Mindfulness and Hypnosis: Conversations in Mindfulness and Psychotherapy

Mindfulness and Psychotherapy has been gaining a mounting interest amongthousands of clinicians and clients. The following is one in a series of informal conversations between Trudy Goodman, Ph.D., Elisha Goldstein, Ph.D. and Steven Hickman, Psy.D., the teachers for a unique upcoming professional training retreat entitled “Mindfulness in Psychotherapy” to be held October 2-7, 2011 at the Joshua Tree Retreat Center in Southern California. This series is primarily aimed toward clinicians, but I’m hoping if you are not a healthcare professional you can also gain some insight from it. Enjoy! Today Steve, Trudy and I talk about the similarities and differences between Mindfulness and Hypnosis.

Trudy: (I recently had an opportunity to explore the differences and similarities between mindfulness practice and hypnosis with a client. I thought it might be worth exploring here in our ongoing conversation on mindfulness and psychotherapy.)

 

In mindfulness practice, we give our full attention to one subject at a time as a way of training our minds to be attentive to another dimension of awareness, “beneath” the discursive consciousness & the thinking mind (what your hypnotherapist calls executive functioning), and yes – the protective activity of the amygdala can be activated and trained via conscious, mindful breathing for example. Meditation does mirror the receptivity of hypnosis in this way.

In hypnosis, one is led and taught how to drop down beneath the flow of habitual patterns of thinking and perception to a receptive, open state where the therapist’s suggestions can be embedded and incorporated into conscious living. We are doing something similar but different, too. We may also invoke the relaxed, alert, receptive altered state, but we emphasize investigation, inquiry, and looking deeply at what is arising (with the intention to understand, rather than to judge, and the accepting, non-judgmental approach, is similar in hypnosis).

One difference is that with mindfulness meditation we are learning how to be both receptive – open, relaxed, alert; and active – forming the intention to stay with experience as it arises and passes away. One goal of MBSR training is to establish and cultivate mindfulness — your ability to direct your awareness intentionally towards what is actually happening, in real time, moment by moment, so you can receive more information, understanding, and compassionate insight as your life unfolds.

There’s no conflict between what your hypnotherapist tells you and what we’re doing because we are actually engaging many capacities of consciousness simultaneously when we focus on one thing at a time – many cognitive and emotional qualities come into play, like the intention to aim or direct awareness, to sustain a close connection with the subject of awareness, AND with awareness of the ebb and flow of mindfulness itself – a kind of meta-awareness – with clear comprehension combined with the suffusion of warmth, acceptance, kindness, even affection, into our mindful awareness of ourselves, others and our world.

So yes, your mind can and does operate on more than one level at a time. What we are doing is bringing more and more of this activity into conscious awareness, in service of developing more and more mindfulness and metta – so that we can make more conscious choices about the way we relate to experience. Hopefully choices that result in our living wiser and more compassionate lives, and enjoying more peaceful, harmonious, loving relationships along the way!

Steve: While I am no expert in hypnotherapy, I do have a strong sense that both mindfulness and hypnosis share an interest in helping people “get out of their own way” in regard to longstanding but dysfunctional, limiting or unskillful habits, attitudes and behaviors. The single-pointed, quiet and patient focus of both practices allows us (both client and therapist) to see these habitual patterns against a plain backdrop of awareness, rather than the cluttered one of everyday busy-ness.

I liken our attempts to make sense of our problems with our typically distracted, multi-tasking minds to trying to watch a movie when someone is trying to carry on a conversation with you at the same time. Both the movie and the conversation might make sense in their own rights, but together they become a mass of conflicting and confusing features that seems completely overwhelming and sometimes discouraging. Mindfulness practice (and therapy) allow the client to develop the attitudinal skills to observe this chaos and respond patiently and kindly, and the attentional skills to direct attention (and psychological resources) toward the “real” issues and perhaps away from imagined or feared ones. This shift can allow a person to see things for what they are, and to recognize where the constructions and stories that we all create are just that: creations, and not facts to be dealt with or resolved.

I am told that hypnosis cannot bring about behavior that is not first desired by the patient or client. If someone does not truly want to change a particular behavior, hypnosis has not magical ability to transcend that desire. Similarly, intention is at the heart of mindfulness in psychotherapy. We seek to tap into the natural intention that each of has to move toward ease, kindness, compassion and fulfillment, by reducing the “obscurations” of habit and conditioning, and thereby reduce suffering. Not much difference between hypnosis and mindfulness in that, is there?

Elisha: I want to make sure we’re differentiating here between mindfulness as a way of life and formal meditation practice. We can practice mindfulness in formal and informal ways and I think the guided formal meditation practice is the one that can be confused with hypnosis. Having been the recipient of both, I would say the big difference for me is that mindfulness is couched within a much larger context and can be seen as a way of life. Not in any dogmatic religious way, but as a philosophy and practice that we can bring into all the things we do.

Mindfulness at its core trains the mind to more actively drop into a kind attention, cultivating a natural warm presence to bring with us throughout our days. In my opinion, this is at the core of self-healing.

Mindfulness also brings people together in community who are interested in living a more present and compassionate life. This may be one of the most important pieces. Ultimately it’s my belief that the most helpful way for people to make change is through a community of peers who support them with this.

I see people who engage with mindfulness in psychotherapy and beyond having an inclination toward wanting to be a part of a community that supports a more mindful life.

As always, please share your thoughts, stories and questions below. Your interaction creates a living wisdom for us all to benefit from.

We invite you to join in this conversation.  Please share your thoughts, questions and stories below. Your interaction creates a living wisdom from which all of us can benefit. As these conversations accumulate, we are collecting them on a separate page of our blog (see the tab above labeled “Mindfulness and Psychotherapy” for the archive) for review and comment. Visit the UCSD Center for Mindfulness Professional Training site for information on Mindfulness in Psychotherapy retreat training.

 

RSM Cautions about Choice of Hypnotherapist

Submitted by Ria Patel on Mon, 06/06/2011 - 08:16

 

Hypnotic treatment may prove out to be an effective tool in the hands of cash trapped NHS, as per a clan of medical experts. Following a deep review underlying the theory of running mainstream treatment and hypnotic treatment simultaneously, team from the Hypnosis and Psychosomatic Medicine Section of the Royal Society of Medicine (RSM) had claimed that administrating hypnosis on patients, suffering from depression, pain and irritable bowel syndrome, can effectively cure the patients in addition to saving millions of NHS pounds, provided the hypnotist is trained and well qualified.

Even though a huge consensus is being seen favoring the recommendation made by the RSM, team had cautioned people to be selective about the medical hypnotic. In spite of having tangible benefits of hypnosis, treatment from any amateur or medically untrained might instill "false memories" in the minds of the patients, compounding the primary health problem of host patients.

Referring to a case in 2010, where a middle-aged man charged his neighbor of sexually abusing him at the age of 14, though later investigations proved that the hypnotherapist, who had treated him, had insufficient knowledge about the therapy and to the shock, had evoked this memory in the mind of the man, Jacky Owens, President of the RSM's hypnosis section, had made an appeal to the Government to conduct an independent review into the issue.

National College Response to RSM Statement on Hypnosis

 

Reply to Royal Society of Medicine Statement on Hypnosis from the National College of Hypnosis and Psychotherapy

6 June 2011

The National College broadly welcomes the statement made on behalf of the Royal Society of Medicine regarding the benefits of making hypnosis a far more common treatment within the National Health Service. Hypno-Psychotherapy as practised by graduates of the National College since 1977 has been used in a number of adjunctive treatments as well as being a standalone modality within psychotherapy. We agree that there needs to be further improvements to training and development within the field, however we do not agree that this is solely in the domain of the medical profession. Indeed, the anecdotal case mentioned in the Independent Newspaper, is not solely a problem brought about by non medical practitioners. Indeed, some of the most high profile instances of False Memory Syndrome (FMS) have been facilitated by the medical fraternity and not the so called “lay therapist”.

We feel that as UKCP registered Hypno-Psychotherapists are eligible for membership of the British Society of Clinical and Academic Hypnosis it would have been prudent to mention the contribution to hypnosis that psychotherapist have made and continue to make. Indeed the training of over 1800 hours of Masters Degree level study, the necessity of clinical supervision and personal therapy currently dwarfs the requirements for accreditation for BSCAH and we assume for the proposed RSM training. We of course recognise that physicians, psychologists, dentists and other health professionals have a skills set that they bring to the practice of hypnosis, but it is essential that it is recognised that psychotherapists do as well.

Graduates of the National College and other registrants of the UKCP College of Hypno-Psychotherapists continue to use hypnosis for the ethical treatment of a variety of psychological, emotional and in some cases even physiological conditions, and we are saddened that the RSM has reverted to the “we know better than you” approach to the practise of hypnosis. This argument which has very little validity and as there is only a handful of medical and dental practitioners who use hypnosis they could not service the needs of the NHS adequately to save the sort of monies discussed in their statement and therefore there is a need to act in co-operation with organisations providing ethically trained practitioners to help meet this need.

The National College calls on the RSM to engage with the wider profession in order to meet the needs of the people of the UK who would benefit from hypnosis in the treatment of psychological, emotional and physiological issues.

