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Wayne Allen Geis Process
Posted by: trying ()
Date: January 31, 2008 06:37AM

[home.dejazzd.com]

The above link contains all information regarding the Wayne Allen Geis Process (Acting School) cult.

Geis has been operating his cult for more then 40 years. He had classes in Munich, Germany, PeEll, Washington (Lewis County) and now in WoodRidge, New Jersey.

Geis and his wife Ruth Beverly Martin have 4 underage children. The live in the same home as the students.

Geis and Martin were accused of Sexual Misconduct with a Minor/1st on 10 counts in 1997. They had 3 children (none of the four still living with them) removed by Child Protection Services because of the severe abuse.

Geis diagnoses his children, students and other family members with mental disorders. He tells them that only he THE MENTOR can heal them, if they leave they will die.

We are a group of ex-students and family members of students out and still in the process. We want to educate about Geis.
Everywhere we post we get deleted. All we are referring to are internet findings.

Lot of influential people were in Geis process, and we assume that these people are afraid that the TRUTH will come out.

We have many written testimonials from ex-students and family members that show the abuse Geis puts on them. Their pain is indescribable.

We have recorded session of lessons Geis has had with his students, his children and his wife. These recordings are horrible to watch.

Officials are informed. They are monitoring the situation closely.

Please be aware of the WAYNE ALLEN STUDIO (see wayneallenstudio.com).
Please look at the testimonial section. If you google some of these people on his site, you will find out who in your neighborhood believes in the PROCESS.
There are Doctors and Accountants to just name a few.


Geis is known to sexually, verbally and physically abuse people of all ages.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 01/31/2008 06:59AM by trying.

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Re: Wayne Allen Geis Process
Posted by: trying ()
Date: February 01, 2008 06:43AM

Here is an excerpt of one rape case Wayen Allen Geis was charged with:

(FIRST STUDENTS THAT CAME FORWARD: Name withheld/young female student I) can testify that she likewise was a singing student of Wayne Allen Geis and can testify that Wayne Allen Geis and his common law wife seduced her until she ended up having sexual intercourse with the two of them for a two or three month period before she came to her senses and left the influence of Geis.
She ended up moving in with Geis and his common law wife Ruth. She stayed at Geis’ residence most of the time. She indicated there was sex with Wayne or Wayne and his common law wife almost every night.



SECOND STUDENT THAT CAME FORWARD: (Name withheld/young female sudent II) can tesitfy that she was presently 19 years of age.

She advised that she was 15 years of age, during 1996, she heard about music and acting teacher named Wayne Allen Geis; he lived just outside of the town of PeEll, Washington.
She began attending acting and singing lessons at the Geis residence which were paid for by her father. GEis said that he had at one point had replaced the well-known actor, John Voight in an off Brpadway play.
She said she was spending the nights along with other students at the Geis residence because she was not yet driving because of her 15 years of age.

The acting lessons were five to six hours at the time. The lessons were one-on-one and some of it was group oriented.
Not long after she attended the lessons, Geis told her that she was too tight emotionally and sexually and she needed to be more comfortable with herself sexually.
Geis told her things which would indicate that she was not going to be a successful actress or singer unless she could be in touch with her own sexuality to a greater degree and become less self conscious.
Geis suggested that (Name withheld/Student II) become more friendly with his common law wife. She advised that she indeed become more friendly with Geis’ common law wife prior to turning 16 years of age.
The student said that there was fondling and touching of the genitals by Geis’ common law wife. She was slowly being brought along by Geis’ common law wife and then Geis took over and approximately two weeks after her 16 Birthday Wayne Allen Geis had sexual intercourse with her in the studio.

Geis called the Students father and bragged about how well she was coming along and how well she was suddenly doing and that his daughter was just “:blossoming” as an actress and as a singer.

Geis indicated to the young female student that in order for her to become even more comfortable with her sexuality, he would take pictures of her with a digital camers. She indicated that Geis took pictures of her in the nude and with her breasts exposed.

