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Posts Tagged ‘phobias’

Erase The Phobias In Your Life Through Hypnotherapy

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Do you fear darkness to such an extent that even a 20 second experience in the dark can leave you breathless and ter­rorized? Have you not stepped out into a street for the last 2 years because you were too scared of the crowds? Does the sight of a spider make you scream in horror? If any of these examples relate to you, then you might be suf­fering from a phobia even without knowing it.

There are all kinds of phobias in the world. Phobia of injections, phobia of flying phobia of public speaking, and phobia of creepy crawlies, people are inflicted with a sur­prisingly large number of phobias. But most of us get through our lives dis­missing these phobias as fears. However, there is a crucial dif­ference between fear and a full blown phobia. While fear is a rational feeling which ori­ginates out of our survival instinct phobia is essen­tially irra­tional. A fear can keep you from being harmed a phobia on the other hand can cripple your existence.

How can you suc­cessfully tackle your phobia? Is there a way out? Yes there is, and it is called hyp­no­therapy. Hyp­no­therapy has had a long standing record in suc­cessfully elim­inating phobias from peoples lives, and the good news is that hyp­no­therapy is available in West London and East Hert­fordshire. Hyp­no­therapy can help you overcome your irra­tional fear of things and situ­ations by making your sub­con­scious awaken to the irra­tionality. A qualified hyp­no­therapist can take you on a journey back into your past to discover where the phobia ori­ginated. It could have been a childhood incident which your con­scious mind has for­gotten, but your sub­con­scious has held on to.

Hyp­no­therapy has a variety of tech­niques to help you with your situation. Through visu­al­iz­ations and NLP methods, not only can you identify the cause behind your phobia, but also learn to deal with it in your present life. It can teach your sub­con­scious mind to adopt a dif­ferent pattern of behavior, so that when you are faced with your phobia, you can deal with it in a fearless fashion. Hyp­no­therapy teaches you to relax and be calm under stressful situ­ations, and you will be sur­prised with the results.

The results which you can achieve with Hyp­no­therapy are effective and long lasting. You can keep reverting back to the tech­niques of self hypnosis at any point in time to tackle a phobic situation. You can auto suggest your mind to be brave and fearless. Go ahead give hyp­no­therapy a try to treat your phobias. Hyp­no­therapy has brought respite from phobias closer home.

For more information about how hyp­no­therapy can help you click here

Ori­ginally posted 2009-​​03-​​15 11:26:02.

Free Your Mind and Soul

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Hypnosis is a Greek word which means “sleep”. This is also referred to as hyp­no­therapy. With the help of a hyp­no­therapist, you reach a trancelike state of restful awareness. When you are under hypnosis you are actually not sleeping, though it may seem like you are. You tend to be more focused and more responsive to sug­gestions. The main purpose of this is to help you gain self control over your emotions and behavior.

How does it work?

Though it is not very clear how it works, it tends to syn­chronize the body and the brain through nerve impulses, body chemicals, and hormones. It is said that the mind has two parts; the sub­con­scious mind and the con­scious mind. When you are hyp­notized, you are said to be in your sub­con­scious mind. It helps you relax and quieten your mind. We tend to go into the hypnotic state in our day to day life also. Many a time we lose track of the time and get engrossed in our work, or while reading a good book or listening to good music, this is similar to the hypnotic process.

Stages:

When you are under hypnosis, you tend to con­centrate intensely without any dis­tractions. As you become more open to sug­gestions, you tend to listen to what you are being told, which could help you give up your bad habits like smoking and drinking alcohol, improving your health and well being.

You are said to go through three stages in Hyp­no­therapy; the first being the super­ficial trance, where your eyes may be closed, but you still exist in the present stage and you are aware of your sur­roundings. During this stage you are more open to sug­gestions, but since the trance is very light, there is a pos­sibility that you may not accept it. The second stage is the alpha stage, which is deeper than the first one. Here the person accepts what he is being told. The therapist can actually control your response to any physical pain or allergies and control your immune system. Your blood pressure and your heart rate can also be con­trolled. The third stage is called age regression, which is even deeper than the alpha stage. In this stage the person can be sent back in time to remember events which had occurred years back. This technique is helpful to make the person come out of any physical, mental, or emo­tional problems, which could be related to his past. Cases like sexual abuse during childhood can really disturb the mind, causing physical and mental torture.

