The Christopher Hansard Courant

November 28, 2009

A Change of Heart

We at The Courant considered closing this site recently and in fact did so, for 2 days. Not having posted anything new in months, some of our authors having to take time to heal themselves, and at times feeling disheartened and discouraged in the knowledge that Christopher Hansard and others like him continue to practice, continue to gain credibility and continue to be enabled by fans and followers despite having committed a myriad of abusive acts against clients in their care, former students and workshop participants.

It was also brought to our attention that Christopher Hansard is now counseling and advising others who have been cyber-stalked or harassed online as he claims to have been so “wrongfully” accused and defamed through the internet.

No matter how many people this man has abused, no matter how many ethical and moral boundaries he has crossed, lives he has ruined, Christopher Hansard will always, without fail, present himself as the helpless victim. There will always be those who support him, and there will always be those who believe him because they want to believe.

We cannot change that, nor would we want to attempt to change the minds of those who would choose to believe despite the sheer number of legitimate victims that have come forward, whether online or have simply found the courage to open up to others enough to carry their story, so that others would not share their fate.

Many of us are grateful to those who came forward and shared their stories in an atmosphere of love and healing. Thank you.

There are still ongoing discussions on the Rick Ross Cult Education Forum, and while those discussions are not nearly as frequent, they latter posts are becoming more and more helpful and the site is becoming more a resource and even a comfort to those who were harmed in Christopher’s care, to know they are not alone, and do not have to be alone in their grief, and they CAN have a voice if they wish it.

The Courant wants to take this opportunity to all those who have written in, who have shared, though remained anonymous, and some who simply wanted to tell their stories, and not have them published as well.

We also wish to acknowledge the many great healers and teachers that remain ethical and respectful of personal space, adhere to boundaries, and bring real healing to those in their care. One such teacher is His Holiness the Dalai Lama, and it is a quote by him that brought us to the decision to continue to keep this resource open.

 

“When teachers break the precepts,
behaving in ways that are clearly damaging to themselves and others, students must face the situation,
even though this can be challenging, criticize openly, that’s the only way.”
His Holiness the Dalai Lama

Thank you to the latest poster on Rick Ross by the name of Rudy – rudyh01. We send you ongoing encouragement and support.

Please check out the ongoing discussion at RRCEF and View On Buddhism

The Courant

August 17, 2009

The Fraud Continues… with a little help from (his) friends

Corruption Among the Flock

- submitted by a reader who took what they called a “snapshot” of the postings before they were taken down. It displays the lengths Hansard’s supporters are willing to go to defame his victims, enable his actions and illness and to carry on abusing others.

Reply posted on website in response to last posting by a Hansard supporter stating that Hansard's victims had "lost" their battle and he had therefore "won".

Reply posted on website in response to last posting by a Hansard supporter stating that Hansard's victims had "lost" their battle and he had therefore "won".

In this posting the poster is pleading with the owner of the site not to present a bias as their postings have been censored previously. No such luck however, as the last poster who appears to be taunting the victims is granted the last word by the so called "moderator" of the site.

In this posting the poster is pleading with the owner of the site not to present a bias as their postings have been censored previously. No such luck however, as the last poster who appears to be taunting the victims is granted the last word by the so called "moderator" of the site.

It would appear the posting remained for less than a day, as the poster submitted their comments on Monday June 22nd, and the snapshot was taken on the same day, though the poster and the reader may in all likelihood be in different countries entirely. Let there be no doubt that Christopher Hansard’s arm of abuse reached across oceans.

In Summary…

“Thank you for your contribution Mr. Livingstone.
This is indeed the Christopher Hansard you speak of. He has now been published by Hodder & Stoughton Publishers in the UK and America and continues to be promoted by his book agent Kay McCauley. Despite repeated attempts to contact those closest to him either in personal or professional capacities, urging them to get him some much overdue and needed ‘help’ or at the very least away from the public he has manipulated and abused over the span of his career, his former psychotherapists are now encouraging him to seek further “education” through various psychotherapy courses, (the latest being with Henry Whitfield in London which is being endorsed by B.A.A.M.), thereby equipping him with the tools needed to further manipulate and coerce those in his care into submitting themselves sexually to him in his ‘treatment’ rooms under the guise of ‘healing’, and into believing that he has acquired the previous education and tutelage of a Tibetan man he called Urygen Nam Chuk in his 3 publications. Mr. Hansard has become a fraud, and a sexual predator, and most unfortunate is the fact that some otherwise respectable upstanding citizens continue to endorse him, adding to his credibility and drawing future victims to him.”

Latest Defense by client Mr. F. Roussel

“Support/ Enable Christopher Hansard”

http://supportchristopherhansard.blogspot.com/search?updated-min=2009-01-01T00%3A00%3A00-08%3A00&updated-max=2010-01-01T00%3A00%3A00-08%3A00&max-results=2

What Mr. Roussel is unaware of is that the many allegations are indeed true. Victims had and continue to approach the police both in the UK and Canada. Coercion is however a difficult matter.

What Mr. Roussel is perhaps also unaware of is the law. If Christopher Hansard does decide to “defend” himself by going after those making online allegations, he knows well as the above poster also states, that it will unify his victims en masse. It is perhaps something they wait for, some more eagerly than others, as for now many who were conned still live in shame. Some were conned financially, others sexually under the guise of investment, spirituality and “love”.  Both forms abuse hit right to the core and shattered their very being.

‘We’ the victims offer you our sincere sympathies Mr. Roussel, as we all found ourselves defending Christopher Hansard at one time as well… It was our defense and denial that allowed him to go on to abuse others…

Christopher Hansard’s story of his training is untrue. It is a falsehood, a fallacy and he is fraud. It is not only because he cannot and will not ever be able to “prove” the story of his teachings, his teacher, nor his teacher’s family that supposedly existed alongside him as well, it is because it was reported that he told not just one but three people the ‘truth’, one being his own psychotherapist in London.

In short, the truth is out there…

June 1, 2009

Support and Healing

isurvive

Hello,

I saw you have iSurvive listed as one of your resources and wanted to let you know a great way to support this tremendous non-profit organization. We are currently trying to involve bloggers to raise money, and it is as easy as making a post! I am a survivor and have found great support at iSurvive. I hope you will help the cause by “Blogging For A Cause”. Here is some more information, if you are interested: http://mymonsterhasaname.com/2009/05/isurvive-blogging-cause-part2/.

Thank you for being a part of the abuse survivor community!

My Monster

April 6, 2009

How Therapist’s Abuse Their Clients

Christopher Hansard – Once known as “Master Physician of Tibetan Dur Bon Medicine”, now in the process of gaining a certificate in counseling and Cognitive Behavioul Therapy has a long history of abusing those who turned to him for help. He delved for many years in sexual relations with his students and patients under the guise of “healing”. Though many of them went to him for treatment of diabetes, depression, or headaches, for Christopher Hansard, the answer to every problem was sex… with him.

But there is more than just one way to abuse your patient when you are in such a position of power, and there is an entire grooming process involved in preparing even your adult patients for sex in the treatment room…

how-therapists-abuse-their-clients1

There are many ways in which therapists and counsellors can abuse their clients. The list below, which does not claim to be exhaustive, is based on the experiences of some of those who have been abused in therapy. Categorising the suggestions has not always been easy: some behaviours fit into more than one category, and there is some overlap between the categories themselves. NB. The words “therapy” and “therapists” here should be taken to refer also to “counselling” and “counsellors” – or indeed to any kind of talking treatment and those who practise it.

“You Don’t Need To Know” – Withholding information

  • Lying, withholding or distorting information
  • Inflicting any kind of treatment modality on the client without discussing the treatment and particulars with client first and gaining their consent
  • Not telling the client that the therapist is making some kind of assessment or diagnosis of them, and/or not informing the client of any diagnosis which has been made
  • Not allowing client to critically question the therapy they are being subjected to, demanding unlimited compliance and agreement and “faith” in the therapeutic process
  • Refusing to allow a client access to their client record
  • Deliberately confusing a client in order to keep the client off-balance
  • Refusal to explain terminology the therapist is using, such as any psychology or DSM terms
  • Refusal to answer direct requests for clarification of the therapist’s words or non-verbal communications

“I’m in Charge” – Controlling, threatening and manipulative behaviour

  • Shifting the balance of power further in favour of the therapist
  • Refusal to address the issues which the client wishes to address in therapy
  • Setting the client’s goals for them without reference to what the client sees as important, in relation to either therapy or life in general
  • Making a client work on an issue on the therapist’s agenda or to his timing
  • Threatening to have the client forcibly admitted to a mental hospital
  • Guilt-tripping the client with phrases such as “You don’t want to get better”, “You have a problem with trust” etc.
  • Using threats of termination to control a client’s actions, reactions, or behaviour
  • Deliberately confusing a client so as to throw them off-balance
  • Emotional blackmail and verbal assault
  • Manipulation through the use of withdrawal and silence (e.g. encouraging client to overstate their distress so as to get a reaction)
  • Unconditional positive regard (conveying the impression that the therapist cares and understands)
  • Arbitrary, capricious or variable attitude to client (cf. “Good Cop, Bad Cop” routine)
  • Making the client make “contracts” as a method of control (e.g. making a client be a “Pollyanna” by having a contract where the client must report “good things that have happened” regardless of the reality of the client’s life and recent happenings)
  • Therapist passive-aggressively re-enacts a traumatic or abusive incident that client experienced, without client’s consent or knowledge of this “therapeutic technique”, just to see how client will respond

“I Know Best” – Misinterpretation of client’s symptoms/situation & imposing own beliefs/ preconceptions

