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August 16, 1996 - Image 71

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1996-08-16

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

orange and sandalwood.
Even as she is working, Dr.
Mandell often finds herself being
healed, she said. "I work in a med-
itative state, to be sensitive to a
person's levels of energy."
Dr. Havi Mandell came to the
Circle of the Sacred Light because
"I wanted a place where I could
do this kind of work and not be
viewed as weird." Outside her of-
fice, though, there isn't much
about her life anyone would find
strange.
She belongs to Adat Shalom
Synagogue, her husband is an at-
torney, she loves M&Ms and
watching "Third Rock From the
Sun." Also, she confesses, `Tm a
java junkie."
At home, her son and daugh-
ter have delirious fun vowing to
"do some Reiki" on the family
cats, and during a disagreement
with Mom at least one of the chil-
dren is bound to say, "And you
call yourself a psychotherapist?'
Dr. Mandell takes it all in with
a sense of humor. "You have to be
able to laugh," she said. "You can't
take everything too seriously."

woman came complaining
of a tightness in her chest.
Dr. Carole Katz asked her
/)
to give the tightness a
shape and a color. The client
chose a basketball.
Dr. Katz asked her to imagine
air slowly leaking out of a hole in
the basketball, until it had all
gone, and the pain vanished.
Other times, she'll used guid-
ed imagery to take clients to "a
safe place, perhaps a beautiful is-
land." The journey will continue
something like this: "You're on
a long walk, you're feeling relaxed
and peaceful, and you come to a
meadow filled with flowers of
every color and shape." The client
will then take a balloon from his
pocket, put all his anger within,
send it off into the air and it's
gone forever.
When not at Circle of the Sa-
cred Light, Dr. Katz works for an
outpatient group at a local men-
tal and substance abuse treat-
ment center. She also spends a
lot of time preparing a Circle
newsletter, with a circulation of
1,100. She signs her messages,
"Peace & Love."
Clients come for everything
from individual therapy to cou-
ples groups. And while there is
some demand for traditional care
— and Dr. Katz is willing to do
whatever the client needs — it's
/— the more "New Age" methods of
healing that are in the biggest de-
mand and continue to grow in
popularity.
Dr. Katz explains: "Most peo-
ple who call here know it's not go-
ing to be exactly mainstream." ❑

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