Dr. David Muss is a qualified medical practitioner. He published "A new technique for treating post-traumatic stress disorder" in the British Journal of Clinical Psychology (1991),30,91-92 describing the results obtained using the Rewind Technique. Since then the work has been replicated at the Maudsley Hospital in London.
Dr. David Muss went on to publish the first self-help book in the UK for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) sufferers, "THE TRAUMA TRAP", now out of print in the UK but still a best seller in Japan.
Dr. David Muss is currently director of a Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Unit in the UK.
If you have been in a serious motor vehicle accident, raped, criminally
assaulted, or involved in industrial injuries or traumatic natural disasters
please contact me at david@cmuss.freeserve.co.uk
PROGRAM : This is the only treatment program known in the field of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder which can help/cure victims of life threatening traumatic events without requiring being face to face with the therapist. It is called the Rewind Technique - which in fact is an NLP technique (VKD) specifically adapted and modified to treat Posttraumatic Stress Disorder sufferers. The Rewind Technique is suitable for survivors, innocent by-standers and emergency workers. The theoretical basis by which it works is this:
Imagine for a moment that your brain is divided into two parts; the front half is the bit you are using now, the back half is the memory area. If you experience anything other than a life threatening event it will first be accepted into the front half and then rapidly moved on to memory, leaving the front clear to receive your next experience or to view an event or image from memory. When we experience a life threatening event this is so alien to our brain that the structures in our brain which "guard" the entrance to our memory refuse to let the traumatic event into memory to be processed.You can see therefore that if the traumatic experience can not be allowed into memory then you are going to have to see it night and day. Your only way of coping is to attempt to cover it - or in jargon, deny it. Your cover usually works and you can just about function until something reminds you of the event - which can be hundreds of things - and then your cover is blown and you are back to feeling anxious, weak and frightened by what's happening to you. If this makes sense to you then you should contact me.The Rewind Technique will get the traumatic event past the "guard" to your memory and once it has found its place in memory it will no longer be in front of you and you will finally move on.
The Rewind Technique has a success rate of 90% in my hands.You will be sent
the technique,we will discuss it so that all is clear, and then we will choose
a day to do it.
Please contact me at david@cmuss.freeserve.co.uk
Click on the following links to see other websites offering relevant information:
(1) National Center for PTSD -for everything being published about posttraumatic
stress disorder:
www.dartmouth.edu/dms/ptsd/
then click on Pilots Database and then Web interface.
(2) David Baldwin's Trauma Information Pages -excellent site updated monthly,
for clinicians, researchers, students and others.
www.trauma-pages.com/index.phtml
(3) Traumatology - for the International Electronic Journal on innovations
in the study of trauma and its treatments.
www.fsu.edu/~trauma
(4) TACT- a UK charity that provides a 24 hour helpline, can assess whether
you are suffering from PTSD and if necesssary provide financial help to get
treatment. www.traumaO.demon.co.uk
