The Swedish New Age Networks: Part 8 Family Therapy, Psychosynthesis and Mutliple Personality Disorder

In 1948 Sir George Trevelyan, 4th Baronet (1906-1996) became the director of Attingham Park where spiritual teachings were taught and he later became associated with the Findhorn Foundation and became one of the founding figures of the New Age movement and wrote several books including A Vision of the Aquarian Age (1977), Operation Redemption (1981), Summons to a High Crusade (1985) and Exploration into God (1991). At Attingham Park there was also a group studying flying saucers led by his friend Victor Goddard (1897-1987).

George Trevelyan was a founding member of several movements, and together with Roberto Assagioli (1888-1974) and Dr Martin Israel (1927-2007) and Geoffrey Leytham (1922-2012), he founded the Psychosynthesis Trust in 1965 where they studied transpersonal psychology with teachings from Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung and with a spiritual side from Theosophy and New Age. Other teachings also came from Alfred Richard Orage (1873-1934) and Maurice Nicoll (1884-1953) who studied under George Gurdjieff (c.1866-1949) and P.D. Ouspensky (1878-1947). At George Trevelyan’s Attingham Park, lectures and conferences on psychosynthesis were regularly held. One conference was called ‘The Conference on Creative Development’.

“Roberto Assagioli (1888-1974) grew up in a middle-class Jewish family in Venice, Italy. He received a classical education and learned several languages: Latin, Greek, French, German and English and later in life also Russian and Sanskrit. In 1906 he began to study medicine in Florence. During his studies he wrote articles on, among other things, the effects of laughter, the German mystic J. G. Harmann and the American transcendentalist Ralph Waldo Emerson. Assagioli became interested in psychoanalysis at an early age. In 1910 he was accepted into Jung’s group of nineteen disciples and in the same year he introduced parts of Freud’s ideas in Italy.” (Sökaren 1994, no. 4)

Dr Martin Israel had a penchant for mysticism and studied Carl Jung, Teilhard de Chardin and Martin Buber and eventually became a clergyman in the Church of England in 1974 where he practiced healing and performed exorcisms and acted as a medium for departed spirits. He was President of the Churches’ Fellowship for Psychical and Spiritual Studies between 1983 and 1998 (wiki). Geoffrey Leytham was involved in the Centre for Transpersonal Psychology and was Vice President of the Scientific and Medical Network where we also find David Lorimer. One of the founders of the Scientific and Medical Network in 1973 was George Blaker who was a member of the Theosophical Society.

At the start of the Psychosynthesis Trust and who sat on the Trustee Board was Joseph Albert Lauwerys (1902-1981) who was previously also involved in the founding of UNESCO during 1945 to 1947 and where we find Julian Huxley (1887-1975) as Director-General in 1946 and who was President of the British Eugenics Society from 1959 to 1962. Joseph Lauwerys was also involved in the World Education Fellowship which was founded by Beatrice Ensor (1885-1974) in 1921. She joined the Theosophical Society in 1908 and was influenced by the ideas of Maria Montessori, and she was a co-founder of the Theosophical Fraternity in Education, and was Organising Secretary of the Theosophical Education Trust in 1915. The World Education Fellowship was also an influence on the founding of UNESCO.

Another member of the Psychosynthesis Trust’s Board of Trustees was spiritualist Paul Beard (1904-2002), who was President of the College of Psychic Studies for 16 years. He was interested in life after death and wrote several books on the subject and was a member of the Society for Psychical Research. He wrote the article “How to Guard Against Possession” in the magazine Spiritual Frontiers in the year 1970. (wiki)

Also on the Psychosynthesis Trust’s Advisory Council were Dr Ford Robertson who is also a member of the Churches’ Fellowship for Psychical and Spiritual Studies and parapsychologist Anita Gregory (1925-1984) who was also a member of the Society for Psychical Research. We also find the mystic Johan Quanjer (1934-2001) who found an interest in Theosophy during a trip to the USA and was a member of UFO groups later when he returned to England and he visited places such as New Age groups in Findhorn in Scotland. He founded the New Age magazine The New Humanity in 1975, which he worked on until his death in 2001.

The Psychosynthesis Trust is also said to have received financial assistance from Alexis DuPont de Bie, who came from the famous DuPont family and who had an interest in gifted children and who acted as Executive Vice-President of The World Council for Gifted and Talented Children, which was founded in 1975. They also had a collaboration with ‘The Association for Gifted and Especially Gifted Children’ and the Meditation Group for the New Age (MGNA), which was part of the Centre for Creative Meditation, which was founded by Roberto Assagioli, Nancy Magor and Michal Eastcott in 1957. Roberto was also involved in the School for Esoteric Studies, which was founded in 1956 in New York by Frank Hilton, Regina Keller, Florence Garrigue, Helen Hillebrecht and Marguerite Schaefer, and which had previously come from Alice and Foster Bailey’s Arcane School. (psychosynthesistrust.org)

Lady Diana Whitmore, a student of Roberto Assagioli, took over the Psychosynthesis & Education Trust after his death. She was a friend of Laura Huxley (1911-2007), who was previously married to Aldous Huxley (1894-1963), author of Brave New World (1932) and The Island (1962), and brother of Julian Huxley (1887-1975). Laura founded Children: Our Ultimate Investment in 1977, and Diana, who was a member of the same organization, founded a branch in England. She also started a Teens and Toddlers programme in the UK, which Laura also founded. Diana is also a Trustee of the Findhorn Foundation and a Patron of Wyse International.

Of particular interest within the Psychosynthesis Trust and in Roberto Assagioli’s teachings in psychosynthesis was a process called ‘Transmutation and Sublimation of Sexual Energies’. This process is often described as a goal within spiritual synthesis and the so-called spiritual Self and is likened to the ancient mystics who sought to reach the higher spiritual through inward meditation. This process has also been described as the “mystical wedding” and shows the alchemical process and transformation that it involved in “transforming” the ego within oneself into the higher spiritual Self. Barbara Somers in her book The Fires of Alchemy: A Transpersonal Viewpoint (2004) describes the therapy process as an alchemical journey as “Solve et Coagula” where the ego is to dissolve and then to regather.

Roberto Assagioli’s teachings in psychosynthesis gained followers in Sweden through the same people who helped to bring the teachings of The Human Potential Movement and lay the foundations for a greater spirituality through the Swedish culture and the corporate world. These were Kerstin Nordin (1942-1925) and Göran Wiklund who in 1989 founded the Swedish Psychosynthesis Academy. Kerstin was a founder of The Circumference (Omkretsen) and gave lectures at ‘Living Companies in a New Era’ and The Life Festival. She also founded ‘The New Thinkers’ (Nytänkarna) in 1982 and Lifelust (Livslust) during the 1990s. Göran Wiklund was behind Pedagogik & Produktion (P&P) which organized ‘Living Companies in a New Era’ and later The Pioneers’ (Banbrytarna) and Nutrition and Life (Näring och Liv). Kerstin says that through her personal journey she came into contact with psychosynthesis and invited Margo Russell to come to Sweden to work with the Psychosynthesis Academy Foundation to spread psychosynthesis in Sweden among professionals and spiritual seekers. Margo became a teacher and supervisor for many Swedish students in psychosynthesis and also created relationships internationally with, among others, L’Istituto di Psicosintesi and SIPT in Florence and The Psychosynthesis Trust in London.

Margo Russell (1939-2001) had a background in the international banking and finance world in banks such as the Bank of New York, Citibank and the World Banking Group in Amsterdam. In the early 80s she trained as a psychosynthesis therapist at the Psychosynthesis & Education Trust in London and further training at The Institute of Family Therapy and The Tavistock Institute Observation Program. (psykosyntesakademin.se)

The Institute of Family Therapy (IFT) was founded in 1977 and had its background in family and child therapy developed at the Tavistock Institute during the 1950s to 1970s and which goes back to, among others, John Bowlby (1907-1990) who was a deputy director of the Tavistock Clinic. Robin Skynner (1922-2000) who was a founder of the IFT was a student of S. H. Foulkes (Siegmund Heinrich Fuchs) (1898-1976) who was a German-British psychiatrist and psychoanalyst who developed theories in group behaviour and group analysis and who was also inspired by Gestalt psychology. Foulkes founded The Institute of Group Analysis (IGA) in London in 1971 where Robin Skynner started with a first training course in family therapy in 1973. Some of the people who taught these courses were Gill Gorrell Barnes, Alan Cooklin, John Byng-Hall, Rosemary Whiffin, Stewart Lieberman, Dora Black and Alan Cooklin. A group of therapists including Gill Gorrell Barnes, Arnon Bentovim, Dora Black and Robin Skynner founded the Association for Family Therapy in 1976 which later became The Institute of Family Therapy.

Gill Gorrell Barnes was a Senior Clinical Lecturer and Family Therapist at the Tavistock Clinic and Consultant for Training at the Institute of Family Therapy in London. Arnon Bentovim was also at the Tavistock Clinic and trained in psychiatry at the Maudsley Hospital and laid the foundation for, among other things, the Child Sexual Abuse Assessment and Treatment Service and wrote the book Trauma-Organized Systems: Physical and Sexual Abuse in Families (1995). Dora Black (1932-2021) was also trained at the Maudsley hospital and wrote the book When Father Kills Mother (2000). John Byng-Hall (1937-2020) was a therapist at the Tavistock Clinic who worked for many years with John Bowlby and Robin Skynner was also at the Maudsley Hospital as an Honorary Associate Consultant.

Maudsley Hospital is known for its connection to eugenics, lobotomy, sterilization and experiments with schizophrenia using drugs such as mescaline. We find names there such as Eliot Slater (1904-1983) who was vice chair of the Eugenics Society from 1963 to 1966 and who was a colleague of William Sargant (1907-1988) who performed treatments in psychosurgery, deep sleep treatment, electroconvulsive therapy and insulin shock therapy.

Psychosynthesis is seen today as a way to find meaning in life as it offers a spiritual perspective instead of traditional psychology and as a combination of processing the past and searching for a meaningful future. This was told by Margo who was interviewed in 1997.

“Psychosynthesis combines old esoteric thoughts and modern psychology and can be used in several different areas to help people heal spiritual wounds and find meaning in their lives. – Today, psychosynthesis is needed more than ever, says Margo Russell, director of the Psychosynthesis Academy in Stockholm.” (Sökaren 1997 no. 3, interview with Margo Russell)

Roberto Assagioli was inspired in his theories by yoga, Jewish mysticism, theosophy and combined this with “Western psychology’s processing of unresolved conflicts (trauma) and an Eastern view of the inner man as part of the universal consciousness”. Assagioli’s work was not only a method for personal development but can also be used in pedagogy and organizational development and creative professions. Margo Russel says in an interview that we need a psychology that sees the whole, not only within the individual, but also as part of the universal consciousness and that could be used to promote the development of the entire human collective.

“The name psychosynthesis refers to a synthesis between conflicting forces. We all have different roles, which periodically come into more or less conflict with each other. In psychosynthesis, we talk about sub-personalities. But we also have a past. Unresolved traumas lead to us repressing parts of our total personality, especially when it comes to aggression, sexuality and grief.”

“We have sub-personalities in our unconscious, which we cannot “see” but which nevertheless play in our inner orchestra. Since we are not aware of them, we cannot control their participation in the concert, but are taken by surprise by the emotions they bring. In our everyday life, this can manifest itself as problems in our close relationships, at our workplace or in the way we react to life’s problems. We identify with these sub-personalities, without really knowing them.”

“By looking more closely at these sub-personalities in therapy, we can become aware of the unmet needs that make these orchestra members play so falsely. We can see that we have a wounded child or an angry brawler inside, but that we are not just these parts. Instead, psychosynthesis emphasizes the importance of “de-identifying” from the conflicting sub-personalities and identifying with the self, the conductor of the orchestra.”

