Redirecting Self Therapy (RST) permanently relieves anxiety, depression, mood disorders, addictions, and aggressive behavior.
Proven to work in theory and practice.
Permanent relief from depression and recovery from emotional
disorders, mood disorders, major depression, bipolar depression,
manic-depression, panic disorders, obsessive compulsive disorder,
post-traumatic stress disorder, nervous mental disease, psychosomatic
disorders, symptoms of Parkinson's and Alzheimer's disease,
codependency and overlying addictions, angry, aggressive, or criminal
behavior.
The self help is proven effective because it is based on the
scientific discovery of the biology of mental illness and violence
published in a medical journal (The toxic mind: the biology of mental
illness and violence).
All those who used the self help as described recovered permanently.
Elnora Van Winkle Retired Neuroscientist, Millhauser Laboratories,
New York University School of Medicine Mailing address: Elnora Van
Winkle, Murray Hill Station, P.O. Box 893, New York, NY 10156 The
Biology of Emotions Suppressing anger causes a toxicosis in the
brain.
All children are born with healthy anger, which is part of the fight
or flight reaction. When parents mistreat or neglect us, even
unintentionally, they often cause us to suppress our anger.
No parent needs to be perfect, but we must be allowed to have
justifiable anger. The suppression of anger is more damaging than the
trauma itself. It causes a toxicosis that leads to anxiety and
depression.
Even the lullaby, "Hush little baby don't you cry," serves the
parent, not the child. Our parents no doubt had to suppress their
anger as children, and this self-therapy is for them as well.
As adults we unconsciously form codependent relationships, which are
re-enactments of childhood relationships, to set a stage for
releasing repressed anger and grief.
Many of us have sought partners, bosses, and friends who remind us of
our parents and have been unhappy in these relationships. Repressed
anger causes anxiety and depression. There is a flood of anger in our
brains.
When you learn this simple biology, the self-help measures will come
naturally. When anger is continually suppressed, toxic amounts of
neurochemicals that store repressed anger accumulate in the brain,
clogging up neural pathways where memories of our parents are
stored.
We may not remember the childhood trauma.Our brains periodically try
to release the excess neurochemicals during detoxification crises,
which are excitatory nervous symptoms.
Nerve impulses are often diverted through the wrong neural pathways.
As a result, anger may be misdirected toward someone who is innocent
or partially innocent, or directed inward as guilt or
self-destructive thought. Or the diverting of nerve impulses may
cause a variety of other symptoms, from anxiety, to mania, to
delusions, even to psychotic behavior.
Depression usually follows a detoxification crisis. But these
detoxification crises, which cause excitatory nervous symptoms, are
healing events--the opening of floodgates to release repressed
anger.
If we mentally redirect anger toward our parents and other past
abusers during the excitatory nervous symptoms, more floodgates can
open, and this speeds recovery.
Our addiction to people (codependency) and overlying additions to
stimulants, chemical or psychological, will only slowly subside
because, as in homeopathy, these stimulants trigger the necessary
detoxification crises. Redirect anger during nervous symptoms.
Recognize excitatory nervous symptoms as signals the brain is trying
to release the neurochemicals that store repressed anger.
When symptoms appear, do not suppress them, but redirect the emerging
anger toward your parents, not in person, but by pounding on a bed
and yelling at them while picturing them or thinking about them.
You will find many ways to release and redirect anger. An excitatory
nervous symptom might be the pounding in your chest when confronting
someone in a current interaction. This is neurotic fear and a signal
that repressed anger from childhood trauma is emerging. Never try to
re-experience the early trauma in detail.
You are not attacking your parents, but only the memories of them
stored in your brain.
You are getting angry at their sickness. Other symptoms that signal
emerging anger are anxiety, panic attacks, tremors, palpitations,
compulsive thoughts or behavior, mania, insomnia, nightmares,
paranoia, judgment, resentments, revengeful thoughts, loneliness,
feelings of rejection, and fear of abandonment.
Symptoms might be guilt, shame, low self-esteem, or suicidal thought,
which are caused when anger is turned inward.These are all
detoxification crises and opportunities to release and redirect
anger.
Get to the anger and redirect it as often as possible throughout the
day.
If it would be too noisy to yell out loud, redirect anger by talking
quietly in your mind. Parental voices stay in our heads saying things
like, "You should be ashamed of yourself." Tell those voices to "shut
up". Symptoms might be cravings for stimulants, sedatives, sedating
foods, sex, psychological stimulation, or meditative techniques to
quiet the mind.
Other symptoms might be misdirected rage or aggressive behavior
toward others. If anger is intense and out of proportion in a current
interaction, most of it is repressed anger from childhood and needs
to be redirected to early caretakers. Do not direct intense anger
toward others in person.
Walk away from abuse. If intense anger is triggered in a current
interaction, pound on a bed and direct some anger to that person, but
mostly to your parents. After releasing most of the anger privately
by pounding on a bed, calmly tell the person in the current
interaction you were uncomfortable with their behavior. Explain to
others that you may over-react during this recovery process.
