Sunday, May 26, 2024

Sounds Fantastic. You Be the Judge

Started off Googling and YouTube-searching for Clare Mann and found this talk : 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UevlZOMvvA4

If you're agitated, the blood flows to the back of your brain - the reptilian brain and you engage negatively with the audience (you become self-centered). If you're calm and relaxed and available to people, the blood flows to the pre-frontal cortex and you're open and able to look at other ways of seeing things. Really? Nice. What bothered me is that she had no problem calling the doctor's (see below) haunt "The Hawaiian State Hospital for the Criminally Insane" for which Google returned zilch.

The bombshell :

Joe Vitale's Zero Limits - he asked a doctor if he believed in personal responsibility. "I do" It wasn't just any doctor. No sir, the same doctor who :

He explained that he worked at Hawaii State Hospital for four years. That ward where they kept the criminally insane was dangerous. Psychologists quit on a monthly basis. The staff called in sick a lot or simply quit. People would walk through that ward with their backs against the wall, afraid of being attacked by patients. It was not a pleasant place to live, work, or visit. Dr. Len told me that he never saw patients.

He agreed to have an office and to review their files. While he looked at those files, he would work on himself. As he worked on himself, patients began to heal. "After a few months, patients that had to be shackled were being allowed to walk freely," he told me. "Others who had to be heavily medicated were getting off their medications. And those who had no chance of ever being released were being freed." I was in awe. "Not only that," he went on, "but the staff began to enjoy coming to work. Absenteeism and turnover disappeared. We ended up with more staff than we needed because patients were being released, and all the staff was showing up to work. Today, that ward is closed." 

Fantastic huh? Now, having done your own research into this excellent doctor, test yourself:

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