“Personal psychosynthesis means just that – to see that I have these partial personalities, but also that I am more than them, to strengthen the self so that it becomes the powerful conductor that the personality needs to be able to play harmoniously. – This deeper or higher center coordinates and integrates the partial personalities, thus creating a personal self that is experienced as “greater than the sum of its parts”. This approach stands in stark contrast to the medical model, which analyzes, diagnoses and tries to cure the abnormal or “sick” behaviors of our unintegrated parts, says Margo Russell.”

“Here we sense, among other things, the Indian yoga view of man as an individual soul, which is not separate from the great Self but is part of this cosmic consciousness. Within psychosynthesis, the self is seen as an outpost of the Self, a divine spark that is somewhat qualitatively different from all our sub-personalities. Therefore, stillness and meditation are encouraged as a way of learning to be in the inner silence, in the ‘eye of the storm’.”
(Sökaren 1997 no. 3, interview with Margo Russell)

Margo was the principal of the Psychosynthesis Academy in Stockholm and after her death in 2001 a foundation was established named after her, ‘The Foundation for Margo Russell’s Memory’, where a scholarship with a sum of money is awarded to those who help spread the teachings of psychosynthesis. Fredrik Lundh, who took over as principal in 2000 after Margo, also created a publishing business and translated Roberto Assagioli’s major works ‘Psychosynthesis’ and ‘On Will’ into Swedish.

Within psychosynthesis, the ego is seen as an outpost of the Self, a divine spark that is somewhat qualitatively different from all our sub-personalities. Kerstin Nordin, who says that her spiritual journey began with a book by P. D. Ouspensky, The Psychology of Man’s Possible Evolution (1950), describes in an interview her encounter with her own higher consciousness.

“One night Kerstin had an experience of great significance: She saw that she herself, her inner self, was a ball of light. She was part of a greater energy, which could be called God, the intelligence that created everything. – I had for some time had a very strong experience of understanding reality in a new way. Then one evening, when I was lying in my bed in the dark, suddenly my head was completely illuminated as if by a bright light, and I gradually felt that it was a ball of light and that it was me.”

“Kerstin saw, in the nocturnal experience, that she was still Kerstin, not something else. Her identity persisted and did not fade away and became like a drop falling into the sea. and becoming one with the sea. She experienced her own identity as enduring at the same time that she had a deeper, stronger and higher identity than the one she normally feels she has. She was still Kerstin, a unique human being, but at the same time part of something bigger, fantastic. – I experienced that whatever happens to Kerstin, I have a kind of higher identity that is me and that is indestructible.”

“- I was sitting in a chair, alone, and was about to start reading a book about Saint Birgitta, when my whole body began to vibrate. This lasted for several hours. I could not move. I was as if paralyzed. But at the same time I was hyper-alert. I knew exactly what was happening around me, heard all the sounds, felt the smells, had strong visual impressions. My consciousness was completely clear. And I saw visions. I saw into my future. I knew that the consciousness I had then was higher than normal consciousness. I knew that I had to believe in what I saw.”

“The night when Kerstin experienced that she was a ball of light, she also heard a voice inside her head. It was as clear as if someone had put on a tape recorder. – It was my voice, but it was the expression of a greater intelligence than my own. I perceived it as coming from the ball of light. It was not the ordinary Kerstin who spoke, but a higher consciousness within me, my higher self.”

“- The voice talked to me all night. I didn’t sleep a wink. I was fully aware of what was around me at the same time as I heard the voice. My husband was lying next to me, I knew where the children were in their rooms, I heard sounds around me. The voice spoke in telegraphically short sentences. It was emotionally nullified, objectively informative. The voice, which was the higher part of myself, treated me, the ordinary Kerstin, much like a parent speaks to a child, that is, with a certain indulgence. – I asked the voice questions. Some of them were answered with “you’ll find out later, it’s too early now”. The answers came at the same time as the questions. Sometimes I felt as if the voice was helping me ask the questions too. It was like two different levels of consciousness talking to each other.”

“Kerstin does not want to say anything more about the answers she received. She says that “this is a bit sacred” to her. But she had her worldview changed, gained a new view of what is about to happen to humanity and the earth. – The following night I woke up to the phone ringing. I woke up with a jolt and was frightened. I lay waiting for the next signal, but none came. Instead the voice began to speak again. It explained that the signal had been a trick to wake me up to listen inwardly. It said that it had tried to make contact with me many times before, but had not succeeded. The higher in me had tried to wake the lower to listen.”
(Sökaren 1982, no. 5, interview, Kerstin Nordin, New Age consultant)

Björn Roxendal, who was chairman of ‘The New Age in Sweden’ (Föreningen Nya Tidsåldern) and founder of The Life Festival (Livsfestivalen), was also a supporter of psychosynthesis and worked as a therapist since 1976 and was a founder of The Psychosynthesis House (Psykosynteshuset). Methods used by the therapists there were coaching, cognitive therapy, relaxation and meditation, visualizations, inner journeys, affirmations and emotional clearing. Björn also talked about his therapy and the encounter with the higher self.

“Björn Roxendal had called his speech at the life festival “Therapy and beyond therapy. To help oneself and others along the way”. He is a Swedish New Age personality with many deep thoughts to share. He began by saying that there has been a wave of new forms of therapy and that behind this lies the fact that people have problems. A common illness in the present day is schizophrenia, he said, and he used the word in the sense of splitting of identity. We have been “split from our inner core” and forgotten what it is. We identify with our outer person, with our physical body and our roles, and this is our great and decisive mistake. We do not know who we ourselves are.” (Your center is the center of everything, Björn Roxendal, The Seeker 1982, no. 2)

“Human – know yourself! The purpose is that you will reach and realize your innermost core, your higher self, and learn to express it in action for the good of all. Björn Roxendal gives lectures and courses with instructions from the teachings of the Great White Brotherhood. We will work with, among other things, visualization, meditation, affirmations, breathing exercises and the science of the spoken word.”

“One of the mysteries of the Self is that it is simultaneously one and many different. It is unity in diversity and diversity in unity. The original God-Self has the ability to multiply according to the formula 1 · 1 · 1 · 1 · 1 · 1 . . . = 1 . Perhaps one can see the great God-Self as a diamond and the different “small-Selves” as its different facets.”

“Usually the real Self lies hidden behind a more or less disharmonious and egotistical outer personality. But with purposeful practice and devotion the outer form can be adjusted to serve the real Self so completely that it can take up residence in it. Then the soul unites with the spirit and the individual becomes completely free in that he merges into his infinite overself.” (The fixed point of existence, Sökaren 1982, no. 8)

The therapists at the Psychosynthesis Academy are not only trained in psychosynthesis, but a number of different treatment methods are incorporated into different forms of treatment and many within the academy work, in addition to therapy, also as coaches, consultants and supervisors. Therapy methods that we find among the therapists at the academy are MediYoga, Compassion Focused Therapy (CFT), IMAGO, Gestalt therapy, Transpersonal Psychology, bioenergetics and mindfulness. Some have also developed their own therapy methods after long experience.

A teacher at the Psychosynthesis Academy, David Elliot, comes from the USA and has developed his own form he calls Three Pillars methods and Integrative Attachment Therapy (IAT) and has written the book Attachment Disturbances in Adults: Treatment for Comprehensive Repair (2016) together with Daniel P. Brown. David Elliot previously worked with Thomas Yeomans who founded the Concord Institute and who also has a background in Psychosynthesis and Spiritual Psychology. He has written the book Holy Fire: The Process of Soul Awakening (2020) and a large number of other texts that we can find at his institute.

MediYoga, also known as Medical Yoga, has its background in the Institute for Medical Yoga (Institutet för Medicinsk Yoga, IMY), which was founded in 1997 by Göran Boll, who taught a form of Yogi Bhajan’s “Kundalini Yoga” and which was aimed at a therapeutic form of yoga for the Swedish healthcare system for problems such as fatigue, mental illness, neuropsychiatry, non-specific back problems and cardiovascular diseases.

Göran came from the Swedish Kundalini Yoga Association (Sveriges Kundalini Yogaförening, SKY) and was a disciple of Tomas Frankell who was the founder of this association and who taught yoga that came from Yogi Bhajan (born Harbhajan Singh Puri) (1929-2004) who founded the 3HO (Healthy, Happy, Holy Organization). Frankell has his background back to The Human Potential Movement and to the Growthhouse movement (Wäxthusrörelsen) which was led by Lena Kristina Tuulse and where Frankell and Marie-Louise von Malmborg founded Cafe Vega in 1981. He was also behind Pan Holenessccenter (Pan Helhetscenter) and later founded Deva Center where A Course in Miracles was taught and he also worked with the spiritual medium Doris Ankarberg.

Compassion Focused Therapy (CFT) was created by the British psychologist Paul Gilbert who also founded The Compassionate Mind Foundation. Methods from there are described as developmental psychology, neuroscience, social psychology and Buddhist psychology with specializations such as psychodynamic therapy. Another founder of the Compassionate Mind Foundation is Dr. Deborah Lee who has written the book The Compassionate-Mind Guide to Recovering from Trauma and PTSD (2013). She also leads workshops for the Swedish Association for CFT.

Imago Relationship Therapy (IRT) comes from the couple Harville Hendrix and Helen LaKelly Hunt who founded the Institute for Imago Relationship Therapy in 1984. Annika Sibring who is the director of studies at the Psychosynthesis Academy (Psykosyntesakademin) is also the education manager for the Swedish Imago Association where we find more therapists who have training in psychosynthesis. Helen LaKelly Hunt is the sister of Nelson Bunker Hunt (1926-2014) who was a member of the Council of The John Birch Society and a sponsor of the organization Western Goals Foundation which was founded in 1979 by General John K. Singlaub, John Rees and Larry McDonald and who also founded the World Anti-Communist League (WACL). Harville and Helen are listed on the World Spirituality Wisdom Council at the Center for World Spirituality which was founded by New Age guru Marc Gafni in 2010.

Lucie Wiberg, who works at the Psychosynthesis Academy (Psykosyntesakademin), introduced Systemic Family Constellations in Sweden in the 1990s with the help of the German Albrecht Mahr, who was a regular guest in Gothenburg and runs the Institut für Systemaufstellung in Würzburg. Systemic Family Constellations have their background in the therapeutic work of Bert Hellinger (1925-2019) and a founder of the Swedish Hellinger Institute is the psychosynthetic therapist Charlotte Palmgren.

“The German psychotherapist Bert Hellinger developed the Systemic Family Constellation. It is a transpersonal therapy methodology, which facilitates the opening and expansion of the individual’s consciousness. By working with the client’s energy field and immediate family relationships, more immediate aspects of life can be explored. These are professional, relational, cognitive, existential issues as well as spiritual matters. The client’s desires and feelings are key to the work performed.” (analydon.com, Systemic Family Constellation terapist)

A person who describes himself as an “expert in psychiatry for the Psykosynthes Academy Foundation” (Stiftelsen Psykosyntesakademin) is psychiatrist Nils Joneborg, who is a former senior physician in psychiatry at Ersta Diakonie and who leads mindfulness groups and works at the Wonsa Clinic with psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy. He is also a founder of the Guardian of Life Collective, a New Age NGO with international members and contacts and which also has members who come from the Tällberg Foundation and the Ekskäret Foundation in Stockholm, which was founded by financier Tomas Björkman (1958-) who is a member of the think tank Club of Rome (Romklubben). At Ekskäret, we can also find courses led by people from the Psykosynthesis Academy.

