Author: | G.A. Barker | ISBN: | 9781412245838 |
Publisher: | Trafford Publishing | Publication: | February 26, 2007 |
Imprint: | Trafford Publishing | Language: | English |
Author: | G.A. Barker |
ISBN: | 9781412245838 |
Publisher: | Trafford Publishing |
Publication: | February 26, 2007 |
Imprint: | Trafford Publishing |
Language: | English |
The Strange Case of Rabin Jynuri is a journey into the terra incognita of the mind. Rabin was an involuntary guest of a state mental hospital. A therapist, determined to get at the source of Mr. Jynuri's quixotic and delusional mind, was convinced he had stumbled across a rare case of "Megalomaniacal Munchausen's Disease."
Rabin would prove to be the case of a lifetime for the heroic Dr. D.W. Dedicated to meet the challenge he constructed a case file, which was intended to support his thesis "Psychophysiosophy and the treatment of integrated neurological and psychiatric disorders." Beginning in the summer of 1967, and continuing up to the time of his murder in the winter of 1968, Dr. D.W. worked on a system of mind/body therapy. He was a pioneer in a field of neuroscience, which incorporates various modern biophysical principles alongside ancient practices of holistic healing.
Transcripts of colorful tape-recorded sessions evolve into picturesque articulations, which lead our minds into a field of splendor. Within the mind of Rabin, there is a valley of the lord, a golden orchis, a golden family, as well as a whole lot of otherworldly realms of weirdness and wonder. It was not an easy task for the good Doctor, but he persevered, and in the end his work survived to tell its amazing story. Readers are urged to partake in the struggle that ensues over a piece of gold; one tiny piece of gold that resides at the center of a madman's consciousness. It is an epic battle waged between a patient that dedicated his life in search of a sacred flower, and the doctor determined to bring him back to reality. Reality becomes obscured as a mystery arises from the battlefield, the line drawn between religion and science dissolves. The doctor finds himself blinded, unable to know "which side of black and white the gray was that he was standing in" as you will soon come to see, it is not an easy distinction to make in Rabin's world. It is an exercise in self-discovery, of finding your way in the dark, of coming to know what it is that eclipses the mind, and troubles the soul.
The Strange Case of Rabin Jynuri is a journey into the terra incognita of the mind. Rabin was an involuntary guest of a state mental hospital. A therapist, determined to get at the source of Mr. Jynuri's quixotic and delusional mind, was convinced he had stumbled across a rare case of "Megalomaniacal Munchausen's Disease."
Rabin would prove to be the case of a lifetime for the heroic Dr. D.W. Dedicated to meet the challenge he constructed a case file, which was intended to support his thesis "Psychophysiosophy and the treatment of integrated neurological and psychiatric disorders." Beginning in the summer of 1967, and continuing up to the time of his murder in the winter of 1968, Dr. D.W. worked on a system of mind/body therapy. He was a pioneer in a field of neuroscience, which incorporates various modern biophysical principles alongside ancient practices of holistic healing.
Transcripts of colorful tape-recorded sessions evolve into picturesque articulations, which lead our minds into a field of splendor. Within the mind of Rabin, there is a valley of the lord, a golden orchis, a golden family, as well as a whole lot of otherworldly realms of weirdness and wonder. It was not an easy task for the good Doctor, but he persevered, and in the end his work survived to tell its amazing story. Readers are urged to partake in the struggle that ensues over a piece of gold; one tiny piece of gold that resides at the center of a madman's consciousness. It is an epic battle waged between a patient that dedicated his life in search of a sacred flower, and the doctor determined to bring him back to reality. Reality becomes obscured as a mystery arises from the battlefield, the line drawn between religion and science dissolves. The doctor finds himself blinded, unable to know "which side of black and white the gray was that he was standing in" as you will soon come to see, it is not an easy distinction to make in Rabin's world. It is an exercise in self-discovery, of finding your way in the dark, of coming to know what it is that eclipses the mind, and troubles the soul.