Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Hypnosis for fear of flying

 
 
Fort Smith Hypnosis
 


Fear of flying phobia

More and more people come for hypnotherapy to help overcome flying anxiety. Some people are mildly anxious about flying and find that it gets worse over time - others simply develop a full blown phobia for no apparent reason.
In our experience, there are three types of "fear of flying". There is the fear of crashing, the fear of not being in control and the fear which seems to be more a symptom of claustrophobia.
Strangely enough, more often than not, the nervous flyer fits a profile of someone who has flown often in the past and didn't always have the fear. Although, it certainly isn't always the case, we do generally find that the phobia or fear can be traced back to a particular incident but didn't necessarily become chronic at that point. The intensity or panic symptoms developed later
Often fear of flying begins at a time when someone is going through other problems or traumas and almost becomes an extension of that situation.

Overcoming a flying phobia

Practically speaking, what can be done about a fear of flying? Hypnosis can be extremely helpful and often helps to eradicate the fear completely. You need to start with a goal. Would you like to be able to enjoy flying or simply to cope with flying? If not enjoy, then why not?
We recommend hypnosis where you can choose from an extensive range of options.

Flying phobia, inconvenient as it may be, is essentially always positive. That may sound strange but then consider the idea of removing a phobia of flying to such an extent that you become happy to run onto a plane which is clearly not in a suitable condition to fly? This couldn't possibly be healthy.
Hypnotherapists have always seen a healthy benefit to fear, if that fear is logical. Illogical fear or irrational fear is just fear that has become a bit too intense. Hypnotherapy will certainly help you to desensitize the fear. You will always have an internal warning system should you ever need it but confidence in this fact allows you to get on and enjoy your life in the way you deserve.
If you could overcome your fear of flying, where would you go? Imagine you could confidently walk into a travel shop and book tickets anywhere - which destination would you choose?
Imagination can be used to create possibilities or to restrict you from doing something. Perhaps today could be the day you start to use your imagination in a different way.

Scared to Fly?

2
Turbulence can be uncomfortable, but is a normal part of flying
People are often frightened by turbulence, because they don't understand what is happening. Nervous flyers are scared, as it seems that the plane is falling out of the sky. They focus on the downward bumps as these are the most apparent, but in fact each downward bump is followed by an upward bump. These bumps are actually caused by slight tipples in the air, which is normally perfectly smooth. Think of it in terms of bumps in the road. It doesn't take huge craters or bumps to make for a jerky ride in a car. It's the same with turbulence - small disturbances in the air can make a plane ride feel uncomfortable, but there's no real danger.
The plane is designed, built and tested to rigorous safety levels
Modern airplanes have to be designed and built to comply with rigorous safety standards which are set out by independent aviation authorities. Airplanes and their equipment are manufactured by systems also monitored by aviation authorities. Once built, they are then tested in flight before being given a final seal of approval. They are built to withstand many more stresses and strains than they will ever encounter in flight - the safety margins are enormous. Aircraft are intended to be in the air - it's what they were made for.
Flying is routine
Everyday, just under three million people fly safely all around the world. If you watch planes taking off and landing at your local airport, or look at the arrival and departure boards in the airport, you'll understand just how many flights operate safely each and everyday. Flying really is just routine. It happens all the time with no problems.
The importance of thinking positively
Think positively all the time. If you catch yourself dwelling on negative thoughts, stop and bring yourself back to the positive. Focus on what is happening in the present moment and not what could happen in the future. It can be easy to start imagining a disaster film scenario - make the effort to redirect your wild imagination somewhere more positive. Distract and occupy yourself by reading, doing a puzzle, listening to music or watching a film, or having a conversation.
Tips to cope with feeling nervous
When you are frightened, you breathe more quickly and your heart starts to beat faster. Try this exercise to calm yourself. Push your stomach outward and slowly taking a deep, long breath in through your nose, fill your lungs with air. Hold this breath for a moment, then let it out gradually. Do this once or twice when you are feeling nervous and you will start to feel better. This is a simple but effective technique for calming yourself down. Practice it whenever you feel tense and soon it will become easy and natural.
Fear or panic itself cannot hurt you
The sensation of fear is your body's way of telling you that it perceives a threat to your safety. It is a protection mechanism, preparing us for the "fight or flight" response, and will not do you any harm in itself. Once you understand that the threat poses you no danger, the feeling of fear will vanish. A panic attack will not lead to heart attack or a loss of consciousness.


Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Hypnosis for sports and fitness


Fort Smith Hypnosis
Athletic Performance And Fitness


Hypnosis has been a useful tool for athletes for many generations.  Whether you're a professional, or wanting to improve your tennis serve for weekend tournaments, hypnosis can be offer many options for improved mind-body performance and coordination. Anything that's a part of your daily ritual affects how you perform in your chosen sport or activity.  By learning about what personally motivates your peak performance, is how working with the unconscious mind can be of most benefit.  This is where meditation can be especially powerful when visualizing a victorious outcome, or improvement in any physical goal. Most successful people in sports or physical fitness will tell you the key element in their suburb performances lies in their ability to visualize the event.  Runners will visualize a better time, martial artists will visualize faster more powerful punches and kicks, skiers will visualize moving through a course with ultimate ease and grace.
Setting A Realistic Goal


The best formula for making improvements in your game or activity, is having a clear insight into "where you are" at the present time physically.  Always keep in mind that a stride toward an objective is most effective when knowing what your full potential is now.  Hypnosis in sports is based on training your ability to consistently engage in a daily structured regiment that will result in a higher level of performance. The short term benefit of hypnosis, is a renewed enthusiasm that results in a visualized outcome, based on improvement for the next event. Of course, the long term benefit of hypnosis along with meditation, is the empowerment of a new daily structured training discipline.

Hypnosis for intuition

 
 
Fort Smith Hypnosis
 
 
 
Developing Intuition Through Hypnosis
 
 
Intuition is an inner knowingness of things without reason or logic. It is the basis of all psychic information. Intuition is that hunch or that gut feeling that you just know something is going to happen, bad or good, without any particular reason. It's just a feeling that happens to you. It's also being able to tune into another persons energies, thoughts or feelings … and being able detect how they are feeling …

One of the most important elements of developing intuition is awareness.

How can you possibly tune into these invisible frequencies if you are not in touch with the more visible slower frequencies that exist all around you? It's important that you really get to know your body for these kinds of exercises. Your body is a receptacle for receiving information … whether it's through physical sensations, your thoughts, or your emotions or what you see and hear around you … if you are not in touch with what is normal for you, it's going to be difficult for you to recognize when you are receiving signs or being given some kind of information.