Wonsa (World of no sexual abuse) was founded by Gita Rajan in 2014 and conducts therapy activities for survivors of sexual abuse with treatments for both PTSD, CPTSD and DID. Just like at the Psykosynthesis Academy, the therapists at Wonsa have various therapy trainings that lead us back to the Human Potential Movement and the Esalen Institute and the therapies at Wonsa lead us to deeper treatments involving Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) and which was previously called Multiple Personality Disorder (MPD). A main therapy used within Wonsa is Lifespsan Integration (LI) which was developed by the American Peggy Pace and where she visited Sweden and issued certification to the first therapists within Wonsa. We can find a number of different therapy methods among the therapists at Wonsa such as Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR), Reprocessing Traumatic Memory Protocol (RTM), Internal Family Systems (IFS), Trauma and Dissociation (Suzette Boon), Enactment Trauma Therapy (Nijenhuis) etc. We can also find the use of psychedelic substances for therapy.

The use of psychedelic substances in psychiatry leads us back to the Esalen Institute and The Human Potential Movement and also to prominent figures in Family Therapy and treatments of, among others, schizophrenia and psychotic conditions. R. D. Laing (1927-1989) was a British psychiatrist who researched mental illnesses such as psychosis and schizophrenia and who trained from 1956 to 1964 at the Tavistock Clinic in London and had colleagues there such as John Bowlby (1907-1990). Laing was invited by the founders of the Esalen Institute to hold a seminar in 1967 on treatments for schizophrenia and they also invited the psychologist Julian Silverman (1933-2001) during the same year who gave a lecture called “Shamanism, Psychedelics, and the Schizophrenias”. Julian held a series of workshops in 1968 called “The Value of Psychotic Experience” where participants included Stanislav Grof, Alan Watts and Gestalt founder Fritz Perls.

Stanislav Grof is a member of a large number of organizations such as Professor of Psychology at the California Institute of Integral Studies (CIIS), Advisor, Global Vision Project, Chair of Transpersonal Psychotherapy, Wisdom University, Council of Sages, Institute of Transpersonal Psychology, Patron, Wyse International, Advisory Board, Archai, Distinguished Advisory board, Institute of Noetic Sciences and Advisory Board, Albert Hoffman Foundation.

Rick Doblin had a connection to Esalen and was a protégé of Dr. Stanislav Grof and was a founder of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) in 1986 where he researched the medical use of psychedelic substances under Grof and where he was also trained in Holotropic Breathwork. In collaboration with Grof and his wife Brigitte, the Nordic organization ‘Grof Legacy Training’ was later founded which was “based on his research into psychedelic therapy, holotropic breathwork, transpersonal psychology and spiritual emergence” (gltnordic.org). Also through Rick Doblin, a ‘Nordic Psychedelic Training’ was started where we have Swedish therapists who are trained within MAPS and who work at Wonsa where they provide treatments in MDMA to treat PTSD (Posttraumatic Stress Syndrome). We also have Swedish Retreat Centers that have been started up like ‘Nysnö Retreat’ where treatments of MDMA and “magic mushrooms” are given as a treatment for depression. Other techniques within Wonsa are Psychedelic Somatic Interactional Psychotherapy (PSIP) which was developed by Saj Razvi.

“During the Cold War, the CIA experimented with MDMA, then as a psychological weapon. During the 1950s, the CIA used MDMA in the MK-Ultra project with the aim of giving participants better “mind control”, however, the tests were not carried out on humans. The US Army also researched the drug during the Cold War.” (wiki)

At the Nordic organisation ‘Grof Legacy Training’ we find the British William Bloom who is a founder of Spiritual Companions Network, co-founded and directed the Alternatives Programme of St. James’s Church, Piccadilly and a faculty member at the Findhorn Foundation. He was also a founder of the Foundation for Holistic Spirituality where we find, as Advisors and Partners, among others Eileen Barker who founded the Network Focus on Religious Movements (INFORM) and David Lorimer who is Director of the Scientific and Medical Network, Vice President of the Swedenborg Society, Founding Fellow of the International Futures Forum and Chair of the Wrekin Trust which was founded in 1971 by Sir George Trevelyan. At the Wrekin Trust we find Tony Neate, who channelled a being from Atlantis, and David Furlong who ran the Spirit Release Foundation and Spirit Release Forum. On the Spirit Release Forum we can find articles by David Furlong involving “Releasing a past-life with a ‘dark’ spirit attachment” and “Working with the Multiple Self: New insights in Spirit Release Therapy” and he has written books such as Illuminating the Shadow: Transforming the Dark Side of the Psyche, The Healer Within, Working with Earth Energies and Healing Your Ancestral Patterns.

EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) is a therapy method developed by Francine Shapiro (1948-2019) who founded several institutes called The Human Development Institute, MetaVox and Meta Development where “meta” is a concept that takes us back to Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) where “meta programs” were developed. NLP was developed by, among others, Richard Bandler and John Grinder which also takes us back to The Human Potential Movement and names like Fritz Perls and teachings like Gestalt therapy and MkUltra researchers like Gregory Bateson.

“While classical hypnosis depends on techniques for putting patients into suggestive trances (even to the point of losing consciousness on command), NLP is much less intrusive. It is a technique of layering subtle meaning into spoken or written language to implant suggestions into a person’s unconscious mind without them being aware of it.” (Chapter on NLP, Bandler, Grinder, Erickson, ordoabchao.ca, David Livingstone)

Reprocessing Traumatic Memory Protocol (RTM) was developed by Dr. Frank Bourke and also leads us back to Richard Bandler (born 1950) and neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) and also to Steve Andreas (1935-2018) and his wife Connirae. Steve has his background back to the Human Potential Movement and is trained by Abraham Maslow and Fritz Perls and they also developed the therapy method Eye Movement Integration (EMI).

A form of treatment within Wonsa is Deep Brain Reorienting (DBR), which was developed by Dr. Frank Corrigan who comes from Scotland, and who also uses EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) and the similar Comprehensive Resource Model (CRM) (Lisa Schwarz) to treat complex PTSD and deep dissociation.

Other techniques are ‘Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction’ which comes from Jon Kabat-Zinn (born 1944) who has a background in Zen Buddhism and who is a member of several New Age NGOs such as the Council of Sages, California Institute of Integral Studies, Director, Mind & Life Institute, Visiting Teacher, Gaia House Advisory Council, Center for Contemplative Mind in Society, Search Inside Yourself Leadership Institute, Advisory Council, Mind Body Awareness Project and Advisor to Mindful magazine.

Somatic Embodiment & Regulating Techniques are techniques that come from trauma therapist Linda Tai who works with Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, Somatic Experiencing, Brainspotting, Internal Family Systems, Trauma-Informed Stabilization Treatment, yoga, and meditation. Linda has worked with Dr. Bessel van der Kolk who founded the Trauma Research Foundation and where Licia Sky was also a co-founder. Bessel and Licia are Faculty Members at the Esalen Institute.

Sensorimotor Psychotherapy (SP) is a therapy that was developed by Pat Ogden to treat trauma and nervous system dysregulation through, among other things, mindfulness and by observing bodily reactions and sensations. Pat founded the Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Institute (SPI) after previously co-founding the Hakomi Institute with Ron Kurtz (1934-2011). Ron was a founder of Hakomi Therapy in the 70s and had as its basis systems theory and the branch “living systems”. Hakomi involves teachings from Gestalt, bioenergetics, Ericksonian Hypnosis, and Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP). The Hakomi Institute was founded in Europe in Germany in 1982.

“Following graduate training in experimental psychology, Ron first taught at San Francisco State College, also leading encounter groups, and studying Gestalt. He became a client of John Pierrakos, founder of Bioenergetics, began to read the work of Wilhelm Reich and Alexander Lowen, and was inspired by the work of Albert Pesso. He describes these experiences as “the beginnings of the Hakomi Method”. A practitioner of yoga since 1959, he was also strongly influenced by Buddhism and Taoism. He studied with Moshe Feldenkrais and received Rolfing sessions. He says, “All of this found its way into my thinking, my work and my writing… These threads: eastern philosophy, psychotherapeutic technique, and systems theory are the foundations of Hakomi.”” (hakomiinstitute.com)

Among the therapists at Wonsa we also find various bodily movement therapies such as Authentic Movement as a therapy to reach our inner so-called “authentic self” and comes through the therapist Linda Hartley who was a student of Janet Adler (1941-2023) who founded the Discipline of Authentic Movement. Linda was a trained Somatic Movement Therapist and Educator in the 80s and trained in teachings such as Transpersonal Psychotherapy, Authentic Movement and Body-Mind Centering.

“Memories, hidden feelings, lost parts of the self, unknown and unexpressed energies may all be accessed when we move with conscious attention to the details of the movement, sensations, emotions and imagery evoked.” (lindahartley.co.uk)

Janet Adler and Joan Chodorow were taught by Mary Starks Whitehouse (1911-1979), a founder of the Authentic Movement, and their teachings took slightly different directions, with Janet’s teachings being more inspired by Buddhist psychology, mindfulness, and mysticism, and Joan’s teachings being more closely linked to Jungian symbolic drama through Active Imagination in Movement. According to Jung, Active Imagination is also associated with the Alchemical process.

Internal Family Systems (IFS) is a therapy method developed by Richard Schwartz (1949-) and he is behind the founding of The Center for Self Leadership in 2000, which later became the Internal Family Systems Institute. Richard describes his method as “de-pathologizing the multi-part personality” and says that he is influenced by people like Salvador Minuchin’s structural family therapy and Murray Bowen’s multigenerational family systems theory. He has written several books and also co-authored them with Regina A. Goulding and Robert R. Falconer, among others. We find Richard Schwartz as a teacher also at the Omega Institute which was founded on the teachings of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin.

Robert R. Falconer co-authored with Richard Schwartz the book Many Minds, One Self: Evidence for a Radical Shift in Paradigm (2017) and later The Others Within Us: Internal Family Systems, Porous Mind, and Spirit Possession (2023), When You’re Going Through Hell …Keep Going: Trauma, Healing, Spirit, and Internal Family Systems (2024) and Spirit (2025). He has co-authored Opening the Inner World: Spiritual Healing, Internal Family Systems, And Emanuel Swedenborg (2025) with Chelsea Rose Odhner and Jonathan S. Rose of the US based Swedenborg Foundation. Robert brings us into the spiritual side of therapy and has a background in neo-shamanism and has briefly studied with Michael Harner (1929-2018) and Sandra Ingerman. He also comes from a background as a survivor of extreme sadistic child abuse; sexual, physical, emotional, and spiritual, and has been an activist in what he calls the survivor movement. He has run the Institute for Trauma Oriented Psychotherapy for over ten years. Robert also seems to have been nicknamed “Bob”.

“For all of his therapeutic work, both professional and personal, Bob now uses IFS almost exclusively. Before this Bob used and explored many forms of therapy, starting with Ericksonian hypnotherapy which he studied with Carol Erickson. He received his master’s degree and hypnotherapist certificate under her tutelage. Then he met and began studying with Jack and Helen Watkins, the creators of Ego State Therapy.” (robertfalconer.us)

“Before beginning his graduate work, starting in 1971, Bob was a regular at with the Esalen Institute where he has attended more than 120 events and workshops. At Esalen Bob met and worked with many of the leaders of the human potential movement and focused on Gestalt Therapy mainly with Mariah Fenton Gladys and Christine Price. In the 80s and 90s Bob also studied codependency and addictions with Pia Mellody.” (robertfalconer.us)

Ego State Therapy, which is also a form of therapy within Wonsa, was developed by John G. Watkins (1913-2012) and his wife Helen Watkins (1921-2002) who worked in the areas of hypnosis, dissociation, and multiple personalities. John was a president of the Society for Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis (SCEH) and a founder of the International Society for Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis (ISCEH) together with Bernard B. Raginsky (1902-1974) in 1959. ISCEH changed its name in 1973 to The International Society of Hypnosis (ISH) and in 1976 the European Society of Hypnosis (ESH) was founded where we find the Swede Per-Olof Wikström as a co-founder. At The International Society of Hypnosis (ISH) we find some names like Ernest Hilgard, Ainsley Meares, Josephine Hilgard, Kay Thompson, Herbert Spiegel, John Hartland, Per-Olof Wikström, P. Brugnoli, Erika Fromm and also Martin Orne who was a member of The False Memory Syndrome Foundation (FMSF) and who worked with Project MKUltra in Subproject 84 and just like John Watkins researched multiple personality disorder. Helen Watkins was also a founding member of the International Society for the Study of Dissociation (ISSD).