  • Not listening properly to clients – and only “hearing” what fits in with the therapist’s own preconceived ideas
  • Defining clients in terms of the therapist’s own outlook, beliefs, ideals etc
  • Using circular self-confirming hypotheses, i.e. basing assessments on the therapists’s conjecture rather than actual evidence, and then making further assumptions about the client based on those assessments
  • Labelling understandable distress/anger etc at external events in terms of mental illness
  • Insisting the client accepts the therapist’s interpretation of their distress and submits to a therapy protocol which is not designed for nor is effective for client’s specific problem (e.g. treating a depressed person for narcissistic or antisocial personality disorder)
  • Developing endless attributions for client’s behaviour (e.g. depression/anxiety/OCD etc.) to justify solving it for a long time, and when behaviour is still present after therapy, develop a new attribution for the behaviour
  • Making the client make “contracts” as a way to control the client or to minimise the client’s emotional situation, not as a useful therapy tool (e.g. where the client must report only “good things that have happened” regardless of the reality of the client’s life and recent happening)
  • Using ANY type of spiritual/religious or otherwise-not-mainstream “therapy” without first explaining such and getting consent
  • Insisting client adopt therapist’s belief system

“You Need Me” – Encouraging dependence & setting self up as only hope

  • Persuading the client that the therapist is their only hope of happiness, and that they should accept and do everything the therapist says
  • Encouraging an unhealthy dependence on therapy and/or the therapist
  • Making extreme and seeming serious suggestions like cutting off contact with family members or verbally abusing family members, and justifying this behaviour by claiming it will “facilitate the therapeutic process”

Use of jargon, clichés, pretence and other inappropriate modes of address

  • Using complex jargon to confuse and disadvantage the client
  • Making jokes at the client’s expense
  • Passing off abusive comments as “just a joke”
  • Passing off superficial clichés as “insight” and “wisdom”
  • Using manipulative phrases which contain a critical subtext, e.g.:
    • “This is life, you must learn to deal with it” (subtext: “You are deficient”)
    • “Choose to like where you are at, what you’ve got and to be with whoever you are with” (subtext: “Stop complaining”)
    • “I never promised you a rose garden” (subtext: “You are unreasonable” – when the only expectation may have been for decent and respectful behaviour!)
    • “Be grateful for what you have” (subtext: “You are ungrateful” )
    • “Do volunteer work” (subtext: “You are ungiving”)
    • “Now you’re sadder but wiser” (subtext: “Don’t be ungrateful – I’ve done something for you” – even though you sought help in dealing with the sadness)
    • “To have a friend you must be a friend” (subtext: “You are the problem – and if you say anything against other people, you’re paranoid”)
    • “There’s no such word as ‘can’t'” (subtext: “You are pathetic”, or “I don’t believe you”)
    • “Don’t you know that?” (subtext: “You ought to know that”)
    • “Don’t you want to get better?” (subtext: “You don’t want to get better”, or ” You will only get better if you do what I say”)
  • Attempting to lead client to therapist’s predetermined conclusions by any of the following:
    • Lying, omitting or distorting information
    • Loaded questions
    • Feigning ignorance about a topic
    • Passing attributional suggestions off as compliments (e.g. “you are a tidy person”)
    • Making coercive/fear inducing statements (e.g. “that sounds pretty paranoid to me…”)
    • Feigning an anger response to client to regain control or compliance
    • Feigning identification with client’s feelings
    • Playing on client’s weaknesses/fears/needs/vulnerabilities
    • Setting client up by encouraging him/her to do something that will fail or appear silly
    • Playing games with client (e.g. therapist brings own problems into sessions and has an “iddn’t it terrible” competition – “you think you got problems, well, I’ll give you a reason to be depressed….”)

Causing disruption to client’s life, including breach of confidentiality

  • Encouraging or causing disruption to client’s long term friendships and marital relationships
  • Failing to respect client’s lifestyle choices as a “given”
  • Discussing the client with others outside the therapy setting, unless the client has given explicit and informed consent to such discussions (which may include both giving and receiving information)
  • Character assassination

Financial/material exploitation

  • Using ANYTHING from a client for the therapist’s personal gain, without their knowledge (including the client’s story as an anecdotal case study for publication in a book)
  • Keeping any item belonging to the client, even if the item was “created” during therapy or a session of therapy (poetry, artwork, journals etc), and refusing to return these items when asked to do so
  • Using billing or financial arrangements to control or manipulate the client (e.g. requiring them to pay for a fixed number of sessions when client has decided to terminate early, or threatening to withdraw counselling which is being provided free or at reduced cost)

“It’s Your Fault” – Blaming the client & denial of any responsibility for distress in therapy

  • “Pollyannaism” – emphasizing only good qualities, people are all nice, well-adjusted, polite, and kind, so if a problem occurs it’s the client’s fault, while ignoring/overlooking/minimizing bad things people do, or the possibility that people can deliberately do bad things to others; if client questions trustworthiness of others, he/she is labelled “paranoid”
  • Demanding client “confess” to doing bad things as part of the therapeutic process and refusing to believe denials (e.g. using illegal narcotics, hurting other people, “being an asshole”, theft, lying)
  • “Cure must fit the symptom” (i.e. if client has excessive guilt feelings, therapist insists client must have done something bad to make client feel guilty and must “come clean about what you did”)
  • Treating the client as though he/she is malingering/feigning symptoms
  • Saying a client is deliberately “dragging their feet” in getting well when the client is confused or does not understand what is going on in the therapy
  • Labelling the client as manipulative or disturbed for questioning the therapist’s approach (e.g. diagnosing a personality disorder in order to discredit a client who makes a legitimate complaint)
  • Labelling the client as resistant or in denial if they don’t accept the therapist’s understanding
  • Refusing to accept that therapists ever make mistakes and blaming the client for any distress the therapist has caused them
  • Character assassination
  • Assuming all therapy “works”, even the latest fad, and if client doesn’t improve then they are “doing something wrong” (which entails many more hours of therapy) because the “theory” certainly cannot be at fault
  • Playing the victim when the client makes a complaint

THE EFFECTS OF EMOTIONAL ABUSE FROM THERAPEUTIC SETTINGS

  • Complete devastation and despair (feeling like Munch’s The Scream – see http://www.ivcc.edu/rambo/eng1001/munch.htm )
  • Self blame and feelings of failure, guilt and confusion
  • Loss of self-confidence and self-esteem, with excessive over-compensatory behaviour for new insecurities and fear about how others will respond to you
  • Withdrawal and inability to talk about the abuse; and feeling also that no one understands
  • Doubting your own perceptions and reality
  • Post-traumatic stress, and ongoing high levels of stress
  • Emotional detachment or “shutting down” (leading among other things to loss of empathy and lack of emotional response within oneself)
  • Intrusive negative rumination/intrusive negative thoughts/flashbacks
  • Extreme (but completely rational) fear of therapists and therapy
  • Retraumatization in circumstances reminiscent of the abusive behaviour (this may lead to becoming unexpectedly or unduly upset with others, and even to adopting therapist’s abusive style in dealing with them)
  • Breakdown of or disruption to client’s long-term friendships and marital relationships

April 3, 2009

When “healers” do harm – Christopher Hansard

logo-london-1

“Sex on the couch: The therapists who abuse their clients’ trust”;

Sex on the couch: The therapists who abuse their clients’ trust

For a therapist, seducing a client is a wanton abuse of trust. Yet it’s far from rare.

By Julia Stuart

When Jo Adams was referred to the counsellor at her GP’s surgery, she expected to be given help for her severe depression. But that was not all she received. During the six sessions, her counsellor paid her a number of suggestive compliments. In her desperately ill state, they gave her a boost. “They put me on a false high, even though I’m happily married,” says the 35-year-old, who works in sales. “He made me laugh when I was suicidal. I felt I couldn’t do without him and if he went out of my life I would go back to the hell of depression I had known.”

When the sessions ended, she wrote to him to express her gratitude for helping her. For several months the pair exchanged letters. The counsellor, who was 20 years her senior, poured out his troubled personal life. One day he turned up at her doorstep and they embarked on a four-month relationship. As they kissed and cuddled, he would try to pressurise her into having sex, though she always refused. “It was all very manipulative,” she says. “He kept saying it was OK, but I knew it wasn’t. I felt powerless. I was very vulnerable. I was so ill, and saw this man as a way out of my depression. I thought I loved him.”

Ms Adams had a breakdown and told her husband. It was the first time in 20 years that she had seen him cry. She told the counsellor it had to stop, and a month later, following another mental collapse, she told a doctor at her surgery what had happened. “I was even more depressed than when I had gone to see [the counsellor],” says Ms Adams. “I was suicidal again and had to have someone with me for 24 hours a day for nine months. I blamed myself for a long time. I had a lot of self-hatred. It put my recovery back at least three years.” Two years later, she is still on medication.

The charity Witness, which supports people who have been abused by health and care workers, believes the problem of sexual abuse by counsellors to be so serious that earlier this spring it held a conference on the subject, called Broken Boundaries: Sexual and Non-Sexual Boundary Violations in the Psychological Therapies.

“There is a lack of awareness and attention to the issue on the part of practitioners and professional bodies,” says the charity’s chief executive, Jonathan Coe.

“If a therapist is struck off they are legally still allowed to practice. So for even the worst offences there is currently no enforceable sanction. At the moment anyone can set up as a therapist, even without training or experience.”

The only UK study of therapist-patient sexual conduct found that 3.5 per cent of therapists admitted sexual contact with patients. However, Birmingham psychologists Drs Tanya Garrett and John Davis, who conducted the survey of 581 clinical psychologists, think the true figure may well be higher. Almost a quarter of the respondents reported having treated a patient who had been sexually involved with previous therapists. And nearly two-fifths knew of other clinical psychologists who had had sex with patients. “We know that it’s likely that reported levels of abuse by professionals are lower than the actual levels,” says Dr Garrett, who estimates the real figure to more likely be 6 or 7 per cent.

