 42 Issue 2

The Journal of Orgonomy Substack

The Journal of Orgonomy Print and Download Subscription Link




Question or Comment?




ACO - Orgonomy.org
A Different Kind of Psychiatry
Orgonomy.org

This podcast features the care of patients by the ACO doctors who practice a different kind of psychiatry.
Medications address symptoms, but not their underlying cause. For most people, the word “psychiatrist” conjures up a doctor who prescribes medications for a biochemical mental disorder. The American College of Orgonomy (ACO) trains psychiatrists in medical orgone therapy, a unique approach that focuses on helping you achieve the best way to function not dependent on medication but by looking more deeply into what sets off your anxieties, fears and negative thinking.
Healthy expression is essential for satisfaction in life. Medical orgone therapists are trained to be keen observers of how people express themselves both verbally and with body language. They can help you become aware of and understand the consistent, automatic ways you handle your emotions—your individual character—and how that impacts your life. They also work with you to identify and express healthy aspects of your nature that can help you overcome your problems.
An awareness of the connection between mind and body forms a foundation for the therapeutic approach taught at the ACO. It addresses the underlying emotional reasons why some people are stiff-necked, tight-lipped, tight-assed, scatter-brained and a host of other ways that emotions are held and processed in the body. You may act out of rage or sadness and not even be aware that those feelings fuel your actions. To handle your emotions more constructively, this therapy improves your capacity for better contact with yourself.
We invite you to listen in on the therapy of some of our patients and see for yourself what's different about this kind of psychiatry.