Colin Feltham, PhD, MTheol, MSc, PGDipCouns, PGCE, FBACP is Emeritus Professor of Counselling Studies, Sheffield Hallam University, UK. He has been a practitioner in probation services, mental health, private practice, student and employee counselling, and has trained and supervised generations of practitioners. His publications are extensive, including Psychotherapy and its Discontents (with Windy Dryden, 1992), Controversies in Psychotherapy and Counselling (1999), Critical Thinking in Counselling and Psychotherapy (2010), The Sage Handbook of Counselling and Psychotherapy, 4th edn (2017). He has taught and examined at many universities, given addresses internationally, and has been Honorary Professor in Humanistic Psychology at the University of Southern Denmark. His interests include psychotherapy, evolutionary psychology, philosophical anthropology, philosophical pessimism, spiritual enlightenment, death, and the psychology of belief. He lives in London.
""The reluctance to return to the events of our youth means that subsequent generations are doomed to repeat our mistakes. Fortunately, there are people like Colin Feltham, who manages to combine the personal confession of a former patient with an exhaustive, professional analysis of the facts, thus not only revealing the true face of primal therapy, but also showing the dark sides and weaknesses that plague the entire psychotherapy field. A must-read not only for therapists and therapist candidates, but also for current and future patients."" -Prof. Tomasz Witkowski, author of Shaping Psychology. Perspectives on Legacy, Controversy and the Future of the Field. In this remarkable book, Colin Feltham takes the reader on a personal and psychotherapeutic journey into the quicks, absurdities, and practice of Primal Therapy. John Lennon and other celebrities were, for a while, enthusiastic supporters of this unproven and flamboyant approach. Feltham dramatically unfolds its origins, history, and its fundamental flaws from the perspective of former patient and active mental health expert. It is the go-to book for understanding the mostly bizarre craziness, rise, and fading away of 'Primal Screaming' and treatment. -Stanley L. Brodsky, Ph.D., Emeritus Professor, The University of Alabama Is the Primal Dream Over? describes an extraordinary journey. How did Colin Feltham go from being a devoted patient of the famous therapist Arthur Janov to thinking the whole endeavor was a therapeutic failure? In this deeply personal, often moving memoir, the patient-turned-professor tells us how. -Elizabeth Loftus, PhD, Distinguished Professor, University of California, Irvine, and Past President of the Association for Psychological Science This important book exposes the flaws and negligence that tarnished Primal Therapy's reputation. Janov turned a brilliant discovery into a so-called ""proven"" theory, prioritizing financial gain and recognition of his ""genius"" over genuine care, leaving many damaged souls on the primal battlefield. Notwithstanding, Primal Therapy is a method that, when approached with integrity, can unlock deep-seated emotions and foster remarkable psychological healing. The challenge lies in separating the profound therapeutic value of the technique from the controversy surrounding its implementation. -Michelle Taja Miller, author of The Invisible Self, Broken Childhood, Primal Healing