“We behave on the basis of our perceptions. If our perceptions of a situation can be altered so as to cause us to misconstrue it, or to develop a false belief, then our behavior in relation to it will be drastically altered. It is precisely in the area of changing perceptions that the hypnotic modality demonstrates its most powerful effects. Hallucinations both under hypnosis, and posthypnotic, can easily be induced in the suggestible subject. He can be made to ignore painful stimuli, be apparently unable to hear loud sounds, and “see” individuals who are not present. Moreover, attitudes and beliefs can be initiated in him which are quite abnormal and often contrary to those which he previously held” (John G. Watkins, “Antisocial behavior under hypnosis: Possible or impossible?”, International Journal For Clinical And Experimental Hypnosis, 1972, Vol. 20, 95-100.)

Therapists at Wonsa also have training that comes from Suzette A. Boon (1949-) from the Netherlands who has studied dissociative disorders since the 1980s and received a PhD for her thesis on Multiple Personality Disorder in 1993. We can trace Suzette’s early education to anthropology where she worked in a regional hospital in Tanzania, East Africa, and researched the local witchcraft movement (1974-1976). (suzetteboon.com)

Suzette was also involved in the International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation (ISSTD) and a co-founder with Eli Somer in 2006 of the European Society for Trauma and Dissociation (ESTD) and was its first president. Eli Somer was also a former president of the ISSTD between 2005-2006 and another president of ISSTD between 2008–2009 was Kathy Steele who, together with Suzette Boon, Onno van der Hart and Ellert Nijenhuis, wrote the books The haunted self: Structural dissociation and treatment of chronic traumatization (2006), Coping with trauma-related dissociation: Skills training for patients and their therapists (2011) and Treating Trauma-related dissociation: A practical, integrative approach (2017).

Involved in Roberto Assagioli psychosynthesis and transpersonal psychotherapy we also find at the Delphi Institutet which is located in Stockholm and which is described as a psychotherapy school at undergraduate level. They also offer therapy in Ego State Therapy, EMDR, Hypnopsychotherapy, Lifespan Integration and Mindfulness. The Delphi Institutet is said to have been founded in 1995 as the Institute for Transpersonal Psychology and one of the founders Bo Wikström has been a Vice President of EUROTAS, the European Transpersonal Association between 1999-2002. Bo describes his “training as a “Group Facilitator” with Carl Rogers with team at his “Crosscultural Communications” workshops in El Escorial (Spain) and Rome (Italy) in the late seventies” and “trained in the “Utilization Technique” by Milton Erickson in 1978″. (delphiinstitutet.se)

EUROTAS traces its history back to Davos (Switzerland) in 1983 where it was founded by Marie-Francoise Louche, André Patsalides and Steven de Batselier and a first European Transpersonal Conference took place in 1984 and the EUROTAS foundation was founded in 1985 in France. One of the Presidents of EUROTAS was Ian Gordon-Brown who also founded a center in England.

The Center for Transpersonal Psychology was founded in 1973 by Ian Gordon-Brown (1925-1996) and Barbara Somers (1929-2013) after working with Roberto Assagioli in Italy and then returning to England. Joan and Roger Evans also founded another center in psychosynthesis in England in 1973 after studying with Roberto Assagioli in Italy called the Institute of Psychosynthesis.

“The term ‘transpersonal psychology’ was first defined in 1968 in the USA by Anthony Sutich. The birth of the transpersonal as a distinct and fourth force in psychology was marked by the first issue of the Journal of Transpersonal Psychology (1969) and the establishment of the American Association for Transpersonal Psychology (1971). Among the original board members and editorial staff of the new Journal of Transpersonal Psychology were some other familiar names: James Fadiman, Stanislav Grof, Arthur Koestler, Michael Murphy, Ira Progoff, Anthony Sutich (editor), Miles Vich, Alan Watts.” (Ian Gordon-Brown, in memory of a person of influence, laetusinpraesens.org)

Ian worked for the Lucis Trust for 14 years and was an executive director of World Goodwill from 1959 to 1969. World Goodwill is recognized at the United Nations as an Non-Governmental Organization (NGO). He is also involved in a journal called World Union-Goodwill which is a collaboration between Auroville/Shri Aurobindo Ashram and World Goodville. Auroville located in India was founded in 1968 by Mirra Alfassa (1878-1973) who practiced occultism under Max Théon (1848-1927) who founded the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor in the 1870s. The Order’s teachings are said to have been inspired by the Rosicrucian Paschal Beverly Randolph (1825-1875). The Lucis Trust published the newspaper ‘The Beacon’ from 1922 and Ian contributed several articles between 1951 and 1975.

“Before founding the Centre for Transpersonal Psychology, both Ian and Barbara had been particularly interested in the many ways of expanding human consciousness; and also in the synthesis of Eastern and Western thought. Barbara loved Zen, and the work of Jung, Maslow and Assagioli. She was developing work with dreams, meditation and imagery. Ian was keenly aware that from time immemorial there have been mystery schools and centres of spiritual training (ashrams, religious orders, fraternities) offering seekers a progressive initiation into new, expanded states of consciousness. He saw his transpersonal work as being in preparation for the mystery schools of the twenty-first century. Ian emphasised that each phase of the individual journey is paralleled by similar processes in the collective psyche.” (Ian Gordon-Brown, in memory of a person of influence, laetusinpraesens.org)

Ian was also involved in setting up an education centre with Sir George Trevelyan which came to be called the Wrekin Trust where we find Tony Neate as Chairman and David Furlong (Spirit Release Forum) as Co-Director.

“To return to 1971. I now entered a new phase, with burgeoning possibilities! ‘Retirement’ meant (as so many have found) a release into a new field of activity. We now had 1,500 names on the mailing list for the spiritual conferences. I could not let them down. So with advice from Major Bruce MacManaway, Ian Gordon-Brown and Air Marshal Sir Victor Goddard, we conceived the idea of an “Educational Trust concerned with the spiritual nature of man and the universe”, to mount conferences all over the country. What was it to be called? I looked out of the window at Attingham and saw our local mountain, the Wrekin and thought: “I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help.” I will call it the Wrekin Trust after this central hill in England.” (Exploration into God, 1991)

The therapy method Lifespan Integration (LI) was founded by Peggy Pace and is described as a method of “integrating neural structures and firing patterns” and is used to treat PTSD, among other things and she also uses EMDR. Peggy began in the 80s with therapies such as Jungian Active Imagination and “inner child work” where the client’s adult self was allowed to talk to the “inner child” but discovered that this was not sufficient as a therapy method.

“The child self within them could not hold on to it. Whereas the adult self knew very well that he or she was an adult and capable and competent; inside each of these adults there were often one or more child selves of different ages who felt stuck in in their age frame and in their traumatic powerless state. So I became very curious about how these states were held within people. I realized that they had to be held in separated neural networks, and that somehow there must be a way of integrating these split-off self-states who felt powerless, so that the adult could understand that the trauma really was over.” (Intervju, Peggy Pace, Youtube)

A therapist who uses a spiritual (New Age-oriented) therapy is Tom Zinser and where he mixes between different systems such as John and Helen Watkins Ego-State Therapy and Dr. William Baldwin’s Spirit Release Therapy and where he uses channeled information to help his clients become free from dissociative disorders which also includes multiple personality disorder. He calls his method Soul-Centered Healing and uses hypnosis to contact a sub-personality or sub-personalities through a method called Ideomotor Response Hypnotic Technique.

“The process begins when the therapist engages and works directly with a person’s higher self to identify the source of symptoms or distress. Whether it is a sub-personality whose past trauma is being triggered in the present, or outside spirits or entities trying to access the self, or intense panic set off by past-life memories breaking through into the present, different protocols are used depending on the particular phenomena presenting.” (soulcenteredhealing.net)

“In August of that year, I met Katharine, a woman who channeled a spirit entity named Gerod. She offered me a session with Gerod and I accepted. I was so impressed with the information Gerod gave me that I asked Katherine for another session, and then another. The information Gerod gave me pointed to a greatly expanded view of the mind and soul and what can go on at inner levels to cause a person pain or distress. Gerod also gave information about specific clients and suggestions for treatment. Within six months, Gerod and I established a collaboration that continued for fifteen years.” (soulcenteredhealing.net)

Dr. William Baldwin (1939-2004) takes us back to the UFO movement and wrote the books Spirit Releasement Therapy: A Technique Manual (1995), Healing Lost Souls: Releasing Unwanted Spirits from Your Energy Body (2003) and CE-VI: Close Encounters of the Possession Kind -A Different Kind of Interference of Otherworldly Beings (1998). William, who became a doctor of psychology, wrote a thesis in 1988 called ‘Diagnosis and Treatment of the Spirit Possession Syndrome’.

William was involved in the Human Potential Foundation which was founded in 1989 and which is part of the disclosure movement in the UFO movement. Conferences held by the Human Potential Foundation were sponsored by Laurance Rockefeller and some of the members were James J. Hurtak, Charles T. Tart, Zecharia Sitchin, Dave Hunt, Paula Underwood, Ruth Montgomery and C. B. Scott Jones was a past president.

William’s wife was Rev. Judith A. Baldwin (1942-2013) who was a minister in the Interfaith movement and describes herself as “clairvoyant, clairaudient, and clairsentient, and uses these spiritual gifts of discernment in the healing process during private sessions with clients”. She was also a teacher in A Course in Miracles and wrote the book Let the Inner Knower Lead the Way (1998).

Dr. Alan Sanderson (1931-2022) from England went to the USA and was trained by William Baldwin in Florida and later started the Spirit Release Foundation in the 90s. We find Tony Neate as Chair of the Spirit Release Foundation and who was previously involved in channeling a “spirit” called “Helio-Arcanophus” and who described herself as the “high priestess of Atlantis”. In 1957 Tony founded The Atlantean Society in London together with Murry Hope who wrote the books Practical Atlantean Magic: A Study of the Science, Mysticism and Theurgy of Ancient Atlantis (1992), The Gaia Dialogues (1995) and Cosmic Connections (1996).

Another person who was interested in hypnosis was the Finnish psychiatrist Reima Kampman, who conducted hypnosis experiments with multiple personality at the University of Oulu during the 1960s and who wrote his doctoral thesis called “Hypnotically induced multiple personality. An experimental study”, University of Oulo, 1973, and he wrote the book You are not alone (1974). He talks about side personalities and a rearrangement of repressed memories and where secondary personalities appear spontaneously as a result of strong physical or mental stress. He also talks about how multiple personality is related to mysticism and the occult and also regressions that take the client back to a past time before their birth, until they are someone else, and that bring thoughts of previous lives (reincarnation). Reima was also interviewed by the magazine Sökaren in 1976.

“Related to multiple personality are such states as mediumistic trance, automatisms (automatic writing, the Ouija board, etc.), hypnotic trance, somnambulism, and further exaltation at religious revival meetings, traumatic neuroses, daydreaming and dreams during sleep.”

“Spontaneously occurring sub-personalities are an exceptionally rare psychopathological condition. However, in deep hypnosis a kind of sub- or side-personalities can be induced in quite a few people. Different manifestations of the ego can be distinguished from each other and certain parts of the ego can, for example, be made to manifest themselves on a symbolic, unconscious level, including through automatic writing.”