Most perpetrators are men and their victims female. There have been incidents of same-sex pairings, as well as adults sexually abusing child patients. The Birmingham psychologists found that therapists who had themselves undergone therapy were more likely to have sex with patients, and that single or divorced therapists were more likely to start a sexual relationship than married ones.

Research has also found that victims often suffer from borderline personality disorder. Typically they have been sexually abused, and may be over-demanding and have intense relationships because they fear being abandoned.

The impact on patients can be devastating. Some are so traumatised they attempt suicide. Often they are re-hospitalised. Research also suggests they can be vulnerable to being abused again by another mental health professional.

Even if a counsellor belongs to a therapeutic association, has a fancy address and is endorsed by celebrities there is no guarantee he or she will behave honourably. Last year therapist Beechy Colclough, whose clients have included Elton John, Michael Jackson, Robbie Williams and Kate Moss, was exposed for having affairs with women patients in his Harley Street consulting room. One of his victims, Janet Bell, started seeing him in private practice in 1999 for binge drinking. After six months he offered to massage her shoulders when she complained of a bad back. The massages became more intimate. After about a year of therapy they had sex for the first time. “I was lying naked on the floor on big square cushions and he was massaging me,” she says. “He just did it, and I didn’t try and stop him. I should have ended it there and then, but, bizarrely, his wanting to have sex with me made me feel special. I was so in need of affection at the time, I think I would have taken anything.”

They had sex during most sessions until the end of 2002, when she texted him to say she was not coming back. She never heard from him again. She filed a complaint with the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy (BACP). He is no longer a member. “What he did is little better than abuse or rape,” she says.

Doctors can be struck off for having a sexual relationship with a patient. Last October the rules were tightened further when the General Medical Council issued revised guidelines stating that having an affair with a former patient would almost always be viewed as inappropriate, no matter how much time has elapsed since treatment ended. But it is anticipated that counselling and psychotherapy will not be subject to statutory regulation until 2008. In the meantime, while a therapist’s membership of a professional body may be terminated, there is nothing to stop them nailing a new plaque to their front door the following day.

The Council for Healthcare Regulatory Excellence (CHRE) is currently running a one-year project, funded by the Department of Health, to find strategies to minimise abuse of patients by healthcare practitioners. “Professionals will throw back the claim that ‘the patient came onto me’. The theme that runs through all of the sets of guidance is that it’s absolutely and always the professional’s responsibility to set and maintain the boundaries,” says Professor Julie Stone, who heads the CHRE project.

With support from Witness, which has been calling for statutory regulation for over 15 years, Jo Adams reported her counsellor to his governing body, the British Association for Sexual and Relationship Therapy. He is no longer a member. Ms Adams has also started legal proceeding against him in the civil courts. “I know there are lot of people who are suffering in silence. There is help out there,” she says.

Some names have been changed

When healers do harm

* Psychologist Dr Steven Manley, who had sex with a patient claiming it was therapy, was suspended from the British Psychological Society for three years in 2005. He met the woman, known as Mrs W, in a car park. She said he “brainwashed” her into thinking it would help her and charged her £35 for the sessions.

* Colin McLean-Manning was jailed for a year in 2004 for indecently assaulting 12 patients. The mental health nurse got a sexual thrill from brushing their hair and rubbing himself against them. He has since been struck off the nursing register.

* In December 2006 the British Psychological Society suspended Gemma Bouwman for three years after she confessed to a sexual relationship with a former client, Mr JG, who was said to have problems relating to physical and sexual abuse he suffered as a child.

During one of their sessions, he told the psychologist he wanted to have an affair with her. She eventually discharged him so they could see each other non-professionally. She was sacked by the NHS following an internal investigation.

To contact Witness call 08454 500300 or visit www.witnessagainstabuse.org.uk

March 30, 2009

“Weird News”, Indeed!

Following Friday’s post, the Courant received the below letter.

When the link was investigated, it was found that Christopher Hansard is indeed still claiming to have treated the likes of Leonardo DiCaprio, Gwyneth Paltrow, Mick Jagger, Kofi Annan, and Mikhail Gorbatsjov, and still referring to himself as “Dr.”

We should perhaps be somewhat ironically grateful that Mr./Dr. Hansard has left such a tangible trace of evidence and fraud behind him. We are not however appreciative of the trail of grief, pain, and destruction he has left behind in the wake of the allegations of sexual abuse burgeoning from when he first set up his “Tibetan” practice in 1992.

“Weird News” is apparently located in Norway where Christopher Hansard was known to frequent with one of his Norwegian students in tow in order to support his fascade, though unwittingly, and unknowingly, and of course to act as a translator.

Thank you for the most recent and continuing contributions to the Courant.

“Christopher Hansard has treated a number of the world’s most famous people. Nå utgis hans bok om «Tibetansk legekunst og livsvisdom» på norsk. Now published his book about “Tibetan medicine and life-wisdom” in Norwegian. Verdens mest kjente mennesker søker hjelp hos ham, og nå vil han også dele noen av sine kunnskaper om tibetansk legekunst og livsvisdom i bokform. The world’s most famous people seeking help from him, and now he will also share some of their knowledge of Tibetan medicine and life-wisdom in the book.

Interessen for tibetansk kultur og medisin er økende i Vesten. The interest in Tibetan culture and medicine is growing in the West. Stadig flere søker kunnskap om urgamle metoder for helbred av sjel, kropp og sinn. More and more searching for information about ancient methods of healing the soul, body and spirit. Det merker Christopher Hansard godt. It marks Christopher Hansard good. Han er svært etterspurt i undervisningssammenheng og som lege. He is in great demand in the educational context and as a doctor. Nå utgis hans bok om «Tibetansk legekunst og livsvisdom» i norsk oversettelse. Now published his book about “Tibetan medicine and life-wisdom” in English translation.

Han behandler mange av verdens ledere, politikere, forretningsmenn og kunstnere. He handles many of the world leaders, politicians, businessmen and artists. Mennesker som Leonardo DiCaprio, Gwyneth Paltrow, Mick Jagger, Kofi Annan, Mikhail Gorbatsjov, men også bussjåfører og gatefeiere, sier Christopher Hansard. People like Leonardo DiCaprio, Gwyneth Paltrow, Mick Jagger, Kofi Annan, Mikhail Gorbachev,”

"Liz

Appears Mr.Hansard is active in Norway,
making it would appear some more ambitious claims as to who he has 'treated'.
Do check thefollowing:"
http://translate.google.co.uk/translate?hl=en&sl=no&u=http://www.rarenyheter.com/%3Fp%3D910&ei=wPXPSb3OCtqD-AbnxsnVBw&sa=X&oi=translate&resnum=6&ct=result&prev=/search%3Fq%3Dchristopher%2Bhansard%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DN%26start%3D70

About (about) Weird news.

Rare nyheter er Norges mest populære web-område med spennede nyheter fra hele verden. Weird news is the most popular web site with interesting news from around the world. Vi er tre personer som snuser opp nyheter for deg. We are three people who snuser up news for you. Vi har besøkende fra hele verden, særlig mange fra USA og England. We have visitors from all over the world, especially many from the USA and England.

Ønsker du kontakt med oss send en mail på: If you wish to contact us send an e-mail at:
rarenyheter@hotmail.com rarenyheter@hotmail.com

vh Rare nyheter…. vh Weird news ….

March 27, 2009

Coming Forward – Breaking the Silence

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Way Too Personal

The temptation and consequences of patient-therapist sex.

WebMD Feature

Secrets, dreams, fears, fantasies — all are shared with the professionals we hire to guide us toward optimal mental health. It’s no surprise that patients often become attracted to their therapists.

But woe to the shrink who allows this attraction to develop into a sexual relationship. In its Code of Conduct, the American Psychological Association (APA) forbids sexual relationships during therapy and for two years after therapy ends. Violating this code can bring expulsion from the APA, a revoked license, and a nasty lawsuit.

Every year, about 17 therapists are expelled or asked to resign from the APA due to sexual misconduct, according to the organization, which began keeping track of the numbers in 1993.

Now, the APA is considering changing its Code of Conduct to forbid post-therapy sexual relationships forever. This means that if a woman runs into her former therapist 10 years later, for example, and the two begin a sexual relationship, the therapist could risk his entire career.

Once Vulnerable, Always Vulnerable

Why such a hard-line attitude? “Because of the possibility of the patient being harmed,” says Rhea Farberman, spokeswoman for the APA. People often arrive at therapy with many concerns, sometimes focusing on sexuality issues and distress about how they were parented, says Farberman. ”These vulnerabilities can remain for a lifetime, and a sexual relationship with a therapist could compound their problems,” she adds.

Furthermore, says San Francisco psychotherapist Dorothea Lack, Ph.D., the process called transference almost always occurs during intensive therapy. This happens when the patient transfers onto the therapist the feelings he or she had for an earlier authority figure, typically a parent. “Transference lingers for life,” she says, which is why a sexual relationship can never be equal, even years after therapy has ended. (Transference is not common, however, in short-term counseling, such as the two to six visits typically provided by managed-care programs.)

A Hug-Free Zone?

Since it’s part of an in-depth review of the Code of Conduct, the APA’s code on sexual relationships won’t change for two to three years, if at all. Members are expected to comment on the proposed change by the end of this year. The final decision will be made by the APA Council of Representatives, which includes its board of directors and state and regional representatives.

