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Gerald N. Epstein (born November 16, 1935), is an American psychiatrist who uses mental techniques to treat physical and emotional problems. An author and publisher, Epstein is the founder and director of a mental imagery school for post-graduate mental health professionals using imagery as "a bridge to the inner world."

Early life and education
Epstein received his formal training as a medical doctor at New York Medical College, New York, NY, graduating in 1961. In 1961-62, he completed a rotating internship at Stamford Hospital, Stamford, CT, and in 1962-65, he took a residency in psychiatry at Kings County Hospital, Brooklyn. He trained in Freudian psychoanalysis at the New York Psychoanalytic Institute, graduating in 1972. In 1965, he began a private practice in New York City as a psychoanalyst. In 1973, Epstein co-founded The Journal of Psychiatry and Law, which he edited from 1973 through 1986. In 1975, he became an assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at New York’s Mt. Sinai Medical Center.

Epiphany
In 1974, Epstein experienced what he calls an “epiphany.” In Jerusalem as a visiting professor in law and psychiatry, he met a young man who reported that three years of extensive psychoanalysis had not succeeded in freeing him of his depression but that four sessions with a local healer who practiced “waking dream therapy” had cured him. Confident that no such inner change could occur so quickly, but also piqued, Epstein arranged a meeting with the healer, a woman named Colette Aboulker-Muscat, who, at her death in 2003, “had an international reputation as a. . . healer of body and mind who employed visualization and dream interpretation.” When Epstein commented that Freudian free association was a kind of imagery exercise since Freud had proposed that analysts elicit free association by asking patients to ‘’imagine’’ being on a train with an analyst and describing to the analyst everything the patient sees while looking out a window, Aboulker-Muscat asked in response, “In what direction does the train go?” Disconcerted, Epstein made a flat, horizontal gesture with his hand. “What if the direction was changed to this axis?” Aboulker-Muscat asked, making a vertical gesture with her arm. Fifteen years later, Epstein described this moment in born-again language "I felt an overwhelming sense of self-recognition, an ‘aha’ experience. It was an epiphany. The vertical movement seemed to lift me from the horizontal hold of the given, the ordinary patterns of everyday cause and effect. I leapt into freedom, and I saw that the task of therapy – the task of being human – was to help realize freedom, to go beyond the given, to the newness that we all are capable of... This is what imagery, I have come to learn, makes possible."

Epstein studied imagery with Aboulker-Muscat for nine years. He closed his Freudian practice in New York, opening a new practice based on mental imagery.

Imagery center
In 1982, Epstein founded and became the director of The Colette Aboulker-Muscat Center for Waking Dream Therapy, a post-graduate training center for imagery chartered by the New York State Regents, with courses for licensed mental health professionals and classes for the general public. In 1994, the school was renamed The American Institute for Mental Imagery. In 2008, the Board of Regents extended the charter for the Institute, still directed by Epstein.

Books
In 1980, Epstein published the first of two books for fellow professionals. Studies in Non-Deterministic Psychology, which he initiated and edited and to which he contributed two chapters, is a collection of papers presenting “the outstanding streams of an "integrated non-deterministic psychological approach," that includes Eastern psychologies.

In 1981, he published Waking Dream Therapy: Dream Process as Imagination, setting out the method and purpose of waking dream, a process in which a patient continues in waking life the action of a previous dream. The result Epstein claims, is freedom from habits we "live with in the concrete world.”

Self-help books
In 1989, ‘’Healing Visualizations: Creating Health Through Imagery,’’ appeared, containing imagery exercises for treating 76 physical or emotional ailments, arranged alphabetically from acne to worry. In its 19th printing as of 2009, with more than 100,000 copies in print, it has been translated into 11 languages and published in 13 countries. ‘’Healing Into Immortality: A New Spiritual Medicine of Healing Stories and Imagery’’, appeared in 1989. For Epstein, “the essential teaching of spiritual medicine is that we possess the means for healing ourselves through the use of our inner mental processes,” which he maintains derive from the Bible. In 2003, Epstein came out with an eight CD set, ’’The Natural Laws of Self-Healing,’’ which consists of 12 “laws” drawn from his study and understanding of the spiritual principles of life. A reviewer in the ‘’Townsend Letter: The Examiner of Alternative Medicine’’ described the set as “the most complete resource on using mental imagery that I have come across.” A six CD set appeared in 2007, ‘’The Phoenix Process: One-Minute a Day to Health, Longevity, and Well-Being,’’ which describes four self-help practices that each deals with one of four common life situations -- self-doubt, feelings of emergency, indecisiveness, and physical and emotional ailments – all of which, Epstein argues, physically wear away the body and shorten one’s life.

Waking dream
Toward the end of the 1970’s, Epstein participated in a study of 127 subjects to investigate the experiences engendered by “self-hypnosis, waking dreaming, and mindfulness meditation.” The experience of waking dream was reported to have a more “vivid inner reality,” with the practitioner more sensitive “to the immediate impact of spontaneously emerging images” and more likely “than in hypnosis and meditation to lose the sense that she/he is actually creating the experience,” findings in line with the view that waking dream provides experiences that can reveal possibilities for living.

Asthma
In the mid 1990’s, Epstein collaborated with Elizabeth Ann Manhart Barrett, then the coordinator of the Center for Nursing Research at Hunter College, City University of New York, and with other colleagues, to conduct two studies on the use of mental imagery with adults experiencing asthma. The first study, funded by the Office of Alternative Medicine of the National Institutes of Health, examined the quantitative effects of imagery and compared 17 participants who used mental imagery as a treatment for their asthma and 16 participants who did not. In the experimental group, eight people (47 percent) reduced or discontinued their medication, while in the control group, only three people (19 percent) reduced their medication and none discontinued it. No deterioration in lung function occurred. Data also showed that participants in the experimental group increased both their ability to make choices and their overall power to create changes in their lives. The second study used a phenomenological, qualitative approach to explore the meaning of the experimental group’s experience of using mental imagery to alleviate asthma. With responses from 14 subjects, the researchers found that participants felt more powerful and less fearful – for example, relieving them of the fear that they will forget their inhaler and die from an asthma attack.

Critical reception
Epstein has consistently maintained that imagery works in a matter of minutes or less when used for a number of days. Martin Rossman, a mental imagery practitioner and the author of a book on imagery, challenged this contention in a review of ‘’Healing Visualizations.’’ He used as an example an exercise that Epstein claimed could remove the feeling of aimlessness if done “once a day, for three to five minutes, for three days.” Rossman, making in tongue-in-cheek use of his California residence and Epstein’s New York residence, wrote "Perhaps Dr. Epstein is seeing patients less seriously aimless than I, or perhaps East Coast people work more rapidly with imagery than people out here on the West Coast, but I, for one have not generally seen loss of direction in life to respond to nine minutes of treatment with or without visualization."

Epstein matched his experience against Rossman’s "All of the imagery in ‘’Healing Visualizations’’ has been tried in clinical situations over the 16 years that I have made imagery the central focus and treatment modality of my clinical work... The imagery summons new possibilities... and can thus result in the rapid relief of ailments or symptoms – like aimlessness – within a short period of time."

He invited Rossman to “come east to New York and try these exercises for himself.”