I'm careful of langugae. Hyperventilation is never treatment, even when it is mechanically initiated or controlled in some way.
Then I don't see how your claims about hyperventilation being positive are useful.
It's easy to enter an altered state where deep experiences can emerge productively. Some people don't need triggers, but we provided triggers.
This is the same sort of language I was talking about in the previous post; it's merely rearranged. Instead of saying "can" you're saying "it's easy to". But this isn't good enough. Psychology and psychiatry have success cases. You're rallying against the entire paradigm. I need to be able to get something that can compare the two before I'm convinced of where you stand on the dangerous fraud to convincing paradigm shift spectrum.
As it stands, you don't look all that different from the phenomena of faith healing.
My personal approach was to be wary of someone looking for treatment and cures. We offered none and no figures were kept.
Then what's the point? If you turn people around who are looking for treatment and cures, how do you know you're not simply filtering out the people who need help? If all you're promising is a positive experience, what's the difference between what you offer and a good book?
The best approach is to maintain a positive view of all of one's experiences, and to be sober and responsible about the vigor of the journey they find themselves on.
This is a useless statement. Some people maintain a positive view of their experiences, and some don't. Those who aren't, you get to maintain aren't using "the best approach". But it's not an approach. You can't simply change your view of things so easily.
Workshop participants always claim their process as their own, and sharing was always postive and enriching. All we provided was the trigger.
Same could be said for reading a good book.
As far as I am aware it is one of the most powerful non-psychological approaches, far outstripping any of those given by psychology.
This is not new information. You're simply telling me in different words that you're convinced you're right. I already knew that. Are you trying to
assure me you're right?
Might I remind you. You're a random internet guy.
If you came to a workshop and expected results for your money I would have to tell you that it was the wrong approach and that you have to go with what you trust, for good or bad.
I don't understand. You're saying that if I payed you because I expected results, then it's the wrong approach. But if I payed you because I trusted you, you'd take my money.
Surely you don't mean trusting that I'd get results, else that would be an expectation. So, you mean trusting you for
what exactly?