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Tara Springett

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Tara Springett
Born
🏳️ NationalityGerman
💼 Occupation
Known forKundalini Healing
👶 Children1
🌐 Websitetaraspringett.com

Tara Springett (born 21 November 1960) is a Buddhist therapist, teacher, and author of self-help books. For the past decade, the focus of her therapeutic practice has been Kundalini Syndrome about which she is now considered to be a leading authority.[according to whom?]

Early life

Springett grew up as the second of four children born to German parents. She attended a grammar school in Germersheim, Rheinland-Pfalz.

Personal and spiritual growth

In her youth, Springett embarked on a quest for self-improvement and spiritual development. First, she immersed herself in Western approaches such as psychotherapy and bioenergetics, the latter initiating a Kundalini process in her energy system that has been active until the present day. At the age of 24, her journey led to a Tibetan Buddhist Centre in Heidelberg, Germany. She describes the occasion as being "love at first sight" and it was the start of a wholehearted lifelong commitment to Tibetan Buddhism. She started to meditate daily and spent most of her vacations in intensive meditation retreats. A key influential teacher for Springett was Rigdzin Shikpo[1][not in citation given] who, in turn, had been one of the first Western students of Chogyam Trungpa. Rigdzin Shikpo's teachings stressed the importance of the heart centre in developing love and compassion. Springett's main teacher is Garchen Rinpoche, one of the main tulkus of the Drikung Kagyu lineage of Tibetan Buddhism.

Professional life

Springett graduated from the University of Heidelberg with a master's degree in Education and later gained postgraduate qualifications in Gestalt therapy, Hakomi therapy, and Transpersonal therapy.[citation needed] The first four years of her career, Springett taught German to foreigners because this left her plenty of time to spend in Buddhist retreats. At the age of 30, she started working as an addiction counsellor and later as a counsellor for adolescents. She also saw clients in her private counselling practice and at first specialised in eating disorders. Later, she branched out to work with psychological and relationship problems more generally. In 1996, Springett's Buddhist teachers encouraged her to work as a Buddhist meditation teacher, and Tara started to run meditation groups on an ongoing basis. From 2001 onwards, Springett's work has been featured in the media: local and national newspapers; national television; national and international radio; and online journals, along with other published books.[2][3][4][5][6] For example, Lora Starling explored Springett's approach to healing with symbols in her book "The Logo Decoded".[7] Examples of Springett's web presence are her regular online publications.[8][conflicted source?]

Discovery of higher-consciousness healing

Springett deeply wished that one day she would find a simple and clear method that people could use to overcome their own personal problems reliably and thoroughly. In 1997, her wishes were fulfilled with the discovery of Higher-Consciousness Healing. Springett recalls her breakthrough moment of discovery in the following way.

"I was sitting in the shrine room of my Buddhist teacher trying to listen to his talk. I could not concentrate because I was inwardly struggling with a painful feeling of sadness that had been with me for many years. As I had often done before, I prayed for help and – lo and behold! – this time, my prayer was answered. Suddenly, the method [of Higher Consciousness Healing] …just "popped up" in my mind. It was so clear and detailed that I assumed I had read it somewhere and was just remembering it."[9][10]

From that point, Springett spent the next few years working on the method. In 2010, her teacher Garchen Rinpoche approved the practice of Higher Consciousness Healing, according to Springett's website.[11][conflicted source?] While completely in keeping with Tibetan Buddhism, the method is universal in its appeal and can be practised by individuals of all faiths and convictions, even atheists. As Springett had wished, the method has proved highly efficient and effective in addressing all manner of personal problems. In fact, Springett claims that she had never worked with a client who did not achieve significant improvements with their problems within a matter of weeks. She explained the method in her first book, Symbol Therapy (2001), which was first republished as The Five-Minute Miracle (2009) and more recently revised and republished as Higher-Consciousness Healing (2020).

Subsequent themes in her writing

As a body of writing, Springett's work can be seen as making certain aspects of Tibetan Buddhism accessible and workable for contemporary, spiritually-inclined audiences. One example theme is that of manifesting wishes. To this topic, she brings the Buddhist-inspired idea of combining our wishes with altruistic motivation as a way of ensuring the wish is both meaningful and will have the individual's energies maximally aligned to it. Her book Make Your Dreams Come True (2002) describes how to establish an altruistic motivation and how to deal with obstacles such as setbacks, resentments, and the frustrations of an extended waiting time. This book was completely rewritten and published with the title Advanced Manifesting – Tibetan Buddhist Secrets for Fulfilling Your Dreams in 2011.

