"The healer must love the sufferer as his [surrogate] mother and be loved in return by the sufferer as his [surrogate] mother. For the ultimate healing is knowing the Love of one's own mother... However, only when the surrogate role is kept firmly in mind can the Love be true, be altruistic."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
p. 269
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/John_Diamond_(doctor)
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
John Diamond (doctor)
John Diamond (August 9, 1934 - April 25, 2021) was an Australian-born physician who initially trained and worked in formal psychiatry, and then in mid-life branched out into studying and using music and art in therapy, among other modalities.
19 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by John Diamond (doctor) →
Related Quotes
"I've tried to make my writing itself therapeutic—that by your act of reading it your Life Energy may be enhanced. One…"
"What matters is not what you paint but what your hand dances. The painting is only a notation of the dance of the han…"
"It is life energy that causes us to grow. It is life energy that enables us to heal. ... It evokes the true and only …"
"The most basic and primitive emotion is love in its various manifestations. This has been neglected in medicine, negl…"
"The basic purpose of music is to be therapeutic, to raise the life energy of the listener. This simple yet profound t…"
"Our first appreciation of music comes through the sounds of the mother, especially her voice and her lullaby. Our ear…"
"For years I have encouraged my patients and students to play musical instruments. I believe that it is essential for …"
"Why does the drum, of all instruments, have the greatest potential for life enhancement? I don't really know but here…"
"Play with joy, with a smile. If you aren't enjoying it—stop. Never practice—that's just the brain. Always play, even …"
"Through my mother's disease I came to know her as Spirit. The name of her disease hardly matters—no more than the nam…"