But, in the meantime, the issue is stirring up controversy within the ranks of psychologists. The threat of lawsuits, the already strong language in the APA code, and the general litigiousness of society have prompted many therapists to erect barriers between themselves and their patients when it comes to any physical contact. No more hugs for a sobbing patient. No encouraging pats on the back. Even friendly chitchat outside office walls is shunned.

“I used to not have any social contact with former patients for two years, but now I don’t do it at all,” says Lack. “It’s just too controversial.”

The Case for Dual Relationships

But Ofer Zur, Ph.D., a private-practice therapist in Sonoma, CA, is leading a fight to support “dual relationships” — patient-therapist bonds that never turn sexual but are nonetheless close and nurturing. “Most of our clients suffer from detached and cold parents,” he says. “So how can we fathom that detached, cold therapists might be able to heal those wounds?”

He contends that sympathetic hugs very rarely lead to sexual advances, and small-town living has convinced him that you can play on the same softball team with a patient outside the office.

“I believe it’s time for patients to file lawsuits against therapists who act in an indecent, uncaring, or inhumane way when they do not hug a grieving mother or anyone else who is in pain,” he says.

Caution Prevails

But Zur is in the minority. The trend is toward more detachment from therapists, he and Lack agree. How this may affect the therapeutic process will take years to discover.

©1996-2005 WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.
Last Editorial Review: 1/30/2005 11:27:37 PM

Since setting up practice “officially” in 1992, self proclaimed Spiritual Guru and “Master Physician of Tibetan Dur Bon Medicine” “Dr.” Christopher Hansard has been engaging in sexual relations with his students and patients. He has caused a great deal of emotional and psychological harm to most as they endured a grueling grooming process under the guise of “treatment”.

The story of his acquired skills and credentials is a lie, and though his frequent demonstrations of ‘power’ over workshop participants has been translated into his having attained some sort of spiritual enlightenment, this abuse of power, and his manipulation of “charisma” should not be interpreted as anything but extreme narcissism, addictive sexual behaviour, and  possible psychopathy.

Whether you currently reside in Canada, the U.S. or the U.K. please report your experiences and any incidences that occurred within the last 16 to 20 years. Your complaints are still valid, though they may be referred to as a “historical assault”, they will help others whose stories are more recent. So please come forward and report what happened to you to your local police department or the police department nearest to where the incident occured.
Thank you.

Project Sapphire – http://www.met.police.uk/crimes/

Royal Canadian Mounted Police - http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/cont/index-eng.htm

Federal Bureau of Investigation – http://www.fbi.gov/contactus.htm


March 26, 2009

The Emperor’s Tantric Robes – Codes of Secrecy in the cult

This article appeared in the Winter 1996 issue of “Tricycle” magazine;

The Emperor’s Tantric Robes

An Interview with June Campbell on Codes of Secrecy and Silence

Tricycle: Is it your understanding that Kalu Rinpoche broke his vows?

Campbell: I don’t know what his vows were. We never spoke of them. What I do know is that clearly I was not an equal in our relationship. As I understand it, the ideals of tantra are that two people come together in a ritualistic exchange of equally, valued and distinct energies. Ideally, the relationship should be reciprocal, mutual. The female would have to be seen on both sides as being as important as the male in the relationship.

My relationship with Kalu Rinpoche was not a partnership of equals. When it started. I was in my late twenties. He was almost seventy. He controlled the relationship. I was sworn to secrecy. What I am saying is that it was not a formal ritualistic relationship, nor was it the “tantric” relationship that people might like to imagine.

The etymology of the word tantra is similar in Sanskrit and Tibetan. In Sanskrit, the word means loom, or warp, but is understood as the principle underlying everything.

In Tibetan, tantra is known as ju (Tibetan rgyud), which means thread, string, or ‘that which joins things together.”

Tricycle: You ended up feeling sexually exploited? Used for personal indulgence?

Campbell: Obviously at the time and for some years afterwards I didn’t think this. How could I? It would have caused me too much distress to see it in this light. It took me many years of thinking about the whole thing to see it differently, and to begin speaking about my experience. This wasn’t easy. I tried through writing to understand why people rationalize these acts as beneficial, and it made me question a lot of things. I’ve got no doubts now that when a male teacher demands a relationship that involves secret sex, an imbalance of power, threats, and deception, the woman is exploited. You have to ask, “Where does the impulse to hide sexual behavior come from?” Especially if it happens in a system that supposedly values the sexual relationship. Of course, there are those who say they are consensually doing secret “tantric” practices in the belief that it’s helping them become “enlightened,” whatever that means. That’s up to them, and if they’re both saying it, that’s fine.

But there’s a difference between that and the imperative for women not to speak of the fact that they’re having a sexual relationship at all. What’s that all about if it’s not about fear of being found out! And what lies behind that fear? These are the question I had to ask.

Tricycle: You were sworn to secrecy by him?

Campbell: Yes. And by the one other person who knew. A member of his entourage.

Tricycle: What might have happened if you had broken the silence?

Campbell: Well, it was assumed that I wouldn’t. But I was told that in a previous life, the last life before this one, Kalu Rinpoche had a woman who caused trouble by wanting to get closer to him, or by wanting to stay with him longer. She made known her own needs, made her own demands, and he put a spell on her and she died.

Tricycle: Just the way child abusers deal with their victims: “If you tell, something bad will happen to you.

Campbell: Yes, there are many similarities. It instills fear in the context of religion. Put yourself in my
position. If I had refused to cooperate I would still have known something that was threatening to the lama and his followers. Where would I have gone from there? If I’d wanted to talk about it no one would have believed me. Some people don’t believe me now. And what if I’d spoken out and the lama had denied it publicly? Could he still have been my teacher? I don’t think so. As it was I was happy to comply at the time because I thought it was the right thing to do and that it would help me. But I was still very, very isolated and afraid for years to speak about it.

In my own experience, despite the absence of a Tibetan upbringing, there were quite specific motivating factors that helped to keep me silent over many years. These factors were probably similar to those which influenced Tibetan women over the centuries. . . . Firstly, there is no doubt that the secret role into which an unsuspecting woman was drawn bestowed a certain amount of personal prestige, in spite of the fact that there was no public acknowledgment of the woman’s position. Secondly, by participating in intimate activities with someone considered in her own and the Buddhist community’s eyes to be extremely holy, the woman was able to develop a belief that she too was in some way “holy” and the events surrounding her were karmically predisposed. Finally, despite the restrictions imposed on her, most women must have viewed their collusion as “a test of faith,” and an appropriate opportunity perhaps for deepening their knowledge of the dharma and for entering ‘the sacred space.”

Tricycle: There are Westerners who knew you when you were with Kalu Rinpoche, who were also close disciples. They did not explicitly know what was going on at the time, yet some of them say now that they are not surprised by your book, that they “knew” without really knowing and that the sexual behavior of lamas, so-called celibate or not, is so pervasive that, in addition to their respect for your personal integrity, there would be no reason to question your veracity At the same time, students in the West who never knew Kalu Rinpoche are disputing you story. And I have already received phone calls from two Tibetan lamas in the Kalu Rinpoche lineage asking me not to publish any of your work and accusing you of making all this up, saying, in both cases, “this June Campbell had a fantasy of having an affair with Kalu Rinpoche.”

Campbell: Well, it’s not the first time that the “fantasy” argument has been used against women. Freud gave in to the social pressures of his day to suppress the truth about what he knew about sexual abuse and incest, and came up with the “female fantasy” theory, now totally discredited. Of course, it’s understandable that those lamas should react in this way; after all, they knew nothing of what was going on. But I’d rather face up now to people abusing my character than go on denying the truth. In any case, my book isn’t about Kalu Rinpoche. It is about much wider issues than my own personal experience, although obviously the effort to write it came from that experience. I left Tibetan Buddhism thirteen years ago and I spent most of those years thinking about the complexities of what happened. If what I’ve written is dismissed by Buddhists as irrelevant, or a fantasy, or a lie-so be it, it doesn’t bother me. I know that writing the book helped me acknowledge m)r past and come to terms with a lot of difficult feelings. It helped me to understand what happened by myself and on my own terms. No one can tell me that isn’t true.

Tricycle: What advice do you have for women who are currently in the position you were in twenty-five years ago?

Campbell: This is a difficult one. Twenty-five years ago I would only take advice from men in maroon robes called “Rinpoche,” so I imagine women in a similar position today will be very, very unlikely to listen to a middle-aged Scotswoman, especially one who’s just been slandered by Tibetan lamas as being a neurotic liar! Still, you’ve given me the opportunity, so I’d have to say: Don’t agree to a long-term secret relationship; it’s a burden you’ll have to carry all your life, and in the end you’ll have to be true to yourself and face up to why you entered into it. If you’re afraid of what might happen next, or how you’ll deal with the stresses of secrecy, try to take control of your life again. If you’re being passive and compliant because he’s your teacher, do as I did eventually: think for yourself, take action, and end it. Never allow part of yourself to be hidden away under threats of “bad karma” or anything else. The truth never made “bad karma.” If you need to, look for supportive people to help you. If you’ve started to feel that in some way you’re special, that maybe you’ve been chosen to fulfill some kind of destiny, well, think again. These kinds of thoughts won’t help you to become strong in yourself. They may seem to explain things now, but they’ll only hold you back in the long run.

cult_leaders_nprofessionalbanner

The following is an excerpt from the book “Captive Hearts, Captive Minds” by Madeleine Landau
Tobias and Janja Lalich. See other “Resources and Links” for ordering information.

