- Christopher Hyatt
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Christopher Hyatt Born Alan Ronald Miller
12 July 1943
Chicago, Illinois, USADied 9 February 2008 (aged 64)
Scottsdale, Arizona, USAChristopher Hyatt, born Alan Ronald Miller (July 12, 1943 – February 9, 2008) was an American occultist, author, and founder of the Extreme Individual Institute (EII). He is best-known as president of New Falcon Publications.
Contents
Early life
A native of Chicago, Alan Miller, the son of police lieutenant Leonard Miller and his wife, Bertha Freidman, was born during what he described as the "roaring war years". Writing and speaking as Christopher Hyatt, he gave two different accounts of the end of his high school career. In the first account, he claimed that he dropped out of high school at the age of sixteen, working instead as a dishwasher and cook, roaming around the United States.[1]
The Occult
Christopher Hyatt's interest in the occult began in his early twenties. His desire to further pursue his studies in magick resulted in meeting Israel Regardie in Studio City in the 1970s. Regardie introduced Hyatt to Reichian therapy, which he insisted Hyatt learn prior to any magickal pursuits. Regardie further instructed Hyatt in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Hyatt was a Ninth Degree member of occult Order Ordo Templi Orientis,[2] and once headed the Thelemic Golden Dawn.[3][4]
Academic career
Christopher S. Hyatt, Ph.D., Adv. M.ED. was trained in experimental and clinical psychology and practiced as a psychotherapist for many years. As Alan Miller, he used the 18 units earned from his military GED towards his first academic career at Los Angeles City College, where he studied accounting for two years. He later changed his graduate to General Psychology, earning Masters Degrees in Experimental Psychology and Medical Education and Counselling. He was a member of a Freudian clinic in Southern California. He spent almost a year studying hypnosis at the Hypnosis Motivation Institute in Los Angeles and also studied hypnosis at the University of California, Irvine. Miller possessed Ph.D.s in both Clinical Psychology and Human Behavior[2] and was a Postdoctoral researcher in Criminal Justice.[5] Some of his techniques blended Reichian physiotherapy and tantric yoga. He also incorporated hypnosis alongside his body work with patients and students. According to his website: "He left academia and state sponsored psychology to become an explorer of the human mind."
Hyatt claimed that as a research scientist he had published "numerous" peer reviewed articles in professional journals and was a Research Fellow at the University of Toronto and the University of Southern California.
Christopher Hyatt died of cancer in Scottsdale, Arizona at the age of 64.
Notes and references
- ^ Hyatt, Christopher; Zehm Aloim. The Magic of Israel Regardie. New Falcon Publishing. ISBN 1-56184-230-3.
- ^ a b Hymenaeus Beta (2008-02-12). "Alan Ronald Miller, Ph.D., IX° O.T.O. (1943-2008)". Ordo Tempi Orientis International Headquarters. http://www.oto.org/news0208.html. Retrieved 2011-06-01.
- ^ Hyatt, Christopher; Zehm Aloim. The Magic of Israel Regardie. New Falcon Publishing. ISBN 1-56184-230-3.
- ^ Greer, John Michael (2003). The New Encyclopedia of the Occult. Llewellyn Worldwide. p. 205. ISBN 9781567183368. "Several of these new Golden Dawn orders were created by friends and students of Regardie in the United States.... [A]nother emerged in Arizona under the leadership of Christopher Hyatt."
- ^ Hyatt, Christopher; S. Jason Black, Zehm Aloim & Israel Regardie. Techniques for Undoing Yourself. New Falcon Publishing. ISBN 1-56184-280-X.
Categories:- American occult writers
- American Thelemites
- American psychologists
- American psychotherapists
- Hypnotists
- People from Chicago, Illinois
- American pimps and madams
- 1943 births
- 2008 deaths
- Cancer deaths in Arizona
- Los Angeles City College alumni
- Ordo Templi Orientis
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