Geis also told her that sex was bipolar, and that she would only be whole when she loved a woman and a man equally. This was said in an apparent attempt to make her feel better about sexual activity with him and his common law wife.

At one point, she indicated a reluctance to carry on the sexual activity and she was told by Geis that if she refused further sexual activity, she would not be developing further in her acting and singing classes and she might just as well stop.
She advised that some of the other students were in such awe over Geis that being cut off from the acting classes would be seen as similar to being barred forever from the gates of heaven.

Geis forbid her to take on a boyfriend because it would interfere with her acting and singing lessons. Yet, she became cognizant of the fact that Wayne Allen Geis was having sex with her on a regular basis as though he was her boyfriend.


...to be continued


P.S. and maybe A........V............A you can relate to these comments made by these young girls. He keeps the same method, he just dropped the parents. Nowadays students are sent to work. We do not relate on the parents for money anymore, Parents are trouble.

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Re: Wayne Allen Geis Process
Posted by: trying ()
Date: February 01, 2008 06:48AM

This article might help you grasp how Wayne influenced your "memories' and identity with his abusive therapy.




Brain Stains

Scientific American Mind, October 2007
By Scott O. Lilienfeld and Kelly Lambert

Traumatic therapies can have long-lasting effects on mental health
A wave of nausea washed over Sheri J. Storm when she opened the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel on a February morning a decade ago and saw the headline: "Malpractice lawsuit: Plaintiff tells horror of memories. Woman emotionally testifies that psychiatrist planted false recollections." The woman in the article shared a lot with Storm—the same psychiatrist, the same memories, the same diagnosis of multiple personality disorder. At that moment, Storm suddenly realized that her own illness and 200-plus personalities, though painfully real to her, were nothing more than a figment of her imagination—created by her trusted therapist, Kenneth Olson.

Storm initially sought treatment from Olson because of insomnia and anxiety associated with divorce proceedings and a new career in radio advertising. She had hoped for an antidepressant prescription or a few relaxation techniques. But after enduring hypnosis sessions, psychotropic medications and mental-ward hospitalizations, Storm had much more to worry about than stress. She had "remembered" being sexually abused by her father at the age of three and forced to engage in bestiality and satanic ritual abuse that included the slaughtering and consumption of human babies. According to her psychiatrist, these traumatic experiences had generated alternative personalities, or alters, within Storm's mind.

Storm is now convinced that her multiple personality disorder was iatrogenic, the product of her "therapy." But years after the psychiatric sessions have ceased, she is still tormented by vivid memories, nightmares and physical reactions to cues from her fictitious past. Although she was told that the false memories would fade over time, she has had a difficult time purging these "brain stains" from the fabric of her mind.


Storm's case is similar to those of many other patients who ­underwent recovered-memory therapy that revealed sordid histories of sexual abuse and demonic ceremonies. Although the scientific literature suggests that traumatic events are rarely, if ever, repressed or forgotten, this type of therapy was widespread in the 1990s and is still practiced today. Only after several high-profile lawsuits did the American Medical Association issue warnings to patients about the unreliability of recovered memories. Nadean Cool, the patient described in the newspaper story that turned Storm's life upside down, filed one such lawsuit. Cool received a $2.4-million settlement after 15 days of courtroom testimony. Amid the heated controversy, the American Psychiatric Association discontinued the diagnostic category of multiple personality disorder, replacing it with the slightly different diagnosis of dissociative identity disorder.

It seemed that science and the legal system had triumphed over sloppy therapeutic techniques. Some patients received substantial monetary settlements, their therapists were exposed in the media, and scientists produced convincing evidence that false memories could indeed be implanted in the human mind. Case closed. Or was it? For Storm and others like her, bad therapy seems to have altered the brain's emotional circuitry, with lasting effects on memory and mental health. Fortunately, as with most other blemishes, such brain stains may be reversible, though only after considerable effort.