The Master Manipulator

Let us look for a moment at how some of this manifests in the cult leader. Cult leaders have an
outstanding ability to charm and win over followers. They beguile and seduce. They enter a room and garner all the attention. They command the utmost respect and obedience. These are “individuals whose narcissism is so extreme and grandiose that they exist in a kind of splendid isolation in which the creation of the grandiose self takes precedence over legal, moral or interpersonal commitments.”(l8) Paranoia may be evident in simple or elaborate delusions of persecution. Highly suspicious, they may feel conspired against, spied upon or cheated, or maligned by a person, group, or governmental agency. Any real or suspected unfavorable reaction may be interpreted as a deliberate attack upon them or the group. (Considering the criminal nature of some groups and the antisocial behavior of others, some of these fears may have more of a basis in reality than delusion!)

Harder to evaluate, of course, is whether these leaders’ belief in their magical powers, omnipotence, and connection to God (or whatever higher power or belief system they are espousing) is delusional or simply part of the con. Megalomania–the belief that one is able or entitled to rule the world–is equally hard to evaluate without psychological testing of the in- dividual, although numerous cult leaders state quite readily that their goal is to rule the world. In any case, beneath the surface gloss of intelligence, charm, and professed humility seethes an inner world of rage, depression, and fear.

Two writers on the subject used the label “Trust Bandit” to describe the psychopathic personality.(l9) Trust Bandit is indeed an apt descripdon of this thief of our hearts, souls, minds, bodies, and pocketbooks. Since a significant percentage of current and former cult members have been in more than one cultic group or relationship, learning to recognize the per- sonality style of the Trust Bandit can be a useful antidote to further abuse.

The Profile of a Psychopath

In reading the profile, bear in mind the three characteristics that Robert Lifton sees as common to a cultic situation:

1. A charismatic leader who…increasingly becomes the object of worship

2. A series of processes that can be associated with “coercive persuasion” or “thought reform”

3. The tendency toward manipulation from above…with exploitation–economic, sexual, or other–of often genuine seekers who bring idealism from below(20)

Based on the psychopathy checklists of Hervey Cleckley and Robert Hare, we now explore certain traits that are particularly pertinent to cult leaders. The 15 characteristics outlined below list features commonly found in those who become perpetrators of psychological and physical abuse. In the discussion we use the nomenclature “psychopath” and “cult leader” interchangeably. To illustrate these points, a case study of Branch Davidian cult leader David Koresh follows this section.

We are not suggesting that all cult leaders are psychopaths but rather that they may exhibit many of the behavioral characteristics of one. We are also not proposing that you use this checklist to make a diagnosis, which is something only a trained professional can do. We present the checklist as a tool to help you label and demystify traits you may have noticed in your leader.

Characteristics of a Cult Leader

People coming out of a cultic group or relationship often struggle with the question, “Why would anyone (my leader, my lover, my teacher) do this to me?” When the deception and exploitation become clear, the enormous unfairness of the victimization and abuse can be very difficult to accept. Those who have been part of such a nightmare often have difficulty placing the blame where it belongs–on the leader.

A cult cannot be truly explored or understood without understanding its leader. A cult’s formation,
proselytizing methods, and means of control “are determined by certain salient personality characteristics of [the] cult leader….Such individuals are authoritarian personalities who attempt to compensate for their deep, intense feelings of inferiority, insecurity, and hostility by forming cultic groups primarily to attract those whom they can psychologically coerce into and keep in a passive-submissive state, and secondarily to use them to increase their income.”(l)

In examining the motives and activities of these self-proclaimed leaders, it becomes painfully obvious that cult life is rarely pleasant for the disciple and breeds abuses of all sorts. As a defense against the high level of anxiety that accompanies being so acutely powerless, people in cults often assume a stance of self-blame. This is reinforced by the group’s ma- manipulative messages that the followers are never good enough and are to blame for everything that goes wrong.

Demystifying the guru’s power is an important part of the psyche- educational process needed to fully recover.(2) It is critical to truly gaining freedom and independence from the leader”s control. The process starts with some basic questions: Who was this person who encouraged you to view him as God, all-knowing, or all-powerful? What did he get out of this masquerade? What was the real purpose of the group (or relationship)?

In cults and abusive relationships, those in a subordinate position usually come to accept the abuse as their fault, believing that they deserve the foul treatment or that it is for their own good. They sometimes persist in believing that they are bad rather than considering that the person upon whom they are so dependent is cruel, untrustworthy, and unreliable. It is simply too frightening for them to do that: it threatens the balance of power and means risking total rejection, loss, and perhaps even death of self or loved ones.
This explains why an abused cult follower may become disenchanted with the relationship or the group yet continue to believe in the teachings, goodness, and power of the leader.

Even after leaving the group or relationship, many former devotees carry a burden of guilt and shame while they continue to regard their former leader as paternal, all-good, and godlike. This is quite common in those who “walk away” from their groups, especially if they never seek the benefits of an exit counseling or therapy to deal with cult-related issues. This same phenomenon is found in battered women and in children who are abused by their parents or other adults they admire.

To heal from a traumatic experience of this type, it is important to understand who and what the
perpetrator is. As long as there are illusions about the leader’s motivation, powers, and abilities, those who have been in his grip deprive themselves of an important opportunity for growth: the chance to empower themselves, to become free of the tyranny of dependency on others for their well-being, spiritual growth, and happiness.

The Authoritarian Power Dynamic

The purpose of a cult (whether group or one-on-one) is to serve the emotional, financial, sexual, and power needs of the leader. The single most important word here is power. The dynamic around which cults are formed is similar to that of other power relationships and is essentially ultra- auhoritarian, based on a power imbalance. The cult leader by definition must have an authoritarian personality in order to fulfill his half of the power dynamic. Traditional elements of authoritarian personalities indude the following:

-the tendency to hierarchy

-the drive for power (and wealth)

-hostility, hatred, prejudice

- superficial judgments of people and events

-a one-sided scale of values favoring the one in power

-interpreting kindness as weakness

-the tendency to use people and see others as inferior

-a sadistic-masochistic tendency

-incapability of being ultimately satisfied

-paranoia(3)

In a study of twentieth-century dictators, one researcher wrote: ‘Since compliance depends on whether the leader is perceived as being both powerful and knowing, the ever-watchful and all-powerful leader and his invisible but observant and powerful instruments, such as secret police) can be invoked in the same way as an unobservable but omniscient God….Similarly, the pomp and ceremony surrounding such an individual make him more admirable and less like the common herd, increasing both his self-confidence and the confidence of his subjects. The phenomenon is found not only with individual leaders, but with entire movemnts”(4)

We will see, however, that an authoritarian personality is just one aspect of the nature of a cult leader.

Who Becomes a Cult Leader?

Frequently at gatherings of former cult members a lively exchange takes place in which those present compare their respective groups and leaders. As people begin to describe their special, enlightened, and unique “guru”–be he a pastor, therapist, political leader, teacher, lover, or swami–they are quickly surprised to find that their once-revered leaders are really quite similar in temperament and personality. It often seems as if these leaders come tiom a common mold, sometimes jokingly called the “Cookie-cutter Messiah School.”

These similarities between cult leaders of all stripes are in fact character disorders commonly identified with the psychopathic personality. They have been studied by psychiatrists, medical doctors, clinical psychologists, and others for more than half a century. In this chapter we review some of this research and conclude with a psychopathological profile of traits commonly found in abusive leaders.

Cultic groups usually originate with a living leader who is believed to be “god” or godlike by a cadre of dedicated believers. Along with a dra- matic and convincing talent for self-expression, these leaders have an intuitive ability to sense their followers’ needs and draw them closer with promises of fulfillment.
Gradually, the leader inculcates the group with his own private ideology (or craziness!), then creates
conditions so that his victims cannot or dare not test his claims. How can you prove someone is not the Messiah? That the world won’t end tomorrow? That humans are not possessed by aliens from another world or dimension? Through psychological manipulation and control, cult leaders trick their followers into believing in something, then prevent them from testing and disproving that mythology or belief system.

The Role of Charisma

In general, charismatic personalities are known for their inescapable magnetism, their winning style, the self-assurance with which they promote something–a cause, a belief, a product. A charismatic person who offers hope of new beginnings often attracts attention and a following. Over the years we have witnessed this in the likes of Dale Carnegie, Werner Erhard (founder of est, now The Forum), John Hanley (founder of Lifespring), Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, Shirley MacLaine, John Bradshaw, Marianne Williamson, Ramtha channeler J.Z. Knight, and a rash of Amway “executives,” weight-loss program promoters and body-building gurus.

One dictionary definition of charisma is “a personal magic of leadership arousing special popular loyalty or enthusiasm for a public figure (as a political leader or military commander); a special magnetic charm or appeal.”(5) Charisma was studied in depth by the German sociologist Max Weber, who defined it as “an exceptional quality in an individual who, through appearing to possess supernatural, providential, or extraordinary powers, succeeds in gathering disciples around him.”(6)

Weber’s charismatic leader was “a sorcerer with an innovative aura and a personal magnetic gift, [who] promoted a specific doctrine…. [and was] concerned with himself rather than involved with others….[He] held an exceptional type of power: it set aside the usages of normal political life and assumed instead those of demagoguery, dictatorship, or revo- lution, [which induced] men’s whole-hearted devotion to the charismatic individual through a blind and fanatical trust and an unrestrained and un- critical faith.”(7)

In the case of cults, of course, we know that this induction of whole hearted devotion does not happen spontaneously but is the result of the cult leader’s skillful use of thought-reform techniques. Charisma on its own is not evil and does not necessarily breed a cult leader. Charisma is, however, a powerful and awesome attribute found in many cult leaders who use it in ways that are both self-serving and destructive to others. The combination of charisma and psychopathy is a lethal mixture–perhaps it is the very recipe used at the Cookie-cutter Messiah School!