Shaun Brookhouse, MA(Education), PGCert(Clinical Supervision) Principal, National College of Hypnosis and Psychotherapy

Fiona Biddle, MSc(Medical and Health Studies) Managing Director, National College of Hypnosis and Psychotherapy

  • Contact: Shaun Brookhouse Principal National College
  • Email: shaun.brookhouse@nchp.org.uk
  • Telephone: 0161 881 1677
  • Contact Address:Richmael House 25 Edge Lane Chorlton Manchester M21 9JH

Hypnosis 'could save NHS millions'

Hypnosis treatments could be used on a range of medical conditions to save the NHS millions of pounds, according to a group of medical experts.The Hypnosis and Psychosomatic Medicine Section of the Royal Society of Medicine (RSM) believe the therapies help relieve pain and stress. But it warned that patients need to be protected from rogue practitioners who cause harm and end up costing the NHS more.

 

Jacky Owens, the president of the RSM's Hypnosis Section, said: "Conditions such as depression, pain and irritable bowel syndrome affect millions of people in the UK and at great cost to the NHS. But hypnosis can often work where other treatments have been unsuccessful."

Ms Owens, a qualified nurse who uses hypnosis in her work with cancer patients, added: "If doctors were able to refer patients to properly trained hypnotherapists, it would save a cash-strapped NHS a great deal of money."

She said making hypnosis a standard part of the "NHS toolbox" would lead to the public becoming better informed about the procedure and mean that vulnerable patients would be less likely to turn to "hypno-cowboys".

Ms Owens added: "We're confident that with more research, hypnosis will be recognised as an extremely useful tool to be used alongside mainstream medicine. What we need are doctors, dentists, nurses, psychologists, physiotherapists, radiotherapists - the whole gamut of people who treat patients - trained in using hypnosis as another tool in their treatment programme."

A Department of Health spokesman said: "We believe in patients being able to make informed choices about their treatment and in clinicians having the freedom to prescribe the treatment they feel most appropriate for that patient after discussing the risks and benefits.

"They should always consider the availability of a suitably qualified practitioner as part of this process.

"Our plans to modernise the NHS will give clinicians more freedom to commission the services that best meet their patients' needs."

Dr. Oz Demonstrates Hypnosis for Weight Loss on the Doctor Oz Show Today

Today’s Dr Oz show is a re-run from February with guest Paul McKenna, who is a world authority on hypnosis for weight loss. Right off the bat he demonstrated several people that he had hypnotized back stage, who were now in the audience. He put them back into a trance and had them feeling good and laughing before he woke them back up. So now that we believe he can hypnotize people, we got to his main area of expertise: using hypnosis for weight loss.

Paul says that there are two main patterns of eating that lead to people be overweight. The first is emotional eating. Paul says that food is the world’s drug of choice now. Paul recommends that if you want to overcome eating due to frustration, use a tapping technique. First you tap on the back of your hand for a while, then under your eye, then your collarbone, then under your eye again. It makes the brain re-process the information and can dramatically lower your frustration or stress level.

The other pattern Paul identifies is obsessive dieting. Paul says that people think about food all day long, except for when they’re eating and then they shovel it in as fast as possible. Paul did an experiment on his volunteer, he blindfolded her while she ate a pizza and she ate about half as much as when she wasn’t blindfolded.

Then Paul showed us how to reprogram ourselves to eat slower and less. You take a knife and fork and imagine a plate of good food in front of you. Cut a bite and put it in your mouth. Put your knife and fork down and chew your food for a while. Imagine eating it slowly and savoring every bite. This will re-program your brain to eat slowly.

Next after the commercial break, Paul took the audience through a guided imagery exercise.

Step 1 is to close your eyes and relax your body

Step 2 is to imagine yourself eating slowly. Paul said to watch a movie of yourself doing this. Then you float into your more in-control self and allow your unconscious mind to find ways to accomplish this.

Step 3 is to imagine yourself thinner. Then float into that thinner self and really feel how good it feels to be thinner.

Step 4 is to imagine someone who loves you and approves of you, and float into them, and view yourself the way that person views you.

Then you can wake up. Dr. Oz sent home Paul’s book “I Can Make You Thin” and his hypnosis CD with the audience members.

5 Things to Lower Cholesterol

  1. Trim your belly fat.
  2. Exercise every day.
  3. Eat 5 – 7 fruits and vegetables a day
  4. Eat 1 cup of oatmeal a day
  5. Take 3 teaspoons of psyllium fiber every day, such as what is found in Metamucil. Start out slow with it so you don’t have problems.

Tart Cherry Juice, the Ultimate Antioxidant

Tart Cherry Juice has been getting a lot of hype lately for a lot of reasons. Dr. Oz investigated and here are the benefits he espouses:

  1. Pain Relief. Tart cherry juice really does help relieve painful joints. Dr. Oz says tart cherry juice turns off the enzyme that causes inflammation.
  2. Fight Heart Disease: Tart cherry juice helps regulate cholesterol levels of both the good and bad.
  3. Sleep Aid: tart cherry juice contains melatonin, which helps your brain get sleepy. Drink a glass with dinner

Healthiest Mall Food

  • A sandwich on wholegrain bread without a lot of dressing on it would be your healthier choice
  • For Chinese food options, Broccoli Beef is a good choice because nothing it in it is fried

New book aims to arm readers against unwanted hypnotic influence

"Hypnotic States of Americans: A Spiritual Survival Manual for Every American Family in a Perilous World" by Roy Masters describes the problem and offers techniques for spiritual protectionGRANTS PASS, Ore. (MMD Newswire) June 20, 2011 -- The oft-repeated myth about hypnosis is that one cannot be hypnotized to think what is untrue or to act against one's own free will. But according to Roy Masters, author of "Hypnotic States of Americans" (ISBN 1460939026), that is simply false, and skilled manipulators have known it forever. Masters also believes that the manipulators have guarded this secret carefully, partly by repeating that such influence is impossible.

 

Based on the author's discoveries about hypnotic influence gathered over more than 60 years, this book seeks to show readers how to become less susceptible to past and present hypnotic influences and thus more able to live in true freedom, drawing energy from what is real and right to be fully alive in a healthy sense.

According to Masters, freedom from hypnotic influence, even from influences seeking to get you to do what is right or think what is true, is essential if one is ever to escape an unhealthy dependence on manipulators, caregivers, experts and leaders - even the well-meaning among them.

The author hopes that reading this book, watching the hypnosis demonstration video and practicing the recommended exercise will awaken a spiritual center from which the reader will be impervious to improper influence and able to influence the world for the better - as effortlessly as the most skilled martial artist can deal with an opponent.

The title initially chosen for the book was "The Hypnotic States of America." Masters chose to rename the book "Hypnotic States of Americans" in an effort to emphasize that vulnerability to improper influence lies within individuals, not a collective or group.

"Hypnotic States of Americans: A Spiritual Survival Manual for Every American Family in a Perilous World" is available for online at Amazon.com, as a Kindle eBook and other sales channels.

About the Author

Host for over 52 years of "Advice Line," the longest running advice program in talk-radio history, Roy Masters is also an author and hypnotherapist turned DEhypnotherapist. As a child in pre-WWII England, Masters saw a hypnotism performance and was inspired to perfect his own hypnosis techniques. He eventually established a hypnotherapy practice and discovered an original meditation method that he has taught ever since. Masters created the Foundation for Human Understanding in 1961 to serve as the institutional home for his counseling work, establishing a successful prison outreach and a private school. Masters and his wife, Ann, have been married since 1952. They have five grown children and 18 grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

MEDIA CONTACT:

Steve Grow

E-mail: books@fhu.com

Phone: (541) 956-6700

Web: www.fhu.com

REVIEW COPIES AND INTERVIEWS AVAILABLE

###

The views and opinions expressed in this press release do not necessarily represent the views and opinions of Create Space or its affiliates.

Anxiety? How to Beat It with Self-Hypnosis

Are you one of those white-knuckled passengers who is not actually afraid of flying, just the take-offs and landings? Perhaps you are an effective employee or a truly diligent manager but then you get "the memo." You have to introduce the next kick-off campaign at the annual company conference and you suddenly feel as if you are under a giant microscope. Maybe your particular trigger for anxiety is the dread of death. Your concern might be centered on your own demise or your loved ones. In nearly 20 years of private practice, I have never been surprised by what terrifies an otherwise rational adult. You are not alone. Anxiety is one of those phenomenons that everyone has to face at some time in life, with sweaty palms, pounding pulse, queasy stomach, ringing or buzzing in the ears, dizziness and even shortness of breath. For many people it has nothing to do with whether they are alone or in a crowd, when the anxiety reaches its zenith. It seems as if the whole world shrinks as you and your greatest fears loom larger than life. It does not seem to matter if the anxiety-producing fear is real or imaginary. The symptoms can be equally debilitating. Loss of sleep, compulsive overeating or loss of appetite are common results of anxious thoughts and can lead to more serious health risks.

Now you can take back control of your life, using the power of your own mind with self-hypnosis. You can rest assured that you have the ability to use self-hypnosis to defeat anxiety. We all tap into a kind of mind-over-matter when we feel a head cold starting up the day before a big deadline or exam. We manage to put those annoying symptoms on hold until we meet the demand, and then we really get sick, taking to our bed.