“Different researchers have different opinions about how phenomena of this type arise. Some have explained them as the reintegration of material repressed during hypnosis, so that a new personality is formed. Others have considered that the phenomena support the theory of reincarnation.” (Sökaren 1976, no. 1)

“If we follow the development of psychiatry, bridging the gap between the conscious and the unconscious has often been associated with mysticism and occultism. The deeper something is found in the subconscious, the further away it is generally placed towards a beyond. In different cultures, different bearers of the trance have acted as a kind of mediator between the two regions: the Pythi of Egypt, the fakirs of India, seers, fortune tellers, healers and others. According to prevailing beliefs, these have had the ability to detach themselves from the plane of knowledge and consciousness and transcend the throat of the subconscious in order to retrieve hidden knowledge or power from the other side. It has been believed that humans have a spirit that can detach itself from the body during sleep and go out into the world, where feelings and events take on surreal expression and form. It was believed that seers and mediums had the ability to enter a beyond and there obtain knowledge that helped the patient as needed.” (You are not alone (1974), p 251)

“The first drawing, where the alchemist is sitting in the crack, the abyss between two land-masses, is a very important one. He’s sitting in the pit of the split, he’s in the flask, he can’t get out. The death raven of the underworld is beside him, the stars are overhead, the wind is blowing – the pneuma, wind of the spirit. There are ‘wet’ depressions and ‘dry’ depressions, and this is the dry kind. It’s the melancholia of the alchemists and it’s the pits. We talk about loss of soul, withdrawal of libido – our interest in things that used to interest us and runs out. In the Eastern tradition, it’s ‘dying to the thousend-and-one things. This is the true alchemist at work.” (Barbara Somers, The Fires of Alchemy: A Transpersonal Viewpoint (2004), p52, The Alchemist in the Split)

The Swedish New Age Networks: Part 7 The New Age, The Human Potential Movement and Ascended Masters

During the 1960 and 70s, a new spirituality spread across the world, primarily through the Human Potential Movement and the New Age movement, and in Sweden in the early 1980s, a series of conferences aimed at companies were held, with mainly speakers from the USA representing the New Age movement, and who were related to the Eselen Institute and its teachings on psychological and spiritual development.

These conferences were called ‘Living Companies in a New Era’ (Levande företag i en Ny Tid) and were aimed at business leaders, economists, human resources managers, marketers and politicians, and with invited speakers, the aim was to bring about a spiritual change in society through an influence through the corporate world. These conferences were held once a year between 1980 and 1983, and the spiritual magazine The Seeker (Sökaren) was there and conducted interviews with speakers who came from both the USA and Sweden.

“Living Companies in a New Era” was the name of the conference, and the organizer was SPF, the Swedish Personnel Administration Association, but it had commissioned the consulting firm Pedagogik & Produktion, P&P, to organize the program entirely in the spirit of the “new age”!
The idea was to put people at the center and, with the help of experts in psychological, spiritual, global and environmental issues together with economists and community builders, shake up the participants thoroughly. The aim was to arouse interest in self-awareness and that what one does in one’s daily work is part of a larger context. It was an almost spiritual attitude to life that the four-year-old consulting firm P&P wanted to introduce into the Swedish corporate world!”
(Sökaren 1980, no. 10)

Pedagogik & Produktion (P&P) was founded in 1976 and the people behind were Göran Wiklund, Jan Boström and Ulla Stridh-Carlsson. Other names we can find were Kurt Andersson, Peter Köll, Erica Albrektson, Yvonne Andersson, Inger Lardner and Tor Lindmark.

One of those who helped lay the foundation for these conferences was Mark L. Mawrence who was living in the USA and studied at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and later at Stockholm University where he studied Scandinavian Politics in 1976. He helped found The World Symposium On Humanity in 1979 which was a similar event to those later held in Sweden. Mark was also involved in Pedagogy & Production (P&P).

“The World Symposium On Humanity 1979 ~ Program Director for this groundbreaking event held in Los Angeles, Toronto and Canada featuring numerous cultural, religious and political leaders from around the world including Pope John Paul II, His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Joseph Campbell, Buckminster Fuller, Elizabeth Kubler-Ross, Ellen Bursten, John Denver, Marcel Marceau and many others. The advocacy of holistic attitudes, sustainability, and ecological principles as a foundation for planning in the future were the principle goals of this event.” (LinkedIn page, Mark L. Mawrence)

Mark Mawrence was interviewed in the magazine The Seeker (Sökaren, 1979, no. 8-9) where he was described as an ambassador for the New Age and where he worked with networking between different collectives within the New Age movement. Mark, who was a trained yoga teacher, also visited the Swedish collectives Ljusbacken, Dådran and Moder Jord as well as Kristiania in Denmark.

“- Mark, how do you become an ambassador for the new age? – Let’s say I am a representative of three large collectives in the spirit of the new age: Findhorn in Scotland, Auraville in India and Arcosanti in Arizona, which are together called Karass-Hexiad. An information flow already works between these using data. It is important to use available technology for constructive information even within the new age. The collectives also send video tapes to each other about what is happening within the respective collective. – Another of my fields of work is PLT, which stands for Planetary Learning Team. PLT consists of two people from each collective, who travel to other collectives and communities, partly to learn themselves and partly to share their own knowledge. In addition, we have a direct exchange of people. For example, two artists from Findhorn and an architect from Auraville have participated in work in Arcosanti.”

“In the late 1970s a young American, Peter Callaway, had a vision. He saw a globe of the world with three points of light radiating from it. He had no idea what it meant. But when he checked a map he discovered that the points of light corresponded geographically to the communities of Auroville in South India, Findhorn in Scotland and Arcosanti in Arizona.” (AurovilleToday, Auroville’s monthly news magazine since 1988)

Mark was also involved in Mark Satin’s New World Alliance, founded in 1979 as a cross-country networking organization. Mark Satin wrote the book New Age Politics: Healing Self and Society (1976), which is described as the political program of the New Age. Mark was the international secretary of the New World Alliance, which was headquartered in Washington.

Mark was also one of the founders of the association ‘The Circumference’ (Omkretsen) and the foundation ‘The New Age in Sweden’ (Den Nya Tidsåldern i Sverige) in 1979 together with the Swedes Bertil Kuhlemann, Kerstin Nordin, Håkan Snellman and Kai Blomqvist.

“- I met Mark at a conference in Virgina Beach in the USA and became completely fascinated by his way of working with ‘networking’ to create contact between people and groups, says Kerstin Nordin. Yes, then he came to Sweden, and here he became in a way a redeeming catalyst for many of us with New Age thoughts. And now some of us have met many times during the summer and formed a provisional association that we call Omkretsen. We have also prepared a foundation, which has the working name of the foundation Nya Tidsåldern i Sverige.” (Kerstin Nordin, Sökaren 1979, no. 9)

The association The Circumference (Omkretsen)worked with networking in Sweden where they established a register for people with an interest in the New Age in Sweden. They had a register of groups abroad and possible speakers. They worked to publish a publication with information about groups, people, services, meetings, books, etc. related to the New Age and information packages about spiritual and transpersonal groups. They also worked to get information out to the public and contacts to socially important people and organizations about the community and the New Age. They also worked to develop festivals and conferences. They also published the magazine Holistic Vision for a New Age (Helhetssyn), which quickly had to be closed down due to lack of resources.

“In 1981, at a time when wise New Age was at its strongest in Sweden, the first issue of Holistic Vision for a New Age was published, which was a project within the The Circumference Community, a New Age association. At this time, the conferences “Living Companies in a New Age” had begun (1980) and new important thoughts seemed to be taking hold of sensitive people in, among other things, the business world. Bertil Kuhlemann, Björn Roxendal and Håkan Snellman were the editorial staff, and the first issue with its beautiful blue design contained articles about Carl Rogers, Jan Grönholm, P. D. Ouspensky, Anthony Brooke, the “alternative Nobel Prize” and Mark Satin. The magazine was supposed to bring the ideas of the new age to an open and eagerly receptive readership. But the interest was not what was expected and Holistic Vision for a New Age was closed down without a fight after issue number 2. There was no money for advertising…”

One of the founders of The Circumference (Omkretsen) was Bertil Kuhlemann who had a background in the UFO movement with his membership in one of the first UFO organizations in Sweden called the Ifological Society which was founded in 1957 and later in Sten Lindgren’s Intergalactic Federation (IGF) which was founded in 1965 where they gathered information from George Adamski, Howard Menger, George Hunt Williamson and also the occultist Maurice Doreal (1898–1963) who founded the theosophically inspired Brotherhood of the White Temple. Sten Lindgren was also a member of the Ifological Society and later during his life published the books Dialogue with Cosmic Culture (1997) and Manual for Cosmic Contact (2006).

“In the spring of 1973, the Working Group for UFO Identification was formed within the framework of the IGF association. In collaboration with other UFO associations around the country, the association developed into Project U.R.D. – Project UFO Reporting and Data System. The idea was to collect, process and code UFO reports for data processing and in this way get answers to the question “is there anything there?” The project was led by Sten, Bjarne and Bertil Kuhlemann.” (Sökaren 1991, no. 2, Håkan Blomqvist)

Bertil Kuhlemann was also part of the Swedish branch of Understanding, Inc., founded by Daniel W. Fry (1908-1992), a UFO contactee organization founded in 1955. Swedish members were Sven-Erik and Ing-Marie Asklund, Kerstin Jansson, Brage Jansson, Karl-Erik Nordquist and Erik Fredriksson. The society, which had around 20 members, also had several members in the previous UFO association, the Ifological Society.

“European Understanding Unit, founded in Sweden 1963 by Sven-Erik and Ing-Marie Asklund, then living in Bandhagen, south of Stockholm. This event was proudly announced in the magazine Understanding, June 1963.” (source, Håkan Blomqvist, blogs, books)

Håkan Blomqvist (1952-) who has written a lot about the Swedish UFO movement through books and blogs talks about Karl-Erik Nordquist who was one of the leaders of the Ifological Society during the 1960s and mentions that Erik was interested in magic in various forms such as stage magic and that he was a member of the Rosicrucian Order AMORC. Håkan also mentions that Edith Nicolaisen was an organizer of Daniel Fry’s European lecture tour and that they received financial support from the couple Gita and Douglas Keiller from Särö. Near Särö is Onsala where we find the Scandinavian headquarters of AMORC. Bertil Kuhlemann also arranged meetings later within the The Circumference (Omkretsen) with Gita and Anthony Brooke.

” The Circumference community in Stockholm arranged three meetings where Gita and Anthony shared their experiences, in general formats, where all participants exchanged thoughts. Bertil Kuhlemann, one of the initiators of The Circumference, who is currently working at the Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences, comments:
– It was very nice to meet Gita and Anthony. For example, we talked about how to work for the new age without falling into old patterns: They were positive about our idea of not making The Circumferenc an organization with membership and membership fees, statutes and so on. We feel that you are a member of the The Circumference community to the extent that you yourself work for the whole. You are involved when you work in the spirit of The Circumference.”
(Sökaren, 1981 no. 1)

“The Keiller home, Gövik, was for several years a sort of new-age center with guests from all over the world. In 1975 Gita and Douglas Keiller founded the Peace Through Unity Trust together with Anthony Brooke. When Douglas Keiller became a supporter of the I Am movement, the sad right-wing travesty of the Esoteric Tradition, Gita separated and left Särö. She married Anthony Brooke in 1982.” (source, Håkan Blomqvist, blogs, books)

Bertil Kuhlemann was also a Swedish representative together with Bjarne Håkansson (1945-) at The Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) which was founded in 1969. Bjarne was also part of Sten Lindgren’s Intergalactic Federation (IGF) and wrote the book The UFO-riddle (UFO-gåtan) in 1973.