For the cult leader, having charisma is perhaps most useful during the stage of cult formation. It takes a strong-willed and persuasive leader to convince people of a new belief, then gather the newly converted around him as devoted followers. A misinterpretation of the cult leader’s personal charisma may also foster his followers’ belief in his special or messianic qualities.

So we see that charisma is indeed a desirable trait for someone who wishes to attract a following.
However, like beauty, charisma is in the eye of the beholder. Mary, for example, may be completely taken with a par- ticular seminar leader, practically swooning at his every word, while her friend Susie doesn’t feel the slightest tingle. Cehtainly at the time a person is under the sway of charisma the effect is very real. Yet, in reality, charisma does nothing more than create a certain worshipful reaction to an idealized figure in the mind of the one who is smitten.

In the long run, skills of persuasion (which may or may not be charismadc) are more important to the cult leader than charisma–for the power and hold of cults depend on the particular environment shaped by the thought-reform program and control mechanisms, all of which are usually conceptualized and put in place by the leader. Thus it is the psychopathology of the leader, not his charisma, that causes the systematic manipulative abuse and exploitation found in cults.

The Cult Leader as Psychopath

Cultic groups and relationships are formed primarily to meet specific emotional needs of the leader, many of whom suffer from one or another unotional or character disorder. Few, if any, cult leaders subject them- selves to the psychological tests or prolonged clinical interviews that allow for an accurate diagnosis.
However, researchers and clinicians who have observed these individuals describe them variously as neurotic, psychotic, on a spectrum exhibiting neurotic, sociopathic, and psychotic characteristics, or suffering from a diagnosed personality disorder.(8)

It is not our intent here to make an overarching diagnosis, nor do we intend to imply that ah cult leaders or the leaders of any of the groups mentioned here are psychopaths. In reviewing the data, however, we can surmise that there is significant psychological dysfunctioning in some cult leaders and that their behavior demonstrates features rather consistent with the disorder known as psychopathy.

Dr. Robert Hare, one of the world’s foremost experts in the field, estimates that there are at least two million psychopaths in North America. He writes, “Psychopaths are social predators who charm, manipulate, and ruthlessly plow their way through life, leaving a broad trail of broken hearts, shattered expectations, and empty wallets. Completely lacking in conscience and in feelings for others, they selfishly take what they want and do as they please, violating social norms and expectations without the slightest sense of guilt or regret.”(9)

Psychopathy falls within the section on personality disorders in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, which is the standard source book used in making psychiatric evaluations and
diagnoses.(l0) In the draft version of the manual’s 4th edition (to be released Spring 1994), this disorder is listed as “personality disorder not otherwise specified/Cleckley-type psychopath,” named after psychiatrist Hervey Cleckley who carried out the first major studies of psychopaths. The combination of personality and behavioral traits that allows for this diagnosis must be evident in the person’s history, not simply apparent during a particular episode. That is, psychopathy is a long-term personality disorder. The term psychopath is often used interchangeably with sociopath, or sociopathic personality Because it is more commonly recognized, we use the term psychopath here.

Personality disorders, as a diagnosis, relate to certain inflexible and maladaptive behaviors and traits that cause a person to have significantly impaired social or occupational functioning. Signs of this are often first manifested in childhood and adolescence, and are expressed through distorted patterns of perceiving, relating to, and thinking about the environment and oneself. In simple terms this means that something is amiss, awry, not quite right in the person, and this creates problems in how he or she relates to the rest of the world. 6

The psychopathic personality is sometimes confused with the “anti- social personality,” another disorder; however, the psychopath exhibits more extreme behavior than the antisocial personality. The antisocial per- sonality is identified by a mix of antisocial and criminal behaviors–he is the common criminal. The psychopath, on the other hand, is characterized by a mix of criminal and socially deviant behavior.

Psychopathy is not the same as psychosis either. The latter is characterized by an inability to differentiate what is real from what is imagined: boundaries between self and others are lost, and critical thinking is greatly impaired. While generally not psychotic, cult leaders may experience psychotic episodes, which may lead to the destruction of themselves or the group. An extreme example of this is the mass murder-suicide that occurred in November 1978 in Tonestown, Guyana, at the People’s Temple led by Jim Jones. On his orders, over 900 men,women, and children perished as Jones deteriorated into what was probably a paranoid psychosis.

The psychopathic personality has been well described by Hervey ClecMey in his classic work, The Mask of Sanity, first published in 1941 and updated and reissued in 1982. Cleckley is perhaps best known for The Three Faces of Eve, a book and later a popular movie on multiple personal- ity. Cleckley also gave the world a detailed study of the personality and behavior of the psychopath, listing 16 characteristics to be used in evaluating and treating psychopaths.(ll)

Cledde’s work greatly influenced 20 years of research carried out by Robert Hare at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. In his work developing reliable and valid procedures for assessing psychopathy, Hare made several revisions in Cleddey’s list of traits and finally settled on a 20-item Psychopathy Cheddist.(l2) Later in this chapter we will use an adaptation of both the Cleddey and Hare checklists to examine the profile of a cult ieader.

Neuropsychiatrist Richard M. Restak stated, “At the heart of the di- agnosis of psychopathy was the recognition that a person could appear normal and yet dose observation would reveal the personality to be irra- tional or even violent.”(l3) Indeed, initially most psychopaths appear quite normal. They present themselves to us as charming, interesting, even humble. The majority “don’t suffer from delusions, hallucinations, or memory impairment, their contact with reality appears solid.”(l4) Some, on the other hand, may demonstrate marked paranoia and megalomania. In one clinical study of psychopathic inpatients, the authors wroa: “We found that our psychopaths were similar to normals (in the reference group) with regard to their capacity to experience external event~ as real and with regard to their sense of bodily reality. They generally had good memory, concentration attention, and language function. They had a high barrier against external, aversive stimulation….In some ways they dearly resemble normal people and can thus ‘pass’ as reasonably normal or sane. Yet we found them to be extremely primitive in other ways, even more primitive than frankly schizophrenic patients. In some ways their thinking was sane and reasonable, but in others it was psychotically inefficient and/or convoluted.”(l5)

Another researcher described psychopaths in this way: “These people are impulsive, unable to tolerate frustration and delay, and have problems with trusting. They take a paranoid position or externalize their emotional experience. They have little ability to form a working alliance and a poor capacity for self-observation. Their anger is frightening. Frequently they take flight. Their relations with others are highly problematic. When dose to another person they fear engulfment or fusion or loss of self. At the same time, paradoxically, they desire closeness; frustration of their entitled wishes to be nourished, cared for, and assisted often leads to rage. They are capable of a child’s primitive fury enacted with an adult’s physical – capabilities, and action is always in the offing.$l6)

Ultimately, “the psychopath must have what he wants, no matter what the cost to those in his way.”(l7)

March 24, 2009

Recovery from Cults: Help for Victims of Psychological and Spiritual Abuse

Whilst most people would rightly assume that cults represent a major problem in North America, few realise the enormity of the problem in Great Britain and the rest of Europe. In the U.K. there are well over 500 cults in operation which means that on a per capita basis the problem is the same as that of the U.S. In Eastern Europe, since the collapse of the ‘iron curtain’ cults are also flourishing by exploiting (and removing) the new found freedoms given to the average citizen.

Cults are operating throughout the fabric of contemporary society. Cults have made inroads into the religious and medical communities and  even advertise in the media.

without an understanding of the basics, a counsellor may overlook cultism as the source of a client’s difficulties and even look for deficiencies in the individual as the root cause of the problems. Other carers, with the best intentions, may recognise that recent cult involvement is at the heart of a client’s difficulties, but enter the counselling with many assumptions about cults that are unfounded and erroneous. This lack of understanding impairs progress and can be extremely harmful to the very person one is trying to help.

There are many myths associated with an understanding of the general cult phenomenon today. One popular notion suggests that to become a member of a cult you have to be experiencing a personal problem. This school of thought further postulates that the prospective cult member must be a lost, searching soul with no faith, who may be unstable and suffer from low self-esteem. It continues with the idea that he is likely to be an uneducated teenager, who may have a history of mental illness and/or joined the cult in order to fill a void in his life. The reality is vastly different.

By far the majority of people who are recruited into cults are in fact normal and healthy. They usually come from economically advantaged family backgrounds, have average to above average intelligence and are well educated, idealistic people, with no prior history of mental illness. Their spiritual perspectives vary greatly. Some have a strong faith and some do not.

People of all ages are influenced and many are professionals. It appears that anyone can be recruited. For rather than joining a cult they are actively recruited. No one wakes up in the morning and says “it’s about time I got involved in a cult” and goes out looking for one. Instead they become unwitting victims of deception and subtle techniques of psychological manipulation.

These techniques of mind control used by cults to overpower the unsuspecting are many and varied. They include food and sleep deprivation. Trance induction is common and achieved using hypnosis or prolonged rhythmical chanting. Another popular tool is bombarding members with conditional love. This love is removed whenever there is a deviation from the dictates of the leader. It is known as ‘love bombing’. Guilt and fear are also used to bring about conformity along with isolation from rational reference points, as well as a removal of privacy, so there is no time to think and reflect on the issues and activities experienced thus far. These techniques are employed against the individual in an atmosphere of intense group pressure to conform at all times to the desires of the leader.

