The Roots of Love & Hate
From Conception to the First Days of Life
Presented by
Theodota Chasapi, M.D.
Greek Board Certified Psychiatrist & Neurologist
What is natural birth?
Mother/baby bonding: How does it affect relationships later in life?
How does the capacity to love develop in humans?
What are the roots of human violence?
How does perinatal care influence society?
Saturday, February 6, 2010
Paul Robeson Center for the Arts
102 Witherspoon St., Princeton, NJ
3PM to 5PM
$45 ($10 for students under age 25 with I.D.)
Refreshments included
Reservations recommended (Walk-ins accepted if space permits)
Call (732) 821-1144 or visit www.orgonomy.org
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
PSYCHIATRIST EXPLORES EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT FROM CONCEPTION TO THE FIRST DAYS OF LIFE
Princeton, NJ – January 1, 2010 – How does mother/baby bonding affect relationships later in life? How does the capacity to love develop in humans? How does perinatal care influence society? Greek board-certified psychiatrist, Dr. Theodota Chasapi, will address these critical topics during her presentation, “The Roots of Love & Hate: From Conception to the First Days of Life,” as part of the ACO’s ongoing series of Social Orgonomy talks on Saturday, February 6th at the Paul Robeson Center for the Arts, 102 Witherspoon St., Princeton, NJ from 3:00PM to 5:00PM. Seating is limited and reservations are recommended. Refreshments will be served. Admission is $45 ($10 for students under age 25 with I.D.). Call (732) 821-1144 or make your reservation online by visitinghttp://www.orgonomy.org.
Dr. Chasapi graduated from Aristotelion University of Thessaloniki, Greece with an M.D. degree and is board certified by the Greek Board of Neurology and Psychiatry. She maintains a private practice in Thessaloniki and lectures in Greece and the U.S. on perinatal care, natural childbirth, raising healthy children, love and work relationships, the physiology of the newborn infant, and other subjects. She is a founding member and past president of the Hellenic Association of Orgonomy and Editor of the Greek Journal of Orgonomy. Dr. Chasapi is available for interviews prior to the event.
PR contact/press passes, please contact:
Debra Sansanelli
Executive Director
The American College of Orgonomy
P.O. Box 490
Princeton, NJ 08542
Phone: (732) 821-1144
Fax: (732) 821-0174
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Theodota Chasapi, M.D.
CURRICULUM VITAE
THEODOTA CHASAPI, M.D.
Born 1953
Practice Address:
Vassilisis Olgas 203 B
54645 Thessaloniki, Greece
Phone: 011-30-2310-414088
Education:
Medical School:
Aristotelion University of Thessaloniki, M.D. 1978.
Post Graduate Training:
AXEPA Hospital, Neurophysiology
Additional postgraduate training:
American College of Orgonomy, training and continuing education in medical orgone therapy 1984 to present.
Gestalt Psychotherapy
Group Psychotherapy
Primal Scream Psychotherapy
Neoreichian Vegetotherapy
Certifications:
Board certified by the Greek Board of Neurology and Psychiatry, 1983.
Current Positions:
Private practice: Thessaloniki Greece, 1987 to present.
Founding member and past president of the Hellenic Association of Orgonomy (H.A.O). Founded 1988. H.A.O. is a very active organization with a list of more than 700 people who are interested in orgonomy. It sponsors and organizes seminars, lectures, and shows, inviting pioneering scientists from all over the world on the field of natural birth, raising healthy children, and preventing armoring. Its activity has influenced the lives of many people including students, scientists, mothers to be and families.
Editor: Greek Journal of Orgonomy.
Presentations:
Lectures in Greece and the U.S. on medical orgone therapy, the prevention of armoring, perinatal care, natural childbirth, raising healthy children, the psychosexual stages of development, love and work relationships, bions and other subjects relevant to the science of orgonomy.
Participant in conferences and seminars held by pioneering scientists on natural birth, perinatal care, the physiology of the newborn infant.
2
Presentations, American College of Orgonomy Annual Scientific Meetings, Princeton, NJ:
“Treatment of a Pregnant Woman with Panic Attacks”, 2004
Publications:
Articles:
“Breast-feeding: An Orgonomic Perspective", The Journal of Orgonomy, 33 (1/2):1999
Dr. Chasapi is the mother of two children.
THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF ORGONOMY
About the College
The American College of Orgonomy (ACO) is a nonprofit educational and scientific organization located near Princeton, New Jersey, that is devoted to setting and maintaining standards for work in the field of orgonomy, the science developed by Dr. Wilhelm Reich.
The College conducts a postgraduate medical orgonomy training program for qualified physicians and psychiatrists. Medical orgonomists offer a unique form of treatment that is based on a scientific understanding of the connection between the mind and the body. This approach effectively treats a wide range of emotional illnesses, usually without medication.
Elsworth F. Baker, M.D., a psychiatrist who trained and worked with Dr. Reich, founded the ACO in 1968. Reich, a student and colleague of Sigmund Freud, discovered that all living things contain an energy that he called, “orgone energy.” He originated the science of orgonomy based on his scientific observations. Today, this science informs an energetic understanding and approach to psychiatry, medicine, biology, the physical and social sciences, and atmospheric environmental research.
The ACO also offers its Social Orgonomy Training Program which applies orgonomic principals to the social realm. In addition to its professional educational programs, the College sponsors conferences, a speakers’ bureau, lectures, and laboratory courses for professional and interested laymen. The ACO conducts and supports basic and applied research, publishes The Journal of Orgonomy, a newsletter, and is a source for books about orgonomy.
For more information about the ACO, its activities, programs, referrals or training programs, contact:
The American College of Orgonomy
P.O. Box 490
Princeton, NJ 08542
Phone: (732) 821-1144 FAX: (732) 821-0174
Email:
Website: http://www.orgonomy.org