By Christine Davies ·
Mar 9th, 2016
As you go deeper and deeper into relaxation you realize that one of your strongest desires - one of your most treasured wishes - is to love and be loved in return by a partner who will love you passionately and lovingly.
You realize that for this to happen you must feel the same feelings towards each other to make that perfect partnership.
Your subconscious develops a strategy for achievement by way of visualization - visualizing what you want to achieve - your main goals, to show your Subconscious what and how you want to be and what you want to achieve in this your perfect partnership.
By Faith Waude DHP Acc. Hyp. ·
Dec 17th, 2015
It is estimated that in Britain alone, 25% of all drug sales are for pain-reducing remedies (mainly Paracetamol and Ibroprofen) to help with headaches, migraine, joint and period pains, toothache, etc - many of these claiming to target specific areas.
As anyone who reads the back of a box of supermarket brand pills can attest, the ingredients are often identical across the brands - regardless of whether they cost 19p a packet or £4.99 a pack.
If there is a difference then this usually lies in the coating of the tablet, the addition of caffeine which can accelerate pain-relief or lysine which is water-soluble and speeds absorption of the pills.
By Lee Betchley C.Ht. ·
Aug 24th, 2015
The hypnotic benefits of lucid dreaming
Hypnotherapists recognize the value of dreams for revealing information from the subconscious mind and venting blockages and frustrations as therapeutic change occurs. A lesser known but highly effective aspect of dreaming is "lucid dreaming."
The awareness that you are dreaming while you are dreaming. It's an ability every one possesses, yet dormant in most people.
Therapist can assist clients to develop lucidity or increase the degree through specific techniques and practice. As you may know, any hypnotic suggestion is most effective when the client takes some form of immediate action. This is also true for increasing lucidity.
By Rob Hadley CHt ·
Aug 24th, 2015
When we work using regression we regularly see the most extraordinary results very swiftly. Suddenly things become plain to the client and they understand why something happened. Subsequently their ability to manage their issue becomes very much more easily understood.
Dave Elman's book, Hypnotherapy, provides a good roadmap for anyone using regression generally to manage an issue. However the pattern occasionally swings out of the norm. Typically an incident in the recent past is associated with an incident in the clients' early life that had traumatic elements and introduced stress and anxiety. By reframing the earlier incident the issue in the recent past is resolved " and future occurrences defused. This is not an unfamiliar process to most hypnotherapists.
By Victoria ·
Aug 24th, 2015
This report was sent in by Victoria, a hypnotherapist who has been working with a cancer patient with the use of hypnosis.
Less anesthetic was
used due to a relaxed physical and mental state
-hunger and thirst
quickly followed surgery to keep the body functions (bladder and
bowel) naturally and easily
-color in her
cheeks unlike the usual drained look that matches hospital sheets
-the immediate
healing of the surgical wound so as to be infection free
By Rob Hadley CHt ·
Aug 24th, 2015
By Rob Hadley
Up to one in ten women between 18 and 25 will at some stage suffer an eating disorder. Worse still, it will be the one in ten we least expect. Clients are mostly female, but not exclusively.
As a hypnotherapist specializing in eating disorders I often work with clients struggling with Bulimia. In many cases they consider themselves overweight, and yet are not. Like anorexics, they have little idea of how they appear to others. Yet, this is not an issue that has a great deal to do with food. Food is merely the media of expression for the problem.