Here are five steps to use self-hypnosis for anxiety relief:

  1. Silence all telephones (land/cell), as well as all media (i.e., music, computers, pagers, etc.)
  2. Get your body comfortable in a chair or recliner, using pillows, as needed. You may want to use a small cover, as many people experience a slight cooling in body temperature as they relax deeply.
  3. With your eyes closed, use your imagination to pretend you can feel soothing, golden massage oil that flows, with gravity, from the top of your head to the tips of your toes. Moreover, everywhere this oil flows, it leaves behind either a warm or a cooling sensation (your choice, depending on weather, season or bodily needs for comfort that moment).
  4. Next, behind your closed eyes, imagine that you can see a blackboard. Now see yourself picking up a brand new piece of chalk (any color you would like) and a brand new eraser. Begin writing down your numbers on the blackboard, starting with the number 100. Write them very large, and as soon as you have finished each number, erase it completely, relax your mind a little more and go down one more number. Sometimes, depending on your stress level that day, you may need to make the countdown even more distracting to your conscious/waking mind by going down the scale on the even or odd numbers.
  5. As you drift into a state of comfortable relaxation, you will see an elegant white door appear in your mind's eye. Go ahead and open the door. On the other side of that threshold is the most beautiful, inviting space you can imagine. It might be an oceanside beach, complete with warm, soft, white sand and a gentle sea breeze. Or perhaps you will see your own secret garden with a shade tree and a hammock or chaise lounge. Just allow yourself to go through that doorway and find your rest in a heightened state of peacefulness. As you let yourself sink into the experience, you are free to make this place precisely the way you want it to be. Are there trees? Can you see boats on the horizon? Would you like to hear songbirds or a bubbling fountain? Be sure to use your own subconscious mind to guide your additions, such as sensory clues or visual stimuli. Do you feel the warmth of the sun or smell the blooming flowers? Can you distinguish the various shades of green in the leaves or the subtle variations between the color of the sea and the sky?

This is your power. You have the capacity to create the most pleasing escape that appeals to your inner self. Now you have subdued that rising sense of panic that surrounds the anxious dread of that certain event. You have also taken back control over the one area where you really are in charge. Your own mind.

Valorie J. Wells, Ph.D. has been in practice as a clinical hypnotherapist for nearly 20 years. Her educational background in industrial psychology, coupled with advanced hypnosis studies, creates an alternative healing environment that appeals to today's informed consumers as clients. Her determination to limit her practice to hypnotherapy has forged a secure bond between area health care providers, hospitals and their referrals. This innovative, cross-discipline approach to patient care serves as a vital link for the integrative chain of careful attention to the individual's needs. Moreover, the rapport between providers and patients encourages participation, dialogue and continuity of care.

'Cowboys' hamper use of hypnotherapy to treat NHS patients

By Jeremy Laurance, Health Editor

Monday, 6 June 2011

The use of hypnosis as a medical therapy is being undermined by cowboy practitioners with little training who have caused serious harm to patients, specialists say today.

Hypnotherapy is a proven treatment for irritable bowel syndrome, approved by the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (Nice), and research has shown that it provides effective pain relief to women in labour.

But the extension of the technique to other areas of medicine is being hampered by its misuse by inadequately qualified practitioners.

Specialists from the Royal Society of Medicine's Section of Hypnosis and Psychosomatic Medicine meeting in London tonight are to discuss ways of combating the threat and increasing the medical use of hypnosis which they say could save the NHS millions of pounds. Peter Naish, senior lecturer in psychology at the Open University and president-elect of the hypnosis section of the RSM, said many lay hypnotherapists were using techniques which induced damaging "false memories" in the belief that current traumas stemmed from episodes of abuse in the past which were so terrible the memory of them had been suppressed.

"Thousands of people offer hypnotherapy – you see the advertisements everywhere – even though they may have had scant training in dealing with psychological problems. A high proportion of lay therapists have this belief [that problems are caused by abuse in the past the memory of which has been long suppressed]. They use techniques [to elicit them] that can cause serious harm."

Dr Naish described the case of "Anna", a patient whose hypnotherapist had steered her over a series of sessions to name a relative who had sexually abused her.

He said: "The hypnotherapist said, 'You must tell me the one most terrible thing you've been involved in and are too embarrassed to talk about.' Her reply was, 'Well, I haven't murdered anyone!' His response: 'Oh no, much worse than that'. These so-called therapists induce a completely false memory in a vulnerable patient which is of no therapeutic use whatsoever and can cause very serious harm. I've treated patients whose lives – and those of their families – have been devastated by the induction of a false memory of sexual abuse. They've paid a lot of money and all they get is additional emotional trauma, while still suffering from the condition for which they first sought help."

Jacky Owens, president of the RSM's hypnosis section, said: "If doctors were able to refer patients to properly trained hypnotherapists, it would save a cash-strapped NHS a great deal of money.

"Making hypnosis a standard part of the NHS toolbox would also lead to the public becoming better informed about the procedure and mean that vulnerable patients would be less likely to turn to hypno-cowboys. The Government needs to look at this again."

Sex abuse 'memories' were false

In a court case in Northern Ireland last year, a middle-aged man accused the neighbour who had lived next door to him when he was growing up of sexually abusing him up to the age of 14.

He persisted with the allegations even though he and his family had moved away from the area before he was 14. He claimed he had slipped and cut himself while climbing over a fence to get away from his abuser but declined to let a GP examine him for signs of scarring.

During the case it emerged that the hypnotherapist who had elicited the "memory" of the abuse had done a distance learning course lasting less than a month to obtain his qualification. He had previously been working as a plasterer and had no other qualifications. The judge threw out the case for lack of evidence.

The Royal Society of Medicine's hypnosis section is setting up a training programme for medical students with an interest in hypnotherapy. Peter Naish, president-elect, said someone seeking treatment should choose a hypnotist qualified in medicine or psychology and trained under the auspices of the British Society of Clinical and Academic Hypnosis.

Why Hypnotherapy ?

Not many of us would agree immediately if we’re asked to allow ourselves to be hypnotized. We fear giving that much control to someone else, often a total stranger. But if we are beset by problems that are beyond our control, hypnosis is often the best way to solve them. In general, hypnotherapy is beneficial because: It helps modify unacceptable behavior: If you’ve been trying to lose weight, trying to diet, trying to quit smoking, without much success, then perhaps you could give hypnotherapy a go. When your therapist puts you under a trance and talks you into doing what you want to do, you find that you have the will to do as you must. Hypnotherapy also helps remove certain forms of obsessive compulsive disorder and change other forms of behavior that you don’t like in yourself. You will need several sessions before you’re able to completely overcome your problem and modify your unacceptable behavior.

It brings out hidden problems: A good therapist could help you learn through hypnosis the underlying cause for your behavior, often a suppressed memory that is making you act abnormally. Your unconscious state makes you more relaxed and you tend to share aspects of your life that your brain has pushed to the subconscious and is too ashamed to even think of when you’re fully awake and in possession of your senses. When you realize that it is these suppressed emotions that are the cause for your problems, it becomes easier to deal with those issues that are troubling you.

It helps you recover from a trauma: Most traumas stun you into a depression because you don’t face the loss and instead push it to a corner of your mind because it is too painful. Hypnosis helps you recover from the trauma in a healthy way by facing your fears and loss and moving past them to a life of more quality.

It helps boost confidence: Some people turn to hypnosis to inject a dose of self-confidence into their lives. They feel better after their sessions and feel more empowered to take decisions and face the world without feeling unsure about themselves.

It helps manage psychosis: In extreme cases, patients with psychosis and delusions are taken to see a therapist in the hope that they will be cured of their condition. Treatment in such cases involves delving into the patients’ past and trying to find out why they behave the way they do when they’re in a trance.

It helps in childbirth: Some people find that hypnotherapy helps when they’re ready to give birth by preparing them to cope with the fear, pain and the trauma of labor. They’re also less likely to suffer from post-partum depression once their babies are born.

If you agree to hypnosis with a reputable therapist who has proven their expertise, you stand to gain personally and emotionally.

By-line:

This article is contributed by Susan White, She invites your questions, comments at her email address: susan.white33@gmail.com.

Tiger at the Masters: An Ultimate Test of Toughness

From his days as a child golf prodigy, Tiger Woods has thrived in the spotlight. But can any athlete be mentally prepared for the circus that will unfold at this year's Masters? After taking a four-month leave of absence from golf to deal with the fallout from his shocking infidelity scandal, Woods will make his highly anticipated return to the sport this week, at the Masters tournament in Augusta, Ga. In an interview with 

SI.com

last month, Sean McManus, president of both CBS Sports and CBS News, called Woods' return to golf "the biggest media event other than the Obama Inauguration in the past 10 or 15 years." A hyperbolic reach from the leader of the network set to broadcast the final two rounds of the Masters this weekend? Sure. Still, the cameras will be glaring, the tabloids screaming, and one of Woods' alleged mistresses has indicated she plans to dance at a strip club in nearby Atlanta. This will be a Masters unlike any other.

 

In the midst of such madness, what can Woods do to stay focused on his golf game? Before we give out psychological advice to the embattled golf superstar, let us be the first to admit that he probably doesn't need it. Until he proves otherwise, Woods is still the mentally toughest athlete on the planet. "He wrote the book that we're all using," says Gio Valiante, author of Fearless Golf: Conquering the Mental Game, who is currently acting as golf shrink for Camilo Villegas, one of the best young players on the PGA Tour. "He's got this belief system that is perfectly constructed for adversity."

Valiante has played golf with Woods on about a half-dozen occasions. "More so than any other person I've ever studied, he's the best straight learner I've ever seen," Valiante gushes. "He makes mistakes, but then you watch him go about his business and he doesn't make that mistake twice." (Of course, you could argue that the sheer number of Woods' alleged mistresses, over 15 by some counts, proves that he's quite capable of repeat offending.)