A list of 26 cult methods of psychological coercion is as follows:

Hypnosis
Peer Pressure
Love Bombing
Rejection of Old Values
Confusing Doctrine
Metacommunication
Removal of Privacy
Time Sense Deprivation
Disinhibition
Uncompromising Rules
Verbal Abuse
Sleep Deprivation
Replacement of Relationships
Chanting
Confession
Financial Commitment
Finger Pointing
Flaunting Hierarchy
Isolation
Controlled Approval
Change of Diet
Games
No Questions
Guilt
Fear
Change of Dress Codes

The victim is broken down physically and mentally so as to become highly vulnerable to the suggestions and wishes of the group and its leader. This process is likely to take only three or four days with the average person in the average group. The end result is a sudden, drastic personality change in the individual. The cult tries to equate this with ‘conversion’. However, Conway and Siegelman describe the change of personality as ’snapping’ (Conway & Siegelman, Snapping. New York: Delta Books, l979). The new personality is unable to reason, to choose, to critically evaluate and is dependent on the cult to interpret reality and his reason for living.

Even with the right help the typical ex-cultist still faces more than a year of pain and suffering before he recovers from the damage done by the group. Typical symptoms of withdrawal include confusion, depression, disorientation, insomnia, amnesia, guilt, fear, floating in and out of altered states, suicidal tendencies and violent emotional outbursts. Most were outlined by Conway and Siegelman in their paper “Information Disease,” Science Digest, January 1982. An ex-member may even bear physical scars that serve as a constant reminder of his experience.

It is obviously a difficult recovery time for former members, but it is made easier if they are made aware of what it is they are experiencing. When ex-cultists experiencing the above symptoms are brought to the realisation that their suffering is quite normal, there is a tremendous sense of relief expressed. This is another area where a counsellor can be particularly helpful. It feels so good to feel normal again, even if only normal at this stage in the fact that they are suffering as they heal, like thousands of others before them.

They can soon be helped by carers to realise they are not alone, that their current situation is understood and has been documented in a growing body of literature published by other pioneers in this field including Dr John G. Clarke Jnr., Dr Margaret Singer, and Dr Jolyon West.

Before beginning counselling the counsellor needs to be sure that it was indeed a cult and not a sect in which the person was enmeshed. A sect may be described as a spin-off from an established religion or quite eclectic, but it does not use techniques of mind control on its membership. However, a cult can be defined as follows:

Definition of a Cult

A cult has all of the following characteristics:

  1. It uses psychological coercion to recruit, indoctrinate and retain potential members.
  2. It forms an elitist totalitarian society.
  3. Its founder leader is self-appointed, dogmatic, messianic, not accountable and has charisma.
  4. It believes ‘the end justifies the means’.
  5. Its wealth does not benefit its members or society.

There are two distinct categories into which most cults can be classified. Whilst most people have heard of ‘Religious Cults’, few are aware of ‘Therapy Cults’. Victims of both groupings require the same counselling skills, but it is useful to understand the differences between the two classifications even if only to help recognise these groups as being cults. The two types of cults are as follows:

Religious Cults Therapy Cults
  1. Communal living common.
  2. Members usually leave or do not join society’s workforce.
  3. Average age at the point of recruitment is in the low 20’s.
  4. Registered as religious groups.
  5. Appear to offer association with a group interested in making the world a better place via political, spiritual or other means.
  1. Communal living rare.
  2. Members stay in society’s workforce.
  3. Average age at the point of recruitment is in the mid 30’s.
  4. Registered as ‘not for profit’ groups.
  5. Appear to offer association with a group giving courses in some kind of self improvement or self help technique or therapy.

For many of Christopher Hansard’s former victims of abuse the coercion, intimidation, and manipulation described above will be all too familiar. As for  those he may be engaging with sexually currently, or who he has recently threatened or intimidated in any way. You are not alone. Though he may tell you that you are the only one, or that the sexual practices you are partaking in with him are meant for your own good and are spiritual, they are not. Christopher Hansard has found a way to ensure his sexual addictions will always be fed and his ego nurtured. For him it is survival. With the help and support of his therapists and media, he will be guaranteed a steady supply of ‘willing’ and ‘consensual’ victims.

What is possibly the worst part of this ongoing scenario is that he also manages to manipulate those around him into feeling sorry for him, drawing out their sympathy and presenting himself as the victim of harassment when he has sexually coerced his patients into granting him sexual favours,  intimidated others into continuing fruitless treatments, and frauded countless people out of their time and money by presenting himself as a “Tibetan Master of Dur Bon Medicine” and even calling himself “Doctor”.

Christopher Hansard never had a teacher, he was never trained in the arts of Tibetan Medicine. He was however trained as an actor in New Zealand long ago. In 1992 if not before, his wife came home one day to find all her house plants hanging from the ceiling and her husband claiming that they were Tibetan medicine and bid her not to question him. Even at that time, friends and acquaintances tried to get him psychiatric help, but he refused. The illusion he had only just begun to create was too good to give up. He set up his own clinic in Adam and Eve Mews and began almost immediately recruiting apprentices, most if not all of which he slept with telling them they were taking part in sacred practices and teachings with him, most of which he had drawn forth from his own practice and were patients or fellow practitioners in his clinic. Most left, only one remained.

Psychological Harassment

Information Association

Psychological Manipulation

Psychological Manipulation and Induced Psychological Illness

As indicated on the home page, psychological harassment and psychological manipulation “mind control” can induce psychological and physical disorders.

When an individual is targeted, the level of harassment usually begins slowly and increases with time.

Anytime someone interacts with you they can influence your thoughts and also manipulate your thoughts.

Usually, people “tune out” the conversations around them. If you are in a crowded room and someone calls out your name they will probably attract your attention and the same goes for other specific words or sounds.

Individual’s can recall or form images. The expression “I get the visual”. When someone talks about or describes a scene you may form an image even if you have never seen what the other person is talking about or describing.

An individual can come in close proximity to another individual and ask a question, If the individual hears the question, whether he is the target of the question or not, his mind can respond with an answer. The answer response can be in different forms such as an image or sound. For example, if the question is what does the person look like? The individual may form an image of the person in his mind. If the question is what is the person’s name? The individual’s mind may respond with the sound of the person’s name.

If someone says leave and slams a desk drawer or hits an object. This is a form of indirect intimidation, an indirect threat of violence. If these actions are repeated it can become a form of conditioning. The next time a person slams a desk drawer or hits an object the person may associate this as a threat.

Classical conditioning can be used to associate different threats to different things. (see also Fear Conditioning)

Bookmarks (sections):
Conditioning your mind Negatively or Positively
Act Happy (condition your mind happy)
Indirect Communication – State of Constant Interrogation
Conditioning Sounds – Hitting Sounds, Conditioning and Fear Conditioning
Conditioning Words – The Identification Word or The Trigger Word
Indirect Threats – Verbal Maneuvering to Hide Direct Threats
Social Queues – Rejection Hurts and can Lower Your Self-Esteem
Smiling and Acceptance (opposite of rejection)
Intrusive Thoughts – Inducing Degrading Images (Degrading Themes)
Psychological Constructions – Constructions, Barriers, and Restrictions
Subtle Attacks – Hidden, Doubtful and Uncertain, Psychological Defenses
Ambiguities – Self Doubt and Uncertainties (A State of Limbo)
Ambiguities – Inducing Self-Doubt and Attacks to Self-Confidence
Metaphorical Speech – Hidden Threats and View on Reality Manipulation
Interpretation and View on Reality Manipulation – The Workplace, The Media, Propaganda, Brainwashing
Fear of Fear and Attacks to the Honor
Responsibility and Vulnerability
Ideation used to Manipulate Victims
Credibility and Psychological Warfare (Psychological Technology)
The Never Ending Test
My Space, Your Space, Not Behind Me
The Domination Game – Who Dominates
Psychological Manipulations used in Covert Type Investigations

Social Queues – Rejection Hurts and can Lower Your Self-Esteem

Rejection hurts, registered as pain by the brain as mentioned on the home page, and rejection can be used in attempts to harm and also lower a person’s self-esteem.

A person’s self-esteem can be lowered or increased by conditioning the person to look only for certain social queues, disregard certain social queues, or by changing the meaning of certain social queues.

Smiling and laughter, social queues, are very important and also have very positive effects on the brain. A tactic often used is to try to condition, associate, negativity to the act of smiling and laughter.

Social queues like smiling indicates acceptance towards the person. A person can be conditioned to associate negativity such as a threat or rejection to a smile. If an individual is repetitively threatened or attacked by individuals that use a devilish or fake smile, that is then gradually reduced to a common smile while still engaging in this behavior, and combined with other tactics to induce paranoia, the result can be that the person will associate other peoples smiles to negativity because they are reminded of the behavior or because they are confused or uncertain as to its intention.

Laughter is associated to joy and acceptance also. Laughter is also a great stress and threat reducer.

A person can be conditioned to associate negativity such as threats, or sarcasm and ridicule using the same tactics, as described above, to laughter.

The desired emotion that victims are usually manipulated towards or led to is anger because of its negative health effects, instead of laughter.

Ambiguities – Self-Doubt and Uncertainties (A State of Limbo)

Humans do not like ambiguities and uncertainties. We like to have certainty and security and ambiguities are also often used to induce insecurity.

Sometimes ambiguities are used to confuse the victim and leave them wondering what it is that they are suppose to do or be doing, or what is the intended meaning. This can also affect the victim by placing them in doubt or used to induce self-doubt and uncertainty, reducing decision making abilities, and can also have the “state of limbo” affect.

The ambiguities can also be manipulated as to hinting at a certain meaning and then modified to hint or indicate another meaning and so on to keep the victim confused or guessing as to what the true meaning of the ambiguities are. This can induce confusion, frustration, and self-doubt.

Ambiguities can also be used for emotional manipulation such as inducing regret for example. One way this is done is by hinting at a certain meaning of what the ambiguities mean with very subtle hints at another and different meaning. After a period of time the meanings can be reversed or what was the subtle meaning can be clarified or made more obvious to the victim to induce regret, self doubt, and also attack or reduce the victim’s self-esteem and self-confidence.