During the early 60s, Bertil ran the mail-order bookstore Edista where literature on UFOs, occultism, ESP and spiritual development was sold. He says that important works in the spiritual field were Henry T. Laurency’s two works, ‘The Knowledge of Reality’ and ‘The Philosopher’s Stone’, and the entire seven volumes of the St. Germain series which could be obtained through Wiola Lowald in Stockholm who ran “The Stockholm ‘I AM’ study group”. Wiola also published her own book of poetry called Fire Eyes (Eldsögon) (1960).

During the 90s Bertil was a coordinator for a Swedish translation of A Course in Miracles, where Jan Vintilescu was appointed translator by the Foundatian for Inner Peace in the USA. Jan together with Eva Lindström opened the East and West bookstore in Stockholm during the 80s where books on psychology, philosophy, religion, mysticism and New Age were sold. A Course in Miracles was taught at Rinkesta Castle in Södermanland where we also find the political party Enhet (The Unity Party) where we find Ove Svidén (1937-2020) who attended a symposium at the Nordic Committee for Human Rights (NKMR).

Kerstin Nordin (1942-1925) was another founder of The Circumference (Omkretsen) and she also gave lectures at ‘Living Companies in a New Era’ and later also at the The Life Festival (Livsfestivalen) which was founded in 1981 by Björn Roxendal who was chairman of the foundation ‘The New Age in Sweden’ (‘Nya Tidsåldern in Sverige). One of her lectures at the The Life Festival was called The New Worldview – the New Man. She later co-founded the association ‘The New Thinkers’ (Nytänkarna) in 1982 where she presented herself as a New Age consultant where she wanted to introduce the ideas of the “new age” into the business world, show companies their role in a larger whole, and teach people to develop a higher consciousness. She was also involved in peace movements and had invited Bernard S. Benson (1922-1996) as a lecturer within The New Thinkers.

The New Thinkers were founded by, in addition to Kerstin Nordin, also by the actress Bibi Andersson, the journalist and author Margareta Calmgård Bergmark, the center-right parliamentarian Birgitta Hambraeus and the journalist and author Ingrid Olausson. The New Thinkers mainly addressed opinion leaders – media and business people, politicians and authors. Many speakers who gave speeches at “Living companies in a new era” were also invited to the The New Thinkers. Some of the speakers were Jean Houston, Willis Harman, George Land, Rupert Sheldrake and Michael Lindfield from Findhorn. The mystic Sir George Trevelyan was also there and Peter Russell gave a lecture on “the awakening earth”. Peter is on the faculty of the Institute of Noetic Sciences, a fellow of The World Business Academy and The Findhorn Foundation, and an Honorary Member of The Club of Budapest.

The New Thinkers also organized a weekend seminar on the future and a week-long future festival for teenagers called ‘The Turning point’ (Vändpunkten), which was the youth’s own New Age association. The first event of The Turning Point, a large-scale “future day”, was held at the premises of Stockholm University in Frescati in 1983. Kerstin’s own son, who was part of the Turning Point, worked with something called RC, Reevaluation Counseling, which was a kind of psychotherapy that was developed by L. Ron Hubbard in the 1950s under Dianetics. One of the speakers was Kay Tift, who came from the spiritual collective in Scotland called Findhorn, and who had a doctorate in the subject of group dynamics where they learned to make joint decisions in groups on various issues.

“- After the decisions, we also usually “fade in”, Kay continued. Fading in means that each person, for a few quiet moments, tries to go into themselves and intuitively feel if the decision feels right. If it feels wrong in any way to someone, this can be decisive and tear up a decision made until complete harmony or consensus has arisen.” (Sökaren 1983, no. 8)

During the 90s, Kerstin founded a new project called Lifelust (Livslust), which was a place in Latvia where she helped orphans to a better life, and where she saw this as a small Findhorn, and she also had San Patrignano in Italy as a model. San Patrignano was a community that helped and rehabilitated drug addicts and was founded by Vincenzo Muccioli (1934-1995) who had a background in parapsychology and spiritualism and where he himself acted as a medium. Lifelust also receives help from the Theosophical Order of Service International.

Kerstin was also one of the forces behind The Right Livelihood Award, the so-called alternative Nobel Prize, which was founded in 1980 in Sweden by Jakob von Uexkull and she came into contact with psychosynthesis during her life and was one of the founders together with Göran Wiklund of the Psychosynthesis Academy (PsykosyntesAkademin) in 1989. Göran was behind Pedagogik & Produktion (P&P) and also the project ‘The Pioneers’ (Banbrytarna) and Nutrition and Life (Näring och Liv) where they wanted to transform the traditional view of business economics into a new approach that they called corporate ecology. Göran was also behind a Swedish Social Venture Network (SVN) which later had a collaboration with the Esalen Institute.

Håkan Snellman, who is an associate professor of theoretical physics at the Swedish Institute of Technology, was also one of the founders of the association The Circumference (Omkretsen). Håkan gave lectures on science and reality. “He started from Socrates’ question: ”What is reality?” and said that, contrary to what most people believe, quite a bit has happened since he was born. We are still far from a satisfactory answer to the question of what reality is.”

Håkan also participated in a symposium on Near-Death Experiences where those present talked about the latest research and where they talked about experience, analysis and interpretation and used Michael Sabom’s book ‘Recollections of Death’ which had recently been translated into Swedish under the title We experienced death (Vi upplevde döden) (1985). In addition to Håkan, the participants were also Göran Grip, Jan Pilotti, Kersti Wistrand and Nils-Olof Jacobson. The organizer was the Association for Psychobiophysics (Föreningen för psykobiofysik) where we find Göran Brusewitz and Jan Fjellander. (Sökaren 1986, no. 10)

“Håkan Snellman belongs to a Japanese spiritual organization called Mahikari (True Light). It is ecumenical insofar as it wants to unite all the major religions, which are believed to have originated from the one God via various messengers. A large part of the activity consists of transferring “True Light”, a kind of spiritual energy, to other people via the hands. Reincarnation and karma are believed in by Håkan Snellman. And he believes that these ideas were present in the original Christianity, but were gradually removed by the ruling theologians.” (Interview with a modern physicist, Sökaren 1984, no. 7)

The Mahikari movement was founded in 1959 by Kötama Okada (1901-1974) and had branches such as World Divine Light and Sukyo Mahikari. Kōtama Okada was previously a follower of the religious movement Church of World Messianity founded in 1935 by Mokichi Okada (1882-1955) who in turn was a follower of the Shinto sect Oomoto. Mokichi Okada is the founder of ‘Johrei’, an energy healing ritual that uses “divine light” to dissolve the spiritual impurities that are understood to be the source of all physical, emotional, and personal problems. (wiki)

An interesting connection to these Japanese movements is found in the Centre for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence founded in 1994 by Paul Wilkinson and Bruce Hoffman, where we find the Swedish expert on terrorism Magnus Ranstorp and we also find former Swedish Prime Minister Carl Bildt on the Advisory Council. Magnus took over as Director from Paul Wilkinson. This centre is also known as the Handa Centre for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence after donations from Worldwide Support for Development (WSD) where we find Japanese religious leader Haruhisa Handa sitting in the management.

Haruhisa Handa (1951-) together with Uematsu Aiko (1934-) founded the Shinto-based religion Cosmo Core in 1984, which changed its name to Cosmo Mate the following year, and it is now called World Mate. Haruhisa Handa learned Johrei within the Sekai Kyūseikyō movement, of which his mother was a member, and he later converted to Oomoto. He published his book Kyōun (Lucky Fortune) in 1986. Uematsu Aiko came from the voluntary organization World Red Swastika Society.

“The stars also have a spirit world, from which power is sent. I will teach you how to get it, a secret that you can own the lucky power from the stars.” (dailymail.co.uk, Haruhisa Handa)

Another founder of The Circumference (Omkretsen) was Kai Blomqvist (1934-2022), who called himself a “cooperative ideologue” and who founded the Cooperative Institute. Kai said that there are different forms of ownership within a company and that the cooperative form was one of them. “- For me, the cooperative idea represents much more than a form of business, says Kai. It is – or can and should be – an expression of a conscious humane outlook on life.” Kai wanted to replace selfish production of goods with one of humanity and said that Findhorn in Scotland was a model where work was cultivated in the name of love. Kai was also a speaker at Living Companies in a New Era.

“- There have also been workers who have taken over a company threatened with closure in order to save their jobs. Such a form of business has a long tradition in many other countries and is increasing everywhere in Europe. An interesting example is found in the city of Mondragon in Spain. There, almost all companies are worker cooperatives.” (COOPERATION an alternative in Den Nya Tiden, Sökaren 1981, no. 6)

From ‘The Circumference’ (Omkretsen) and Foundation ‘The New Age in Sweden’ (Den Nya Tidsåldern i Sverige), the The Life Festivals (Livsfestivalerna) was also born in 1981 in Stockholm.

“In parallel with the Living Companies conferences, the “The Life Festivals” also began in 1981. Behind these was the “The New Age in Sweden”. Once again, Jan Grönholm and Kerstin Nordin were among the speakers, but also one of the priests from Stockholm Cathedral- Ludvig Jönsson. Jan Grönholm spoke about the ongoing paradigm shift. According to the old paradigm, the world is seen as a mechano, according to the new one, as a living organism. Through an impressive holistic approach to the emerging New Age ideas in the book Holistic View and Faith in the Future (1979), Jan Grönholm appears at this early stage as Sweden’s equivalent to the ideologist David Spangler in the international arena.”

Behind the organizers of the The Life Festivals were Björn Roxendal, who was chairman of the foundation ‘The New Age in Sweden’, and Eva Horney and later also Lars Lagerstedt. Some of the speakers at these festivals were Ingrid and Rune Olausson, Karl-Erik Edris, William Dockens, Manfred Kilgus, Göran Wiklund, Sten Kullberg, Jens Tellefsen, Jan Fjellander, Kersti Wistrand and Jan Pilotti. These talks could be about new culture, New Age, consciousness after death and paranormal phenomena, etc. A talk at the The Life Festival by Björn and Eva was called ‘Alchemical problem solving, personal and global crises antidote’.

Björn had his early background in communist revolution and joined the Communist League (Förbundet Kommunist) and was active in revolutionary groups and trained as a theoretical Marxist. He felt that something was missing and instead began to explore spirituality and his studies took him to Rudolf Steiner, Transcendental Meditation and then to the I Am movement and Summit Lighthouse. He says that he was also a member of the Theosophical Society Adyar.

“- I meditate on the ultimate reality, infinity and try to experience and unite with it, says Björn. I focus on infinity, on God as a presence of all-encompassing consciousness, intelligence and love with infinite energy and unlimited possibilities.”

“- As I see it, both the teachings of Summit Lighthouse and Theosophy come from the same source, The Great White Brotherhood. Alice Bailey’s teachings also have that origin, since her master Djwal Kul belongs to The Great White Brotherhood.”
(Sökaren 1984, no. 6, A cosmic outlook and high ideals, Interview with Björn Roxendal)

Björn, who was part of Summit Lighthouse (at Grävlingsvägen in Bromma), which was founded by Mark L. Prophet (1918-1973) in 1958, gave lectures with instructions from the teachings of the Great White Brotherhood through visualization, meditation, affirmations, breathing exercises and the science of the spoken word. He also gave lectures on doomsday prophecies based on the book Saint Germain’s Prophecy for the New Millennium written by Elizabeth Clare Prophet (1939-2009). The leaders of Summit Lighthouse came to Sweden in 1968 and a group was formed in Stockholm that made invocations to Masters such as Saint Germain, El Morya, Dwjal Kuhl and Koot Hoomi. Björn was also interested in Psychosynthesis and trained as a psychosynthesis therapist and later founded the Psychosynthesis House (Psykosynteshuset).

