Post by flyingcarpet46 on Apr 14, 2022 5:01:55 GMT
Jan Foudtaine
Jan Foudraine g.co/kgs/r9Eg2H
Under the pen name "Amrito" he published in 1979 the book "Oorspronkelijk gezicht... Een gang naar huis" (Original face.. A way back home), two books about the Baghwan and a series of publications about non-dualism. Other for him important teachers were Alexander Smit, a student of Shri Nisargadatta Maharaj, Jiddu Krishnamurti, Tony Parsons and Richard Sylvester. His early inspiring figures were C.G. Jung and the Ich und Du of Martin Buber, the meaning of which, he once tried to explain to Dutch psychiatric patients. Like Koppejans, and Buber, he imagined that one could see "the face of Christ" in the smile of the loving other. But the word "love" has never been an scientifically expressed object. So "believing in it" can make you only a spiritual dreamer.
In 2004 he published "Metanoia: over psychiatrie, psychotherapie en bevrijding" (Metanoia, about psychiatry, psychotherapy and libeartion). In the tradition of Buddhist and Hindu mysticism, he sees mental suffering as the consequence of the sense of separateness that can be removed by releasing the ego-concept (Idea of Ich) and the (re)discovery of non-dualism or Advaita (non-duality). As young children, we once had a sense of unity with the surroundings, but with the necessary building of the Ego "fortress" and his defences we lost it. He sees the I versus Other distinction as an artificial creation of the ego, which is only an psychological instrument for the experienced "soma" body that wants (for ever) to survive. The death of the ego within the psychosomatic organism is an existential and traumatic event of "to be and not to be". It brings us anxiety, as the seemingly unique on its own "existing" personality still identifies with his deeply conditioned in childhood conditioned mask. Interpersonal psychotherapy and meditation can support the transition from a born with mask to the Higher Self.
Until his death, he gave interpersonal psychotherapy and lived together with his spouse, the hypnotherapist Marijke Foudraine-Kranenburg.
Jan Foudraine g.co/kgs/r9Eg2H
Under the pen name "Amrito" he published in 1979 the book "Oorspronkelijk gezicht... Een gang naar huis" (Original face.. A way back home), two books about the Baghwan and a series of publications about non-dualism. Other for him important teachers were Alexander Smit, a student of Shri Nisargadatta Maharaj, Jiddu Krishnamurti, Tony Parsons and Richard Sylvester. His early inspiring figures were C.G. Jung and the Ich und Du of Martin Buber, the meaning of which, he once tried to explain to Dutch psychiatric patients. Like Koppejans, and Buber, he imagined that one could see "the face of Christ" in the smile of the loving other. But the word "love" has never been an scientifically expressed object. So "believing in it" can make you only a spiritual dreamer.
In 2004 he published "Metanoia: over psychiatrie, psychotherapie en bevrijding" (Metanoia, about psychiatry, psychotherapy and libeartion). In the tradition of Buddhist and Hindu mysticism, he sees mental suffering as the consequence of the sense of separateness that can be removed by releasing the ego-concept (Idea of Ich) and the (re)discovery of non-dualism or Advaita (non-duality). As young children, we once had a sense of unity with the surroundings, but with the necessary building of the Ego "fortress" and his defences we lost it. He sees the I versus Other distinction as an artificial creation of the ego, which is only an psychological instrument for the experienced "soma" body that wants (for ever) to survive. The death of the ego within the psychosomatic organism is an existential and traumatic event of "to be and not to be". It brings us anxiety, as the seemingly unique on its own "existing" personality still identifies with his deeply conditioned in childhood conditioned mask. Interpersonal psychotherapy and meditation can support the transition from a born with mask to the Higher Self.
Until his death, he gave interpersonal psychotherapy and lived together with his spouse, the hypnotherapist Marijke Foudraine-Kranenburg.