This two-day session (July 20th and 21st) is part of the Rhythmic Movement Training (RMT) Symposium presented by Swedish psychiatrist Dr. Harald Blomberg, who developed and has been using RMT for more than 20 years. Rhythmic Movement Training mimics the primitive reflexes, early stereotyped movement patterns of the fetus and infant; these patterns are important developmentally, but if they remain active, can interfere with learning and functioning. RMT is thought to inhibit (integrate) the primitive reflexes and help to mature the brain. The session will consist of both lecture and experiential learning.
Topics discussed by Dr. Blomberg will include:
REM Sleep; Inborn Symbolic Language of Dreams; The Healing Dream Process; Dreams during RMT; Affirmations; and integration of specific primitive reflexes.
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The RMT Symposium is sponsored by the local non-profit, LoveLight, Inc. in cooperation with The Gerald H. Read Center for International and Intercultural Education of Kent State University. All symposium sessions will be held in the Read Room of White Hall on the Kent campus. For more information, please contact Dr. Lisbeth Justice, Executive Director of LoveLight at lkjusti1@kent.edu or (330) 673-5839. Thank you.