This is the franchiser of one of the White Flame Institute healers. A former psychotherapist who claims to have been made a healer by the Bushmen. But so far I haven't seen any evidence of that from actual Bushmen.
Reviews of his best known work include some revealing charges.
-------
http://www.amazon.com/The-Bushman-Way-Tracking-God/product-reviews/1582702578/ref=cm_cr_dp_qt_hist_one?ie=UTF8&filterBy=addOneStar&showViewpoints=0Misdescriptive, January 25, 2013
By Anton Reger - See all my reviews
I feel deceived. I thought I was buying a book about the Bushmen. Instead, what I got was a new-age lecture. The description of the book is misleading. I re-read the description after I had started the book, and realized that it was lured into a drippy rant.
1.0 out of 5 stars New-age Ph.D. ether, February 27, 2012
By Julia M. Hoskins "jewelit" (Jacksonville, OR USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)
I purchased this book before a recent trip to Botswana, Zambia and Zimbabwe. It's a bunch of new-age hot air. Much more worthwhile and clear-eyed looks at the Bushmen can be found in Elizabeth Marshall Thomas's The Old Way: A Story of the First People, and in Rupert Isaacson's The Healing Land: The Bushmen and the Kalahari Desert.
1.0 out of 5 stars shenanigans, August 9, 2013
By A&P Folman "Apat" (Long Beach, Ca. United States) - See all my reviews
I saw at least two names in this section that I know from attending Keeney's program (PhD in Marriage&Family Therapy) at the University of LA, Monroe.
He posts under aliases to promote his ideas.
He is also known to cyber-stalk his students, being a weak professor who does not challenge his students but who tries to indoctrinate them with the ideas he believes they should have as well, and as a self-proclaimed Guru, all of which I, as his former student who dropped out due to all the reasons mentioned, would call the art of shenanigans.
Text for "Holy Rollers" Only, January 29, 2012
By David Adams (Minnesota) - See all my reviews (REAL NAME)
If you are looking for a sound anthropological study of the religion of the Bushman of the Kalahari look elsewhere! I guess I did not read the reviews carefully enough before buying this book, and I will be selling it as soon as possible. It may be interesting to compare an interesting native African spirituality with United States "Holy Ghost" religions, but simply equating the two seems a bit much to me. I found this book to be totally worthless in understanding the Bushman - - Joseph Campbell is much sounder in his Atlas of World Mythology. If you are convinced that being a "holy roller" is a good way to connect with God, I have no complaints or doubts that it is a viable method of ecstatic spirituality, but for heaven's sake don't use your own childhood religion as a way of explaining the spirituality of a totally different culture. I can see how this book would be appealing to many people, but if you are looking for a solid, disinterested view of Bushman spirituality this is NOT your book.
reads like a sermon, hard to apply, August 22, 2011
By Jason (Sacramento, CA USA) - See all my reviews
I found this book difficult to absorb. It reads like a bible thumping sermon and meanders all over. If you're looking for something clear and delineated with step by step instructions like I was, this book will probably disappoint. What does come across is his tone. It makes you feel like you're in church and the gospel singers are singing and the preacher is sweating and thumping his bible in a booming, melodious voice. At the same time, he's not taking anything seriously. I feel like most of what is said is between the lines. Don't try to decipher it literally. I may try to read this again someday, because it FEELS like it has something to teach, but overall it was like listening to free jazz or avant-gardge jazz, which I don't comprehend, and I would have preferred some straight up swing, which I do.