Memories of other past abusers who were parent figures for you, for
example, male or female authority figures, are laid down in common
neural pathways, and you will need to redirect anger to them as well.
They might include relatives, bosses, doctors, clergy, officers of
the law, other persons in authority, partners, or friends.
False notions of God as a judgmental parent are stored with memories
of past abusers, and it helps to get mad at God as well. Mood swings
may worsen, but are temporary. Releasing anger has a fast
antidepressant action.
You may feel a temporary "high" followed by increased depression or a
drug-like sleep. Remind yourself that the depression will lift, or
you may be able to trigger a detoxification crisis by pounding on a
bed. Crying often follows, and feelings of grief may last for many
months. Headaches, sweating, fever, and other physical symptoms,
which are all detoxification crises, are common.
Detoxification crises will subside. In time detoxification crises,
that is, the excitatory nervous symptoms, will be less intense and
less often. If you let go of addictions before using the therapy,
including the addiction to sedating foods, you may have a rather
dramatic release from anxiety and depression.
If you let go of addictions while using the therapy, your recovery
may take longer. After publication of the longer version of this
article on the Internet, those who had changed their diets to mostly
raw food began to share the characteristics of normal persons in a
few months. Normal people feel alive but content, are friendly but
enjoy being alone, are patient but cannot be pushed around, feel sad
but not depressed, and they have a sustainable peace of mind.
They are incapable of violence unless in self-defense. They have a
relaxed posture, fall asleep more easily, and have a lighter but
restful sleep. They work efficiently and seek pleasure when not at
work. Short-term memory and concentration are improved. I.Q's can
soar.
Childhood memories may return, but without the painful emotions
attached.
Anger when triggered will still be mixed with anger from the past,
and it will be necessary to continue redirecting anger
indefinitely.
Anger will be mild and related more and more to current interactions.
Even when your anger is entirely about the current interaction, feel
and express it privately, and then confront calmly if appropriate. If
you suppress anger, neural pathways can become clogged up again, and
symptoms will re-occur. Physical health should improve.
Toxicosis in the brain results in periodic over- and understimulation
of the pituitary gland and other control organs, leading to
peripheral disease. When the detoxification process is finished,
psychosomatic disorders--better termed neurogenic--disappear. Because
you will be attracted to healthier diets, your are less likely to get
physically sick.
If you do get sick, symptoms will be milder. Neural pathways are
clear, and the nervous system can do its daily job of detoxification.
Eat as much raw food as possible and avoid stimulants, sedatives,
processed or overly cooked foods, refined sugar, grains, and dairy
products on a daily basis.
Freedom from emotional disorders and addictions will be permanent.
Eventually the fight or flight reaction is restored, and you will
have healthy anger and sadness when appropriate. Addictions will
cease. By processing your anger when triggered, you will have a
sustainable euphoria, which is not a "high," but is best defined as
freedom from anxiety and distress.
You will be reborn with the capacity to love and be loved. Author
Note I was not an abused child by society's standards, but was left
by my mother in my crib to 'cry it out' and listened to my father
rage, not at me but at my mother, brother, and sister. I learned to
suppress my justifiable anger very early.
I was an autistic child and in my twenties was diagnosed as
schizophrenic and locked for four years on the violent ward of a
mental hospital. I spent much of the time in the mattress room raging
against the tight sheets of a straight jacket, or I turned my anger
inward in suicidal rage.
One of the shock treatments didn't make me unconscious, and I felt
pain and panic as the electricity surged through my body. It was like
being electrocuted, yet still alive. Over the next thirty years I was
confined in more than twenty hospitals, re-diagnosed many times,
given every drug known to psychiatry, and had serious addictions.
At age 60 I was re-diagnosed with major depressive disorder, then
manic-depression, and had symptoms of Alzheimer's and Parkinson's
disease. In those years in hospitals only one nurse had a sense of
what I needed.She came to my room where I was tied to a bed in
restraint, untied me, and gave me a tray of plastic dishes.
"Throw these at the wall, dear," she said. Had I known to picture my
parents on the wall, I might have begun to heal. I wanted to be
locked in those hospitals.I never knew why, but it was an 'acting
out' of a fantasy - a re-enactment of having been imprisoned in my
crib, - and an opportunity to release my justifiable anger toward my
parents.
When I understood this and used the self-therapy, I recovered
permanently. My full length story is on: Confessions of a
Schizophrenic Disclaimer The self-help measures are of a nature of
advice given in 12-step programs and are not intended for children
under age and in the care of their parents without parental
permission.
The therapy is safe when the anger is redirected and if there are no
serious health conditions. It is best not to make changes in work or
relationship during the recovery period unless you are in danger.
I cannot assume responsibility for any misunderstanding of the
biological concepts.
If you use this self-therapy you do so at your own risk. This article
does not suggest discontinuing professional therapy or the use of
prescribed drugs as ordered by physicians. You can begin the
self-therapy while using other therapies and on medication. In time
you will not need therapy or medication.
Please study the scientific article, which provides a basis for the
self-therapy.