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Orosz, Kati (Hungary)

Orosz, Kati (Hungary)Biography:

My university studies in Mathematics and Physics taught me that the world is not what our five senses perceive. As a young adult, I was led by my deep spiritual interest to explore European, Tibetan and ancient Hungarian traditions. After giving birth to my two sons, I decided to go in new directions and gained university qualification in psychology and completed clinical vocational studies. My psychotherapeutic training included Jungian analysis and various methods dealing with altered states of consciousness. My professional and personal experiences helped me develop my own transpersonal therapeutic practice, in which I also integrated what I learned from English and Holland therapists.
In 1994, I became founding president of the Hungarian Transpersonal Association. Besides working with depressed and abused clients, I also do therapy with physically ill people (with cancer, SM, Crohn’s disease, etc.) in order to help them discover the self-healing power of their body, as well.
Kati Orosz (56)

Workshop: The angry baby inside us

In the course of births determined by the protocol of modern obstetrical practices, the first experiences that newborn babies have to face include exposure, helplessness, subjection, violence and fear, instead of cooperation and love. The workshop introduces our 8 year long work that helps adults achieve a corrective experience of their birth pattern. This type of therapy occurs in longer group processes and/or individual work. Its main strength lies in the helpers’ total and loving cooperation with one another and participants. We do not use suggestion, hypnosis or holotrop breathing, but encourage participants to express their deepest feelings via body work exercises, verbal communication and drawings. Part of them are able to relive those physical and psychological experiences on the emotional level that were split off during the fetal and perinatal period and became the obstacle of their personality’s development in their subsequent life, especially when major changes occurred. The angry, disappointed or bitterly desperate baby inside us determines the quality of our attachment mainly in our primary relationships and influences our sexual habits and ability to change. In the course of the therapy, the baby’s body-grief unfinished in the perinatal phase can finally continue and lead to a successful correction of our emotional patterns.
In case of interest, the workshop also offers self experience to participants.