Their Story Matters with Sara Troy and her guest Tami Goldstein aired from January 5th
A Journey Through Autism and Sensory Processing Disorder to Functioning Recovery and Independent Living
When her youngest child was diagnosed with Asperger’s Syndrome, High Functioning Autism, Tami spent the next few years in a tailspin trying to find ways to help her daughter. She watched in amazement as a more holistic, all natural approach did what no western medicine techniques could accomplish. Some of those approaches included various techniques to stimulate the sense of touch.
Tami started by studying Reiki Therapy. Reiki a Japanese word meaning universal life energy. The first part Rei, refers to our spiritual dimension or soul. The second part Ki, means vital life or energy. This ancient natural method of healing touches the body without physically touching the body. (How else do you connect with a child who feels pain when you touch them?)
The benefits this approach provided opened Tami’s eyes to try other techniques. While she worked toward a Master/Teacher level in Reiki, she also sampled Yoga, learned Feng Sui, and began receiving regular massages & CranioSacral treatments, Chiropractic adjustments and Acupuncture.
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Tami became so fascinated with the benefits provided by Massage Therapy and CranioSacral Therapy she decided to become certified and is currently State and Nationally Certified in Therapeutic Massage, Bodywork and in CranioSacral Therapy. Her daughter’s Functioning Recovery is maintained by a Sensory Lifestyle and CranioSacral Therapy.
Since 2005, Tami has been State and National Certified in Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork and she continued her training in Cranio-Sacral Therapy with the Upledger Institute in Florida. Tami became certified in CranioSacral Therapy in January of 2013. Trained in Massage Therapy, CranioSacral Therapy (CST) I and II, Somatic Emotional Release (SER) I and II,CST Pediatrics, and The Kolden Technique & Body Therapy, Reiki Master/Teacher. She is also a Certified Infant Massage Instructor.
Tami currently has two offices where she facilitates Cranio-Sacral Therapy. Approximately 38% of her clientele are children, teenagers and young adults on the Autism Spectrum or with other neuro-developmental delays.

Based on her own experience with Heather, her daughter, labelled with Autism and Sensory Processing Disorder, and her extensive research into effective treatment regimens, Tami Goldstein’s compassionate tale of Heather’s progress to functioning recovery and independent living offers hope and practical advice to other parents of children similarly labelled.
Comingthroughthefog.com,
www.WisconsinforVaccineChoice.org,
www.IAHP.com/ATherapeuticTouch
cst1@gmail.com
facebook.com/tami.a.goldstein
Tami Aronowitz Goldstein
twitter.com/TamiAGoldstein
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I try to stay positive, doing the work I do interviewing people who are making such a wonderful difference in the world and their living in meaningful purpose keeps me upbeat, but not even that helps right now.
This too will pass, I hope, my dog is at my feet, for she knows I need her love. I will put on a brave face for my kids and be that cheers and the Christmas feast. But in my heart and soul I know my spirit is hurt and it will take global love and the healing of the planet to make it free once more.

You have spend months, sometimes years working on your book, with luck you will have also shown it to first readers and taken onboard their feedback and made changes. Believe me, if you think you can write a book that doesn’t need changes you really aren’t ready to show it anyone yet. A novel needs a collaborator, that reader to make it real. We aren’t just talking about errors of punctuation or spelling. We are talking about whether a character is convincing, or a given situation works. I can cite many instances when a readers input has made my work better, from the angle of a gunshot wound, to how a girl might react to a specific situation or even what they are wearing or might eat. This is important, because if your reader cares enough to worry about a detail, he or she has already accepted the character is real.

The art of interviewing is to be inviting, to inspire your guest into sharing their story because they feel comfortable enough to tell you. It is not their what, but their WHY and their How that truly is important. Are they telling your audience something that will liberate them? Something that they can use? Something that will enable them to make those changes in their life they so need?
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