March 3, 2010 - Paul Swingle
Friday, March 05 2010 @ 09:03 AM PST
Neurotherapy, Paul's specialty, is used to help the brain overcome many different brain-related problems. From Olympic athletes going for the gold, to attention deficit disorder (ADD) and autism, Paul's staff help their patients improve their brain functions.
In this interview, David brings in phone calls from two of Paul's former clients.
Even years after his original injury, Les recounts that his treatment over about a year "I felt like myself again"
Stephanie, a professional research scientist, brought her son to Paul's staff with a lot of scepticism. There has been a major improvement in her son's life. With ADHD and oppositional defiance, her son ended up in a special education class with a crisis room with padded walls, which he spent time in. In his teens, her son simply was a handful beyond their abilities to deal with, on several types of medication.
After a brain-mapping and several sessions, her son has not had a single detention and is getting straight A grades. He gets himself to school and has just been accepted to university; a remarkable success story.
Individual Segments
- Les Sikora - one of Paul's patients - recounts his closed-head injury and how he has come back from it with the help of Paul and his staff
- David recounts his original interview with Paul. Paul is the first and so far, the only, of David's guests that have had their background checked prior to being interviewed and Stephanie, mother of another of Paul's patients, recounts the success of the program.
- Stephanie's story continued. David recounts his initial session with Paul, given as a Christmas gift, wherein his son, Peter gets measured and has his eyes light up.
- Paul answers a phone question from a person whose husband seems to have had a stroke, yet traditional diagnostics can't find the traces of it.
- David asks Paul to explain "how does this work?" referring to Paul's work with brain waves and therapy. David brings out Paul's "brain brightening" glasses for an explanation. Les phones back to tell Paul that he has also lost his need for alcohol.
- The conversation turns to depression and suicide. Paul has some interesting insights into suicidal tendencies and why some people still suicide even though they seem well along in getting help for their depression.
- Discussion turns to one of Paul's clients that David also knows - and how the client doesn't think anything has changed, yet those around him know this is not true. Chronically unemployed, the individual now has a full-time job.
- David and Paul discuss retirement how Paul really came to Vancouver to retire - yet now finds himself with 14 staff and a burgeoning practice. Why Paul's technologies should be used in the schools instead of having 50% of kids in some schools taking drugs to control them. A question from anonymous about erectile disfunction.
- A follow-up question about female orgasm. Paul works with sex therapists if the nature of the problem is determined to be a brain function.
You can contact Dr. Paul Swingle at:
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