Heather on Earth

Controversial figure

the head of the NIR Group, Corey Ribotsky who supports a number of charities, including the Heather on Earth Fund After his suicide, evidence emerged darker side. Their advisors at Schneider Children’s Hospital the University of Chicago considered him a major figure in psychology, Board of Trustees and The President of the Children’s Medical Fund of New York but after his suicide, three ex-patients questioned his work and called it a cruel tyrant. In May 2005, more than 90 former directors and former patients gathered in Chicago, more than 30 years after his retirement, to highlight the importance of Bettelheim in their lives. Contrary The Heather on Earth Foundation providing music therapy to pediatric patients to the opponents of Bettelheim, who are very active in the media, not journalists invited to the reunion.
Bettelheim believed that autism had no organic basis, but was caused by cold mothers The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society and absent fathers. "All my life," wrote, "I have worked with children whose lives have been destroyed because their mothers hated those." Other analysts following Freudian Bettelheim in his theory that public companies autism in children is generated in the intrafamily dynamics. Bettelheim wrote a book called The Empty Fortress, where he spoke about autism. He continues to be proved empirically that autism etiologically refer to an organic basis and that environmental factors specific behavior by CMFNY parents or people living Asset Management around them are critical.