The Fallibility of Memory
In 1949 Canadian psychologist Donald O. Hebb proposed that cellular changes lead to the establishment of "memory circuits" in the brain. Neuroscientists Tim Bliss of the National Institute for Medical Research in London and Terje Lømo of the University of Oslo validated this idea in 1973 by demonstrating that electrical ­signals delivered to certain brain areas, such as the hippocampus, had long-lasting effects on the connections among nerve cells. Research over the past century has provided unequivocal evidence that the brain's functional structures are continually modified to generate and maintain memories.

The problem with the brain is that it is not a very discriminating processor. It has no spam folder for imaginary or coerced memories. Movie plots, unsubstantiated rumors and images from dreams are stored in our brain alongside memories of our 10th-birthday party, first kiss and high school graduation.

Research by Elizabeth F. Loftus, then at the University of Washington and now at the University of California, Irvine, has shown how difficult it can be to distinguish real memories from fictitious ones. In 1995 she and her research associate Jacqueline E. Pickrell contacted the family members of 24 individuals and, after gathering information about their lives from relatives, constructed memory booklets containing actual childhood events along with a false story of being lost in a mall at five years of age. The researchers found that 29 percent of the subjects "remembered" the false event and were even able to provide details of it.

Recovered-memory therapy relies fundamentally on the notion that some memories are so unspeakable that the mind represses them to protect itself. Decades of research conducted by neurobiologist James L. McGaugh of U.C.I. suggest, however, just the opposite—that one key function of memories is to recall threatening situations so that they can be avoided in the future. Human experiments by McGaugh and neurobiologist Larry Cahill, also at U.C.I., have shown that emotional arousal tends to make memories stronger. Likewise, when animals receive injections of the stress hormone epinephrine (also known as adrenaline), they sail through memory tests. Not only do these experiments run counter to the notion that traumatic memories are repressed routinely, but they also may elucidate why patients such as Storm, whose therapy focused on "guided imagery" and enactments of traumatic scenes, report that these experiences have become fixtures in their memories.

Multiple Personalities
Storm's relationship with her psychiatrist was based on trust. She knew that he had professional credentials and a prestigious reputation at the local hospital. Once she was diagnosed with ­multiple personality disorder, she received official-looking publications that seemed to confirm the surprising judgment. Storm reports that over time, her "memories" were fabricated and consolidated by a multitude of techniques—long hypnotherapy sessions, multiple psychotropic medications, sodium amytal (purportedly a truth serum), isolation from family members and mental-ward hospitalizations.

Transcripts of Storm's sessions with Olson reveal that he did most of the talking. Although Storm provided no initial information about the alters, Olson identified and conversed with them. When she repeated and responded to the terrifying accusations revealed during her sessions, she was videotaped so that her alters could be validated once the sessions were over. As the sessions progressed, the acts Storm described became more horrific, and the alters became active even when she was not in her therapist's office.

"I felt absolutely stark-raving mad," Storm later wrote. "Under Olson's tutelage, dissociation became second nature to me. I randomly switched from alter to alter so frequently that I lost time or forgot how to perform even simple, routine daily functions."

The idea that emotionally laden memories can be induced in a clinical setting dates back to experiments conducted nearly a century ago. Famed behaviorist James B. Watson "conditioned" an 11-month-old infant, known in every introductory psychology text as Little Albert, to fear a white rat. The infant showed no sign of fear toward the furry creature in the first session, but after the white rat was paired with a very loud noise, Albert responded with tears. Later, Albert cried when he was presented with a variety of stimuli that resembled the rat. This early case suggested that a therapist (or experimental psychologist, in this case) could easily create emotional associations and that these mental connections could be so powerful that they generalized to similar stimuli. In the case of Little Albert, the memories were "implicit"—that is, not consciously recalled—but Watson's findings remind us that powerful emotional memories can be enduring.



In Storm's case, a technique called abreactive therapy helped to create these emotional associations. Storm was told that abreactions were total-body "flashback" reactions that would enable her to relive the traumatic events in her life, complete with the sounds, smells, sights and tactile experiences of these events. Olson instructed Storm to allow her alters to come forward and share their participation in unthinkable acts such as eating babies. For Storm, this therapy was physically, mentally and emotionally grueling. Years later the conditioned associations remain strong. Storm is plagued not only by her explicit memories of the disturbing scenes brought to life in her therapist's office but also by implicit memories that provoke reflexive physical reactions.

