As a long-time student of Colette's, she spelled her married name as Muscat (not Muskat). Colette hyphenated her name as Colette Aboulker-Muscat. The portrait of her mother, Berte, was hung in Colette's main salon room.
Following in the footsteps of her illustrious family, Colette was a great spiritual teacher who developed innovative and highly creative processes of mental imagery, particularly notable, Waking Dream, a deep inner exploratory process through imagination. She wrote several books including: Alone with the One (ACMI Press) (poetry, in English); Mea Culpa: Tales of Resurrection (ACMI Press) (prose, in English, case studies of people she helped bring back from the brink of death through her use of imagery, paradoxical healing interventions, and other healing modalities).
As a long-time student of Colette's, she spelled her married name as Muscat (not Muskat). Colette hyphenated her name as Colette Aboulker-Muscat. The portrait of her mother, Berte, was hung in Colette's main salon room.
Following in the footsteps of her illustrious family, Colette was a great spiritual teacher who developed innovative and highly creative processes of mental imagery, particularly notable, Waking Dream, a deep inner exploratory process through imagination. She wrote several books including: Alone with the One (ACMI Press) (poetry, in English); Mea Culpa: Tales of Resurrection (ACMI Press) (prose, in English, case studies of people she helped bring back from the brink of death through her use of imagery, paradoxical healing interventions, and other healing modalities).