So, when I say aware, I mean … really begin to pay attention to what is going on in your body, particularly in the chakra areas … these will be clues for you that something is happening … Pay attention to how you are feeling … notice how you feel when you enter a room or someone's home, or a building … do you get a different feeling about one place or another? Same thing with people … begin to become so curious about people … notice things about them that you would not ordinarily notice … look into their eyes … notice their voice … see if you can detect what their mood is without asking them … and then once you feel like you are getting good at that … validate your experience, by asking them, "are you feeling this particular way right now?"

You may want to choose several close friends that you trust won't feel weird about psychic phenomenon and practice tuning in to their energy in this same way … You can do it face to face, over the phone, or even remotely … but if you do it remotely, you may want to let them know about it ahead of time that you'll be doing some work on them at a certain time on a certain day … and don't let them know the exact time, but at least the day … and then to get the validation ask them if they thought about you at a particular time and see if they picked up your signals …

So, once again, the key here is awareness …

Another thing to become aware of is auras … An Aura is a field of energy … and if you pay close attention, you can see the field of energy around most people and things … So, you can practice this by even looking at your own hands, allowing your eyes to get a little blurry, which is sort of a trance hypnotic state and then you may notice an outline of maybe white or another color around your hands … you can also see this around your animals if you have any, or plants, other people, objects in nature, or even the furniture in your house …

You'll notice that not only can you see this energy, but you can feel it too … If you take your hands for example, and hold them close together about one inch apart, you will feel a warmth emanating from your hands … and if you slowly pull them further and further apart you can see or feel this energy as far as two feet apart … That is because the energy within our body does not stop at our skin, where we can see with the naked eye … this energy surrounds our bodies for quite a ways beyond what we can see … and you can even tune into this energy and begin to see the energy … and while the energy does fade out at a certain point … it really doesn't come to a distinct end … meaning, that our energy is commingling with the energy in the atmosphere and every person with whom we encounter … And so at this level … the atomic level, we are virtually all connected … so, it stands to reason why we really can intuitively feel another persons feelings, and even tune into the thoughts that they have … we influence people with our thoughts and with our feelings …

Becoming more perceptive to all the things that exist in your awareness and then going beyond that is what becoming intuitive is all about …

Of course keeping an open mind is equally important … when you first begin developing intuition, you may wonder, "Am I just making it up?" or chalk up your experiences to your imagination. One of the most important things to understand here is that just because a thing is in the imagination does not mean that it does not exist.

This thing called imagination seems to get a bad rap, especially in your formidable years as a child, in hearing such things as, Oh, it was only your imagination. It's interesting to notice though, how as a child gets older they seem to become ashamed of using their imagination and it eventually it ceases all together. On the other hand, every great discovery that has ever been created was created first in the imagination … And I'll quote Einstein, who said: Imagination is more important than Knowledge.

So, do not discount this powerful resource of information, your imagination is a big key to your success in your psychic work … eventually, you will be able to trust the instincts that come from your imagination … you will be able to validate your experiences … and ultimately your imagination will work for you the way it did when you were a child and you will be more available to these experiences …  Terry Everson  www.fortsmithhypnosis.com

 

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Hypnosis for diabetes

 
 
Fort Smith Hypnosis
 
 
 
Hypnosis for diabetes
 
 
· Compliance – In many cases, the patient is non-compliant to his doctor’s plan for a healthier lifestyle. With hypnosis and self-hypnosis techniques, we can tap directly into the subconscious mind and reprogram the patient’s thought process to follow the doctor’s orders. The patient begins to eat better, exercise more, lose weight and ultimately get in control of his diabetes.

  • · Less Stress and More Relaxation – Controlling anxiety and stress is important in managing diabetes. Hypnosis is one of the best ways to reduce stress and increase relaxation. In fact, hypnosis is nothing more than a very deep state of relaxation, and relaxation plays an integral role in better health.

  • · Mind Games with The Pancreas – Under hypnosis, the therapist can tap the subconscious and offer suggestions for the body to produce the proper levels of insulin. This might not work for everyone, but the power of the mind has the ability to heal many common ailments and diseases in the human body. Similar strategies have been used to help mothers produce breast milk, or to alleviate pain and allow mothers to have a natural childbirth, for example.

  • · Reduces Depression and Emotional Eating – Studies show that people with diabetes are at an increased risk for depression, which can lead to emotional eating and make it more difficult to manage insulin levels. Hypnosis can increase self-confidence, improve the quality of sleep and improve the belief about a brighter future, thereby reducing depression and emotional eating and helping the patient control his diabetes and overall mental health.

  • · Breaks The Cycle of Bad Habits – Hypnosis can reverse the cycle of habitual negative behaviors that lead to diabetes like overeating, snacking on sweets, being dormant and more. The power of suggestion and visualization can eliminate destructive habits and literally reprogram the subconscious to want to make better and healthier choices.
  • Terry Everson  Fort Smith Hypnosis  www.fortsmithhypnosis.com

Friday, February 7, 2014

Athletic performance

Fort Smith Hypnosis
  
Athletic Performance


 
Hypnosis has been a useful tool for athletes for many generations.  Whether you're a professional, or wanting to improve your tennis serve for weekend tournaments, hypnosis can be offer many options for improved mind-body performance and coordination. Anything that's a part of your daily ritual affects how you perform in your chosen sport or activity.  By learning about what personally motivates your peak performance, is how working with the unconscious mind can be of most benefit.  This is where meditation can be especially powerful when visualizing a victorious outcome, or improvement in any physical goal. Most successful people in sports or physical fitness will tell you the key element in their suburb performances lies in their ability to visualize the event.  Runners will visualize a better time, martial artists will visualize faster more powerful punches and kicks, skiers will visualize moving through a course with ultimate ease and grace. 
Setting A Realistic Goal


The best formula for making improvements in your game or activity, is having a clear insight into "where you are" at the present time physically.  Always keep in mind that a stride toward an objective is most effective when knowing what your full potential is now.  Hypnosis in sports is based on training your ability to consistently engage in a daily structured regiment that will result in a higher level of performance. The short term benefit of hypnosis, is a renewed enthusiasm that results in a visualized outcome, based on improvement for the next event. Of course, the long term benefit of hypnosis along with meditation, is the empowerment of a new daily structured training discipline.