When Storm found a hair in her pizza at a local restaurant, it triggered visual and emotional memories of gagging, eating babies and cult activity. Cigar smoke brought up memories of cigar burns and subsequent rapes by her uncle. The cries of a baby provoked an intense desire to "save" the child. And the list goes on: stale air in the car made her recall sensations of being buried alive; dead animals on the road awakened grief and dread associated with satanic ritual abuse; and any form of anxiety or stress led to stuttering, crying hysterically and choking sensations. Worst of all, Storm became convinced that her parents—the people previously associated with nurture, safety and love—had tortured her in unimaginable ways.

Long-Term Impacts
Before she began therapy, Storm's symptoms consisted of minor insomnia and mild anxiety. After Olson's therapy commenced, she experienced migraines, dizziness, backaches, nausea, bowel disturbances and severe insomnia. Olson prescribed lithium, Prozac, Desyrel, Tegretol, Xanax and several migraine medications to address these new symptoms. A decade later Storm reports continued use of psychotropic medications—Prozac, Xanax, Cytomel and a rotation of sleep medications. She continues to experience intrusive images and thoughts and remains unemployed and socially isolated.

Research suggests that Storm's case is not unique. According to a 1996 report of the Crime Victims Compensation Program in Washington State, recovered-memory therapy may have unwanted negative effects on many patients. In this survey of 183 claims of repressed memories of childhood abuse, 30 cases were randomly selected for further profiling. Interestingly, this sample was almost exclusively Caucasian (97 percent) and female (97 percent). The following information was gleaned:

100 percent of the patients reported torture or mutilation, although no medical exams corroborated these claims
97 percent recovered memories of satanic ritual abuse
76 percent remembered infant cannibalism
69 percent remembered being tortured with spiders
100 percent remained in therapy three years after their first memory surfaced in therapy, and more than half were still in therapy five years later
10 percent indicated that they had thoughts of suicide prior to therapy; this level increased to 67 percent following therapy
Hospitalizations increased from 7 percent prior to memory recovery to 37 percent following therapy
Self-mutilations increased from 3 to 27 percent
83 percent of the patients were employed prior to therapy; only 10 percent were employed three years into therapy
77 percent were married prior to therapy; 48 percent of those were separated or divorced after three years of therapy
23 percent of patients who had children lost parental custody
100 percent were estranged from extended families
Although there is no way to know whether recovered-memory techniques were the sole cause of these negative outcomes, these findings raise profoundly troubling questions about the widespread use of such techniques.



Whereas traditional therapeutic approaches are designed to reduce problematic symptoms, recovered-memory therapy exacerbates symptoms, sometimes intentionally. In a 1993 article, Paul R. McHugh, former director of the psychiatry department at Johns Hopkins University, noted that most patients later diagnosed with multiple personality disorder (MPD) had come to therapists with ordinary psychological symptoms such as problems with relationships or feelings of depression. The therapists, according to McHugh, suggested that there was a deep emotional root for these symptoms and that they were caused by alternative personalities.

After viewing their problems in this new and perhaps interesting way, some patients display repeated shifts of demeanor and deportment on command. Eventually these patients are diagnosed with dissociative identity disorder (DID). In the most recent (2000) version of the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, the diagnostic criteria for DID include the presence of at least two distinct identities that frequently take control of a person's behavior. The DSM also states that the average time between the appearance of the first symptom and the diagnosis is six to seven years. Most patients begin therapy with no clear signs of DID, and determination of the disorder comes mostly from a small number of DID "specialists."

In 2004 August Piper, a Seattle psychiatrist in private practice, and Harold Merskey, a professor emeritus of psychiatry at the University of Western Ontario, examined the scientific literature and concluded that there was no compelling evidence that DID is caused by childhood trauma. They reported that the disorder is not reliably diagnosed, that DID cases in children are practically never reported and that recurring evidence of blatant iatrogenesis is seen in the practices of some therapists utilizing recovered-memory methods—for example, calling out alters by name and referring to them as different people. Piper and Merskey concluded that DID is "best understood as a culture-bound and often iatrogenic condition."