The key, says Valiante, is Woods' constant quest to be better. As TIME wrote in a 2000 cover story about Woods: "What is most remarkable about Woods is his restless drive for what the Japanese call kaizen, or continuous improvement. Toyota engineers will push a perfectly good assembly line until it breaks down. Then they'll find and fix the flaw and push the system again. That's kaizen. That's Tiger." These words were written after Woods' first reconstruction of his golf swing, a revamping he undertook after winning the 1997 Masters by a record 12 strokes. Despite his continued dominance, he has made major changes to his swing at least two more times in the past decade. "He has taken the greatest game in history, broken it and put together something better," says Valiante.

Valiante believes Woods, who has undergone therapy, will reconstruct his life along similar lines. His game will surely follow suit. Valiante points to a relatively overlooked quote from Woods' March 21 interview with ESPN. "The strength that I feel now, I've never felt this type of strength," Woods told the network. To a psychologist like Valiante, those words are particularly telling. "Think about that," he says. "Woods is finding strength through redemption and humility. It's like when A-Rod admitted he used steroids. A massive burden was lifted off his shoulders, and he could go out and play.

Despite Woods' obvious resolve, a little advice from the golf shrinks couldn't hurt, especially since he's entering a pressure cooker with the potential to break even the best athletes. For example, if Woods were on his couch, Bob Rotella, a noted golf psychologist and author of Your 15th Club: The Inner Secret to Great Golf, would encourage the golfer to truly relish this uncomfortable comeback. "Love the challenge," Rotella says. "This is a totally different challenge than you're used to. Go out and test yourself. Go love it." Rotella also recommends that Woods pal around with his fellow players in the clubhouse. "After you've had a problem, you want to see if your buddies still like you," Rotella says.

Patrick Cohn, a sports psychologist based in Orlando, Fla., and author of Peak Performance Golf: How Good Golfers Become Great Ones, says that Woods can block out distractions by not trying to block out distractions. Instead of telling himself to tune out the occasional heckler, he should just visualize placing the ball in the fairway. "Once you focus on the right stuff," Cohn says, "distractions fall by the wayside."

When Woods was a teenager, he worked with a hypnotist to help place his mind in the proverbial zone. And given his recent revelations that he's reconnected with Buddhism, it's fair to assume that Woods is doing a fair amount of quiet introspection. Do more of it, say the psychologists. With practice, you can enter an altered, hypnotic state on the golf course, though not to the point where you're barking like a dog on command. "You are aware of what's going on," says Ken Grossman, a Sacramento, Calif.–based hypnotherapist who has worked with many athletes. "You're not out in left field."

For example, Jennifer Scott, a golf hypnotherapist from Phoenix, suggests staring at some object on the course — perhaps a leaf on a fairway tree — and taking a deep breath while waiting to take a shot. "Your eyes are very powerful," she says. "If you're darting your eyes back and forth, you lose focus." Summon the subconscious and give yourself a mantra. "Think peace, harmony, relax, relax," Scott says. "The golfers I teach love those words." Denise Silbert, a hypnosis expert from La Jolla, Calif., recommends selecting a physical trigger, like holding a golf ball while walking down the fairway, which will signal your brain to slow down. "As I hold the golf ball, I feel a calm energy," Silbert says. "I let go of the conscious riffraff, I'm reprogramming the unconscious mind. The verbiage in my mind is affirming: 'Fairways of power, greens of solace.'" Are you in a trance yet? For Woods, Scott suggests a less hippie-sounding mental chant, perhaps, "I'm the greatest player in the world, see each shot as it lands."

While affirming his greatness, Woods should also visualize his most triumphant moments. "I'd have him channel a mental movie," says Grossman. "While he's in that relaxed state, he should recall his 2008 U.S. Open championship win against Rocco Mediate. He would want to remind himself he won that with a broken leg, and here at the Masters, he's not even feeling any pain."

And despite the pain he may be enduring in his personal life, the shrinks don't recommend betting against him. "His head will be in a good place on the golf course," says Rotella, the golf psychologist. "He's going to put all his energy into playing great, and that crazy mother probably will."

Hypnosis could help children with emotional breathing problems

February 14, 9:13 AM Charlotte Health and Happiness Examiner Kathleen Blanchard RN

Hypnosis could help children with emotional respiratory symptoms.

www.riversidehealing.com

Related articles

Study: Healthy lungs suffer from ozone levels deemed safe

In a paper published in Pediatric Asthma, Allergy & Immunology, Ran D. Anbar, MD, Professor of Pediatrics at SUNY Upstate Medical University, in Syracuse, NY suggests that hypnosis should be considered for children whose respiratory symptoms are brought about as the result of a mind-body component. Children with asthma who hyperventilate, breathe noisily, cough disruptively, or otherwise have emotionally triggered respiratory symptoms could be calmed with hypnosis.

Coughing out of habit or vocal cord dysfunction that produces a high pitched noise with breathing but can have psychological roots, found to be absent during sleep might be indicative that hypnosis can relieve symptoms of asthma of breathing difficulty triggered by emotions.

"Dr. Anbar has added hypnosis to our therapeutic toolbox. When breathing problems have a large mind-body component, resolution with hypnosis can dramatically reduce the need for expensive testing and medications," says Harold Farber, MD, MSPH, Editor of Pediatric Asthma, Allergy Immunology, and Associate Professor of Pediatrics, Section of Pulmonology, at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX.

Hypnosis for children with asthma or other breathing disorders should always be performed by a medical professional warns Anbar. Only individuals with special training in hypnosis therapy should be considered to help alleviate respiratory symptoms of asthma in children triggered by emotions.

Pediatric Asthma, Allergy, and Immunology DOI: 10.1089/pai.2009.0025

 

Hypnosis is an Affective Approach For Healing Children

February 17, 6:14 PM Glendale Alternative Medicine Examiner Doreen Cohanim Children tend to be better candidates for hypnosis than adults. The reasons are children tend to respond to suggestions better then adults because children are in touch with their imaginations. Think back to a time when you were a child and how easy it was to imagine or daydream. For a child everything is possible, all he has to do is to pretend that he is a millionaire, a truck driver, a police officer or a doctor. He can even imagine himself flying like Peter Pan.

* Children tend to be better candidates for hypnosis than adults. The reasons are children tend to respond to suggestions better then adults because children are in touch with their imaginations. Think back to a time when you were a child and how easy it was to imagine or daydream. For a child everything is possible, all he has to do is to pretend that he is a millionaire, a truck driver, a police officer or a doctor. He can even imagine himself flying like Peter Pan.

Children can be hypnotized as early age of three, In my practice I have learned that children have no worries like adults do. For example: An adult may feel or think that a hypnotherapist will control them or make them tell their deepest secrets while in hypnosis.

Children do like the idea that they can "Stop the Bad Things Happening to them" such as seeing monsters, wetting their bed, hearing voices, sounds, or being controlled by bullies and the list goes on.

A hypnotherapist can help the child with the process of resolving problems such as pain, anxiety, bed wetting, asthma, cancer, fear, phobia, rape, anger, and much more.

This is how a child can be hypnotized! By having the child focus on one point or a spot until their eyes start blinking and begin to feel heavy to a point when the child eyes become sleepy! This is when the child enters into a trance state, this is when the hypnotherapist begins to tell the child some beautiful story relating to the issues a child is facing.

Hypnotherapy is different from one child to another, and it must be followed with a doctor referral in most cases, with doctor referral at least six sessions will be recommended unless the child is not facing the same issues any longer.

A Child can attend four to eight sessions with a qualified hypnotherapist, and during the session he could learn all about seif hypnosis and how to apply the tools to hypnotize himself. In some cases only one or two sessions are needed to solve the issue the child is facing, but no hypnotherapist can predict or tell the parents how many sessions their child will need.

Part of the therapy is to have the parent work with the hypnotherapist as a team. I also ask the child's parent to be in the same room during the sessions depending on the situation and the child's age. Before any therapy begins, written consent is needed, especially if the parent is facing custody issues or the child is under the age of 18.

This is how hypnosis can help a child with issues such as: Enuresis - Bed-wetting, Attention deficit disorder (ADD), and Nightmares.

Many doctors prescribe medicine for children who have a bed-wetting problem or ADD. But now more physicians are turning to hypnosis, because it has some very effective results without the negative side effects. The reason hypnosis work with children is because they are playful and active during the role playing of feeling better.

Asthma & Allergies: When children feel their throats constricting, they begin feeling anxious by starting to breathe heavily with their biggest fear of "I Cannot Breath" when fighting for Oxygen as a fresh air, In this case with hypnosis I teach the child to relax when the attacks occur and I calm him/her down by taking him/her to a safe place using the children's imagination.

* Each child is different, so it is very important to build a report before the therapist takes the child to a safe place, since what can be a safe place for one child cannot be safe place for another child.

Pain: Hypnosis is bypassing the critical Mind of the conscious mind in order to achieve a selective thinking within the subconscious mind, which it is effective by alleviating the pain for children. Children who are undergoing cancer treatments can use hypnosis to take their mind to a safer place, far a way from the pain and that can be done when the child can only access his subconscious mind. This is where the child creates an image that forces him to concentrate and focus on something else instead of his pain, such as using the children's favorite game to destroy the disease. When a child's is using his imagination for optimal recovery making their white blood cell stronger then the cancer cell, it's all about programming the subconscious mind so it can work together with the conscious mind in order to create the positive changes by planting more and more positive suggestions to achieve hopes, dreams, wishes, goals and desire.

