Here is the danger of this stuff. I have my students do a website evaluation 
exercise. If they used the criteria that I provide them with they would think 
this was the best new thing since cats' pajamas. Sigh. How would a normal, 
layperson know????

That's what is scary because even an educated person would find nothing here 
that suggests it is bogus. My only criterion: in all of their research on the 
link there is NOTHING published. They have a very lengthy list of conference 
presentations, mostly at trauma-related organizations but I did see one at WPA. 
Sigh again.

Annette

Annette Kujawski Taylor, Ph. D.
Professor, Psychological Sciences
University of San Diego
5998 Alcala Park
San Diego, CA 92110
[email protected]
________________________________________
From: Michael Smith [[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, September 20, 2010 6:29 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: [tips] New advances in eye movement therapy

If you thought EMDR was an advance, well we now have something better:
OEI (One Eye integration Therapy).
Yes its true. OEI therapy only needs to use one eye, so maybe its
twice as good as EMDR!

At any rate, here's what some 'observers' have said:
"... OEI is like a combination of EMDR, Educational Kinesiology
(‘Brain Gym’), and Gendlin’s Focusing." (https://www.sightpsych.com/)
(It seems that they now prefer Observed and Experiential Integration).

There's a nice picture of the discoverer of this breakthrough (Audrey
Cooke) and her business partner (Bradshaw) at the bottom.
Audrey also works with multigenerational trauma in case you need some
help with that.

Here's an excerpt from some promotional literature from Trinity
Western (a Canadian University)

"The success of OEI lies in its ability to deal with these long-hidden
memories and traumas. Throughout sessions, clients are encouraged to
override appropriate social norms and behaviors, allowing themselves t
express emotions and memories more primitively. In some instances,
patients have had startling physical responses. Bradshaw recalls a
woman who was choked unconcsious by a relative on several occasions as
a child. 'As we connected with the event visually using OEI, the marks
on her neck showed the hand-prints of her abuser.'" (Conscientia: The
research publication of Trinity Western University, 2009, pg. 5).

There's just so much in this therapy it's wonderful. Talk about
cross-discipline integration!

Maybe good for your critical thinking class Annette. And we could be
witnessing the birth of a new cult.

--Mike

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