In popular culture, books and films may have played a role in turning MPD, and later DID, into a fad. The 1976 made-for-television movie Sybil portrayed the life of a shy graduate student, Shirley Ardell Mason, who was diagnosed with MPD. This compelling movie, based on a 1973 book, won Sally Field an Emmy. Further confirmation of the power of Field's performance may be found in the sharp increase in MPD diagnoses after the release of the book and movie. Before 1973 fewer than 50 cases of MPD associated with child abuse had been reported, but by 1994 the number had soared to more than 40,000.

Mason herself may have been a victim of iatrogenic practices. In 1997 Herbert Spiegel, a psychiatrist who worked with Mason for four years, told an interviewer that Mason's behavior was induced by the suggestive therapeutic techniques of her primary psychiatrist. That revelation has not stopped CBS from producing a remake of the film starring Jessica Lange as Sybil's psychiatrist, which has not yet been scheduled for broadcast.

Neural Restructuring
Decades of behavioral neuroscience experiments using animal models have consistently suggested that trauma and fear can change the architecture of the brain. For example, neuro­scientist Bruce McEwen's group at the Rocke­feller University has shown that chronic stress alters neuronal complexity in three key areas: the medial prefrontal cortex (involved in working memory and executive function), the hippocampus (involved in learning, memory and emotional processing) and the amygdala (involved in fear and intense emotions).

McEwen found that chronic stress reduces length and branching of dendrites in the brain's medial prefrontal cortex by about 20 percent. This reduction is associated with an impaired ability to shift attention while learning new tasks. In contrast, neurons in the amygdala grow in response to fear. The functions of the brain areas that are affected by fear and stress in animal studies are closely aligned with the symptoms exhibited by recovered-memory patients. Compromised functioning of the prefrontal cortex may be associated with a patient's inability to distinguish reality from fiction, whereas growth of neurons in the amygdala may lead to hypervigilance and suspiciousness. Animal research also suggests that once therapy sessions cease, compromised prefrontal cortex functioning may diminish the ability to inhibit fearful memories.



Although investigations of brain responsiveness in MPD-DID patients are lacking, striking similarities to brain areas known to be affected by fear and stress in animals are found in neuroimaging studies of humans experiencing post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). PTSD is classified as an anxiety disorder characterized by recurrent intrusive memories of a past traumatic event; behavioral and cognitive avoidance; and psychophysiological arousal leading to mood disturbances and sleep disturbances—all resulting in functional impairment. Research on PTSD patients has shown diminished responsiveness in the medial prefrontal cortex and heightened activity in the amygdala proportional to the severity of PTSD symptoms.

Guided imagery and reenactments used in recovered-memory therapy may produce PTSD-like symptoms. Harvard University psychologist Stephen M. Kosslyn has found evidence that the same areas of the brain activated when we see an object are activated when we close our eyes and imagine seeing the object. From the brain's perspective, guided imagery could be just as powerful as viewing home movies of abusive events.

The feelings of helplessness associated with recovered-memory therapy may increase the likelihood of negative effects. In animal research conducted in 1967 at the University of Pennsylvania, psychologists Martin Seligman and Steven Maier (Maier is now at the University of Colorado at Boulder) found that when dogs were allowed to escape an aversive shock stimulus, they continued to show motivation to escape in the future. But when dogs were not given an opportunity to escape the traumatic experience, many of them just gave up when exposed to the shock the second time, even when an escape route was provided.

It is difficult to imagine a context in which one would feel more helpless than that of MPD-DID patients learning that alternative personalities, including demonic ones, could emerge at any time. Yet the notion of demonic possession persists to this day among a handful of psychiatrists. Olson conducted an exorcism in the hospital on his patient Cool—complete with a fire extinguisher because he had read that patients sometimes self-combust in these circumstances.