Benefits:

Deep hypnosis can also relieve pain from your body and control allergies. Chronic pain such as arthritis, fibromyalgia and back pain are said to be improved with hyp­no­therapy. Prac­tising this can relieve symptoms up to 70 percent. Even sleeping dis­orders such as sleep apnea and snoring can be improved. This technique is even used in the emergency rooms in hos­pitals to help relax a severely injured victim, and even in the ICU to control the heart rate and res­piration. Dentists also use this technique to decrease pain, calm the patients, and to reduce bleeding. Even during childbirth it is used to relieve pain.

Hypnosis can work only when you fulfill three con­ditions — A peaceful envir­onment without any dis­turbance, good under­standing between the therapist and you, and your cooperation and will­ingness to be a part of the therapy.

Hypnosis per­formed by a qualified hyp­no­therapist is said to bring good changes in your health. It helps you give up unwanted habits like smoking, over­eating, give up alcohol, and over­coming stress. It can also help control phobias, and this therapy has shown positive results in con­trolling asthma, irritable bowel syndrome, migraine, and high blood pressure.

Remember to go only to a cer­tified and recognized prac­ti­tioner, as the success of the therapy will depend on the com­petence of the therapist. It is best to take opinions from friends and those around you.

Ori­ginally posted 2009-​​03-​​23 20:33:07.

Why Hypnosis And Hypnotherapy Can Be Beneficial

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Several studies show hypnosis can help you lose weight, give up smoking, achieve other goals and suffer less pain.

To sceptics, hypnosis is mumbo-​​jumbo, but sci­entific evidence now shows that hypnosis and self-​​hypnosis can help people to overcome problems. It has can help people:

* Stop over-​​eating and reduce weight

* Stop smoking

* Reduce excessive drinking

* Stop gambling

Of course, you must want to end these problems. During your normal mental state you may not be prepared to take the trouble needed to overcome the addiction — and may not admit it is an addiction — but if you ever think “I want to stop smoking” or drinking, etc, then there is a good chance that hypnosis will help.

How does it do so? Hyp­notism — that is the act of being hyp­notised — has been shown to alter the mental state. Dif­ferent elec­trical signals are produced, and this has also been show with magnetic res­onance imaging. However, it is not know exactly what occurs.

All that is known is that the state appears to be closer to sleeping with one exception — you remain com­pletely alert. There are various theories. For example, it is known that there are two aspects of the brain: con­scious and sub-​​conscious.

The con­scious is used to work things out logically, and to take decisions about what to do next. The sub-​​conscious keeps us breathing, keeps our heart beating reg­ularly, and sends out signals to our body to carry out all the routine oper­ations needed to keep us alive.

But it is more than that: the sub-​​conscious also stores memories and information, and has ready access to these things — even when we have for­gotten them. In some cases, the events just happened a long time ago, or were insig­ni­ficant. In others, they were so uncom­fortable that we don’t allow our con­scious mind to remember them.

Theses for­gotten memories can also result in repression, so that we don’t achieve what we want, or may make us do things we don’t really want to. The hypnotic state can make your sub­con­scious see things dif­ferently, and overcome problems.

What happens with hypnosis? Some hyp­no­ther­apists induce a feeling of nausea that is asso­ciated with smoking or over­eating, so that the next time we get a cigarette out, we don’t feel good. Another approach is to help the person have more determ­ination to stop smoking.

Increased determ­ination also helps us achieve our goals — goals that we thought were com­pletely out of reach.

Personal problems such as phobias can be overcome with hypnosis, and pain in illness can be reduced — this has been demon­strated in various studies including one involving 80 children suf­fering from cancer. Over­coming the pain of childbirth is another example.

A group of people who suffered from hay-​​fever in Switzerland also found reduced symptoms fol­lowing hypnosis. Half the group were treated this way in the first season, and compared with the others, and the other half of the group were treated prior to the second season. Afterwards, they reported that they needed less med­ication than before being hypnotised.

EEGs (electro-​​encephalographs) showed that the right-​​brain was more active and the left-​​brain less active during hypnosis. The left-​​brain is asso­ciated with analysis and cri­ticism and the right-​​brain with creativity.

For more information on how hyp­no­therapy can help you click here

Ori­ginally posted 2009-​​03-​​15 18:26:18.

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