Janine Rodiles - NeuroSoup Writer


Janine Rodiles - NeuroSoup Writer

Janine Rodiles is a clinical psychologist and the author of two well-known books: “A Forbidden Therapy: A Therapy with Entheogens” and “Addictions and Spirituality”. She worked several years with PhD Salvador Roquet, the famous and controversial Mexican psychiatrist (1920-1995) who pioneered therapy with entheogens.

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Books:

Una terapia prohibida: Biografia de Salvador Roquet, 1920-1995 (Spanish Edition) - Prohibited Therapy narrates the life and scientific discoveries of the fascinating Mexican psychiatrist SALVADOR ROQUET. Known internationally, Roquet belonged to a generation of psychiatrists who were the first explorers of the unconscious through psychoactive substances. In November 1967, with Maria Sabina, the Mixteca shaman, Roquet debuted a new treatment that included psychiatry and psychoanalysis, along with the natural medicine of the so-called power plants in Mexico.

Janine Rodiles worked with Dr. Roquet for 3 consecutive years, as his assistant and his biographer. Roquet’s "Psychosynthesis" is a well-known therapy utilized in many countries. It is a form of psycho-spiritual work which helps human beings to fully experience the deepest meaning of life.

To Roquet, mental health is the ability to love and to receive love. To empower the human being in this capacity was the goal of his work with over 4,000 patients from Mexico, United States and Europe which he personally attended.

 

Addictions and Spirituality - The search for spiritual experience, the longing for God and the desire for transcendence, is the driving force behind all human addiction: alcoholism, compulsive sexual disorder, bulimia, gambling, internet, workaholism, and so forth. Beneath all these behaviors, underlies the desire of the human being to be completely fulfilled and to escape this temporal dimension.

Janine Rodiles poses this hypothesis and argues that addicts seek to find the source of wisdom, ultimate reality, by wrong (not evil) methods, because they do not know the proper channels of true mystical experience that involve the configuration of an existential identity. The author explores the compulsive and destructive behaviors of human beings in the context by the denial of love, and the rejection of pain. Rodiles poses that our society wants to eradicate love and pain and create a fantastical new reality that encourages the use of drugs. The way for society to deal with addiction is found in the will of the addict to regain his or her freedom, and moreover, a battle of the mind to overcome this internal slavery. Janine Rodiles suggests that healing takes place through love and commitment, through a true spiritual conversion which reveals that the very core of health resides in discovering the meaning of existence. Rodiles calls for society to respond decisively and with compassionate action to this great crisis of our time.

 

Articles:

The Transference and Counter-Transference in Psycholytic Therapy