E-Therapy
E-Therapy is a form of healing and Connection Practice developed by A. L. Kitselman [1]
Kitselman Terms
A. L. Kitselman > E, E-Therapy, The Four Unthinkables, Upstairs Mind
Notes
E-therapy basically involves putting the Spiritual Ego in charge of the healing process, and then facilitating communication and understanding. You can do this individually, by simply asking, or in groups. Kitselman calls E-therapy done in groups Group-E. As groups advanced and become more sophisticated and aware, K. refers to something called Hyper-E, which is a more involved and active team focus on healing and connection.
Quotes
"Consider that we're all geniuses -- that is -- we have a genius mind upstairs, but that in most of us, it's not connected. Now it isn't hard to just consider that possibility. And that's all you're asked to do - just sort of play along with it. Let's pretend that that's so for a while. And if you do that, you'll find that some amazing things will happen. You don't have to believe it -- just pretend. Because it's very easy to get these upstairs minds to show themselves. We all them 'E' -- for short."[2]
"E-Therapy might be described as a kind of psychological vomiting. Suppose you eat something that's poisonous - your system causes you to vomit -- throw it up -- get it out of your system. A lot of us, in many ways, have had experiences that we can't digest--and E-Therapy is a way of getting them out of the system."[3]
"Don't try to conduct the therapy yourself. The 'E's are doing it....You are simply to keep the egorup working as a unit, but you leave it up to the 'Es's as to what's being done. You really don't have to know anything much to be a leader of the group. You simply have to operate on the premise, for the time being, that the 'E's know what to do and they'll take care of it."[4]
Bear in mind that this work is something that isn't done in the dark - although it may be advantageous to subdue the lights a little bit for the benefit of those who see pictures. There's nothing hocus pocus about it; you're not going through any involved ritual. You're just making one simple assumption - that each person there has a super-mind attached, and that this super-mind can do wonderful things, if asked to to them. It is only an assumption. Then watch to see what happens. [5]
"Asking is the first step in E Therapy."[6]
"...Group-E is the easiest kind of therapy to get started in, and that the teamed Hyper-E is probably one of the most powerful methods of therapy known in the world today."[7]
"Did you know that you're 'E' keeps accounts on you? Ther was a fellow in Portland, Oregon, who told his brother inlaw that he had had some psychotherapy from some man, about forty-five hours of it. It hadn't done hnim any good. The brother-in-law said, "Who'd you get it from?" "Oh, from so-and-so." "How much did it cost you?" "Oh I didn't pay anything." "Well did you exchange services with him in any way?" "Why, no..." The brother-in-law said, "Well, you got what you paid for, didn't you?" He got nothing--he paid for nothing....We don't care if you take a free ride. It doesn't concern us. We do this because we like it. But the point is that if you take a free ride, you will get ... exactly what you pay for....If you pay for nothing, that's what you'll get. I mention that as an obstacle to your own progress, not because I'm a bill collector, suggesting that you pay somebody.....I'm just telling you for your own information that hitch-hikers don't get anywhere in therapy, because your 'E' keeps accounts on you."[8]
Footnotes
- ↑ Kitselman, A. L. E-Therapy Lectures. Masterworks International, 2013. p. 35.
- ↑ Kitselman, A. L. E-Therapy Lectures. Masterworks International, 2013. p. 62.
- ↑ Kitselman, A. L. E-Therapy Lectures. Masterworks International, 2013. p. 61.
- ↑ Kitselman, A. L. E-Therapy Lectures. Masterworks International, 2013. p. 67.
- ↑ Kitselman, A. L. E-Therapy Lectures. Masterworks International, 2013. p. 6.
- ↑ Kitselman, A. L. E-Therapy Lectures. Masterworks International, 2013. p. 70.
- ↑ Kitselman, A. L. E-Therapy Lectures. Masterworks International, 2013. p. 87.
- ↑ Kitselman, A. L. E-Therapy Lectures. Masterworks International, 2013. p. 88.