Born in New York City, Bindrim earned a bachelor's degree from Columbia University and a master's degree at Duke University, where he did research in
parapsychology under
J.B. Rhine who coined the term
ESP. He was ordained in the
Church of Divine Metaphysics in 1958 and served as a minister of the
Church of Religious Science in Glendale. He obtained his psychologist license in California in 1967, and later served as president of the Group Psychotherapy Association of Southern California in 1978–79. In his early work, Bindrim created a group psychotherapy strategy in which participants were encouraged to recall
peak experiences, which he called "peak oriented psychotherapy". This was based in part on ideas about peak experiences described by
Abraham Maslow, considered the father of
Humanistic Psychology. The encounter group movement was also an inspiration. After observing that towards the end of a long encounter group its participants would be easy about nakedness in front of each other Bindrim reasoned that introducing nudity early in the group might accelerate the transition to emotional openness. == Nude psychotherapy ==