WHAT IS HYPNOSIS?
Hypnosis has been used successfully for decades to help people deal
with weight loss, smoking, pain, fears, spiritual enlightenment and
many other issues. Some other cultures are more in touch with their
“inner minds” and as a whole express much less disease,
both emotionally and physically. Hypnosis has been approved by the American
Medical Association and many other reputable organizations as a fast,
effective treatment for many issues. But to understand hypnosis, you
must first understand how your mind works.
Let’s separate the mind into 3 parts to make it simpler. You have
your Conscious mind, your Subconscious mind and your Unconscious mind.
They all work together, and they all have different jobs and responsibilities.
THE CONSCIOUS MIND
This is the part of your mind where you live your life. Your daily
thoughts, opinions and actions come from your conscious mind. It is
responsible for your short-term memory, which recalls phone numbers,
people's names and other things stored temporarily. It also makes the
little decisions that you need on a daily basis…"should I make that
phone call now or wait until later…" is a good example. Your conscious
mind is also your analytical mind (ever hear those voices in your head
- arguing!?). Some people seem to be much more analytical than others
- you probably know someone who analyzes everything over and over again.
Your reasoning mind is also part of the conscious mind. The reasoning
mind must give you a reason for everything that happens and everything
that you do. Even if it has to make it up! Ask a smoker why they smoke
- they will probably tell you that it relaxes them. That it makes them
feel calmer or more at peace. The problem with this is that nicotine
is a stimulant - it actually increases the metabolism. So here you have
a case of the conscious mind making up a reason, just because it has
to. Willpower is also part of the conscious mind. How strong is your
willpower? Are you one of those people that has great willpower the
first two weeks of the year, right after you've made all your New Years'
Resolutions?
So this is how you live your life - in a conscious mind that's analyzing everything, making things up and really inconsistent, is that it? True, the conscious mind is quite weak, when you think about it.
THE SUBCONSCIOUS MIND
Then you have the powerhouse - the subconscious mind. The subconscious
mind is like the most powerful computer on earth. It can process faster,
store more material and generate your reality.
The subconscious is responsible for several things:
Your long-term memory
The subconscious mind has stored everything you've ever seen, touched,
smelled, heard and experienced in your whole life. Even from before
you were born - it's all in there. At any point in time an experience
hypnotist can take you back to re-experience any event in your life
- how about your second birthday? And you would be there like you were
re-living it.
Filtering Information
Your conscious mind can only handle so many inputs. Even where you are
now, there are thousands of inputs - the light, the temperature, the
sounds, the reflections off each object in the room…it goes on and on.
Your subconscious mind puts this picture together for you and only presents
your conscious mind with what it believes is relevant for you at this
time. If you're presented with too much input, you lose your focus,
become confused and your productivity declines.
Emotions
Your subconscious mind is responsible for the generation and storage
of emotion. Here's where we run into real trouble. In our society, we
have no constructive ways to release emotion. We teach our children
not to cry. We say, "Stop crying or I'll give you something to cry about."
We're not supposed to get angry - we get punished for that. You can't
feel sad, guilty, or afraid. So what happens to those emotions? They
get generated, but where do they go? If the emotions don't get released,
the subconscious will find a place to put them. It may store them in
your head (migraines). Maybe it stores them in your stomach and intestines
(Irritable Bowel Syndrome). Or maybe it stores them in your neck, shoulders
and chest causing anxiety and stress.
Protection
The subconscious' biggest job is to protect you. And it will - from
all danger, real or perceived. Now this was very useful in the ancient
days when we were all sleeping in trees. If you moved a little during
your rest, you'd wake up with a start - that instant awareness that
would keep you from falling out of the tree. Or you ran into a bear
- the fight or flight response would pump up your adrenaline, increasing
the energy to your body and giving you speed to get away. And this protective
trait is still very protective, increasing your awareness to alert you
of possible dangerous situations - in parking lots, walking through
parks, etc. But sometimes this protection goes awry. Imagine walking
through an elevator in a hotel. You pass a really pretty, fragrant inside
garden on the way, and enjoy it as you wait for the elevator. As you
board the elevator and it begins to rise, you start to feel a little
uncomfortable, but you don't think much about it. Maybe that lunch you
just ate was too spicy. So you go on with your day. Two weeks later,
you board an elevator in a clients' office. As soon as the doors shut,
you are struck with a sense of panic - you feel like you have to get
out of there, or else you'll die! You have no idea what's going on -
you feel totally out of control. The only thing you know is that you
absolutely must get off the elevator - NOW! So you go to see a hypnotist.
