Well its not really about
swinging watches and dancing like a chicken! What is
Hypnosis? It may be surprising
to many to learn that we experience trance states often
during the course of our lives. Even passing into
ordinary sleep involves a kind of trance state. The
experience of hypnosis is similar: neither asleep nor
awake and a little like daydreaming, with a pleasant
feeling of deep relaxation behind it all. Hypnosis is a
different state of
consciousness which you can naturally enter so that, for
therapeutic purposes (hypnotherapy), beneficial
corrections may be given directly to your unconscious
mind. In this way, hypnosis
is an effective way of making contact with our inner
(unconscious) self, which is both a reservoir of
unrecognised potential and knowledge as well as being
the unwitting source of many of our problems.
Realistically no-one
can be hypnotised against their will and even when
hypnotised, a person can still reject any suggestion.
Thus hypnotherapy is a state of purposeful co-operation.
What is
Hypnotherapy? Hypnotherapy is using
the state of hypnosis to treat a variety of medical and
psychological problems. It is estimated that 85% of
people will respond at some level to clinical
hypnotherapy. It may even succeed where other more
conventional methods of treatment have not produced the
desired result. When carried out by a trained and
qualified hypnotherapist the benefits can be long
lasting and often permanent. It is natural and safe,
with no harmful side effects.
Hypnotherapy makes use
of the bicameral nature of the functioning brain and the
conscious / unconscious processes therein. At its
simplest level the unconscious mind becomes (through our
life experience) the repository of our conditioned
experience, while the conscious mind is the waking mind
dealing with appraisal and decision making. In
hypnotherapy the critical faculties of the conscious
mind are sidestepped (through the hypnotic condition)
and new ideas and 'suggestions' placed directly into the
uncritical unconscious to effect beneficial changes when
back in the waking state.