Recovering from Recovered Memories
Storm initially fought her diagnosis of MPD but eventually came to believe it. She was convinced that if she did not continue therapy and accept her "history," her illness would worsen and one of her satanic alters would harm her children. When she finally realized that she had been misdiagnosed, she had nowhere to turn. There are no formal programs or clinics for "deprogramming" the victims of bad psychotherapy, and these victims often find it difficult to trust any potential new therapies.

Although research evidence is lacking, some patients might find relief through antianxiety medications that mitigate intense emotional responses. Others have been helped by behavioral conditioning designed to extinguish alters by ignoring them. These therapies have not been systematically assessed for MPD-DID in large-scale studies, however. McEwen's studies of animals exposed to chronic stress suggest that brain alterations, though physical in nature, could be reversed by medications or by living in a stress-free, enriched environment.

Harvard psychologist Richard McNally suggests that the malleability of memories is a product of the most prized aspects of human intelligence: inference, imagination and prediction. MPD-DID patients exhibit impressive abilities to weave the fragments of fiction and reality revealed in their therapists' offices into the neurobiological fabric of their minds. The development of MPD-DID symptoms appears to be the result of a highly functioning but misdirected mind.

Understanding the science of memory formation and the impacts that emotional experiences have on the brain is critical for refining mental-health therapies. Some long-standing therapeutic practices may need to be reconsidered. For example, research reviewed comprehensively in 2003 by psychologists McNally, Richard Bryant of the University of New South Wales in Australia and Anke Ehlers of King's College London has shown that reliving traumatic memories shortly after a terrifying event—performed in a popular therapeutic technique called crisis debriefing—may cause unnecessary stress and impede recovery.



Columbia University psychologist George Bonanno suggests that it is time to take a fresh look at the different ways individuals adapt to and flourish in the midst of traumatic events. After focusing throughout most of the history of psychology and psychiatry on individuals who do not exhibit natural resilience, it is time to learn more about effective coping strategies. Such endeavors will determine when it is beneficial and when it is harmful for individuals to engage in therapies that provide a constant reminder of traumatic events.

In the case of Storm and patients like her, "for­getting" traumatic events—whether they ­happened or not—may offer the best chance for regaining mental health. But forgetting may be especially difficult when a legal case remains unresolved. Storm filed a malpractice suit in September 1997. A decade later her case has not gone to trial.

To read about Sheri J. Storm's experience in her own words and see examples of the art she produced during therapy, click here.

[www.sciammind.com]

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Re: Wayne Allen Geis Process
Posted by: trying ()
Date: February 01, 2008 07:10AM

Allen (Geis) twists the meaning of acting school to trap aspiring performers into his control. Using the apparent positive results each one felt at first as bait with promises that an eventual "breakthrough" would occur, the acting coach then inserted phobias to avoid contact with family and outside influences. The "bad energy" would destroy all their gains, was the powerful implication. All eight ex-members told me that Geis refused to allow them to audition once they began the intense therapy with him by implying and outright declaring "you are not ready." He told each one, "You will die without me."

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Re: Wayne Allen Geis Process
Posted by: trying ()
Date: February 01, 2008 04:22PM

The reason why he lets you audition right now is because he wants to keep you busy. He is not with you right now he can't control you like he wants to.

He is very controlling you know that, he controls your whole life. Your every step, your every thought. You are a zombie controlled by a sick person. You have no thoughts of your own, because he tells you they are pathological.
These thoughts you have are normal, they are you. Now you are what he wants you to be. You are him. You have the power in you to change that.

I will post more soon, I will tell you about what his sons said how he abused them and completely destroyed their youth. I will tell you about what the other students said, what his co-workers said. What people in my country saying about him. They can’t all be wrong and sick and pathological. He can’t be the only one sane and healthy. Think about it…………..

His sons mother is dead. They grew up in a foster home after they were taking away from him. CPS took them because he beat them; he abused them in a horrible way. They had bruises on their body, broken bones after they spent the weekends at his house. The mother fought a lonely battle for her children and won. She got sick and died. The story of her is a courageous one.

Whatever he tells you, question it. Use your common sense. You are not sick. You are You.