Through hypnotic investigation you recall that when you were young,
your brother locked you in the closet for over an hour (until your mom
got home). While you were in there you were afraid and angry. You could
smell your mom's perfume on some of the coats in the closet, and you
just waited, yelling for someone to let you out. Then your mom came
home, let you out and scolded your brother, and you forgot about it.
But the event was stored in your subconscious mind - along with the
fear and anger you were feeling and not able to express. Then you went
on with your life. So why would this cause a fear of elevators? As you
passed that garden on the way to the elevator, you smelled a faint floral
smell, much like the one that your mother used to wear. Then you entered
a small, closed in space and your subconscious mind made a connection
- back to that time in the closet where you were afraid and angry. It
decided that to keep you safe, it would pull up these panic feelings
- in response to the "perceived" danger of being locked in a closet,
and there you are. Terrified to go into another elevator in case those
feelings come back again.
Critical Factor
Until you're the age of 5 or 6, there are no barriers as to what goes
into your subconscious mind. Everything is accepted as your reality.
Everything your parents tell you, everything your friends say, what
you hear on the radio and TV, even things that strangers say to you.
And this becomes the programming by which you live your life. Maybe
someone said that you had chubby cheeks. Or baby fat. Or maybe that
you would be fat just like everyone else in your family. Hmmmm.
Then when you are 6 or 7, you develop a filter. We call it the Critical
Factor, and it's stationed between your conscious mind and your subconscious
mind. The job of your Critical Factor is to evaluate all suggestions
coming in and accept them or reject them. It doesn't make that determination
based on if the statement or suggestion is positive or negative (that
would be too easy), it makes the determination based on if the suggestion
matches what is already in your programming. If someone says "you're
looking great!" and that's consistent with your programming, the critical
factor allows it to go right in. But if it's not consistent - maybe
you've been programmed to see yourself as fat, the critical factor rejects
that statement and in doing so reinforces the programming you already
have. Is it any wonder that it's so hard to change?
So here's what happens. You're 30 pounds overweight. You have been
for years. You've been on diet after diet, only to gain all the weight
back, sometimes even more than you lost. Then you find a diet that's
actually working for you. You easily drop 10 pounds and start to feel
pretty good. You're fitting into a smaller size - those jeans you haven't
been able to wear in 10 years, but you held onto them to "motivate yourself"
are almost wearable. And then it happens. Somebody says "Hey, you're
looking pretty good - have you lost some weight?" All of a sudden your
critical factor kicks in and grabs that statement. It says "Hmmm, is
this consistent with our programming? Oh no, I can't accept that statement.
Wait a minute, she's lost 10 pounds? That's not right! Emergency! Kick
it into gear, we gotta get her fat again." You end up with your head
stuck in the refrigerator, cleaning out the leftovers for the entire
week. Then you go for the junk food, feeling horrible, defeated and
hopeless. Wondering all the time what happened. And then the feelings
of guilt complicate the situation - how could you be so out of control?
Can you see how the critical factor keeps you from changing? No matter
what the problem, you might be depressed, you might have anger issues,
or even health issues.
Hypnosis, by definition, is the bypass of the Critical Factor of the
mind, allowing your hypnotist to work directly with your subconscious
mind, the part of your mind that drives your feelings and behavior.
Through specific techniques, your hypnotist will guide you into a wonderful,
relaxing state of hypnosis and guide you to find the cause of your issues
and resolve them.
In hypnosis, you will be fully aware and an active participant in the
session. You are in complete control at every moment, though you may
have feelings of heaviness or lightness. Most people get very, very
relaxed as their mind becomes distinctly focused. Your hypnotist will
be guiding you through techniques and exercises to uncover the cause
of your issues and resolve them. Then you get to re-create yourself.
You begin to experience changes in your life that are natural and consistent
with your new view of yourself. You get to choose who you will be.
At the end of your session, your hypnotist will answer any questions
you have. You may still feel very relaxed at the end of your session,
some people feel a bit groggy. This is because your subconscious mind
has processing to do, and is still focusing on changes. This is completely
natural and will dissipate after a good night's sleep. Some people,
however, feel very energized by a session and will jump right into things
that may have fallen behind.
Whatever your experience, it is right for you.