Monday, February 3, 2014

Hypnosis for improved concentration

 
 
Fort Smith Hypnosis
 
 
 
Hypnosis for improved concentration
Lack of concentration affects all kinds of people. The symptoms are hard to ignore – rather than focus on the matter in hand, you regularly daydream and drift away to escape from whatever you’re doing. You’re easily distracted and avoid tasks that require a lot of thought or focus. Instead you’ve a ‘grasshopper mind’, jumping from one thing to another. Often your memory is unreliable, as is your sense of time and inability to organize yourself properly.
 Advanced concentration abilities is the main reason for good performance level in school, work, or in other activities. Concentration is not possible when you experience emotional problems, physical pain, or loss of interest towards something. Improved concentration is attained with factors like dedication and interest to the assigned task, skill and ability about the certain task, balanced physical and mental state, and a suitable environment with fewer distractions. Balancing these factors and practicing to focus will enhance your concentration ability. The reason for concentration problems varies depending on the individuality of a person. Hypnotherapy can provide insight, guidance and direction to establish personal learning goals, boost self-esteem and create motivation. Enhanced learning and improved memory result.
In hypnosis, your brain’s ability to sustain concentration at increased levels will grow, not recede. Hypnosis serves as a very effective set of training wheels of sorts which can be slowly lifted, then finally removed as your ability to improve concentration and focus — or “steer straight” — gets better and better. Hypnosis is a safe and effective way to cleanse away unproductive old habits and negative emotional associations to clear the way for success.
Besides getting you into a state of total concentration, hypnotherapy also allows you extreme peace. This relaxation helps prepare your body for waking states of action by giving you deep levels of rejuvenation and confidence which greatly enhance your ability to carry out actions that require to improve concentration.
During hypnotherapy, you can still think logically but you also have access to the ‘software’ of your mind so that you can update instinctive emotional and physical responses. In fact the hypnotized subject (not the hypnotist) calls the shots. Hypnosis will give you more control in your own life because of what it enables you to do. This is a great way to improve concentration. Hypnosis is a safe environment to ‘try out’ new behaviors and emotional patterns before you experience them for real.      Terry Everson  http://www.fortsmithhypnosis.com/
 


Forensic hypnosis


Fort Smith Hypnosis
 
 
 
Forensic hypnosis is not a  power that one possesses to use some “golden lasso” to get a serial killer to confess.  Typically, a forensic hypnosis session involves a willing witness or victim.  “Willing,” meaning the person volunteering is motivated to tell the truth.  In investigations we find people that want to help, but at times they can have motives contrary to finding the truth.
 When searching for the truth, often investigators are confronted with untrustworthy or blank memories.  Investigators and detectives around the world have closed cases or placed them in the cold case file for want of information.  Many times, the case remains dormant while time passes and no new leads are found.  A new lead may come about, but often it is vague and hard to confirm.  When a forensic hypnotist is asked for assistance his or her goal is to refresh memory if possible.  Any information gained from a forensic hypnosis session must be corroborated by an independent investigation.   Strict rules exist involving the ethical standards of forensic hypnosis.  The professional forensic hypnotist should not misrepresent his/her credentials, training or experience.
 When conducting the pre-hypnosis interview and the forensic hypnosis session, the welfare of the witness or victim comes first.  No matter how crucial the information to be elicited may seem, the subject’s welfare is the primary focus.  If the hypno-investigator feels that the session may be harmful to the witness, the session may need to be postponed or cancelled entirely.  Rapport and trust are crucial to the relationship of the hypno-investigator and the subject undergoing hypnosis.  This may begin with talking about hobbies, likes and dislikes of the subject.  This can be important in assisting the hypno-investigator as to how to conduct the session and give him/her insight into the personality of the witness or victim. When speaking of confidentiality of witnesses Martin Reiser, Ed.D, the Father of Investigative Hypnosis states: “Information learned from an investigative hypnosis session has the same status as other investigative material.  Generally, this information should be kept in confidence with the usual legal and professional exceptions.” 
 All forensic hypnosis sessions should be recorded.  Marx Howell, retired Texas Department of Public Safety Inspector and premier authority on Investigative Hypnosis says the session should be recorded from “hello to goodbye.”  Whether it is audio, video, or both, the session should be fully documented.  It is a common practice to have both.  Many hypno-investigators have two video cameras operating during a session, in case of malfunction. 
Howell is adamant that all equipment should be tested and tested again to ensure everything is operable.  Another point Howell stresses is that everyone in the room should be identified by name, position, agency and purpose for being present during the interview.  Often, composite artists, lead case investigators and advocates for the victim may be present during the interview.  However, this is at the discretion of the lead investigator and the hypno-investigator at the time of the interview. 
 This is a brief overview of what is involved in the field of forensic hypnosis.  Later articles will include the “nuts and bolts” of what increases the chances of success.  Undoubtedly, the reader of future articles will find that hours of training, practice, experience and a multitude of considerations for each session must be addressed.  The purpose here is to merely inform the reader and give a cursory view of what is involved.
                               Terry Everson Fort Smith Hypnosis  http://www.fortsmithhypnosis.com/


Sunday, February 2, 2014

Fort Smith Hypnosis Facebook

 
Fort Smith Hypnosis
 
 


Hypnosis for insomnia

 
Fort Smith Hypnosis
 
 
 
Hypnosis for insomnia
 
 
We've all "been there." Tossing and turning, getting up, maybe reading a little, or watching a little TV. Then more tossing and turning, still unable to fall asleep and, finally, out of sheer exhaustion, we do "drop off."
Or we have occasionally fallen asleep and then, only two, three, or four hours later, woken up, unable to go back to sleep. We may even ask ourselves, "What's going on here?"
These two experiences are the more common forms of insomnia, i.e., 1) Inability to get to sleep. 2) Inability to maintain sleep. When either or both of these conditions become chronic, they can easily affect our ability to cope and our overall capacity to effectively function in our everyday activities.
The good news is, once we understand the real behavioral dynamics at work here, these conditions can be easily corrected.

How We Get To Sleep

Let's examine how a person who has no difficulty getting to sleep actually does it. Most people are unaware that someone who lies down in bed and "goes to sleep" actually moves through four different stages, the last of which is unconscious sleep.

The four stages of sleep are:

  1. Thinking
  2. Fantasy
  3. Hypnoidal
  4. Unconscious Sleep

Stage 1 - Thinking

When we get into bed, we start thinking about the events of the day or, possibly, what will happen tomorrow, or any myriad of things.