The good news is that hypnosis is getting more and more recognized by doctors and many insurance's that will soon start covering it, because hypnosis is a drug free, risk free and no side effects.

Note: for some children it is harder to let go, so the therapy may take longer, parents aren't involved in the actual hypnotherapy session.

Hypnosis to Overcome Depression Before It Becomes Deadly!

February 26, 3:09 AM

Glendale Alternative Medicine Examiner

Doreen Cohanim

As announced here earlier, Andrew Koenig, the son of Star Trek TOS star Walter Koenig, was found dead Thursday of an apparent suicide.

Andrew Koenig's Body was found in Vancouver Park on Thursday February 25Th, 2010... Why? What happened? before I even talk about this painful subject, I want to share my condolence to the family's who their love ones are trapped in this sad feelings, Andrew Koeings was A Growing Pain Star, and he was fighting depression, and he took his life because coping with depression was a hard work.

Depression is not a joke and not everyone understands depression, not if you haven't been there. It is a very scary place to be at and it is very important not to ignore it, for some people it start with fighting anxiety and before you you know it the symptoms worsen and the person becomes clinically depressed.

Depression is a trigger from bad eventsthat occur to the person, they are usually very painful, it is an emotional pain and for some people even both, emotional and physical pain.

Depression Is an Illness and must be taken care of or it will be too late, and then the pain is even more to the families, especially if the depressed person commits suicide.

Please read this few times, and remember you are not alone and you don't have to think that it is the end of the world, it’s really not, help is around, and all you have to do is ask for help! If you or anyone you know is suffering from depression, there is help. Please call The National Suicide Hotline at 1-800-SUICIDE.

Trust me suicide is not the solution and not everyone who's depressed wants to die, they may say it, but they don't mean it, so when you think of taking your life as a solution, pinch yourself, scream, cry out laud and call someone, there are so many help lines to help you, just google it, or call your family, you don't get along with your family, that's fine, talk to strangers, take a walk and tell yourself, I am not depressed, I am having a hard time, don't own your depression, with your psychologist you do what they advice you to do, but until then tell yourself, their is a higher power and angels and good people who are here in this universe to rescue me, believe it, and still ask for help.

Don't take your depression inward, taking it silently is not going to brighten your life, talking about it will.

Take your issues in hand, "Depression is not a joke" please take it seriously and talk to someone, and the good news is, with hypnosis and your psychologist you can fight depression in a very short time, why hypnosis and Psychologist? Because psychologist helps you to understand the problem, and if needed, your doctor will prescribe you antidepressant until your brain chemicals are in balance. And Hypnosis does the other part of the subconscious work; a good trained hypnotherapist will give you the right suggestions to heal from pain, anger, guilt, resentment and much more.

I can say that my clients all were able to survive depression in a short time combining their healing with their psychologist or psychologist.

Please remember not every hypnotherapist is trained or understands depression, therefore you must make sure that your well being comes first, and when you work with a professional hypnotherapist, a doctor referral is a must for all medical and mental conditions.

I Care, since depression needs much more then just self Hypnosis, It needs close attention from a trained hypnotherapist and a psychologist.

Past Life Regression Therapy and the debate over its authenticity

Past Life Regression Therapy can help people resolve a few things that primarily are rooted much deeper than the body.

(I-Newswire) February 11, 2010 - One can appreciate that the logical and scientific mind wants proof but there are a few things that I feel are lacking in all the arguments happening over television and newspapers about Past Life Regression. This article is an attempt to genuinely establish a base for the logical mind to understand that Past Life Regression Therapy can help people resolve a few things that primarily are rooted much deeper than the body.

The first time when I read “Many Lives, Many Masters”, it sort of shook me. I was born in a religion where re-incarnation is accepted and believed in and yet I never took it so seriously until then. I had so many questions about it but the best thing I did at that moment is I gave myself permission to start with a belief and then explore it further. Dr. Brian Weiss accidentally discovered this therapy or atleast voiced in first about 30 years ago when he was treating one of his clients for over 18 months and she didn’t see any signs of improvement. Dr. Brian Weiss is the Chairman Emeritus of Psychiatry at the Mount Sinai Medical Center in Miami. During hypnotic treatment, he accidentally told her to go to the “source” of her problems and she went into a past life. Once that happened, in a series of sessions Catherine recalled 16 complete lifetimes of hers and with every lifetime she unveiled, her symptoms of depression, anxiety, fear, relationship issues, insomnia etc started going away. Dr. Brian Weiss was heading the Psychiatry dept then and it was very risky for his career to unveil this information and he took 5 years to decide before writing this book. Ever since he has regressed over 7000 people and is a widely published author. Some other amazing research is by Dr. Michael Newton, where he does something called “spiritual regression” where one can be regressed to when they are “between lives” and they are in soul form. If one reads through his book “Journey of Souls”, it’s another eye opener.

As far as proofs are concerned, there are a few things I would like to bring to the notice of all my readers and leave it to them to validate if they find any conviction. A Past Life Regression session is commonly done by taking the subject into a hypnotic trance and guiding them to unveil a past life. I have recently read claims of some stage hypnotists that people can fantasize and imagine things while in a trance but I have something to say here. Stage hypnosis and clinical hypnosis is different. It is true that while in a trance people have the ability to imagine things and that ability is what a stage hypnotist will exploit to make a good stage show. Clinical hypnosis is different. Firstly, in clinical hypnosis, the trance level used for past life regression is as light as the trance one is in while they are watching an interesting movie. It light and the subject is always in control. Secondly, the objective of clinical hypnosis is not to misguide the subject or patient, but is to resolve their issues and hence a good therapist will never ask leading questions, never stress on people telling them their name, place, year etc., if not guided intuitively to do so.

Ian Stevenson has written a book called “Children Who Remember Previous Lives: A Question of Reincarnation questions?” where there are case studies of over 2600 children from across the world, who recalled their past lives with most of them under the age of 5, which he has personally verified for all proofs. That is a good one since adults can be claimed of having fantasies but how does a child who just lerant how to talk, tell about names and places, addresses, families, relationships and searches for his hidden toys at the right places.

Brian Weiss mentions the case of a client of his where the woman flew from china for a PLR with him and she brought along a translator since she couldn’t understand or speak English. He hypnotized her using the translator and when she entered a past life, she started speaking fluent English. He remembers the translator turning back and translating it in Chinese to him when he said well, that is my language and I can understand it well.

While I was on my first day of practical training on Past Life Regression with Andy Tomlinson, who is also a famous author on Past Life Regression, we had an amazing experience where all our doubts were put to rest for starters. A guy whom I will call Jack, went through a past life experience where he was killed by slitting his throat. Andy went ahead and transformed his memory by healing that wound and releasing his emotions from that experience. He was quite deep and was experiencing shivering, pain and a lot of other emotions in the story and I was not sure someone could feel that much through a past life. The next morning, when he came for the class, he has a big red scar on his neck, exactly where the knife had slit his throat and that for the first sign for me to say “there is no harm in starting with a belief”. In my experience, the emotions evoked by a past life memory are more powerful than those evoked by a movie or novel? Some clients even experience PLR emotions as more powerful than any evoked by present life experience. These powerful feelings can be an indication that a past life memory is accurate. One client weeps prolifically over a broken relationship and later he describes the emotions evoked as far more powerful than anything he has ever experienced in present life. While hardly scientific, this evidence can be used as a measure of the validity of the memory. Many times some creative ability emerges from a past life memory for which the client can find no other easy explanation. Musical or artistic abilities, for example, can be brought forward from past lives that might be otherwise hard to explain. For example, one client with no artistic gifts or experience emerges from trance and starts to paint beautifully. I have recently come across one such client. Many times in our lives, the first time we meet people, we carry a familiarity that we don’t understand. Sometimes, we dislike people for no conscious reason and sometimes we meet them for the first time and have a knowing that they will be with us for life. It’s not a coincidence that this happens. We often carry the knowing of the energies of people whom we have shared past lives with, in our energy bodies and the moment they step into our lives, the subconscious mind sends us signals of the knowing, based on our relationship with them from the past. From my little knowledge and experience as a Past Life Regression Therapist, it’s an amazing therapy to resolve a lot of issues that we don’t have a conscious knowing of why they are there or we feel very strongly as if there is something more we don’t know about why a particular life situation occurs with us. If this article of mine, can help even one person’s life and they can look at past life regression therapy as a tool to help them, I would think it was worth the effort. For more information on Past Life Regression, please visit www.pastlifeconnection.com or write to me at minal@pastlifeconnection.com

Many Chinese under the spell of hypnotism

Many Chinese under the spell of hypnotism

Source: Global Times Feb 26 2010

  • By Yin Hang

Soothing music creates a dreamy atmosphere in the room, while the hypnotist murmurs to his patient, "Calm down, relax and then wake up" in a slow but authoritative tone. The patient has been suffering insomnia. Now, he opens his eyes, seemly relieved of a heavy load in the wake of a hypnotic trance.

This use of hypnosis as a medical cure is being advertised by a growing number of clinics in China, claiming that a deep trance can help people get better sleep, ease stress, relieve pain, induce people to stop smoking or even lose weight.

On the online forum tieba. baidu.com, over 50 Web users posted their contacts saying they can provide hypnosis therapy.

