![]() Again it's not that bad but it just feels like there something inauthentic about it. I might be wrong but it reminded me of how Wim Hof the 'Ice Man' has a son who is running a business to promote and maximize value out of his father's work and public image. finally and my biggest frustration with this documentary is the feeling someone has turned the whole thing about Gabor Mate into a personality worshipping business and is trying to get as much momentum as possible. ![]() Nothing wrong with psychdelic therapy, it is a worthy endeavour but i thought it would have been more honest to say how long after the session was the interview with the patient. I have done a number of psychedelic therapy sessions and am well aware of how one can feel permanently healed during the afterglow phase but after a few weeks or months a lot of the feeling of being healed can vanish. The substance used is not explained and while i did enjoy seeing how Gabor runs the session, i thought interviewing the patient after the session and how he feels good now also felt oversold. So if it's not trauma work being done bur a mock session, what is the point of it? Do people benefit by from those type of 'shows' about trauma? -the part with someone doing some kind of psychedelic therapy session in with Gabor Mate. I can't imagine anyone being comfortable talking like that in front of an audience and making sure they talk in a microphone and keep the audience entertained with witty comments while doing trauma work. I looked like some typical personal development guru doing these big workshop events with a large audience and I can't imagine how this can provide any of the needed intimate and safe space needed to do trauma work. the parts where you see him doing some kind of express therapy to some people in front of an audience, it made me cringe. I mean, seeing him surrounded with groups of photogenic women in awe in front of him. overall the documentary felt like a big Gabor Mate worshipping session rather than being about trauma which is a shame in my opinion and was even unerving at times. some of the talks of Gabor Mate about trauma and how we are living in a society that traumatizes people and fails to help those who are traumatized The bad: the interviews with (ex)addicts and (ex)homeless people where they talk about their lives in a trauma informed way The film is available in the following languages: English, Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese (Traditional and Simplified), Czech, Dutch, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Persian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Spanish, Turkish, and Vietnamese.-the parts where prisoners are talking about their own traumas and doing some kind of group therapy Producers: Maurizio Benazzo, Zaya Benazzo, Ryon LaneĬast: Gabor Maté, Russell Brand, James Doty, Tim Ferriss, Rae Maté Maté gives us a new vision: a trauma-informed society in which parents, teachers, physicians, policy-makers and legal personnel are not concerned with fixing behaviors, making diagnoses, suppressing symptoms and judging, but seeking instead to understand the sources from which troubling behaviors and diseases spring in the wounded human soul.ĭirectors: Maurizio Benazzo and Zaya Benazzo ![]() It shapes the way we live, the way we love and the way we make sense of the world. Trauma is the invisible force that shapes our lives.
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