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Frequently Ask Questions About Hypnosis By Dr. Robert A. Fahey, M.Ed., Ph.D. |
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| Robert Fahey, M.Ed., Ph.D., N.D. l [course info] |
The
purpose of this article is to help you remove any misconceptions about hypnosis.
Hypnosis can best
be achieved
by first seeking a professional hypnotherapist who is qualified and appears
to conduct himself or herself
in a manner
that makes YOU feel comfortable. Hypnosis will in all likelihood work for you
if you are WILLING to
be hypnotized
and WANT to change your life.
Hypnosis has been sometimes called SUGGESTION THERAPY. The words that make up
the suggestions used by a hypnotherapist - consciously or subconsciously can
be considered bedside manner, office behavior, or a demonstration of an interpersonal
relationship. Call it what you want, it is the talent of the professional hypnotherapist
- hypnotist to positively influence the client to change their mental attitudes,
motivational and habitual ways of thinking to achieve a better life.
For some time you may have read or heard about hypnosis and the wonderful results
it offers in the field of medicine
and dentistry. Many have a need for it, but are afraid. Fear of the unknown
has been the greatest enemy
of hypnosis. It is hoped that after reading this article, you will have a better
understanding of what hypnosis
is "really like" and accept hypnosis as a method of choice when you
need to change your life for the better.
The word hypnosis comes from the Greek word "hypnos" which means sleep.
In hypnosis you are NOT asleep. As you
can see the word alone is misleading. I would like for you to think of the word
"SUGGESTION" every time you read
or hear the word "hypnosis." Why? Because that is exactly what hypnosis
is really all about. The mastery and
use of positive thinking words that make up positive suggestions and given in
a special way under special controlled
conditions to help others change their life.
Now, throughout my hypnosis teaching and private personal counseling career,
many have asked me when the first
act of hypnotism was demonstrated. I enjoy referring all to:
Well, there you have it! The first act of instantaneous hypnosis that lead to
hypno-anesthesia management for the
successful removal of a body part to be used for a special purpose - to create
Eve.
Hypnosis has had its ups and downs throughout the ages. Its popularity has come
and gone many times. It's acceptance
declined when it was used for entertainment purposes and when attacked by certain
medical authorities
that condemned its use. Its popularity increased during and after World War
I and II, when hypnosis was
successfully used for war neuroses. Finally, in 1958, hypnosis was formally
approved by the American
Medical Association as a viable method for helping others in both the medical and dental fields. Later, other professionals starting to successfully use hypnosis in their private practice. It is important to point out that today there is a vast difference between modern hypnosis and the old fashion "mesmerism."
Today we know that a professional hypnotherapist does not treat the client with
hypnosis - but with what one can
call SUGGESTION therapy. The professional hypnotherapist does not pretend that
he or she has some kind of magical
powers. The professional hypnotherapist does not try to make you do anything
against your will or morals.
The professional hypnotherapist will teach you positive methods of mind control
so you can with practice learn to successfully
self-induce hypnosis self-hypnosis. As a result of this education learning
process, a positive change
can take place in your thinking: which cannot always be completely explained.
Negative thoughts, tension,
anxieties, fears, doubt, and worry diminish or disappear completely. You develop
a feeling of well-being together
with a tremendous amount of positive energy, power, courage, confidence, and
reassurance in yourself. The
little things of everyday living that annoyed you don't bother you anymore.
Below are some commonly asked questions about hypnosis. Read them and the answers
that follow so you can more
fully understand the science of hypnosis.
What IS hypnosis and HOW does it work?
No completely acceptable theory or definition of hypnosis has ever been given.
Hypnosis can be illustrated but cannot
be defined. There is no scientific explanation of what happens in the hypnotic
state. It has been defined as
a state, a method, and an attitude, something that just happens.
For example, hypnosis has been defined as a learning process, a student-teacher relationship wherein the more you practice the easier you are able to enter the hypnotic state. Hypnosis can be said to offer the client a heightened sense of suggestibility making the subconscious mind dominant over the conscious. Meaning, the hypnotic induction allows your conscious mind to become LESS active thus making your subconscious mind MORE open and accessible to helpful positive suggestions. The hypnotherapist can then verbalize well thought out positive SUGGESTIONS that can help you resolve faster current issues, concerns, and problems.
Hypnosis is certainly a therapeutic tool that is widely used today in individual,
group, and family counseling. It is differentiated
from yoga, transcendental meditation, and mind control in that hypnosis is a
science that has been formally
approved over 40 years ago by the American Medical Association in 1958, as a
beneficial medical and dental
tool.