We love you!

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Re: Wayne Allen Geis Process
Posted by: trying ()
Date: February 02, 2008 05:20AM

this is to help you grasp the immense abuse he puts on his family

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In my childhood, I can’t remember one day where my parents were not screaming at each other in some form or another over things I could not understand. I remember as a child not understanding why my parents were fighting and running to the couch and sticking my face in the corner of it to block out the wailing sounds coming from the kitchen. As I learned later on in life, my father was notorious for breaking his marriage vows and using physical and mental abuse, and having an extreme problem with controlling others; something he did with anyone that was close to him.

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One memory that is forever burned into my memory is that he was pinning my mother down and my mother screaming for me to help her by getting a knife out of the drawer. I was three years old at the time, and the image of me reaching into the drawer and grabbing the knife is something I will never forget. My father bears to this day the scar of that encounter on his left forearm, after my mother used the knife that I had given her.

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Living with him after the divorce became a living hell for me. He was furious over the fact that he did not win custody over my brother and usually took his frustrations out on me. Until my ninth year I endured agonizing physical and psychological abuse from him, the psychological abuse being the worst, and at what point he forced me to believe that my mother had been the abusive one and the one that had caused all my pain and suffering and the end of the marriage. He was a master of manipulation, and practiced his ability on the poor lost voice and acting students that came his way, who soon became his proverbial “disciples.” Being part of the cult of Ramtha, my religious upbringing through all of this was that I was a god that created my own reality; along with the belief that pain and suffering were just a result of ignorance and the inability to create a good reality for myself. For this reason if I felt sad, unhappy, or angry he would tell me that this was my doing, and had nothing to do with what was happening around me.

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One morning before school at his house I was practicing piano while waiting for the bus on a Friday morning. I was excited to go because I knew that night I would be going to my mothers house afterwards and would then be visiting my Aunt ****** (my father’s sister). My father knew this and came into the piano room to tell me that he wanted me to tell her that she was “a stupid bitch and horrible mother for raising a crazy son.” (My Aunt’s son was a schizophrenic and had been in an institution for many years). He then asked me to play the song that I had been practicing on the piano. To this day I remember what song it was: When the Saints go Marching In. I was having trouble with the piece and he hit me in the arm and told me to start from the beginning every time I messed a chord or played out of time. Soon the pain in my arm began to throb and I began to mess up more frequently on the piece. Soon he became enraged at how I was messing up and he knocked me off the piano bench and picked me up by my throat. I remember looking into his wrinkled face and yellow teeth with spit on his mouth yelling that I was not worth anything and that I had better tell my Aunt what he wanted or I would receive the beating of my life. He then smacked me in my stomach and hit me on my sides. I remember the blessed sound of the airbrake of the bus and the beep of the horn. My father released me, telling me to not forget what he told me. I remember running down the long hill to the bus crying and hoping I would stop by the time I climbed inside.

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He soon showed his true colors and began to Psychologically abuse my brother and I. By this time I was old enough to defend myself in these situations, but my younger brother was not and endured more abuse than I did during this period. Finally after two more years of hell with him another miracle occurred. He beat my younger brother enough that my mother could show the marks to CPS. And finally we were free of him forever. The court granted my mother full custody with only supervised visitation rights with my father. My father thankfully declined, as he realized he would no longer have the control over us that he once had with someone else in the room. And so we finally could be free of him, and it seemed like my troubles were over.

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Re: Wayne Allen Geis Process
Posted by: trying ()
Date: February 02, 2008 07:38AM

2. Members of RSE have been investigated by the state of Washington for security infractions, by the FTC for fraud (Knight, Redhead, Magno, Lawson). Members of RSE have been implicated in alleged sexual violence, (Ledwith, Wayne Allen Geis and, Ruth Beverly Martin.)



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LEDWITH IS A RAMTHA APPOINTED TEACHER:

Dr. Miceal Ledwith was ordained a Catholic priest in 1967, was a professor of theology for sixteen years, and for the ten years following that, a College President of Maynooth Seminary and was identified as a candidate for the Bishop of Ferns. Ledwith left Maynooth quickly and quietly. He later turned up at Ramtha's School of Enlightenment where he is authorized by Knight to conduct teachings. Ledwith is alleged to have engaged in various forms of sexual abuse with minors while at Maynooth. His activities are under investigation.