A third theme is highlighted in the title of her third book, Soulmate Relationships (2003, 2012). In keeping with a Buddhist perspective, Springett emphasises the crucial importance of the mutual wish to grow in love as the foundation of a soulmate relationship. She also explains the working of the Buddhist idea of karma in an intimate relationship – a dynamic she calls "The law of an even deal".[12] This law suggests that couple relationships can often be unbalanced in terms of the contributions made by each partner and that this lack of balance is at the basis of all relationship problems. Her perspective is, however, ultimately an optimistic one in that she claims that partners can learn to work positively with this law and other relationship dynamics.

Current work around Kundalini Syndrome

For about a decade, the main focus of Springett's therapeutic practice has been to help people suffering from the multifaceted symptoms of Kundalini Syndrome. In Enlightenment Through the Path of Kundalini, and, more recently, Healing Kundalini Symptoms, Springett writes about the core spiritual development dynamic (Kundalini) that has been active in her energy system for many decades. The former book explains the process partly through the words of the Tibetan Buddhist deity Tara and through descriptions of her client work with people suffering from the symptoms of Kundalini syndrome. The latter book focuses squarely on the symptoms of Kundalini syndrome and how to overcome them.

A major contribution to the topic has been her view that a Kundalini Awakening is fundamentally an event of the mind, not of the body, and that every strange physical symptom that can accompany Kundalini Syndrome has a psychological base that requires investigation and therapeutic work for it to heal. More specifically, she asserts that a Kundalini awakening is an expansion of consciousness that opens one's mind simultaneously towards a transpersonal higher consciousness and to one's personal subconscious, as well as to the collective unconscious. In holding this view, she fuses the spirituality of Tibetan Buddhism with the general perspective of Western psychotherapy.

Springett's contribution to knowledge about Kundalini Syndrome also extends to many innovative methods that she has developed in order to work with the different negative emotions, physical symptoms, mental problems, and relationship problems that sufferers typically experience. Her flagship therapeutic method is called Higher-Consciousness Healing, in which the individual strengthens their connection to their Higher Power and, from that relationship, receives love and protection as well as developing self-love. From a Tibetan Buddhist perspective, this method can be regarded as a form of Deity yoga. Her many other psychological techniques can be viewed as extensions of this root practice.

Her concentration on the phenomenon of Kundalini Syndrome for the past decade – in terms of writing, producing video material, and in conducting thousands of therapy sessions – has resulted in her being considered a leading authority on the topic, as evidenced by the invitations she receives to address major conferences about spirituality.

Books

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 28 January 2012. Retrieved 11 November 2011. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)CS1 maint: Archived copy as title (link)
  2. Caroline Hardy, Just four minutes a day to solve your ills, Sevenoaks Chronicle, 15 November 2001.
  3. Fiona Bray, How to symbolise your new way to health and fitness, Liverpool Daily Post, 2 April 2002.
  4. Madeleine Reiss, It's good to be lazy!, Family Circle, March 2003.
  5. How to find your soulmate, Southern Daily Echo, 24 May 2003.
  6. Is Monogamy Overrated?, The Heaven and Earth Show, BBC One, Sunday 25 April 2004.
  7. STARLING, LORA (16 December 2011). The Logo Decoded: What Logos Can Do to You. Bloomington, IN: BalboaPress. pp. 14–16. ISBN 978-1-4525-0302-8. Retrieved 15 September 2021. Search this book on
  8. "Beliefnet". Beliefnet. 2016-05-06. Retrieved 2016-06-02.
  9. The Five-Minute Miracle: Discover the personal healing symbols that will solve your problems, Redwheel, Weiser, December, 2009 ISBN 978-1-57863-458-3 Search this book on . (HC) ISBN 1-57863-458-X Search this book on . (PB), page ix.
  10. "Achieve Radio Archive Vault playing". Achieveradio.com. Retrieved 2016-06-02.
  11. "Buddhist Therapist and Teacher". Tara Springett. Retrieved 2016-06-02.
  12. "The law of the even deal in relationships: an interview". The-soulmate-site.com. 2015-01-28. Retrieved 2016-06-02.


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