Archive for the ‘clinical hypnotherapy’ Category
Which would you choose?
If you were to go to a psycologist to help relieve your addiction to smoking or eatting food. Both psycologist offer hypnotherapy. One psycologist moonlights on the weekends at clubs as a hypnatist. Would you chose A. the Psycologist that moonlights as a hypnotist on the weekends or B. the Psycologist that only offers clinical hypnotic services?
Both therapist are clinical hypnotherapist, but A. enjoys the entertainment possibilities of his skill, but I see your point about thinking he needs the money. If hypnotherapist A. had plenty of money and enjoyed moonlighting as a hypnatist entertainer at clubs, who would you chose as your psycologist?
I would choose psychologist B if I was aware of psychologist A’s transgressions. I would assume that since psychologist A moonlights as a hypnotist at clubs he must therefore need the extra money due to inadequacy as a professional, seek to capitalize on a psychological phenomenon, showboat his prowess toward hypnoses, possibly discuss patients outside of work, and even act condescending or boastful toward patients.
The argument that psychologist A simply loves what he does, and wants to spend all his free time doing it doesn’t really work for me. Hypnosis as a public spectacle carries too many negative connotations for that argument to be plausible, at least for me.
Which would you choose?
If you were to go to a psycologist to help relieve your addiction to smoking or eatting food. Both psycologist offer hypnotherapy. One psycologist moonlights on the weekends at clubs as a hypnatist. Would you chose A. the Psycologist that moonlights as a hypnotist on the weekends or B. the Psycologist that only offers clinical hypnotic services?
Definitely B, the psychologist that only offers clinical hypnotic services.
Personal Growth Activator:Action Plan to Execution

25-minute Self-hypnosis Audio CD After reading a self-improvement book, or attending a personal growth course, many people do not take the steps necessary for permanent change. Listen to this self-hypnosis audio, and you will be motivated to activate your personal growth plan to achieve your desired outcomes, stay excited about your goals to sustain momentum and focus, and complete what you’ve started and feel proud of your personal success. Dr. Brian E. Walsh is an author,speaker and former journalist. He spent nearly 30 years working in human resources and training executives. After leaving corporate america, he studied NLP (Neuro-linguistic programming) and hypnotherapy and obtained a doctorate with a dissertation on accelerated learning techniques, which inspired his passion and his book, Unleashing Your Brilliance. Dr.Walsh is a master practitioner of NLP, an acupuncture detoxification specialist, an Emotional Freedom Therapist, and a clinical hypnotherapist. He has also co-authored with John Gray and Jack Canfield in the self-help book, 101 Great Ways to Improve Your Life: Volume 2.
Hypnotherapy Training
A comprehensive investigation into the development of hypnotherapy, written by one of the foremost experts in the field. It provides an in-depth review of the development of the profession, and outlining all the issues which are faced by the modern hypnotherapist.
Why don’t other clinics offer guaranteed NW Arkansas Hypnosis for only $25?
Yes, there are other clinics in NW Arkansas.
No, only one offers guaranteed hypnotherapy for only $25.
Douglas Myrick, C. Ht.
Certified Clinical Hypnotist
They’re cheapskates.
Healing the Divided Self

Rich in case examples, this book provides a step-by-step guide for the use of hypnotic techniques in the treatment of the entire spectrum of dissociative disorders. The authors synthesize traditional and Ericksonian styles of hypnosis in practical methods that work consistently within their four-stage model of treatment.
can hypnotherapyy be used to cure depression? Need information.?
I read that hypnotherapy used with results to treat depression. I have clinical depression with bouts of major depressive episodes and tried almost everything to get rid of my depression, but nothing works. For the past month, its been getting worse.
How does hypnotherapy work? What do you have to do and what are the results like?
I just recently met a Hypnotherapist. He claims that hypnosis can help depression. He is licensed and seems good. He has made me two tapes to listen too – I find them a good adjunct to my already treatment of medication & therapy.
what can you say about Hypnosis in the Delivery Room/Labor Room
It isn’t for every woman, but "hypnobirthing" certainly has its fans, including Carla Breakey, a 38-year-old home business owner from Idaho. And rave reviews from women like Breakey are helping this method of natural childbirth grow in popularity around the globe.