The purported benefits of hypnotism have given birth to a large number of believers who want to become professional hypnotists or simply try their hand at putting people into a deep sleep.

Recently, experts have warned that possible psychological damage could be inflicted by unlicensed clinics, illegal training classes and amateur hypnotists in China's booming market for hypnotic therapy.

"As far as I know, there are only two qualified hypnotists in China," said Wu Rengang, a psychology professor at Peking University and a psychiatrist at the No. 2 Hospital of Beijing.

Wu told the Global Times that it is impossible to master the skills of hypnotism needed to treat patients simply by attending a weeklong training course.

"Maybe you can learn how to hypnotize someone within a week, but to become a professional hypnotist requires the skills needed to provide proper psychological guidance after hypnosis," Wu said.

She warned that those who want to try the effects of hypnosis at a training class should never attempt to hypnotize someone else because it might worsen their mental problems.

In Jilin Province, a 28-year-old cook, Wang Zhilong, saw hypnotic treatment for the first time on a TV talk show program. Since then, he has been deeply attracted to hypnotism, but also worries about professionalism in the market.

"I feel so absorbed by hypnosis. It's amazing," Wang told the Global Times. "I want to master it, but I'm afraid there are too many fraudulent training institutions right now."

A Shanghai-based hypnosis training center that boasts of being a pioneer in the field told a Global Times reporter that even a junior high-school graduate could master the skills of a professional hypnotist by attending the center's eight-day training program.

"The nation's famous hypnotists will lecture at the courses, using hands-on teaching methods. We guarantee that you will master all skills needed to conduct hypnosis, exactly like what our teacher mastered," said an anonymous female assistant at the training center.

She repeatedly suggested that a reporter watch teaching videos on the center's website. One video shows a man under hypnosis, fast asleep but performing acrobatic moves on verbal commands of the hypnotist, who is surrounded by a group of students.

The tuition fee for the weeklong program is 12,800 yuan ($1,875) according to the assistant, a fee equal to the average tuition cost of four semesters at an accredited university offering psychology courses.

Similar training centers and seminars can be found in cities like Beijing, Xi'an, Zhengzhou and Guangzhou, all claiming that their teachers are hypnotists with reputations.

Thus far, there are no existing laws or regulations to guide the establishment of hypnosis training programs.

Hypnosis Helps Children with asthma

SYRACUSE, N.Y., Feb. 16 (UPI) -- Hypnosis mayhelp children with asthma and other respiratory disorders, U.S. researchers said.

Dr. Ran Anbar of the State University of New York Upstate Medical University in Syracuse suggests proper use of hypnosis as an adjunct to conventional treatment could bring about physiological changes that help ease symptoms

The study, published in Pediatric Asthma, Allergy & Immunology, found habit cough or unexplained sensations of difficulty breathing, as well as discomfort during medical procedures, was helped by hypnosis.

Hypnosis is also recommended, Anbar said, when a child has respiratory symptoms such as difficulty taking a breath, a disruptive cough, hyperventilation, noise on inspiration such as a gasp or squeak, and difficulty swallowing despite normal lung function.

Symptoms absent during sleep can be associated with a particular activity or location, or are linked to or triggered by an emotional response may be particularly responsive to hypnosis, Anbar said.

Mass(media)hypnosis

by Hans Durrer

It doesn't cease to baffle me that whenever I turn on the news it does not seem to matter at all which channel I choose — they all seem to agree on what is relevant in this world.

We all love freedom, we are told — and often by politicians who are forced to live a tightly regulated life with no freedom at all. Fact is however that we abhor freedom, that we prefer to have none of it.

Isn't freedom supposed to create variety? So how come it creates so much uniformity? 'Cause we're afraid of freedom — for what humans, above all, want is security, says Dostoyevsky's Great Inquisitor.

Moreover, we human beings want to belong. Which is why the American media stood by its government when it decided to invade Iraq.

Meanwhile, the 

New York Times

— its opinion-page, however, opposed the invasion — regrets publicly that it agreed with the Bush administration "that Saddam Hussein was concealing a large weapons program that could pose a threat to the United States or its allies" — which, as we all know by now, could hardly have been more wrong — and it also regrets that it "didn't do more to challenge the president's assumptions."

So how come it didn't? "At the time, we believed that Saddam Hussein was hiding large quantities of chemical and biological weapons because we assumed that he would have behaved differently if he wasn't. If there were no weapons, we thought, Iraq would surely have cooperated fully with weapons inspectors to avoid the pain of years under an international embargo and, in the end, a war that it was certain to loose. That was a reasonable theory, one almost universally accepted in Washington and widely credited by diplomats all around the world. But it was only a theory."

The mass media do not only serve, they also represent, and are part of, the masses — and these masses are characterised by group thinking. Contrary to what editors usually claim, they are not after the exclusive story that nobody else has, they are after the story that their rival paper has. As James Fenton in "The Fall of Saigon" reported: "In those initial days it was possible to travel outside the city, since no formal orders had been given. Indeed it was possible to do most things you fancied. But once the restrictions were published restricting us to Saigon, life became very dull indeed. The novelty of the street scenes had worn off, and most journalists left at the first opportunity. I, however, had been asked by the 

Washington Post

to maintain its presence in Vietnam until a replacement could be brought in. I allowed the journalists' plane to leave without me, then cabled Washington stating my terms, which were based on the fact that I was the only stringer left working for an American paper. The 

Post

, on receipt of my terms, sacked me. I had thought I had an exclusive story. What I learned was: never get yourself into an exclusive 

position

. If the 

New York Times

had had a man in Saigon, the 

Post

would have taken my terms. Because there were no rivals, and precious few Americans, I had what amounted to an exclusive non-story."

Next

The Western world is generally characterised as individualistic — but is it? Take the United States, for example (no America-bashing intended), that many (especially Americans) consider the most individualistic culture on earth: While that might well be so, the fact that the same country is also the birth place of mass-products, and the place where all men (sic!) were created equal, seems to indicate that there is, besides the individualism, at the same time quite a strong notion of playing down individual differences — "We all can be president and we all buy the same products" — to be found. Moreover, that Americans, wherever they go, appear to be easily identified as Americans seems to be more an expression of uniformity than of a distinct individualism. Americans probably don't perceive themselves that way, though.

In other words, we're much more conformist than we think we are. Take whatever problem, wherever in the world, the modern day solution is always: we need better communication; we have to better explain what we do. This, of course, is not communication, this is propaganda yet it appears that we're all so thoroughly brainwashed that we do not seem to be able to see that. Or maybe we just don't care.

"The first principle is not to fool yourself, and you are the easiest person to fool," I remember the Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Feinman being quoted when asked what the most important thing in doing scientific research was. Since most of us don't do scientific research, we don't need to pay attention, right?

Next

In his novel 

Zen and the art of motorcycle maintenance

, Robert M. Pirsig makes the point that we are susceptible to believe just about anything:

-

"The law of gravity itself 

did not exist

before Isaac Newton. No other conclusion makes sense."

-

"And 

what that means

," I say before he can interrupt, "and 

what that means

is that the law of gravity exists 

nowhere

except in people's heads! It's a ghost! We are all of us very arrogant and conceited about running down other people's ghosts but just as ignorant and barbaric and superstitious about our own."

-

"Why does everybody believe in the law of gravity then?"

-

"Mass hypnosis. In a very orthodox form known as "education""

-

"You mean the teacher is hypnotizing the kids into believing the law of gravity?"

-

"Sure."

-

"That's absurd."

-

"You've heard of the importance of eye contact in the classroom? Every educationist emphasizes it. No educationist explains it."

Mass hypnosis then. Not as absurd as one might think. Consider De Tocqueville who in the first half of the nineteenth century wrote: "For 50 years, it has been repeated to the inhabitants of the United States that they form the only religious, enlightened and free people. They see that up to now, democratic institutions have prospered among them; they therefore have an immense opinion of themselves, and they are not far from believing that they form a species apart in the human race."

Next

So if we were to believe that mass hypnosis does indeed produce the dominant perception of the world, does that mean that we are condemned to subscribe to the currently dominant mass ideology of the cultural hemisphere that we populate? It is likely, yet not all do.

Consider Art Spiegelman, for example, who is, according to the 

Independent

"one of the world's most revered graphic artists. Yet when he turned his hand to the burning issues of our day, the US media didn't want to know." Why? This is how Hannah Cleaver reported it: "He began to make notes for a post-September 11 cartoon strip, finally producing sketches in May 2002. You would have expected the US media to sit up and take notice; instead, it slumped in its comfortable chair and closed its eyes. Yes, Spiegelman is a Pulitzer-prizewinning cartoonist; yes, he has a particular genius for describing the human price of fanaticism. Rarely have commentator and theme been so perfectly matched. But in the new "with-us-or-against-us" climate of aggressive US patriotism, his habit of expressing uncomfortable truths was becoming awkward. Once, 

The New Yorker

had been happy to stand shoulder to shoulder with Spiegelman in the face of controversy — notably in the case of his notorious 1993 cover depicting an orthodox Jew passionately kissing a black woman — now he found himself being urged to tone down his work.

