Heartline Podcast - Episode 37 - Dr. Curt Thompson
Did you come from a family where matters of the heart weren’t addressed? Did you learn early on to stuff your feelings? Perhaps you’ve never experienced being fully known by others, or by God. But what if there were a set of tools that you could tap into, drawn from new data on neurobiology, about how the brain can actually be re-wired to help you change the way you relate to others and to God. What if you could change the way you think and behave through the concept of knowing and being known. Would you take the risk?
Dr. Curt Thompson is a psychiatrist, practicing in Falls Church, Virginia and is the founder of Being Known, an organization which develops teaching programs, seminars and resource materials to help individuals explore the connection between interpersonal neurobiology, Christian spirituality and relationships which lead to genuine change and transformation.
Dr. Thompson graduated from Wright State University School of Medicine and completed his psychiatric residency at Temple University Hospital. He is board certified by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology. His clinical focus has been the treatment of adults, adolescents, and families. He is the author of Anatomy of the Soul (Tyndale, 2010) which demonstrates how insights from interpersonal neurobiology resonate with biblical truths about God and creation—validating the deep human need for meaningful relationships as a key to a life of hope and transformation.
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Hi there . I think everyone interested in psychiatry should read text about the lack of sleep as the factor, that may be cause of a brief psychotic disorder. The text is available on The Washington Post website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/travel/psychologist-lack-of-sleep-prompted-jetblue-pilots-brief-psychotic-disorder-during-flight/2012/07/11/gJQA7Wx4bW_story.html