Today hypnosis is successfully being use to eliminate the smoking habit, control
food habits, mobilize the powers of
concentration, facilitate psychotherapy and for the relief of a variety of fear;
such as heights, small places, air
travel and so forth. An increasing number of doctors and dentists are now using
hypnosis to perform operations,
extract teeth, control bleeding, and for pain control. Some obstetricians have
been using hypnosis for years
as an effective aid in childbirth conditioning.
Every person has a personal built in "S-Q" factor or Suggestibility
Quotient. We are all suggestible at times. It depends
on our individual likes, make-up, mental and physical capacities that determine
the outcome of a hypnotic
experience.
Hypnosis is a state wherein the client is concerned only with words, ideas, objects, and surroundings to which their attention is specifically directed. The hypnotherapist offers specific suggestions to help one think only about solutions to current issues, concerns, and problems. Indirectly, the hypnotherapist is only SUGGESTING the client say good riddance to negative thoughts and feelings that sometime make us participate mentally, physically and emotionally with an addiction like behavior reacting to our thinking about personal problems that somehow guide many of us to become lost and troubled in the mist of life's ongoing tasks.
The hypnotic state is something that the client accomplishes HIMSELF OR HERSELF
and each person will describe the
experience differently. For example, when emerging from hypnosis the client
will sometimes admit to listening and
hearing every word said to them. Usually after emerging a client from hypnosis
and questioning them about exactly
what was told to them while in hypnosis, many times they (happily) fail to recall
the information. The situation
is a good sign and not a bad sign. Why? It means the client was mentally doing
what they were supposed
to be doing while in hypnosis - they were NOT concentrating: using their conscious
mind.
Sometimes a client will explain that they did experience a state of mind similar
to daydreaming. Others say they felt
heavy and some report they felt light and buoyant. Many get a feeling of numbness
in the hands and fingers.
Others get a tingling sensation in certain parts of their body. Again, these are all good signs of hypnosis coming about. Just about everyone feels totally relaxed and more in control of their mind and body. Hypnosis is such a pleasant state, that once it is entered into, another hypnotic experience is wanted.
If a hypnotized client is asked, "What are you thinking about?" With almost certainty the answer will be "nothing."
Hypnosis is not a medicine. It is not a curative agent. It is a "tool"
which can be used much like a surgeon's knife when
helping a client's mental outlook and physical condition. Before the client
is accepted for any hypnotherapy,
a careful history is usually taken. If it is felt that other tests should be
made to rule out organic disease
then this is taken care of as the hypnotherapist sees fit.
Will hypnosis harm you?
You can rest assure that a professional hypnotherapist will not want to use
or do anything that would harm you. It
has already been mentioned herein that the American Medical Association approved
hypnosis as a method of helping
others. You must trust your intuition and believe your hypnotherapist can help
you with hypnotherapy.
What is the difference between talking to a client in the ordinary awake state
and talking to a client in the hypnotic
state?
We have a conscious mind and a subconscious mind. In the awakened state, the
hypnotherapist presents ideas to
the conscious mind; while in the hypnotic state ideas are presented to your
subconscious mind. The subconscious
mind will more readily accept ideas presented to it and will act on them.
Let us say for example that a client has a fear of riding in an airplane. The hypnotherapist can spend hours explaining to the client in the ordinary awake state why they should NOT be afraid of riding in an airplane. When finished the client will still say, "I agree with everything you said, BUT, I am still afraid to ride in an airplane." With the same reasoning given to the client in hypnosis, they will accept and act on the positive suggestions given with control and confidence."
What is a post-hypnotic suggestion?
A post-hypnotic suggestion is a well thought out correctly worded suggestion given to a hypnotized person that is then carried out by the client during or after he or she emerges from hypnosis. There are many reasons for giving a hypnotized person post-hypnotic suggestions. Some of the reasons I will list below.
Do all persons react in the same way to hypnosis?
No. Some people are more suggestible than others. Those who are very suggestible
will enter the hypnotic state in
a matter of seconds. Others may take several minutes to hours. The power of
hypnosis lies in the client's ability
to utilize the power of their imagination.
The client having the least degree of suggestibility is classified as simply
being resistant. They may have one or many
reasons for not entering the hypnotic state. The greatest enemy to hypnosis
as mentioned earlier is fear.
Fear of hypnosis usually comes about as a result of the client's earlier life experiences. In particular what they might associate with hypnosis? Perhaps they saw a stage hypnotist at the movies or on television. It could be a product of their imagination and what they think about when they even hear the word "hypnosis." Listed below are some common reasons why a client is likely to resist using hypnosis and self-hypnosis for self-improvement purposes.
Who has a need for hypnosis?
It is for every normal person who needs to regain or increase his or her confidence
and enjoyment for life. Hypnosis
can easily help you prepare yourself for the daily negative attacks that bombard
us daily in the newspapers
we read, on the television, and by some people in our lives. Hypnosis offers
you an opportunity to literally
be transformed by reprogramming old negative attitudes into new positive attitudes
about life and living.
