In the western world people are comparatively comfortable with 'hypnosis'.
In the east the word 'meditation' does not raise any eyebrows. Hypnosis
has been used mainly for 'directed healing'. Meditation has been used
mainly for 'general' well-being. In the West, visualisation and imagery
have developed from hypnosis. This is a commonly known fact among
practitioners of hypnosis. But ...
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If you ask 100 different hypnotists for their definition of hypnosis, you
will likely get 100 different answers.Because, while most hypnotists,
Hypno-therapists, psychologists who use hypnosis, stage hypnotists as well
as enthusiastic amateurs, know that something is happening, getting them
to explain exactly what that something is, is where the problems begin. "I
can't define it, but I know it ...
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What is viewed as stressful is different for different people. When some
of us think of stress, images of rush hour traffic come to mind but,
someone else may think of the pressure they feel while working. Homemakers
and children experience their own personal stress too. Certain types of
stress are normal and healthy. We need a certain amount of stress to
become motivated and achieve our goals. ...
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Hypnotherapy processes interact directly with inner consciousness to find
core issue causes of problems in a client’s life. Clients can examine
beliefs and thought processes that are giving rise to emotional, physical,
mental and spiritual problems and make changes at the core level from which
the outer manifestation originates. With changes at the inner levels of
consciousness the outer projection changes.
the clinical use of hypnosis, in which the subject’s powers of
consciousness are mobilised and subconscious memories and perceptions are
brought into consciousness. Heightened responsiveness to suggestions and
commands, suspension of disbelief with lowering of critical judgments, the
potential of alteration in perceptions, motor control, or memory in
response to suggestions and the subjective experience of responding
involuntarily are induced through hypnotherapy.
Hypnotherapy is the application of hypnosis as a form of medical therapy,
usually for relieving pain or conditions related to one's state of mind.
Practitioners believe that when a client enters, or believes he has
entered, a state of trance, the patient is more receptive to suggestion and
other therapy. The most common use of hypnotherapy is to remedy maladies
like obesity, smoking, pain, ego, anxiety, stress, amnesia, phobias, and
performance but many others are also treated by hypnosis.