"I found that I was fighting for every picture, and that was really exhausting." Spiegelman realised that his new cartoon stood no chance of being published there; and, by extension, that he was probably working in the wrong place. He finally resigned this February, after ten years, saying that 

The New Yorker

was "marching to the same beat as the 

New York Times

and all the other great American media that don't criticise the government for fear that the administration will take revenge by blocking their access to sources and information." While he will make his own pilgrimage to Ground Zero, Spiegelman will not take part in any ceremonies. "There is nothing like commemorating an event to make people forget it. Commemorations seem to be part of a revisionist memory process. Our heroic mayor; our heroic president ..." He has banned himself from watching television — it makes him too angry."

References

  • Cleaver, Hannah (2003), "Art Spiegelman — Voice in the wilderness." In: The Independent, September 2003, 11.

  • Fenton, James (1998), "The Fall of Saigon." In: Ian Jack (ed.), The Granta book of reportage. London: Granta Books.

  • Pirsig, Robert M. (1974), Zen and the art of motorcycle maintenance. London: Bodley Head.

2004 © Hans Durrer / 2004 © Soundscapes

Supermodel Bundchen uses hypnosis for pain free labor

Supermodel Bundchen uses hypnosis for pain free labor

Wife of New England Patriots' quarterback Tom Brady, Gisele Bundchen delivered her son Benjamin in a Boston bathtub in a water birth, claiming that after an 8 hour labor she experienced no pain, and was walking and doing dishes the following day.

CJ:

Marlene Pardo BS CMH

Thu, Feb 04, 2010 10:59:34 IST

NO DOUBT her supermodel status has brought attention to the circumstances of Gisele Bundchen’s delivery; however there is a growing number of women who now opt for a gentler way to bring a child into the world. Among the methods used during pregnancy are yoga, meditation, hypnosis and ultimately a water birth, in order to avoid the use of medication and epidurals that affect both mom and baby.

According to the national center for health statistics approximately 1 percent of births in the United States occur at home. In their consumer publication, “your pregnancy and birth”, the American College of obstetricians and gynecologists describes the process of water births, even though they do not recommend it. There is a technique though that can be used regardless of where and how you give birth, which is hypnosis. According to Julia Benitez a doula and consulting hypnotist at Miami hypnotic center, “the first step in this process is to dispel the fear and the anticipation of pain which most women experience as their delivery date approaches. The truth is childbirth is a natural and normal event, and with hypnosis the mind can be trained to experience discomfort and pain as only pressure. ”

The benefits of hypnosis vary from fewer side effects to mother and child due to drugs, shorter, pain-free labor, a peaceful birthing experience, breech and posterior babies have higher turning rates and quicker recovery for moms, even those that have a caesarean section. And the benefits still keep coming because most babies who have fewer drugs in their system are better sleepers and nursers, something deeply appreciated by new moms who are short on snooze time.

Marlene Pardo, certified hypnotist advises, “I have many clients who inquire about using hypnosis during childbirth after they have successfully used it for smoking cessation, weight control and other behaviors which they thought was out of their control. I am not surprised that more and more people are looking to have a healthy, natural lifestyle, free of drugs and pain.”

Forensic Hypnosis and Cognitive Interviewing

'Forensic and Investigative Hypnosis' is a specialised group of techniques, used the world over, to to enhance the memory-recall of the victims and witnesses of crime and trauma.In the UK, due to Home Office guidelines governing the use of forensic hypnosis, a leading expert in hypnosis and recovered-memory, Rob Kelly, has researched and developed a group of Forensic memory-enhancing techniques, that he has called 'FIMET - Forensic and Investigative Memory-Enhancing Techniques. These (FIMET) techniques are based upon the very latest research, conducted by the worlds leading experts in human memory. I have trained with Rob Kelly.

The FIMET techniques are ideally suited to anyone who has:

a) Experienced some kind of traumatic incident(s) and struggling to process (get over) and come to terms with it, and who also may be suffering as a result of the incident or experience.

b) Experienced some kind of traumatic incident(s) and have poor memory recall (or possibly none at all) about the experience(s).

c) Experienced some kind of traumatic incident(s), have poor memory recall (or possibly none at all) about the experience(s), and where the information gathered about the experience(s) may be used in Civil or Criminal legal proceedings.

How have these methods been used in the past?...

Traditionally the therapist/interviewer would tend to lead the session in the direction he/she (quite possibly wrongly) felt was most beneficial to the investigation/therapy and preconceived ideas on his/her part about what occurred, along with inappropriate suggestions, may well impact upon the hypnotised person's recall of the event. In addition, the view held by many that hypnosis itself is somehow 'magical' and has special memory enhancing properties may well have contributed to its use in a misguided and inappropriate manner. Using the traditional forensic hypnosis techniques has, in a significant number of cases, been unsuccessful or even detrimental. In the worst case scenario, these traditional techniques can produce highly distorted memories. Even in many cases where the material recalled is largely accurate, it is likely that some potentially important information will have been missed. In addition to this, a traditional forensic hypnosis session conducted in this manner is unlikely to really help a victim of (or witness to) a traumatic event in getting over the experience and processing the emotional trauma, in the most effective manner. Home Office Guidelines regarding the use of hypnosis for investigative purposes...

These guidelines state:

"Under section 78 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 the court has a discretion to exclude evidence if, having regard to all the circumstances, including the circumstances in which the evidence was obtained, it appears to the court that admitting the evidence would have such an adverse effect on the fairness of the proceedings that the court ought not to admit it. As evidence obtained from a witness who had been hypnotised cannot properly be tested in cross-examination, there must be a serious risk that the courts would rule it inadmissible under section 78"....

"It would be prudent, therefore, to assume that any confession obtained by hypnosis will not be admissible in evidence and any potential witness who is hypnotised will not be permitted to testify."

The Home Office guidelines are indeed only guidelines and do not completely prohibit the use of investigative hypnosis. The guidelines, however, do caution against its use and it seems probable that most post-hypnotic testimony will not be admitted in a Criminal Court of Law - which is why we don't actually use hypnosis now, when we conduct forensic interviews (see FIMET below). There are no regulations or guidelines regarding the admission of post-hypnotic testimony in a Civil Court."....

It has been proven that the use of hypnosis per se does not contribute to either increases or decreases in quantity and accuracy of information recalled. Instead it is factors such as the use of suggestion, direction or leading questions along with factors internal to the witness that impact upon recall.

"Does Traumatic Memory Differ From Ordinary Memory?"

There has been much debate on this point and whether or not there are differences in the way that traumatic and ordinary memories are stored and subsequently recalled. In many cases highly emotional or traumatic experiences are remembered more clearly than neutral experiences. Stress tends to focuss a persons attention to an event meaning encoding takes place more effectively. Emotional arousal also appears to increase the liklihood of memory conslidation during the storage of memory. It may be that emotional events are replayed in a persons mind more frequently thatn neutral events. Problems with retrieval of information stored may be due to psychological defence mechanisms coming in to play following a traumatic experience, this limiting or even preventing recall of that event F.I.M.E.T ( Forensic and Investigative Memory-Enhancing Techniques ...

The techniques that we use, were devised by Rob Kelly who has carried out extensive work and investigation in these areas over many years. The techniques are collectively known as Forensic and Investigative Memory-Enhancing Techniques (FIMET). These techniques may or may not include the use of hypnosis depending on whether or not it is appropriate to do so. We do use hypnosis on many occasions, as it is a very straightforward way of enabling a client to relax, feel safe and focus solely on reporting everything that comes to mind. On other occasions, however, we specifically don't use hypnosis because of the negative view that British Criminal Courts have upon testimony revealed under the influence of hypnosis. Here we would use some relaxation techniques (which have the same benefits of allowing a client to feel calm, safe and focused) instead. Prior to a session it would always be discussed with a client as to whether or not he/she may wish to use the resulting information in a Criminal Court. The techniques used are not in any way suggestive or directive. They merely enable a client to recall an event by creating a safe and non-judgmental atmosphere in conjunction with using proven memory enhancing and psychotherapeutic techniques. These memory-enhancing techniques include several that are commonly used in the Cognitive Interview (CI) and Enhanced Cognitive Interview (ECI) processes. The CI and ECI are interviewing techniques designed to enhance memory in cooperative interviewees (usually witnesses and victims of crime, but in some cases suspects) and to extract as much accurate information as possible. This is mainly done using two distinct types of investigation:. Critical Incident Debriefing...

This was originally introduced to be used with those working in the Emergency Services or the Armed Forces. It aimed to limit or prevent the development of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and Stress Related Illness in people exposed to critical incidents. A critical incident is any event that causes an unusually intense stress reaction, overwhelming a persons normal coping mechanisms and their ability to adjust. These tend to be events that are outside "ordinary" human experiences.

CID is being used more and more now to help people overcome the effects of traumas such as road traffic accidents, sudden deaths, and violent and sexual crime. These people don't need "therapy" per se but need to be able to process the experience and then move on.

Critical Incident Stress Debriefing aims to prevent people from bottling up their feelings and emotions... PTSD is a recognised psychological disorder and is most commonly associated with the Armed Forces during the wars. Three types of symptom identify PTSD - intrusive recollections of trauma, physiological arousal and also numbing/withdrawal/avoidance.

The Cognitive Interview...

The Cognitive Interview has slowly been replacing the familiar "interrogations" that the Police Forces have used for a hundred years or more. This is a friendly and structured interview, where rapport and memory-enhancing techniques are used in order to gain maximum useful information from the client/subject/witness. These techniques are used to obtain information but at all times you are put at ease by the gentle way in which information is recalled.