Classical conditioning can also be used with ambiguities. For example the victim can be constantly bombarded with negativity or is lead to the conclusion that past ambiguities also had a negative meaning. Because of the conditioning the person will deduce or assume what is implied follows the same trend or pattern of negativity or theme. (see Conditioning your mind Negatively or Positively)

Song lyrics often use ambiguities so that the listener can apply the lyrics to their own life or view on reality. Ambiguities can also be used to influence a person’s view on reality or in combination to efforts to change a person’s view on reality.

Ambiguities – Inducing Self-Doubt and Attacks to Self-Confidence

A tactic that is often used to attack a persons self-confidence and to induce self-doubt is to ask a question using an ambiguity, when the person answers with a deduction or guess, a negative (wrong or no) is indicated and a more accurate re-question is provided with the correct answer. This is done repetitively to induce self-doubt and attack a persons self-confidence by having them believe that their conclusions or deductions are always false.

Metaphorical Speech – Hidden Threats and View on Reality Manipulation

Sometimes people will use metaphors and metaphorical speech to try to hide different threats or use words that are not obvious in their association to a threatening nature and try to reduce the risk of exposure or criminal evidence.

The meaning of different words can also be changed (sarcasm). For example if two people that hate each other are using the words “I love you”, the intention and meaning of the words used do not have the same meaning or intention as the definition of the words.

Metaphorical speech can also be used to change or manipulate the view on reality of a victim. For example metaphorical speech can be used to describe a certain view on reality or belief that is not the actual reality in an attempt to manipulate the person. (see Ideation in Suicide Factors)

The words “profile”, “psychoanalyzed”, we are going to “fill you up” in the sense of creating a bad or false psychological profile and using psychiatry as a threat is often used. The victim is psychologically harassed and also bombarded with degrading themes such as pedophilia and an attempt to make them believe that they will be labeled a pedophile, sexually confused, or a violent, angry, and dangerous person. The truth and reality is that this tactic is used by the perpetrators in an attempt to protect themselves, discredit the victim, and prevent the victim form coming forward and exposing them.

Another example is referring to the victim as an animal and usually a dog. The attempts made by the victim to expose the perpetrators are then described as trying to “bite”, like a dog, or eat the perpetrators. Using metaphors that are orally oriented are then re-directed towards degrading themes in an attempt to prevent the victim from continuing the behavior of trying to expose the perpetrators. This example of the victim being described as a dog can also imply or insinuate that the person is less then human and can be controlled by a master or as a slave.

A better use of metaphors to describe the situation is that by trying to expose the perpetrators, the victim is using the light (exposure and visibility) and the perpetrators trying to use the darkness (deception).

When your enemy uses the darkness and tries to hide in the darkness, you have to use the light.

Interpretation and View on Reality Manipulation – The Workplace, The Media, Propaganda, Brainwashing

Event or Action -> Interpretation of Event -> Reinforcement of Interpretation
An event or reality -> interpretation of this event or reality -> reinforcement of interpretation and view on reality

In the workplace, employees who are psychologically harassed or psychologically tortured are often described as having the wrong interpretation of events, or having a “perception problem”, a “bad attitude”, and the wrong view of reality. They are then asked to consult a medical professional, a psychiatrist, and are then usually subsequently discredited and classified as having a psychological problem or mental illness.

You may have seen this in the media where something will happen, the media will interpret it in a way that is false according to other media groups or to your understanding of events and evidence, and will then proceed to try to reinforce their view and interpretation on reality or events and evidence.

Conflicting countries or organizations will often use what is called propaganda and their media to interpret their view on reality and events. For example the media in the US, Russia, Europe, China, and Asia may all have different interpretations of events and views on reality that they wish to induce in their audience.

Controlling a victim’s source of information and interpreting reality and events for the victim is also part of brainwashing technologies. An example of brainwashing and psychological attacks is Fear of Fear and Attacks to the Honor. A victim will be lead to believe that the fight-or-flight response is fear, they are then threatened which results in the fight-or-flight response, which is interpreted as fear, you were scared (showing fear to your enemy), and the victim’s honor is then attacked. (see also Degrading Themes)

Interpretations and evidence are not the same. For example if the interpretation of events is that Julius Caesar throw himself on the knifes of the Senators several times, that would contradict the evidence, so ignorance, intelligence, and the ability to interpret the events and evidence correctly and deduce the right view on reality is key and a factor.

For more information please follow the links below

Thank you

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March 22, 2009

It is up to us to initiate Safety and Efficacy at the CNHC

It has been brought to the attention of the Courant that while other publishers have acted responsibly by removing the current fraudulent biography of Christopher Hansard stating that he  “was trained in the spiritual and medical traditions of Tibetan medicine from the age of 4 and is now a leading practitioner in the field. He is Director of Clinical Affairs at the Eden Medical Centre, London. He writes a weekly column on herbal medicine in the Sunday Express magazine and a monthly column for the Life section of the Express. He regularly appears on TV and newspapers in Britain, Europe and the US. He is married with a young daughter.”  those at Hodder Mobius, Hodder & Stoughton – his main publisher – seem slow to act or react in the face of more recent allegations. The current biography above is directly from their site, and as it is used by other publishers and book promotors it is this biography that continues to draw innocent future victims to the practice of Christopher Hansard, It also helps to lend him credibility in the eyes of the public who remain ignorant of the fact that publishers and agents are not required to look into an authors past history.
Christopher Hansard is known to be violent, he has been accused of various sexual offences against his patients and students spanning from the time of his conception as a Tibetan Healer to now. His victims have been shamed, blamed, and called any number of names by him such as “scorned women”, “jealous practitioners”, “vengeful ex-students”, and “mentally ill”. The patients that he has been accused of molesting have been referred to as delsional, while it was Mr. Hansard who created an illusion for them when they came to him for help.
He is currently seeking further credibility and a certificate in counseling, cognitive behavioural therapy, and psychology courses with the help and encouragement of his former therapists who were made aware of his many breaches of boundaries, and of his fraud that has now been published in 3 books. The Tibetan Art of Living, The Tibetan Art of Positive Thinking, and The Tibetan Art of Serenity. He writes a daily blog where he continues to present himself as a spiritual, enlightened guru. In the past he would preach the importance of respecting women, revering sacred unions such as marriage, all the while he was breaking such boundaries, and dis-respecting women in the worst way. Infliciting violence on those closest to him, coercing his patients into acts of sex with him under the guise of healing, and manipulating his students into submission and unquestioning loyalty.

Safety and Efficacy at the CNHC

The Complementary and Natural Healthcare Council
(CNHC) is the UK Government’s attempt to regulate “alternative
therapy”. But it does not even require evidence that certified
treatments are safe, or actually work.

On 19 January 2009, the UK Government set up the CNHC, ostensibly to
regulate Supplementary, Complementary and Alternative Medicine (SCAM)
practitioners.

Double Standards

The actual effect will be to create a double standard for treatments.

In “normal” medicine, therapies must undergo rigorous testing
for safety and efficetiveness, and may not be licensed even if
preliminary data seem good. A good example of this is the drug
Herceptin, which was not licensed for use in the UK because the early
promising trials did not pan out. This is good – I don’t want some drug
being administered to me on the sole say-so of the company that made
it, and if it costs the drug companies millions to prove that it’s OK,
then so be it. What is the price of a human life?

However, market your cure-all nostrum as a supplement, herbal remedy or traditional medicine, and the sole-say-so rule is exactly
what happens. A SCAM practitioner can get accreditation from his or her
“professional body” – an association of other true believers, usually -
and a certificate of insurance, and become government accredited for
£45.

Worthless Certification

The CNHC does spell out what they do and do not claim about those on
its register, but this is hardly likely to be read by the general
public. SCAM practitioners will undoubtedly use CNHC certification to
imply safety and effectiveness. In fact, the CNHC referring to their
little logo as a “kitemark” reinforces this belief, as a kitemark
usually refers to the mark of the British Standards Institute, a
well-respected and trusted body.

And it turns out that this implication is a step too far for
the BSI. The term “kitemark” is a trade mark of the BSI, and the CNHC
have had their wrists slapped over the use of the term, through the medium of a cease-and-desist letter from the BSI’s lawyers.

Petition

I have set up a petition at the Government’s Petition Website, asking them to amend the requirements for CNHC certification to include evidence of efficacy and safety – please sign it.

the Courant encourages all UK citizens to sign the above petition and show your support for those who suffered in the ‘care’ of Christopher Hansard. A man who is highly delusional, dangerous, and due to a lack of regulation, seeking credentials so that he may carry on abusing those who turn to him for help and healing.

The story of his supposed ‘training’ turned out to be false in it’s entirety. A story that has been publised in 3 books. The Tibetan Art of Living, The Tibetan Art of Positive Thinking, and The Tibetan Art of Serenity.

While complementary practitioners expect to be treated with the same respect as our General Medicial Practitioners, they are not bound by the same laws nor any code of ethics save those imposed by their own regulatory bodies should they choose to be a member. However being a member of a regulatory body is not mandatory, nor are there any REAL consequences if any of the professional associations rules are broken. Even insurers offering coverage to those in the complementary field seem to lack any teeth when in comes to enforcing their own code of ethics or policies. This was evidenced when we attempted to bring the many abuses we were aware of to Christopher Hansard’s insurance company. With such serious accusations, one would think that at the very least a thorough investigation would have been launched into his claims, let alone his abuses of clients.

There is a need for government imposed regulations specifically aimed at those in the complementary and alternative medicine field. Christopher Hansard is perhaps one of the best examples of why it is so important that we take an active interest, whether you are a practitioner yourself, a student, or a client.

the Government’s Petition Website

Investigate Christopher Hansard

Thank you!

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