Stage 2 - Fantasy

Whether the person is consciously aware of it or not, his thoughts eventually turn to thoughts ASSOCIATED with relaxation. (Perhaps thought of a future vacation or activity in a place that person already associates with feeling relaxed.)

Stage 3 - Hypnoidal

As both the mind and the body relax, the muscles release tensions, and the person enters a light stage of hypnosis, known as hypnoidal. When a person enters this state of mind, he is still conscious, yet he also experiences time distortion and some amnesia. We actually must enter this hypnoidal stage because it is what enables us to attain the last stage. (No one, for instance, can honestly say, "Last night I fell asleep at 11:34 p.m. and 17 seconds.") It is the amnesia and time distortion aspects of the hypnoidal stage that make it impossible to identify the moment of transition from hypnoidal to unconscious sleep. We simply "drift" from one to the other.

Stage 4 - Unconscious Sleep

We are not consciously aware of anything going on around us.

People who have difficulty getting to sleep

This person has great difficulty transitioning from thinking to fantasy, or he simply stays in the thinking stage way too long; usually because he is worried about something or doesn't know how to control his own mind.
Now that we know about the four stages, the strategy for someone having difficulty initially getting to sleep is to skip the thinking stage altogether. Therefore, when the person gets into bed to go to sleep, he needs to begin visualizing or imagining the fantasy stage. Remember, the fantasy stage needs to be thoughts associated with relaxation.
One way to develop a fantasy stage is to reflect upon some real experience where you really were feeling relaxed. This could be when you were on a vacation or involved in some activity that you associate with relaxation. One of my clients visualizes riding north on Pacific Coast Highway, while another visualizes an imaginary round of golf on one of his favorite courses. Yet another visualizes being on a beach on the island of Maui. It is important that you use your own experience because you already associate that occasion with relaxation. It is most important that you stay in or maintain that fantasy thought process. That will eventually draw you into the hypnoidal stage and then into unconscious sleep.

Alternative method for getting to sleep

Yet another way of understanding how we get to sleep is to recognize that the combination of stages 2 (fantasy) and 3 (hypnoidal) result in the person actually hypnotizing himself. A person may not be consciously aware that that is actually what he is doing, but, in fact, it is.

How to use Self-Hypnosis to get to sleep

Self-hypnosis (like meditation) is possible because of two Dominant Laws of Suggestibility. (These laws of suggestibility, of which there are five, are literally how we learn everything.) The Laws of Association and Repetition are what make self-hypnosis possible.

Hypnotizing Yourself

Step One is to make sure your body is relaxed. Relaxation occurs when there is an absence of tension in the muscles. A good technique to accomplish this is to sequentially tense and release the muscles in the different areas of your body. Starting with the area of the feet up through the knees, first tense, then release the tension. Next, concentrate on the thighs through the hips, again, tensing and releasing the tension. Then bring your focus to your abdomen, chest, and shoulders, and do the same (tense and release), followed by the areas from your shoulders down through the arms and hands, all the way to your fingertips. Lastly, do not tense the mouth and jaw areas, but simply release any unnecessary tension there.
The next three steps replicate the physiological (body) changes experienced by anyone entering hypnosis. Take a really deep breath, hold it for a moment, then slowly exhale. (The brain and body require more oxygen to enter hypnosis.) Now create a swallow (you can do this by pretending to swallow something.) Next, roll your eyes up (eyelids closed, looking up into the forehead). This causes the eyelids to "flutter," replicating the Rapid Eye Movement (REM) of sleep.
There are several options for this next step. You could visualize or imagine your "fantasy" stage, as mentioned above, noting that it is very important to control your thoughts and stay in the visualization. Another option is to concentrate on your breathing and, only on the exhale, repeat a series of words, such as: peaceful, restful, sleep or beautiful, deep, restful, sleep.
With either option, you have by now, indeed, hypnotized yourself, and that state of mind will draw you into unconscious sleep.

People who have difficulty maintaining sleep

Let's ask a very important question: What would cause a person who has fallen asleep to suddenly be reawakened to consciousness? The usual culprit is something I call toxic worry. When we are worried about something that will occur the next day or about some important issue going on in our lives, it can interrupt our sleeping through the night. It is similar to children who are excited about Santa coming on Christmas Eve. They have difficulty getting to, and maintaining, sleep. I call it toxic worry because during those hours when it affects us, there is usually very little we can do, if anything, about the "issue" in question. No business is being conducted, people we may want to contact are probably sleeping and, at that time, when fatigued, we are not at our best.

Strategy for maintaining sleep

This strategy for maintaining sleep throughout the night is based on two elements of human behavior: 1) As we approach sleep, we become more "suggestible." Remember that to attain the unconscious sleep state, we must pass through the "hypnoidal" stage (of hypnosis). As we approach this stage, our mindset is one of receptiveness, or increased suggestibility. (For this reason, it is also a good idea to avoid depressing, fear-provoking news programs prior to sleep.) 2) There is one person in our lives to whom we are the most suggestible: ourselves. We talk ourselves into and out of things. Whatever we tell ourselves, we are more likely to follow through on.
Considering that toxic worry can trigger us out of unconscious sleep, a good strategy for maintaining sleep is to give ourselves a "suggestion" when getting into bed. Say to yourself (aloud or silently), "I refuse to worry during my sleep state. This kind of worrying accomplishes nothing. I deserve my peaceful, restful, sleep." When we tell ourselves that, we are certainly more likely to follow that suggestion (or advice).

Getting back to sleep

Sometimes, we do wake up in the middle of our sleep, whether it's for a trip to the bathroom, a pet disturbing us, a change in room temperature, a loud noise, a light going on or off, or toxic worry. An excellent strategy for getting back to sleep is to concentrate on your normal breathing. (What you are really doing is controlling your thoughts.) Become aware of how your normal inhale and exhale actually feel. This takes some practice, but once you concentrate on your normal inhale and exhale, begin repeating a series of words only on the exhale: peaceful, restful, sleep or peaceful, deep, restful, sleep.
What this repetition of words (silently or aloud) actually does is prevents you from going back into the thinking stage. You could also think of this repetition of words as a "substitute fantasy stage." With practice, you will most likely be back asleep within five to ten repetitions of the series of words.

