What’s in a name?
Whenever we encounter situations that don’t quite
fit our usual experiences we tend to distort them into familiarity. There’s a
story about a huge storage tank filled with 100,000 gallons of chocolate syrup.
A worker seeing a crack spreading down the side of the tank yelled “FIRE” and
was credited with saving many lives. Asked why he yelled “FIRE” he replied, “I
didn’t think that people would run for the exits if I yelled “CHOCOLATE”
“Therapy” according to my dictionary (Webster’s
New World Dictionary on Power CD) is defined as:
“the treatment of disease or of any physical or mental disorder by medical or
physical means, usually excluding surgery: sometimes used in compounds
[hydrotherapy]”
The National Guild of Hypnotists considers the
titles “Hypnotherapist” and “Hypnotist” identical. The “Hypnotherapist” moniker
was adopted by hypnotists who wanted to distance themselves from image created
by stage hypnotists who seemed to possess supernatural powers to make people do
embarrassing things in public.
There are many licensed health care professionals who are also
trained hypnotists. These
practitioners may use hypnosis in such close support of their usual medical
procedures that it appears to be integral or in part alternative. The fact that
a doctor is capable of using hypnosis does not make it a medical procedure. A
physician trained as a
radiologist and x-ray equipment repair technician
may be able to deal with a variety of problems for which others require outside
help; however, no one would suggest requiring an MD license to perform those
tasks.
Hypnotists certified by the National Guild of
Hypnotists are trained to assist people in modification of their behavior.
·
Weight reduction,
·
Smoking cessation,
·
Stress management,
·
Performance enhancement,
·
Stopping nail biting,
·
Overcoming fear of flying and
·
Phobia elimination
are just a few of many procedures that people can
accomplish without utilizing the services of a physician or psychiatrist.
Hypnosis is also frequently used as a
complimentary procedure in support of medical treatment.
·
Pain
control when specifically approved by a physician.
·
Help
patients remember to take their medication on time.
·
Mentally prepare patients for surgery.
·
Minimize recovery time
The invisible
difference
Suppose you were observing identical twins and
only one of them knew how to swim. Imagine one of them falling into the deep
end of a swimming pool. The situation is extremely hazardous for the one who
does not know how to swim and quite comfortable for the other. The invisible difference rests on
their necks. The non-swimmer has all of the tools required to survive and enjoy
the experience, but the lack of knowledge, in this circumstance, could be fatal.
Suppose one gets a “tension headache”. Some
people know how to relax and can easily eliminate the problem, while others need
to take medicine. According to an article by Denise Grady in the Wednesday
April 15, 1998 edition of the New York Times:
“More than
100,000 people a year die in American hospitals from adverse reactions to medication, making drug reactions one
of the leading causes of death in the United States, researchers are
reporting Wednesday. The deaths, as described in the current issue of the
Journal of the American Medical Association, are not due to mistakes by
doctors in prescribing drugs or by patients in using them. Rather, drug reactions
occur because virtually all medications can have bad side effects in some
people, even when taken in proper doses.”
Double that the number to include the fatalities
that occur outside of the hospital and you begin to see the tip of this iceberg
of a problem. There are probably five to ten times the number who suffer
non-fatal adverse reactions. Even common aspirin will cause intestinal bleeding
and irritation in approximately 10% of the population.
We are drowning in a sea of medication that not
only endangers our health and
steals our money, but enslaves us as victims. A
recent article in the Manchester, NH Union Leader stated that the health care
industry now constitutes 15% of the GNP.
The world’s
greatest doctor
Perhaps you’ve heard that the vast majority of
illnesses effecting humans are considered “functional” rather than “organic”.
Symptoms arise because some bodily component is, for reasons largely unknown,
temporarily malfunctioning. The majority of these conditions are easily and quickly resolved by the
“poor person’s physician” – time.
Frequently physicians find nothing organically
wrong and help us become more comfortable by prescribing medications that
attenuate the symptoms. Seeing the doctor is important and it’s always very
comforting to know that we are not coming down with some dreaded disease.
The problem is that we have become a drug
dependent society expecting some chemical to restore our comfort no matter what
the affliction. Virtually every medicine known to science is, in some respects
damaging to our systems. It may provide the temporary relief that we’re seeking
while it deposits foreign material in various vital organs. Over a long period
these deposits may build up and result in diminished performance of the heart,
liver, kidneys, pancreas, etc..
Our conscious mind constitutes no more than 10% of
our mental powers. The subconscious mind regulates our metabolism, processes
our food, regulates our temperature, stores and manages our long-term memory and
a whole lot more.
If anyone has written an instruction manual on how
to use the human mind I am not aware of it; however, the principles of hypnosis
seem to come fairly close. The US Labor Department defines “Hypnosis” as a state
of mind in which the critical faculty of the human mind is bypassed, and
selective thinking established.”
Hypnotists are trained to understand that all
hypnosis is self-hypnosis. We are taught how to guide people into the hypnotic
state. Once a person is “hypnotized” we must use carefully crafted phraseology,
based on our understanding of how the mind works, to implant beneficial
suggestions.
While I hope to discuss how to construct
suggestions that will be accepted by the subconscious in future articles, my
objective here is to encourage people to seek the benefits available through
hypnosis. Not as an alternative to needed medicine but as a method of avoiding
unnecessary medicine and a means to escape the victimization forced on us by the
health care and insurance industries.
This article was submitting by Hypnotic World's US
Representative, Irwin Bluestein, CH
Irwin
teaches
sales powerful techniques drawn from the fields of hypnotism and Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP) that will make customers want to do business with them.
You can read more about him on
The Unfair Advantage
page or contact Irwin directly at
irwin@gis.net