In a "typical" session an initial discussion will take place to enable the interviewee to feel more comfortable with the process. The interviewee will have explained to them exactly what can be expected as this will usually be an unfamiliar situation that they have not faced previously. Any fears or worries will be answered before the process of focussed retrieval commences.. Its quite alright to say "I dont know" to any questions, or "I dont understand". At the end of the session there will be a summary where the account of what was experienced will be recounted back so that things can either be added, or changed according to the Interviewee. The interview will then be closed....

A FIMET consultation aims to help clients to elicit as much information as possible surrounding an incident, when this information may be used in a police investigation and/or legal proceedings, without inadvertently creating memory distortions or inaccuracies. Perhaps even more importantly, a FIMET session can provide the very best way for clients to process and move on from a traumatic incident(s).

The FIMET that we use fully take into account the UK Home Office Guidelines as well as those issued by the Crown Prosecution Service. An audio recording of a forensic session is conducted from start to finish so that a complete record of the information recovered is secured.

© Caroline Hamblin 2010 All Rights Reserved

Hypnotherapist in Grantham, Stamford and Newark in LincolnshireHypnotherapist in Sleaford, Melton Mowbray, Oakham and Bourne.

Forensic Hypnosis in Famous Court Cases

"You are getting sleepy. Very sleepy." Private detective Paul Grey thinks to himself and then laughs at this stereotypical belief of how hypnosis works. Only he knows it’s not that simple and a hypnotized person isn’t asleep even though the Greek root word in hypnosis is hypnos, which means to sleep. Under hypnosis Paul might appear to be asleep, but he is actually in a state of altered consciousness characterized by heightened awareness, deep relaxation, and suggestibility. There is decreased activity in the muscles, slowed breathing and heart rate, but the mind and senses become more alert and memories become more accessible. When hypnotized, Paul can vividly remember events from early childhood, like the first day of school, but in such detail he could tell you what he wore, what his teacher wore, and all of the surroundings he thought were long forgotten.

On his way to his hypnosis appointment Paul is able to focus so precisely on his driving that he blocks out all the stimuli around him, yet he still knows what is going on. He drives his car, but then won’t remember how he got there. Yet, obviously, he was still in control of the car: he didn’t run any red lights or have a wreck. Paul has experienced a form of self-hypnosis, that practically everyone can achieve – he has lost track of time. Hypnosis patients are often surprised their sessions have lasted two hours or longer, yet they feel as if hardly any time has gone by.

Upon arriving, Paul’s hypnotist dispels some common misconceptions about hypnosis spread through its portrayal in Hollywood movies, on television, and hypnosis stage shows. The hypnotist explains that Paul cannot be made to divulge secrets, be forced to tell the truth, or get "stuck" in hypnosis. Paul cannot be made to do crazy or embarrassing things like taking off all his clothes or acting like a chicken unless he is already motivated to do so or it is part of his underlying personality. It is important to realize Paul can lie or make up information while under hypnosis because of the highly suggestible state; however, this would have to be something he would already be willing to do. In other words, the hypnotist cannot control Paul. Even under hypnosis he will not do anything against his own will. Hypnosis makes Paul less inhibited, like the effects of alcohol or drugs, however it is not dangerous to him.

Paul and his hypnotist know the multitude of uses for hypnosis besides entertainment. Its uses include the treatment of many mental and physical conditions like phobias, overeating, smoking, school or sports performance, and self-confidence. The most fascinating use of hypnosis and the reason Paul will be hypnotized is to use hypnosis to solve a crime – forensic hypnosis.

Forensic hypnosis has been used in some high profile cases such as the Boston Strangler, Ted Bundy, and Sam Sheppard. First of all, forensic hypnosis must be conducted by a trained professional who knows how to get information without leading a witness or accidentally implanting a suggestion or memory. Secondly, very exacting procedures and standards must be met during the hypnosis session. Last, when the case goes to court the jury must consider the four dangers of hypnosis in deciding the case. The four dangers are: (1) suggestibility – a hypnotist could "suggest" a race, height, eye color, etcetera which the subject accepts as truth; (2) loss of critical judgment – under hypnosis personal beliefs and prejudices may influence how an event is interpreted during recall; (3) confabulation or lies – a person who has a reason to lie may create lies while under hypnosis or gaps in the memory may be filled in with false material that supports a self-interest; (4) memory cementing – a false memory seems so real to the witness that he develops false confidence in it. If all of the above conditions are met, then hypnosis testimony may be used in court and has in many cases been used successfully.

One such successful case is that of serial killer Ted Bundy. Theodore Robert Bundy was the handsome, charming stranger who stalked young grade school and college girls and confessed to killing more than thirty of them. No one knows for sure how many women Ted Bundy killed starting in 1974.

On January 15, 1978 Nita Neary returned to her Chi Omega sorority house and saw a man running down the stairs, a club in his hand. She saw the profile of his face. Four girls living in the house had been brutally beaten; two of them died. One week later Nita was put into a hypnotic state and questioned. She selected a photo of Ted Bundy from a photo line-up.

Approximately one month later, on February 9, 1978, a man in a white van abducted, brutalized, and killed twelve-year-old Kimberly Leach. Clarence Anderson was the one eyewitness to the abduction which took place near Kimberly’s school. Anderson underwent hypnosis twice to refresh his memory. Thereafter, he identified the man in the white van as none other than Ted Bundy, and the young girl as Kimberly Leach.

After two escapes from prison and eleven years of trials and appeals, Ted Bundy was convicted for two counts of first degree murder in the Chi Omega killings and a death sentence for the murder of Kimberly Leach. Theodore Bundy finally confessed to nearly thirty murders and was electrocuted in February 1989 surrounded by cheering and celebrations including fireworks and "Burn Bundy Burn" t-shirt sales.

In the case of Sam Sheppard, forensic hypnosis saved an innocent man. Sam Sheppard’s case is the one on which the movie The Fugitive was based. Convicted of murdering his wife, even though he consistently claimed that a "bushy-haired" intruder did it, Dr. Sam Sheppard was later legally exonerated of all charges.

It began in July 1954 when Marilyn Sheppard went to bed, leaving her husband Sam downstairs where he fell asleep watching television. Sam awoke to his wife’s calls and found her being beaten by an intruder. He struggled with the man and was knocked unconscious by a blow to the head. The media’s spin of the events included an "affair" and rumors of Sam’s "dark side" which resulted in a conviction.

After ten years in jail and various appeals, Sam Sheppard’s case returned to court. His defense was conducted by the now famous and brilliant trial lawyer, F. Lee Bailey. Throughout the trial F. Lee Bailey was able to convince the jurors that the original police investigation had been sloppy, ignoring evidence such as a cigarette butt in the toilet although no one in the house smoked, and that no motive had been established for why Dr. Sheppard would kill his wife. Dr. Sheppard had also been examined under hypnosis. He described the attacker and remembered feeling his neck crushed under someone’s foot and hearing someone talk about whether to kill him. He said the person walked with a limp. The juror’s votes in the case were for acquittal.

The decision to use hypnosis in the case of Albert DeSalvo, a.k.a. the Boston Strangler is unique and controversial. Thirteen women were killed in the Boston area from the summer of 1962 to January 1964, all victims of a serial killer who liked to sexually molest and kill the women in their apartments by strangling them with articles of their clothing. None of the killings gave any indication of forced entry, which means the women had let the killer into their homes. Five police jurisdictions eventually became involved, interviewing over 30,000 people, collecting thousands of pieces of evidence including hundreds of thousands of documents.

In 1961, Albert DeSalvo had been arrested for posing as a modeling agent, knocking on women’s doors. Those women who were interested had allowed him inside where he measured them; some had sex with him. He changed his methods, and in 1964 was arrested for entering women’s apartments and raping them. He would either talk or force his way in and caress the woman. Sometimes he would have sex with her. He claimed he never had sex if the woman was unwilling.

The police psychiatrist believed that Albert DeSalvo was moving through psychosexual stages, in which murder of the women was the next logical progression. Albert DeSalvo confessed the crimes to defense lawyer, F. Lee Bailey, claiming he was the Boston Strangler. After more than fifty hours of questioning, Bailey was convinced Albert DeSalvo was telling the truth. Part of the interrogation included putting DeSalvo under hypnosis. While hypnotized, DeSalvo described the murder of one of the women, Evelyn Corbin. During his session he was able to give details that he couldn’t have known unless Evelyn Corbin had told him herself, including information about her medical condition and a warning from her doctor to not have sex. Descriptions of other murders and the women involved had similar results, enough to convince the police detectives.

Forensic hypnosis was used in the Robert Kennedy assassination and the kidnapping of Jimmy Hoffa, as well as other high-profile cases. But forensic hypnosis isn’t just used for high-profile or famous court cases. It has been used hundreds of times for more everyday kinds of crimes from convenience store robberies to bank stick-ups to rapes and child molestation cases.

So let’s get back to Paul, our hypnotism subject. Today Paul is being hypnotized to help solve the mystery behind the death of an Atlanta socialite. Nikki Sills fell to her death from her seventeenth story apartment building. As a witness Paul could possibly remember under hypnosis whether he saw her jump, accidentally fall, or get pushed over. If she were pushed, his evidence and description of the culprit could solve her murder. The difference between Paul’s case and the others above is that Paul’s case is fiction, part of the novel Runner’s High, but the premise remains the same for both fiction and reality. For investigators and police alike, forensic hypnosis provides a valuable investigative tool in conjunction with other evidence, and aids them in their quest to find the guilty party

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