Terry Everson Fort Smith Hypnosis   www.fortsmithhypnosis.com

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Hypnosis for self confidence

 
Fort Smith Hypnosis
 
 
Hypnosis for self confidence and improved self image
 
 
Hypnosis is a powerful tool that communicates with your subconscious mind and replaces your negative self doubts and beliefs with more positive thoughts that help you see how capable you really are.  The possibilities are endless when your confidence soars.
By working with a professional hypnotherapist, you can make profound differences in the way you approach life.  You will seize the bull by the horns and take charge of your life.  Your shyness and fears will dissipate as you become stronger and more confident. 
Hypnosis is an empowering tool that will help you grow.  It has been proven to be an effective self help instrument that positively changes lives.  You can take advantage of this help and use it in your life.  It doesn’t get any easier to make such immense changes in your life.  You can make your self confidence fly and enjoy your life to its fullest.  Terry Everson Fort Smith Hypnosis  http://www.fortsmithhypnosis.com/


Friday, January 31, 2014

Hypnosis for memory improvement

 
Fort Smith Hypnosis
 
 
Hypnosis for memory improvement
 
 
One of the best ways to improve memory is through hypnosis. This is because your brain registers an event, thought, or feeling which is then retained in the subconscious, where it is stored until it is retrieved. Your subconscious retains, or stores everything you have ever experienced, even things that might not have seemed important. Your subconscious is like one big data server, housing all the information of everything you have seen, felt, or thought. Even so, sometimes we are unable to remember something. This is where hypnosis comes in.
When you can't recall something, like where you put something important, or a memory that seems forgotten, hypnosis can help you access where this data is stored. Sometimes we can't remember something because our subconscious has blocked our memory of it, and sometimes we can't recall something because we just can't concentrate deep enough to retrieve it.
Through various hypnosis techniques, a certified hypnotist can identify and remove any blocks in our subconscious, and then replace those blocks with truthful statements that prevent the subconscious from re-blocking it. Your hypnotist is also able to reprogram how the subconscious retains information, kind of like cleaning out a messy filing cabinet, or defragmenting our internal data servers, making your memories more accessible.
Hypnosis to Improve Memory
If you have ever driven yourself crazy looking for a misplaced item, or if you can't remember the name of the person you just met earlier in the day, you know that these kinds of struggles can be extremely frustrating.
One of the best ways to improve how you retain information is to ensure you have a clear retrieval system. Through hypnosis, your hypnotist can put you in a hypnotic state that quiets your brain, eliminates distractions, and heightens your focus on specific areas in the subconscious. This enables you to retrieve that specific memory.
For example, maybe you put the combination code for your new wall safe in a place where it would never be discovered. However, in time, you forget where that hiding place is. Your hypnotist can quiet your mind, and help your subconscious focus on the day when you hid the combination. By asking you a series of questions pertaining to that specific day and time, while your brain is in a highly focused state, you will be able to remember where the combination is. Hypnosis helps you find misplaced items, or retrieve seemingly forgotten memories, and enhances your retention and retrieval processes.
Sometimes we cannot recall simple yet important things like holiday or anniversaries because our subconscious has connected them with a hurtful or upsetting event from your past. In this case, no matter how hard we try, we just can't remember what we have forgotten.
During hypnosis, your hypnotist can remove whatever blocks are in the way of the retrieval process by allowing your brain to recognize that the pain or frustration of the past has no place in what's going on today. This allows your subconscious to put distance between that event and what it is that you are trying to remember. Once your subconscious is unlocked through hypnosis, your memory will improve.
Terry Everson Fort Smith Hypnosis  www.fortsmithhypnosis.com
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Thursday, January 30, 2014

Hypnosis for anger

 
Fort Smith Hypnosis
 

Hypnosis for anger management

Hypnosis induces a state of inner calm and wellbeing.  When a heightened state of emotion like rage, we lose our ability to reason.  How many times have noticed when angry that your ability to see things clearly is impaired, how all you can feel is the injustice to you.
Learning how to use hypnosis gives you an undercurrent of relaxation in all situations.  You can still feel anger but not to the explosive extent of before because you can recognize the signs and know that when you are calmer and more relaxed, you can think more clearly – being aware of other people’s body language and in fact, you will notice how solution focused you have become.  Your ability to be more objective and therefore, rational is very pronounced.
This can be evident after the first session, this sense of control over your anger.  NLP is used to build the visualization – how do you look, how do you feel? What does this mean to you?  What does it mean to remain the same?  Initially it is about managing the anger and you and as you develop your skills, you find yourself developing into a more centered and calmer person.  

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Hypnosis for weight loss

 
Fort Smith Hypnosis
 
 
 

Weight Management Through Hypnosis
The essential rule of thumb for weight loss in the long term, is a consistent  program that WORKS.   Not only will hypnosis help the body burn calories faster and speed the metabolism, but it also programs the unconscious mind to do all the right things necessary to achieve results.  Eating habits, exercise, motivation, and the long term objective of managing the weight for life, once the desired weight is reached.  Ultimately, physical results come by way of a non conflicting decision to make the changes necessary to reach your goal.  Once a person chooses hypnosis, they have come to an agreement that the answer to their weight management exists in their INNER ability to make a lifetime decision.  
How Hypnosis Can  Provide Your Answer To Lifelong Weight Control. 
My personal goal for all my clients is to reach a desired weight  by unlocking your individual potential.  Since you are a unique person, the right therapy that will fit into your lifestyle is the most important goal.  Three things have to happen in your life in order for your weight management changes to occur.  The right program supported by the right mental process, the right choice in physical activity, and the right long term strategy for lifelong results.  Once you have made a conscious decision to make the appropriate choices,  my hypnosis sessions with provide you the added benefit of integrating your unconscious  with your true will.

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

 
hypnosis Fort Smith
 
 
Hypnosis and stress
 
Hypnosis is perhaps one of the least understood therapeutic tools in use. While most people think of hypnosis as a way to get somebody to bark like a dog at the snap of your fingers or take off their clothes when you say the work ‘stupendous’, hypnosis can be a valuable tool in helping people overcome fears, withstand pain, or, yes, even reduce stress in their lives.
Contrary to popular belief, you cannot be hypnotized without your consent or awareness. You can, however, be hypnotized by a trained professional whom you trust, to more easily achieve goals you set for yourself. Even better, you can save time and money and learn to hypnotize yourself using your own voice or even just your thoughts, a practice known as ‘self-hypnosis.