Breakey used hypnobirthing for two of her three children. Hypnobirthing teaches women how to hypnotize themselves to manage their labor, helping them to relax and let their bodies take over. The theory is that, in the absence of fear and tension, severe pain does not have to accompany labor. In this calm state, endorphins — naturally occurring chemicals in the body that can relieve pain — replace the stress hormones that contribute to pain, proponents say.
"I enjoyed the experience a lot more and was a lot more present when I used hypnobirthing," Breakey tells WebMD. For her first child, Breakey had a standard hospital birth with an epidural. That time, she says, "I felt like I was fighting the labor, and after the epidural was administered, I couldn’t feel anything, which was scary."
That’s why she, along with her husband, Jeff, decided to try hypnobirthing for their second child. "I was very skeptical the first time, but the experience was unbelievable. I was relaxed, and it really does help with the pain," she says. "With hypnobirthing, I felt confident, and when the contractions would come, they weren’t scary at all."
And although some experts warn that undergoing any type of drug-free childbirth requires a high level of determination and commitment, proponents say hypnobirthing really can help ease women’s fears about the birth process.
"Hypnobirthing is a childbirth process that includes a major focus on many of the techniques used in hypnotherapy to relieve fear," Pat Burrell, RN, a hypnobirthing therapist based in State College, Pa., tells WebMD. "It integrates factual information on the childbirth process along with hypnosis." Burrell is also an instructor with the American Board of Hypnotherapy and an executive board member of the Hypnobirthing Institute in Epsom, N.H.
"Other childbirth processes approach pain as a given and try to find ways to deal with pain, from medication to massage, but hypnobirthing teaches women to transform the sensation of pain so that it feels like something else," she says. "The healthiest way to deliver a baby is to be very relaxed and allow the body to do it. Once labor begins, it has its own momentum and mom really doesn’t need to do much of anything."
Hypnobirthing can also be used along with other birthing processes ranging from Lamaze to pain-killing drugs, Burrell says.
Couples learn the technique by taking between four and six classes, starting after the first trimester of pregnancy. "The partner is the hypnotherapist and helps the woman get into a trance-like state, where she is fully conscious of what her body is doing," Burrell explains. "She is very relaxed, which provides a safe and healthy environment for the baby and the mom."
Burrell says hypnobirthing creates a strong bond between the couple as well as between the mother and her baby.
The cost varies across the country, and many insurance companies do reimburse for hypnobirthing classes, she says.
Debbie Wagner, a clinical hypnotherapist in Bellevue, Wash., has taught hypnobirthing to hundreds of expectant mothers since the early 1990s."I have had great success with it," she tells WebMD. "Many women have told me that they had a sense of control that wasn’t present [in previous births] after using hypnobirthing."
But some experts warn that hypnotism may not be enough to help everyone endure the powerful pains of labor. Yvonne Thornton, MD, PhD, a senior perinatologist at St. Luke’s Roosevelt Hospital Center in New York, says she would counsel women to think long and hard before they decide to try hypnobirthing or any other method of drug-free delivery.
"If you really want to have a drug-free birth, you have to be committed to the program or technique because if you are not really committed, it’s a farce," she tells WebMD. "Some people have a fairy-tale idea about the true nature of labor, but it is painful. It is one of the most painful crisises that the woman has to endure."
I hope that insane was not hung on you by a "friend" if so they are not!
I have been a hypnotist specializing in pain control for over fifty years.
Yes! you can eliminate pain connected to childbirth along with bleeding, relax easier and more completely.. you are not going to do it by your self ,you will need trained support by your partner or a hypnotist ! and you are going to need to practice a lot.
I would strongly reccomend you learn and understand the glove anesthesia to the point you can do it by your self (in Case your partner does not make it through. i have heard of more than one roll there eyes and bite the floor The technique for this is a deep trance one so if the hypnotist starts telling you that light trance is more beneficial -thank you but no thank you.
the bleeding can be eliminated almost completely as can any cramping
start doing some looking for a classical hypnotist of deep trance hypnotist tell them you are looking for someone to teach you glove anesthesia. their response should be positive or it is B.S. and you find another hypnotist.
see what you can do.
write me for help if you have trouble finding a practitioner
tom