DYADIC REPAIR: A CLINICAL APPROACH TO AUTISTIC RECOVERY AND PRODIGY RETRIEVAL
Abstract
Clinical evidence with the group of autistic and autistic-like children treated through Dyadic Repair in this count!)' and in Europe suggests strongly that many, perhaps most, autisti.: persons are prodigies. It appears that autists are pefiOns gifted with prodigiously high intello..-rual and empathetic endowments who. early in their devdopmental lives, learn to use an overwhelming. pervasive withdrawal and rejection of the environment. &.:ause ofa combination of intrinsic and extrinsic fa<.'[ors (coincidence), these children remain in a position of extreme withdrawal and retreat with defidts which potentiate (and are potentiated by) pervasive and sadistic rage in the face of failed attachment. Appearing unreachable and out ofcontact with the environment they are. in fact, intensely conne<.'[ed to it. RegardJess of the pervasive and discouraging appearance of the neurological, metabolic and physical damage which may be present, the apparendy untreatable state of the autist must not he taken as conclusive proof of the unassailable nature of these disabilities. Rather. they may he potentially remediable deficits.References
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Since there are other therapies designed to encourage bodily contat.'t and tender embr.lIX, "Dyadic Repair~ provides a misleading picture of the therapy under discussion and will no longer be used to describe this modaliry. The essential aspect of the retrieval of seriously retreated individuals is not the physical relatedness of bodies, but the very repair of the dyad, I have chosen to refer to the therapeutic modaliry as «Dyadic Repair."
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Subtle Energies & Energy Medicine by International Society for the Study of Subtle Energies & Energy Medicine is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. Based on a work at journals.sfu.ca.Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at www.issseem.org.