How Does Hypnosis Work?:

Hypnosis can be used for stress management in two ways: First, you can use hypnosis to get into a deeply relaxed state, fighting tension and triggering your relaxation response. This will help to prevent health problems due to chronic stress.
Second, hypnosis can also help you achieve various healthy lifestyle changes that can reduce the amount of stress you encounter in your life. For example, you can hypnotize yourself to stick to an exercise program, keep your home less cluttered, feel more confident setting boundaries with others, etc.
In this same vein, you can also effectively use hypnosis to help overcome any negative habits you’ve been using to cope with stress, like smoking or compulsive eating.

What's Involved With Hypnosis?:

The process of hypnosis involves entering a trance, or a deeply relaxed, but focused state (like that of daydreaming or meditation), and making suggestions for your subconscious mind to accept. You can go to a trained professional for hypnotherapy, and they will talk you through it. Or, you can employ the use of books, videos, or even short articles to learn what’s involved, and achieve effective results at home.

What Are The Benefits Of Hypnosis?:

Hypnosis is an extremely versatile tool that can be used for everything from simple relaxation to pain management in childbirth. (I can personally attest to this!) It’s easy to do, can be quite inexpensive, and the results are lasting. There are no potential negative side effects, and it can give multiple benefits at the same time.

How Do Hypnosis and Self-Hypnosis Compare To Other Stress Reduction Methods?:

Like meditation, hypnosis does require more focus and practice than techniques like simple exercise or the use of medications and herbal treatments, and hypnosis also requires some training, or the help of a trained professional. However, hypnosis may be a preferable option for those with physical limitations that make exercise like yoga more difficult. There are no potential negative side effects, like with some medications or herbal remedies. Also, few other techniques can offer such a wide variety of benefits.With training and practice, virtually anyone can use hypnosis to some degree of success, and experience the many benefits this technique has to offer.

Hypnosis for stress

 
 
Fort Smith Hypnosis
 
 
 
Hypnosis is perhaps one of the least understood therapeutic tools in use. While most people think of hypnosis as a way to get somebody to bark like a dog at the snap of your fingers or take off their clothes when you say the work ‘stupendous’, hypnosis can be a valuable tool in helping people overcome fears, withstand pain, or, yes, even reduce stress in their lives.
Contrary to popular belief, you cannot be hypnotized without your consent or awareness. You can, however, be hypnotized by a trained professional whom you trust, to more easily achieve goals you set for yourself. Even better, you can save time and money and learn to hypnotize yourself using your own voice or even just your thoughts, a practice known as ‘self-hypnosis’.

How Does Hypnosis Work?:

Hypnosis can be used for stress management in two ways: First, you can use hypnosis to get into a deeply relaxed state, fighting tension and triggering your relaxation response. This will help to prevent health problems due to chronic stress.
Second, hypnosis can also help you achieve various healthy lifestyle changes that can reduce the amount of stress you encounter in your life. For example, you can hypnotize yourself to stick to an exercise program, keep your home less cluttered, feel more confident setting boundaries with others, etc.
In this same vein, you can also effectively use hypnosis to help overcome any negative habits you’ve been using to cope with stress, like smoking or compulsive eating.

What's Involved With Hypnosis?:

The process of hypnosis involves entering a trance, or a deeply relaxed, but focused state (like that of daydreaming or meditation), and making suggestions for your subconscious mind to accept. You can go to a trained professional for hypnotherapy, and they will talk you through it. Or, you can employ the use of books, videos, or even short articles to learn what’s involved, and achieve effective results at home.

What Are The Benefits Of Hypnosis?:

Hypnosis is an extremely versatile tool that can be used for everything from simple relaxation to pain management in childbirth. (I can personally attest to this!) It’s easy to do, can be quite inexpensive, and the results are lasting. There are no potential negative side effects, and it can give multiple benefits at the same time.

What Are the Drawbacks of Hypnosis?:

Hypnosis isn’t for everyone. Some people have trouble getting past their initial prejudices about the practice in general, and some have a more difficult time getting into the trancelike state required for hypnotic suggestions to become deeply embedded. Others find that they simply can’t find the time or the focus, and have an easier time with other stress-management techniques.

How Do Hypnosis and Self-Hypnosis Compare To Other Stress Reduction Methods?:

Like meditation, hypnosis does require more focus and practice than techniques like simple exercise or the use of medications and herbal treatments, and hypnosis also requires some training, or the help of a trained professional. However, hypnosis may be a preferable option for those with physical limitations that make exercise like yoga more difficult. There are no potential negative side effects, like with some medications or herbal remedies. Also, few other techniques can offer such a wide variety of benefits.With training and practice, virtually anyone can use hypnosis to some degree of success, and experience the many benefits this technique has to offer.

Hypnosis and pain management

 
 
Fort Smith Hypnosis
 
 
Hypnosis and pain management
 
Stress and pain are intimately related. When being in pain causes stress or being stressed worsens pain, psychological therapies -- including hypnosis, meditation, and relaxation -- may help break the cycle.
For pain therapists, these treatments, which focus on the relationship between the mind and body, are considered mainstream. For other health professionals, they may be considered alternative or complementary therapies. Regardless of how they are labeled, there is evidence that for many people they work.

If you're considering trying one of these approaches to pain relief, here's what you need to know:
Hypnosis
For many, hypnosis brings to mind a parlor game or nightclub act, where a man with a swinging watch gets volunteers to walk like a chicken or bark like a dog. But clinical, or medical hypnosis is more than fun and games. It is an altered state of awareness used by licensed therapists to treat psychological or physical problems.
During hypnosis, the conscious part of the brain is temporarily tuned out as the person focuses on relaxation and lets go of distracting thoughts. The American Society of Clinical Hypnotists likens hypnosis to using a magnifying glass to focus the rays of the sun and make them more powerful. When our minds are concentrated and focused, we are able to use them more powerfully. When hypnotized, a person may experience physiologic changes, such as a slowing of the pulse and respiration, and an increase in alpha brain waves. The person may also become more open to specific suggestions and goals, such as reducing pain. In the post-suggestion phase, the therapist reinforces continued use of the new behavior.
 
Benefits of Hypnosis
Research has shown medical hypnosis to be helpful for acute and chronic pain. In 1996, a panel of the National Institutes of Health found hypnosis to be effective in easing cancer pain. More recent studies have demonstrated its effectiveness for pain related to burns, cancer, and rheumatoid arthritis and reduction of anxiety associated with surgery. An analysis of 18 studies by researchers at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York revealed moderate to large pain-relieving effects from hypnosis, supporting the effectiveness of hypnotic techniques for pain management.

