The Clinic
Re-defining healing
Sydney Healing and Research Centre was founded upon the premise that our body cannot be looked at or thought about in isolation when it comes to our health, wellbeing and relationships.
Sydney Healing and Research Centre offers clients an embodied approach to healing which focuses on the whole person. Based on years of academic research and drawing on conventional and non-conventional therapies for healing, our Centre has developed a program that caters to the individual needs of each client. At one level, the program addresses any immediate health needs in the context of illness and disease, and at another level, supports clients in the broader context of stress, lifestyle, relationships, parenting - whatever the need may be.
At Sydney Healing and Research Centre we are committed to educating and empowering people of all ages to improve their health and emotional wellbeing through a variety of practices and natural medicine, including pure essential oils.
We teach practical tools to embed in daily life, with a focus on key areas such as:
Stress and anxiety
Trauma
Children and emotional wellbeing
Pain and inflammation
Autoimmune and chronic disease
Sleep issues
Immune support
Digestive health
Infertility
Vaccine injury
We see significant improvements with people of various ages, and work closely with individuals, families and practitioners to integrate a holistic approach to care.
At Sydney Healing and Research Centre we:
Pursue research, education and practices to improve lives, health and relationships that would support people in the areas that affect them most;
Give clients knowledge and access to a variety of healing modalities including various natural medicine and therapies;
Empower clients with hope: hope for improvement, hope for quality, hope for healing.
Publications
Tahhan, D.A. 2019. “Connections, Conflicts, and Experiences of Intimacy in Japanese-Australian Families” in A. Alexy and E. Cook (eds) Ethnographies of Closeness and Conflict. pp 219-235.
Tahhan, D.A. 2014. The Japanese Family: Touch, Intimacy and Feeling. London: Routledge.
Tahhan, D.A, 2013. “Touching at Depth: The Potential of Feeling and Connection.” Emotion, Space and Society 7:45–53.
Tahhan, D.A. 2013. “Sensuous Connections in Sleep: Feelings of Security and Interdependency in Japanese Sleep Rituals” in K. Glaskin and R. Chenhall (eds) Sleep Around the World. pp 61-77.
Tahhan, D.A. 2010. “Blurring the Boundaries between Bodies: Skinship and Bodily Intimacy in Japan.” Japanese Studies 30(2): 215-230.
Tahhan, D.A. 2008. “Depth and Space in Sleep: Intimacy, Touch and the Body in Japanese Co-Sleeping Rituals.” Body and Society (Special Issue on Sleep) 14 (4): 37–56.
Tahhan, D.A. 2008. “Two Plus One Still Equals Two: Inclusion and Exclusion in the Japanese Family.” Japanstudien 19(1): 151-168.
Click here to view abstracts and full articles.