This info is to be found on the net from respectable sources.

Would you want your child/niece/friend/sister/grandchild/great-grandchild/cousin/ ect. to be around any of these three people after knowing all tthe official facts?

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Open Letter
Posted by: trying ()
Date: February 12, 2008 06:56AM

The absurdity of your online ranting is disgusting.

Absurd and disgusting is that you are in a sexual relationship with a man that could be your grandfather. Not only that, you fuck with his wife, and “friends” in order to “heal” a pathology that never existed. An old horny sick perverted man who nobody would look at in a sexual way, does what he can do best to get young women into his bed. By brainwashing them. Brainwashing you. He is using your beliefs and dreams and twists the meaning of common sense. He will talk you into more things. You will be sorry. You will never be a star. Maybe a porn star…….whenever he sells the home porn he filmed.


Your accusations of my friends are entirely false.

I have told you before, and I will tell you again: EVERYTHING I write about is copied off official documents, or first hand.
He is an abuser. He beat his children. He molests his children. He beats his woman. He is sex obsessed. NEVER, not even one student of his became a star. All his ex students are suffering from his abuse to this day.


Pick up the phone and call his ex students. Talk to outsiders about the process. Search for older students of his process and call them. I can provide you with a list of names and phone numbers you can call.
He contradicts himself in his sessions. He is a malignant narcissist. He feeds his disorder. He needs people like you to breath.

Take a little step away from your life and look at it with that little bit of self worth you have left. What do you see?



I want you to be happy and make your own choices.

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Re: Wayne Allen Geis Process
Posted by: trying ()
Date: February 15, 2008 07:01PM


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Mentor gone bad.......
Posted by: trying ()
Date: February 19, 2008 06:20AM

Wayne Allen Geis claims to be a MENTOR.
The definition of a mentor according to Webster's New World Thesaurus is instructor, guide, coach trainer or teacher.

A Mentor is a wise and trusted counselor or teacher. A mentor is that one person who can guide you, help you, take you under his or her wing, and nurture your career quest.

Wayne Allen Geis claims to be a Mentor? A Mentor gone bad, insane and disgustingly sick.

Wayen Allen Geis does not nurture your career quest. He is nurturing his sex quest and his disorder.

You let him touch you, and you let him diagnose you. He makes you divorce your family. He makes you a different person. He makes you a sick and perverted person. All the time claiming having your best interest in mind? YOU PLAY HIS GAME!

How the f%$k does it help your career, when you let him f*&k you? How can it possibly help your career when you f*&ck his wife? How can it possible help a career when the students f%$ck each other? Do you feel free, and are you finding the truth when he satisfies himself with you? Does that bring you closer to the truth? Is having sex with him the truth?

He is making you believe that he is the answer. He is no answer. He has no answers for himself. How can he have answers for you? He lost his sons, he lost two wife’s, he lost many students, he lost his sisters.
All he has is you. He feeds off of your stupidity. Your vulnerability! Your weak mind.

He is in your mind, you are him. You think like him, act like him, live like him. You are his “mini me”. He is sick and disturbed, but he is very old and will never change. He is lost and confused. Look at his life. He has no success on stage, he can’t show emotions on stage, he can’t sing. He failed horribly in Europe. He sucked so badly in Germany. I can proof that. He is a laughing stock in Germany. He was nothing in Germany, he stayed here because the German government paid him welfare. The women in his life gave him what he needed. He is nothing without the women around him.

He never leaves the house. He lives through you.

He is ugly and old. He is sick and disturbed. He controls you. Don’t let an old disturbed man control you. He had no power. He has no values. He has no life. All he’s got is you to control. Get out of his web for a while and see how he acts.


Szimhart said: What dies when a narcissist has no one to impress is a grandiose illusion that serves as the identity the narcissist.

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