Eva Horney (1952-) (also called Eva Horney Seilitz) who helped set up the The Life Festivals was a trained Hathayoga teacher and had Jonas Salk (1914-1995) as a mentor and spiritual guide with whom she had contact since the 70s after trips to the USA. She also co-ran the New Age bookstore Vattumannen (Aquarius) in Stockholm for several years during the 1980s, and later in life, together with Josefin Wikström, she developed a trauma-adapted yoga program for the Forensic Psychiatric Regional Clinic in Vadstena to help people in the Prison and Probation Service.

Eva, whose father was Johan Horney, had a famous sister named Jane Horney who was born in 1918 and who disappeared and was presumed to have been murdered under mysterious circumstances during World War II in German-occupied Denmark. Jane was recruited in 1943 to the Swedish military intelligence service C-Bureau (C-byrån) with the code name “Eskimå”. She was reported missing and suspected of being murdered by the Danish resistance movement.

“After the failed assassination attempt on Hitler in July 1944, the German spy chiefs Reinhard Gehlen and Walter Schellenberg began cooperation with the US intelligence service OSS via the Swedish C-Bureau. Courier contacts were handled via Denmark, among other places, and there Jane Horney became the most important courier.” (Wiki)

“In the book The Secretaries’ Club (2014), the later author Jan Bergman states that Jane Horney Granberg was recruited by the C-Bureau‘s deputy head Helmuth Ternberg to act as an informant and courier for the Swedish military intelligence service C-Bureau. In that role, she developed contacts with the Germans – including in Copenhagen. As a courier, she was important for the intelligence cooperation between the Swedish C-Bureau, the American OSS and the German FHO (General Reinhard Gehlen), a development that is described in Bergman’s book The Photo Dealer in Bizonien (2018).” (Wiki)

Helmuth Ternberg (1893-1971), who was deputy head of the secret military intelligence agency C-Bureau during World War II, previously worked in the 1930s for the banker and industrialist Torsten Kreuger (1884-1973). In 1941, Torsten helped finance the start-up of the naziorganization Swedish Opposition (SO), which was led by Per Engdahl. In an open letter to Prime Minister Per Albin Hansson, which was published in Stockholmstidningen and Aftonbladet (which was owned by Torsten Kreuger), they wanted a three-point appeal, “Communism must be crushed, Finland’s cause is ours, and better relations with Germany”. This is described in the book Crisis in the Homeland, Swedish Political History 1900-2010 (2011) by author Karl N Alvar Nilsson, where he also describes Swedish upper-class Nazism and its connection to the Swedish Opposition, and where he tells us that Clarence von Rosen (1867-1955) and Sven Hedin (1865-1952) had a kind of superior role among the upper-class Nazis. Both Clarence and Sven were knights in the Order of St. John in Sweden. In 1920, Torsten bought the Rösan manor in Onsala, which he had as a summer residence, and in 1982 the residence was taken over by the Rosicrucians order AMORC, where it became the Scandinavian headquarters under Irving Soderlund (1927-2019).

Lars Lagerstedt, who also helped with The Life Festivals, was a teacher in UMV (Human Values Teaching) and introduced this in Sweden. UMV was a teaching that came from Sri Sathya Sai Baba (1926-2011) and was called ‘Sri Sathya Sai Human Values Teaching’. Lars was previously connected to Wäxthuset Gallery Medmera which was founded in 1976 by Lena Kristina Tuulse and several others who worked with emotional release therapy (primal therapy), rebirthing, humanistic psychology and Gestalt therapy. He was also involved in Mullingstorp’s institute which was led by the doctor Bengt Stern.

“The purpose of these annual festivals is to help people into a better future. For this reason, speakers with different goals and orientations were invited – Lars Lagerstedt spoke about teaching human values, Björn Roxendal about positive thinking, Jens Tellefsen and Jan Fjellander about paranormal phenomena in everyday life, Göran Wiklund about how one should think when starting one’s own business, Kjell Axner about the Montessori school, Lars Johansson about chakra meditation, Ulf Wamming about Za-zen and Tai Chi Chuan and Lars Norberg about “How I realize my ideals right now”.” (Sökaren 1984, no. 3-4, Livsfestivalen)

Swedish followers of the Indian Sai Baba gathered for a week in 1993 in an old Östergötland manor house called Herrborum, whose history stretches back to the Middle Ages. The owner of Herrborum was Count Magnus Stenbock (1911-2007), who took over in 1969 from his mother Louise, and where it opened for paying guests in 1981. Herrborum was rented for a week and some of the leaders of the Sai Baba followers were Britt-Marie Mossberg and Göran Mellqvist and who helped prepare Herrborum. Conny Larsson held meditations and UMV was also taught to a group of children.

Stenbock himself was interested in Indian philosophy, had the Dalai Lama as a role model, and ate vegetarian and cared about the environment. He is also said to have socialized in right-wing extremist circles and used information about race theory (and believed that race mixing should be avoided) that came from Herman Lundborg (1868-1943) who was head of the Racial Biology Institute from 1921-1935. Stenbock wrote the book Thoughts and opinions on some of the issues of the day (Tankar och synpunkter i några av tidens frågor, 1961) and a documentary was made about the count for Swedish Television where you can see that he had his own Carolingian war squad that bore his coat of arms. He was also interviewed in the magazine Contra (1989, no. 2 ) where he talked about his consevative views and holding on to old traditions of being a noble knight.

“In his youth, the count studied Indian philosophy, and it is something that has made a deep impression on his life and livelihood. He adopted ahimsa, which is based on not harming any living thing – animals or plants – and which is found in Buddhism, among other things.”
(Östgöta Correspondenten, The Count Who Made Time Stand Still, 2007)

In Stenbock’s family we find his mother Louise Mörner af Morlanda (1879-1978) whose brother Carl Oscar Robert Mörner (1883-1977) was a member of the Order of Saint John in Sweden. His father Vilfried Carl Magnus Benvenuto Stenbock (1874-1923) had a brother who was a knight named Reinhold Sigfrid Gotvald Stenbock (1878-1946). Magnus’ mother Louise was involved in the suffrage movement and in several associations such as the Fredrika Bremer Association and the National Association for Women’s Political Suffrage, and she was chairwoman of the local Association for Women’s Political Suffrage in Linköping.

Another speaker at Living Companies in a New Era, and a follower of Sathya Sai Baba and member of the Swedish Sathya Sai Organization, was Annastina Vrethammar (1927-2011) who was a consultant in personal development and who worked with affirmations, and tried to turn negative thoughts and patterns that we have within ourselves into something positive, by changing the underlying belief systems (programming) we have within ourselves that we are often not aware of. She wrote the books Imagine a Better Life (1988), Paths to Love (1993) and Boundless Life (2003).

“Then we had to go into a light meditation, while Annastina spoke to us about how the golden light from our higher self should fill our entire body. This visualization exercise, which you should do every day, removes negative, self-destructive thoughts and feelings and creates harmony and goodwill.” (Sökaren 1989, no. 3, On a course in positive thinking)

Vrethammar was also a follower of Joseph Murphy (1898-1981) who belonged to The New Thought movement and became a priest in The Church of Divine Science and who was also a 32nd degree Mason in the Scottish Rite.

Jan Grönholm, who was a speaker at, among others, Living Companies in a New Era and The Life Festival, took his ideas from, among others, Mark Satin, Abraham Maslow, Arthur Koestler, David Spangler and E F Schumacher, and talked about the mystic’s personal experiences as a basis for spiritual development. He wrote the books Holistic View and Faith in the Future: An Introduction to Our Time’s Search for a New View of Humanity and the World (1979), The Good Information Society (1984), Warrior with a Briefcase: On Strength and Morality in Working Life (1987), The Feldenkrais Method: Learning to Learn Again (1996), and Time to Do – Time to Be: Prerequisites for a Healthier Society (2005).

“The first real New Age book in Swedish was perhaps Jan Grönholm’s “Holistic View and Faith in the Future”, which was published in 1979 by Liber. Grönholm linked a number of ideas and movements into a vision of a new human society in a way that no one had done before in our country. Among other things, he spoke about “mystical physics” – modern physics’ perception of the unity of everything, which is found in ancient spiritual traditions. ”Behind all separate phenomena and events, behind all opposites there is a fundamental unity. Everything is inseparable and interdependent, everything is part of a cosmic whole.” (Sökaren 1985, no. 1)

The Human Potential Movement also came to Sweden through Cross-culture Gallery Medmera (Tvärkultur Galleri Medmera), which was founded in 1976 by a group of therapists who had training in emotional release therapy such as primal therapy and rebirthing and humanistic psychology such as Gestalt and Group Therapy. The association was dissolved in 1979 but continued when four people formed the Growthhouse Galley Medmera (Wäxthuset Galleri Medmera), which eventually had a membership of 250 to 300 people.

“Wäxthuset Galleri Medmera, with premises in a former pharmacy on Bellmansgatan in Stockholm, is a gathering point for the ideas of the ”New Age”. There, in a spirit of love and harmony, they want to work for, among other things, raising the spiritual level of man, releasing creative and spiritual ability and for people to take responsibility for themselves and their relationships to each other and the earth.”

“The gallery tries to build a network of contacts – similar to the “network of light” that the “growth society” Findhorn in Scotland tries to create between groups and individuals who work in the spirit of the ”new age”.”
(Sökaren 1981, no. 4)

These therapists received their training through trips to the USA, primarily to California but also to India, and they also had visitors from abroad who held courses through Wäxthuset for the association’s members. Wäxthuset was founded in Stockholm but later started up in several other places in Sweden and with other names, such as with Tomas Frankell and Marie-Louise von Malmborg who founded Cafe Vega.

One of the driving forces behind Wäxthuset was Lena Kristina Tuulse, who says that she went to her own family therapy with the American Walter Kempler (1923-2007), who was one of the pioneers of family therapy in Sweden and who founded The Kempler Institute in 1979 in Denmark. Walter had previously worked for Fritz Perls (1893-1970) during the 1960s, who worked at the Esalen Institute. Walter ran his own form of Gestalt Therapy.

“Psychologist Lena Kristina Tuulse is the one who started the Wäxthus movement in Sweden. She is inspired by modern humanistic psychology, i.e. various forms of experience-oriented psychology, which can be said to have been started by Maslow and Ericson. It is about giving people the opportunity to go through a deep therapeutic process to self-knowledge and self-realization.” (Sökaren 1989, no. 7, Lena Kristina Tuulse wants us to grow as people)

“A person who has meant a lot to Lena Kristina is Fritz Perls, a pioneer in Gestalt therapy. – I have met his first and his last wife, says Lena Kristina, and have studied their teachings a little, so that I have learned the language and basics of Gestalt therapy. I have introduced Gestalt therapy to Sweden, have held courses and have also had clients in individual therapy.” (Sökaren 1989, no. 7)

Lena also studied with Carl Rogers (1902-1987) in America and she also met the family therapist Virginia Satir (1916-1988) and Elisabeth Kübler-Ross (1926-2004) whom she traveled to and she also trained with Leonard D. Orr (1930-2019) who developed Rebirthing Breathwork.

Psychologist Carl Rogers (1902-1987), who visited Sweden and was a lecturer at ‘Living Companies in a New Era’, was a founder of humanistic psychology and became president of the American Psychological Association in 1947. He was previously involved in the CIA and sat as a board member of the Human Ecology Fund in the 50s and 60s where research was conducted within Project MK-ULTRA. Carl was one of the founders of the Association for Humanistic Psychology in 1962 together with Abraham Maslow, Charlotte Buhler, Rollo May and Virginia Satir and from these people grew The Human Potential Movement. The Human Ecology Fund had a branch in the Netherlands called ‘Stichting voor Onderzoek van Ecologische Vraagstukken’ which was connected to the anti-communist think tank Interdoc (International Documentation and Information Centre).

