How Hypnosis Can Help You
Clinical hypnosis is widely used to assist in
pain
control and to change
unwanted
habits. Hypnosis is also used for
motivation, enhancing memory
and to achieve
many other therapeutic gains.
Using hypnosis, the changes you want can come about easily and effectively.
Many clients have tried to
change life patterns for a long time, and know that will power alone isn't working for them.
This is because most of our behavioural patterns are
created subconsciously. When a person experiences trance or hypnosis, they don't have to
consciously think about their problem, or about what the therapist is saying because
the therapist is talking
to the subconscious part of the client's mind.
This is the part of the mind that is
dominant during a trance experience, it is the part of the mind that
automatically does what you need to do while you consciously tend to activity at
a more aware level. Driving a car is an example of the
"automatic" action. You can drive safely while thinking about
something else entirely because you subconscious mind knows how to drive and
"takes over" that behaviour when you need it to. During hypnosis, if the therapist operates
skillfully,
the client, who has all the resources to make effective change, will
subconsciously sort things out and make those changes for him or her self.
When this is achieved, the changes created are therapeutic and long
lasting.
Hypnosis has a long and effective history of bringing change to
people's lives and we know of no client who has
experienced trance and not had a positive and beneficial change.
Trance or hypnosis is a natural state, one you are very familiar with
although you may not call it by that name.
As you have just read, most of us have driven from one
destination to another only to arrive with no memory of parts of the
journey. Your subconscious mind was ensuring your safety, performing a learned
behaviour (driving), while your conscious mind was engrossed in other
things. During the journey, your brain waves had slowed to the Alpha level of 8
- 12 Hz a second. You were “there, but not there”.
Hypnosis is very similar
to this state. Another common example is
daydreaming. Perhaps in a meeting, in a lecture or at work you have found yourself daydreaming and not really noticing what was
going on around you, effectively you had dropped into a comfortable trance
state.
Children and hypnosis...
Children are particularly skilled at this. A child can become so
engrossed in drawing, playing, or watching
TV that it is as if he doesn’t hear when
spoken to. The child is not being deliberately rude, he has simply accessed a very
focused state and become less aware of what is going on around him. This is
known as natural trance. It happens to all of us, not just to children.
Modern
research shows that the analytical part of our brain, the rational, logical
side, operates at its optimum in 90-120 minute blocks. After this length of time
we find ourselves daydreaming a little, or lacking concentration. Effectively,
this daydreaming is simply our brain taking a short break, refreshing itself.
When this
happens, the creative but less analytical part of the brain becomes dominant.
Hypnosis mirrors this, and when the creative part of the brain is influential, we can
make lasting change.
Did you know that...
It was
back in 1958, that the American Medical Association accepted
clinical hypnosis as an adjunct to standard medical care.
It
recommended that hypnosis instruction be included in the
curricula of American medical schools and postgraduate
training centers.
Still, according to an
American survey published nearly 40 years later, in the 1996 issue of the
American Journal of
Clinical Hypnosis, 79%
of the doctors and therapists interviewed had no prior knowledge of hypnosis and
even fewer had experienced clinical hypnotherapy themselves.
Unfortunately this
still the situation here in Australia even now.
Therefore, if your doctor or
therapist does not mention hypnotherapy as an adjunct to your care, it could
simply be because he or she may lack sufficient knowledge or training in this
highly specialized field. In addition, hypnotherapy sessions take time, and
this can, perhaps, prohibit your doctor or therapist from incorporating
hypnotherapy into their overall treatment. However,
your doctor or therapist
has the discretion
to refer you to a
hypnotherapist and you,
as the patient, have
the right to go to a hypnotherapist as an adjunct to your standard medical care.
|