 
 
Fort Smith Hypnosis
 
 
 
Stress and pain are intimately related. When being in pain causes stress or being stressed worsens pain, psychological therapies -- including hypnosis, meditation, and relaxation -- may help break the cycle.
For pain therapists, these treatments, which focus on the relationship between the mind and body, are considered mainstream. For other health professionals, they may be considered alternative or complementary therapies. Regardless of how they are labeled, there is evidence that for many people they work.

Recommended Related to Pain Management

The back pain may seem like arthritis or the aches and pains of aging. People often think it's a disc problem or muscle strain. Many people don't even get examined because either they -- or their family members -- don't realize what the problem is. But often back pain among older adults is caused by a spinal compression fracture. Only your doctor can diagnose a spinal compression fracture. To determine what's wrong, your doctor may ask questions such as: How long have you had the back pain? ...
If you're considering trying one of these approaches to pain relief, here's what you need to know:

Hypnosis

For many, hypnosis brings to mind a parlor game or nightclub act, where a man with a swinging watch gets volunteers to walk like a chicken or bark like a dog. But clinical, or medical hypnosis is more than fun and games. It is an altered state of awareness used by licensed therapists to treat psychological or physical problems.
During hypnosis, the conscious part of the brain is temporarily tuned out as the person focuses on relaxation and lets go of distracting thoughts. The American Society of Clinical Hypnotists likens hypnosis to using a magnifying glass to focus the rays of the sun and make them more powerful. When our minds are concentrated and focused, we are able to use them more powerfully. When hypnotized, a person may experience physiologic changes, such as a slowing of the pulse and respiration, and an increase in alpha brain waves. The person may also become more open to specific suggestions and goals, such as reducing pain. In the post-suggestion phase, the therapist reinforces continued use of the new behavior.

 

Benefits of Hypnosis

Research has shown medical hypnosis to be helpful for acute and chronic pain. In 1996, a panel of the National Institutes of Health found hypnosis to be effective in easing cancer pain. More recent studies have demonstrated its effectiveness for pain related to burns, cancer, and rheumatoid arthritis and reduction of anxietyy associated with surgery. An analysis of 18 studies by researchers at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York revealed moderate to large pain-relieving effects from hypnosis, supporting the effectiveness of hypnotic techniques for pain management.

Saturday, January 25, 2014

Hypnosis and PTSD

 
Fort Smith Hypnosis
 
 
Hypnosis And PTSD

Hypnotherapy for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

As well as undergoing the treatment recommended by their health care provider, some PTSD sufferers also find that hypnotherapy treatment is beneficial. Hypnosis is a tool to ease stress in the mind and body. This benefit alone serves as an added resource for anyone seeking help with this condition. Make sure you consult with your doctor before seeking hypnosis, or any other therapy outside of your medical treatment.
The aim of hypnotherapy is to unlock stored emotion so that the trauma can be revisited and explored from a different perspective.
There are various forms of hypnotherapy a practitioner may use and in order to determine which is the most suitable for you, a practitioner will usually begin by performing an assessment of your personal circumstances.
In most cases practitioners will tend to use cognitive hypnotherapy or analytical hypnotherapy, both of which function on a deeper level than suggestion hypnotherapy and are able to work with the unconscious mind so that negative beliefs which were built up during the trauma can be explored and alleviated.
A hypnotherapy practitioner will treat you and your problems with sensitivity and understanding and will discuss and explain any decisions regarding you treatment plan with you thoroughly before treatment begins or any changes are implemented.
If you would like to find out more about how I can help you through  hypnotherapy could to over come post-traumatic stress disorder, go to the contact link of my page.  www.fortsmithhypnosis.com

Friday, January 24, 2014

Hypnosis for drug addiction

 
 
Fort Smith Hypnosis
 
 
 
 
Hypnosis for Drug Addiction
To overcome drug addiction, a person needs to have the full control of his/her conscious and subconscious mind. Unfortunately, drug addiction tends to alter the mind. If you’re planning to use your will power to overcome an addiction to drugs, you know that will power may be severely compromised.
This is why hypnosis works. Hypnosis relaxes the body and eases the mind into a pleasant, relaxed, altered state. Within this state, the mind is then able to take “suggestions.” successfully. These suggestions can encourage and motivate you when your rational mind cannot encourage and motivate itself.
Depending on the type and severity of your addiction, you may need to seek other help and may have already. Most of the clients that use Hypnosis for addiction it’s their next step after rehab. If you are a smoker, for instance, you may well be able to listen to self-hypnosis MP3 and quit smoking without any other assistance. If you are addicted to alcohol or pain pills, you may have been or will need to enter treatment, visit a trained Hypnotherapist in person, and join a 12 step program.   http://www.fortsmithhypnosis.com


Thursday, January 23, 2014

Hypnosis and past life regression

 
Fort Smith Hypnosis
 
 
 
 

PAST LIFE REGRESSION THERAPY

When considering a physical, emotional or spiritual healing modality, it’s important to understand its purposes as well the healing effects and limitations in its ability to move you forward in your health goals. This brief article is designed to give the reader a basic overview of Past Life Therapy.
A Past Life Regression is not a parlor trick and has serious implications about how we live our lives. It is deep work on the unconscious template that often dictates our reactions to situations, people we choose to partner with and our physical health and habits. With this in mind, when doing a past life regression, it is important that you work with an experienced professional who can assist you with issues that may arise following your regression.
With that caveat, there are very few healing modalities that can offer the physical and emotional healing and insight that can be had through past life therapy. We are, as individuals, far more than we understand ourselves to be in this present lifetime. I believe that the numbers of previous life experiences that we have had are countless. Furthermore, my belief follows that we continue in an infinite number of future lives in order to realize who we are. As we experience, we continue to grow, change and become as we evolve into something more wonderful and wise than we can imagine. Past Life Regression is an important tool for us to understand what we (as a soul) have been becoming which assists us in moving forward on our path toward God.
Are Past Lives Real?
Most major religions have reincarnation as a basic tenant. Early Christians believed in past lives as well until the Catholic Church banned it as a heretical offense, nowhere in the Bible is reincarnation denied as a spiritual reality. Because of this, the tradition of reincarnation in the west is new and takes an approach that often leads to a more surface understanding. We want to know if we’ve been here before, who we’ve been and maybe to see if we were some famous past-life figure. Often times, the deep spiritual meaning as well as the importance and effect that on our current life situations are often overlooked.
Hindu tradition views reincarnation as a spiritual prison where we keep going around an endless circle of lives and reincarnation until we reach enlightenment. This enlightenment can be reached at any moment ending the cycle of incarnations. In Buddhism, incarnations are a way of development of the soul and the realization that there is no me/you or mine/yours. We come together in the realization that we are all one with everything. Obviously, these are simple statements for dynamic religions that have been in practice for thousands of years.
Therapist’s Point of View
While Past Life Therapists view reincarnation as a spiritual reality, this view is of secondary importance in a Past Life Regression. Primarily, the importance is the material that surfaces from the unconscious mind that is acting on the inner and outer life of the client. If, for instance, a client has discovers that she was Jesus in a past life, the work around that manifestation is on the Christ within and the healing of that aspect of the self. So, if a client has an “unlikely” past life experience, it is necessary to treat that as absolutely real in order to get the full benefits of the regression. The reason for this is simple. Whether you were Christ, or whether you deeply identify with that figure, your unconscious mind has brought this aspect of you to your attention. Perhaps the client who regresses to a Christ life needs to bring that energy into his life. It is possible that the client thinks about herself as “too small”, by bringing up the possibility that she may have been Christ in a past life may be a way to get the client to think about herself in a larger capacity. Finally, it may be possible that this person was Christ. In getting the most out of the regression, do not judge your experience, just go with it and see what is uncovered about yourself.

