A 70-page summary in 45 points of the Tallman Paradigm and some of the concepts that derive from that neurological paradigm. The book includes a timeline of Daniel’s integration disorder and his development of left-brain dominance.
The Conclusions: In view of the spontaneous recoveries and partial recoveries of these subjects and the similarity of their symptoms to those improved or healed by the Tomatis Method, Bérard’s AIT, or Focused Listening (with headphones, right ear only) to high-frequency music, it seems likely that appropriate music therapy could greatly accelerate the SSRI withdrawal and recovery process, possibly also…
Ear Function in SSRI Withdrawal: A Comparison with Symptoms of Other Ear-Related Syndromes is Laurna Tallman’s study of 107 subjects who provided data online for researchers about their symptoms following the withdrawal of their SSRIs and other psychoactive medications.
The author concludes that in dyslexic and schizophrenic integration disorders Wernicke’s area processes morphemes in sequences perpetually interrupted at two-minute intervals due to stapedius dystonia, not through intrinsic cerebral incapacity. The larynx can produce only the order of sounds and words—as well as frequencies—via Wernicke’s and Broca’s areas that the temporal lobe is likely to receive from a dominant right…
Richard Tallman's memorate of The Turning Year explores the mindscape of the modern condition, telling of a year of tragedy and redemption, of legal and emotional trials, of human wretchedness and unexpected promise.
A New Perspective on Integration Disorder in Dyslexic Syndrome, Schizophrenia, Bipolarity, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, and Substance Abuse that introduces the Tallman Paradigm, a neurological explanation of human behavior, and Focused Listening, a treatment for strengthening the stapedius muscle in the middle ear, with special attention to the right ear.