Hypnosis lets you become the final judge as to how your thoughts and the thoughts of others will affect you. Hypnosis allows your mind to move into greener pastures that can produce only positive energy, good health and success.
If hypnosis is so good, why arent more practitioners using it?
Since its approval by the American Medical Association in 1958, and the blessing
of the late Pope Pius XII, hypnosis
continues to be used more and more each year. It does take time to educate the
public and the real values
of hypnotism. Each new generation needs to experience hypnosis for themselves.
It is encouraging to note
that each year there is an increasing number of professionals in many fields
now authorized to practice and teach
hypnosis.
Practitioners like medical doctors, dentists, chiropractors, massage therapists,
social workers, nurses, psychics and
many other professionals at all levels of training are just starting to realize
the benefits hypnotism can have on
themselves and their clients. More and more people are turning to hypnosis as
a way of gaining positive control.
What should the client expect from the hypnotherapist?
The hypnotherapist should be well trained in the art of SUGGESTION therapy -
hypnosis. This includes induction, maintenance,
and utilization of the hypnotic state. Other professional qualifications dealing
with the mind and body
such as majoring in counseling or clinical nutrition will go a long way in helping
those clients desiring to lose weight
and needing to increase energy levels. The professional hypnotherapist should
be able to speak at different
levels. Most importantly at a level the client can understand.
The professional hypnotherapist should have an understanding attitude toward the client they are seeing. The professional hypnotherapist should impress the fact they are NOT treating them with hypnosis, but with SUGGESTION while in hypnosis.
The professional hypnotherapist should not lose sight of the client's feelings and emotions, which are responsible for most of their symptoms. The hypnotherapist should never make rash promises about results. The results will depend largely on how well the client learns to relax. The professional hypnotherapist is a good listener. He or she should know how to help people when they are under a great deal of stress.
The professional hypnotherapist should have absolute confidence in their ability to use hypnosis and positive suggestions. This talent comes only with continuing education, life experiences, training, study and application.
What does the hypnotherapist expect from the client?
The hypnotherapist expects you to understand that they are going to help you
to help yourself.
The hypnotherapist is not going to put you in hypnosis and make your life change without your permission or help.
The client must have absolute faith and confidence that he or she will be helped. After a thorough explanation of what hypnosis is and what it is not, and when all your questions have been answered will the hypnotherapist expect your fears of hypnosis to be eliminated. Only then will you be motivated to be hypnotized. The request for hypnosis should come from the client and not the hypnotherapist.
The hypnotherapist expects the client to have willingness and desire to follow all suggestions - uncritically. All the suggestions that the hypnotherapist gives are planned and when given will help you rebuild your self-image so you can better reach all of your desired objectives.
What is autohypnosis or self-hypnosis?
Remember that hypnosis is a learning process. You are taught what to do. You
go home and practice your lessons.
It becomes a "do it yourself" project. The more you practice, the
quicker you learn and get results. With repetition,
you develop a success pattern - a blueprint to success -, which will enable
you to go into self-hypnosis
quickly and as deeply as you wish without the presence of the hypnotherapist.
When you are practicing self-hypnosis, do not try hard to make it WORK; often times, the harder you try, the less you are able to achieve your desired objective. Just LET it happen, WANT it to happen, EXPECT it to happen and it WILL HAPPEN.
"I don't think I was hypnotized, I heard every word you said!"
The statement of course is an illogical one especially if the client has not
previously been hypnotized. The popular
misconception most have about hypnosis is that when you are hypnotized you're
"asleep." The client must
understand that when you go into hypnosis the five senses actually increase
in sensitivity - almost one thousand
percent. All five senses become more acute. The client will always hear every
word spoken.
I hope that I have given you a better understanding of hypnosis. It is not a
"cure-all," but it is a useful "tool" in today's
modern world of alternative healthcare therapies.
Should you or anyone you know want to learn all about hypnosis and self hypnosis, please go to the following
Site: AkashicUniversity.com
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Dr. Robert A. Fahey, M.Ed., Ph.D., makes no representations about
the content published in this manuscript. It is provided
"as is" and without warranties of any kind. Dr. Robert A. Fahey, M.Ed.,
Ph.D., and/or the BioHealth Counseling
Center, Inc. d/b/a/ Hypnosis Specialists Training Institute nor does the Akashic
School of Hypnosis hereby
disclaims all warranties and conditions with regard to this information, and
user agrees that all such use is at
their own risk.
Learn all about hypnosis today. Anyone can by taking enrolling in the Akashic School of Hypnosis Hypnosis Certification Program. No college background is required. A positive attitude and a sincere desire to learn the subject of hypnosis and self-hypnosis is of most importance. For more detailed information goto: [course info] [AkashicUniversity.com] [Questions?]
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