Gestalt therapy also came to Sweden through Barbro Curman, Lars Norberg, Jannis Missios and Ulla Westling who founded the Gestalt Academy in Scandinavia in 1976. Lars Norberg says that he, just like Lena Kristina Tuulse, went to family therapy with Walter Kempler and that his wife received training from the American Jorge Rosner who was a friend of Fritz Perls.

Lars was a trained social anthropologist and we can also find that he early on engaged in volunteer work in the third world and had a connection to the Theosophical Youth Group (Teosofiska Ungdomsgruppen) (TUG) which was active between 1953 and 1973 and which was run by, among others, Gudrun Fjellander and Jan Fjellander who were children of Sigfrid Fjellander (1899-1975) and Ingrid Nyborg-Fjellander (1915-1992) who ran the Liberal Catholic Church in Sweden. We also find the cousins Roland von Malmborg and Christer von Malmborg in TUG.

“Lars Norberg, who studied social anthropology, took the initiative in 1968 for a new movement to gain education through volunteer work in the third world. The idea was to conduct long-term sustainable volunteer work that would begin with a preliminary course. Continue with work in developing countries on the same terms as the local population and end with follow-up activities in Sweden to spread knowledge about the third world and recruit new volunteers. Together with Gudrun Hubendick, a TUG member, Norberg built up the activity. Bill Robertshawe also got involved and helped with study materials, and Christer and Kersti von Malmborg became some of the first volunteers to leave.” (Tord Björk: Nordisk folkrörelsehistoria)

Another person who ran a psychotherapy practice similar to Wäxthuset, and who lectured at ‘Living Companies in a New Era’, was the doctor Bengt Stern (1930-2002). He studied psychosomatic medicine, body psychotherapy and humanistic and transpersonal psychology in Europe, India and the USA and in 1985 started the Mullingstorp Institute for Education and Health on his father’s farm in Vikbolandet where he designed what was called the “Meet Yourself Process”. At Mullingstorp, courses in bio-resonance therapy, body cleansing and energy analyses were also run. He wrote his first book Growing to Health in 1985 and later Meet Yourself Beyond All Reason (1990) and Feeling Bad is a Good Start (1994). Several therapists who worked at Bengt Stern were also followers of Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh (1931-1990) and where the courses began with dynamic meditation, so-called HO meditation.

“Every day began at 7:00 with dynamic meditation, the so-called HO meditation, developed by Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh. This meditation begins with breathing very intensely and deeply, in and out, through the nose and moving the body and pelvis in time with the breath. The exercise is very difficult, especially if you have respiratory blockages. It is a kind of hyperventilation. Part two of the HO meditation is an expression phase, when you are asked to scream, hit a pillow and get in touch with your anger. In part three you stand on your full feet, jump, with your arms high in the air, and shout HO from the depths of your inner self.” (The Seeker 1987, no. 3)

The course center Mullingstorp was later sold in 2010, by Bengt’s widow Viktoria, to Otto Runmark and Denise Lagercrantz who continued the activity in the same spirit. Denise comes from the famous noble family Lagercrantz where her father Carl Lagercrantz (b. 1935) is also the head of the family line. We also find knights of the Order of St. John in the family such as the military men Herman Ludvig Fabian Lagercrantz (1859-1945), Bror Gustaf Herman Lagercrantz (1894-1981) and Carl Adolf Erik Lagercrantz (1898-1961). Denise, who is educated and works as a lawyer, is a partner at Zettergren & Lagercrantz Law Firm and handles cases related to, among other things, sexual offense cases, forced care (LVU) and custody disputes. Denise was involved in submitting a report to the European Parliament on forced care of children (LVU) which was issued by the Nordic Committee for Human Rights (NKMR).

Denise’s mother Kerstin Koorti is a well-known Swedish criminal lawyer who has taken on several famous cases such as the convicted Swedish murderer and bank robber John Ausonius who was nicknamed the Laserman. She was also the lawyer for the two doctors in the murder trial called the da Costa case (1980s) where the 27-year-old prostitute Catrine da Costa was murdered and later dismembered and found in various plastic bags. She was also the lawyer for and defended the mother in the Södertälje case who was accused of incest and ritual murder of children. She also represented Maximilian Kartaschev (1957-2007) called “The Count” when he was suspected of murdering and dismembering his partner, Marita Pentinmäki.

At the conferences on ‘Living Companies in a New Era’ there were also several women, who in addition to giving lectures on various New Age cultures, also came from various women’s movements that had their founding far back in time. One of these was the Fredrika Bremer Association, which is one of Sweden’s oldest women’s organizations and was founded in 1884 and published a magazine called Hertha. The Theosophical Society had a strong connection to many women’s organizations in human rights, suffrage and feminism from an early age. One speaker at the conferences was the journalist Barbro Holm-Löfgren (1935-2005) who was awarded the Fredrika Bremer Association’s anniversary scholarship and who was a member of the New Idun Society which was founded in 1885 and which also had several Theosophists as members. Another speaker at the conferences was Eva Moberg (1932-2011) who was editor of the Fredrika Bremer Association’s magazine Hertha between 1960-1962 and involved in feminist organizations such as Group 222. Ulla Stridh-Carlsson who was an employee of P&P (Pedagogy & Production) ran ANIMA which held courses for professional women.

“In P&P she has the ideal opportunity, she believes, to combine collaboration with personal freedom. Among other things, she runs together with her comrade Ulla Lardnerd, union secretary of the Fredrika Bremer Association – the independently functioning “ANIMA” (soul, or according to Jung the feminine within the man) which, among other things, holds the popular courses for professional women “Stand up for yourself”.” (Sökaren 1980, no. 10)

Other speakers at the conferences were Ingrid (1934-2024) and Rune Olausson (1933-2022) where Ingrid also co-founded The New Thinkers (Nytänkarna) together with Kerstin Nordin, Bibi Andersson, Margareta Calmgård Bergmark and Birgitta Hambraeus. Inger wrote Meditation – magic or therapy? (1974) about transcendental meditation and Of Course-wise – A handbook for a new lifestyle (1978) and together with her husband Rune she wrote the book Another Way (1982). Ingrid was also interested in Pierre Teilhard de Chardin (1881-1955) and translated a letter from him that he wrote in 1934 into Swedish and she talked about ‘Teilhard de Chardin’s thinking’ in an article from 1988 in the magazine The Seeker (Sökaren no. 4-5).

Another speaker at ‘Living Companies in a New Era’ and the The Life Festival was the historian of ideas Karl-Erik Edris, whose talk was called “Culture in Crisis” and consisted of an “overview of Arnold Toynbee’s philosophy of history, which was made as a starting point for a consideration of our culture’s dilemma”. Karl-Erik is part of the group behind the Tibetan Book Fund Foundation, which is working to translate Alice A. Bailey’s books into Swedish.

A speaker at Living Companies in a New Era was Peter Sandblad who published the magazine “Nexus – a magazine for whole relationships” between 1976 and 1984 and which had a connection to the Human Potential Movement and which focused on inner personal development. Poor finances meant that the magazine had to close down, but Peter restarted the magazine later in the 90s under the name “Nexus – Wholeness & Development”. The magazine focused on “new-old forms of therapy and personal liberation, on primal and gestalt-oriented therapy, on Zen, yoga, meditation, on psychosomatic methods, “bioenergetics” and much more that can help people grow”. Peter also held courses at his Apeiron Institute where he taught the “Apeiron methodology for Body-Learning”.

One of the American speakers at the first conference at the Rantasipi Turku Hotel in Turku from 30 September to 2 October 1980 was the futurist Hazel Henderson (1933-2022), who was a member of a large number of organisations and NGOs such as the World Future Society, the Association for Evolutionary Economics, and a fellow of the World Futures Studies Federation. She is a fellow of the World Business Academy, the Lindisfarne Association, and sits on the Advisory Board of the Center for Visionary Leadership, the E. F. Schumacher Society and the American Teilhard Association. She is also an Honorary Member of the Club of Rome. She published the book The Politics of the Solar Age: Alternatives to Economics (1981), in which she attacks the industrial society. The World Future Society was founded by Edward S. Cornish (1927-2019), who published the magazine The Futurist, and a co-founder was Barbara Marx Hubbard (1929-2019).

As a speaker at one of these conferences we find Jean Houston (1937-) who founded the Foundation for Mind Research together with her husband Robert Masters. She and her husband were involved in research into psychedelics and LSD and wrote the publication ‘The Varieties of Psychedelic Experience’ in 1966. She was also interested in anthropology and was involved with Margaret Mead (1901-1978) for a few years and her lecture at the Swedish conference was given together with Robert Schwartz and was called ‘In the business world the new man is being formed’ (Inom affärsvärlden formas den nya människan). Houston taught at Marymount College, Tarrytown, from 1965 to 1972 and we also find the Tarrytown Group which was formed by Margaret Mead and where we find Robert Schwartz who was the proprietor and chairman of the Tarrytown House Executive Conference Center since 1963. From Tarrytown the teachings of The Human Potential Movement were also spread to the business world in the USA.

“Tarrytown established 16 years ago as a private campus for a few corporations, the Tarrytown House Executive Conference Center gained a reputation as a cultural and intellectual center when Margaret Mead, the anthropologist, helped form what came to be known as the Tarrytown Group. Under the chairmanship of Dr. Mead, who died Nov 15, 1978. The 26-acre Mary Duke Biddle estate was a favorite weekend retreat for a small group of friends, who met informally to explore life’s problems.”

“About 10 years ago, Dr. Mead arrived to speak at such a conference and met Mr. Schwartz. He recalled that they did not get along at first, but eventually developed a close friendship and the basis for the Tarrytown Group.”

“Leading the weekend’s discussions were two longtime friends and associates of Dr. Mead – Jean Houston, the director of the Foundation for Mind Research, and Dr. George T. Land, a generalsystems theorist. By Sunday afternoon, the group had produced ”A Report from the Leading Edge” that detailed positive signs of change in areas ranging from multinational corporations to families. When published, the monograph will include the results of last weekend’s discussion, ”Whither Goes America,” led by Herman Kahn, founder of the Hudson Institute, and Norman Macray, deputy editor of The Economist.” (Tarrytown Center Expanding Its Scope, By Tessa Melvin, New York Times, 1981)

Margaret Mead was married to Mk-Ultra linked anthropologist Gregory Bateson and they were also involved in the Macy conferences on cybernetics and Margaret was also involved in the publication “Changing Images of MAN” together with B. F. Skinner, Ervin Laszlo, and Sir Geoffrey Vickers and which was led by Willis Harman who worked at the Stanford Research Institute. This publication was intended to change the “image of man” from an industrial model to a religious gnostic and spiritual model and it is from this that we can find the Swedish title ‘Living companies in a new era’.

Another speaker from the USA was Barbara B. Brown (1921-1999) who was one of the founders of the Biofeedback Research Society and who popularized biofeedback and neurofeedback in the 1970s. Another speaker was the German-American philosopher Peter Koestenbaum (1928-) who founded the Koestenbaum Institute and Philosophy-in-Business. Another was the famous Marilyn Ferguson (1938-2008) who wrote the book The Aquarian Conspiracy (1980).

We also heard Michael Lindfield from the Findhorn Community in Scotland who was also interested in Psychosynthesis. Others were Fritjof Capra (1939-), James Robertson (1928-2023), Willis Harman (1918-1997) and Gary Zukav (1942-). James Ogilvy (1940-) was a speaker and Edgar Mitchell (1930-2016). Elisabeth Kübler-Ross (1926-2004) spoke about scientific research into life after death.