Why do a Past Life Regression?

In my practice, I have found that Past Life Regressions are particularly valuable when dealing with issues that have no “rational” cause. Many people find healing with individuals that they are in conflict with at work, in social circles and in their families. These conflicts all have the quality of “unsolvability” meaning that there is no outward cause of the conflict but rather the feeling that “there is just something about that person I don’t understand”.
I find regressions are particularly helpful in solving relationship problems with partners, parents and family members because of the tendency to continue to share life experiences with these primary people.I have also noticed that people with phobias tend to do well with Past Life Regressions.
Fear of heights, fear of flying, fear of water, etc. all seem to have roots in Past Life Traumas and I have found that this modality is especially effective in these cases.
There is also remarkable evidence both in my practice and the literature that chronic somatic illnesses can be relieved and often times cured through the use of Past Life Regressions. Our bodies are a reflection of our conscious and unconscious mind. As a result, certain traumas that occur in a previous life can manifest physical symptoms in this life.
I had a client named “Beth” who had problems with headaches and dizziness. Tests and MRI’s showed no physical cause. In her regression, she was “blindsided” with a blunt object while asleep in a teepee during a raid on her village. After the regression, her head was in pain and she was extremely dizzy for about a half an hour. When she regained her balance and her head cleared, she was able to go home. She reported to me that her headaches were cleared.
While Past Life Regressions can have impressive curative effects on somatic illnesses, it is important for such people to continue their allopathic care and to realize that it is important to heal the body as well as the mind and spirit.
How to Approach a Past Life Regression
In approaching any “transpersonal therapy” it is important to have a specific intention. While many people initially want to “just be open” to whatever they might experience, it has been my experience that we just have so much going on that an intention offers us a context in which we can consciously understand our experience.
In approaching a regression and a new client, I never know what that client is going to see or why spirit has brought them to me in the first place. An intention allows the client a framework in which to draw conclusions and gain insights into themselves. Many people are concerned that they will limit what could be obtained, my experience is that spirit never disappoints or limits us. The intention is for us, not spirit. You will experience what spirit wants you to experience.
My advice then is to have an intention, then be open to the possibilities. “This or something better” is a prayer that is often said in the new thought community and a good approach to regression therapy.
What kind of intentions work well? Anything that is problematic is really best. Specific questions about life circumstances, relationships, phobias or illnesses will all bring good results. Make sure that you keep it within the realm of your everyday life and always about you only. This will also help you see how truly spiritual your everyday life is. If you stay with things that you consider problematic, you’ll be able to see how you’ve played out your problems in the past and what you’re trying to accomplish in this lifetime.
Compulsion to Repeat
The compulsion to repeat offers a clinical explanation of why we live out the unfinished business of a past life. Jung wrote, “a complex arises where we have experienced failure in life.” Roger Woolger Ph.D. expands that phrase to “in any life”. This compulsion to repeat is the method by which we finish our unfinished business for when we repeat the behavior, we have the opportunity to change the outcome, thus finishing the business.
Past life therapy offers another way in which to finish business while learning the lessons. The client, after experiencing the failure of that particular life, is able to release the repressed emotions and see the situation from the paradigm of his current life. This view allows resolution with his past situation as well as assist him in finding other solutions, alleviating or dissipating the existential problem.
Often times, clients who have anorexia or bulimia find past lives of starvation. Also, the compulsion to repeat is often expressed by the opposite behavior. Roger Woolger noted “the number of concentration camp past lives that appear in the U.S. (can be expressed) with all its 24-hour grocery stores and fast food chains.”
I have found that many of my interests and talents come from past life experiences. My metaphysical, Gnostic and shamanic leanings seem to come from a past life as a medieval priest as well as a medicine woman in a tribe of American Indians. Both of these lives were violent and ended in predictable and deserved death in the former and tragic, Shakespearean death in the later. Many of the drives of service began with “setting right” the past. Understanding the meaning of the lives and letting go of the repressed material has cleared the picture of the direction that I am going in this lifetime.
What if I Get in Over My Head?
This is one of the two most commonly asked questions that I hear from clients that begin working with Past Life Regression. The unconscious mind’s “prime directive” is to protect the body and the psyche from harm, so you can rest assured that you will not experience anything that you cannot handle. This is one of the “fail safe” mechanisms built into human beings. Even when it feels difficult, know that you are ready for this experience. You are much wiser than you are consciously aware of.
We see this psychic prime directive working when discussing abuse. Often times, people do not remember their abuse as a defense mechanism allowing them to cope and survive in society. When one begins to remember abusive situations, they do not “get it all at once” but remember pieces and spend years reconstructing their childhood. To remember it all at once would be devastating to the individual.
The same is true of past life experiences. My experience tells me that people have been through torture, separation, war and abandonment both as the victim and the perpetrator. To remember all of this in present time would be absolutely overwhelming. In regression therapy, the goal is to remember just a little bit at a time, process it, and remember a little bit more.
Will this Work for Me?
There is some debate in the hypnosis community about who is hypnotizable and who is not. My experience is that a person who is willing to suspend what they think they know and are willing to allow themselves to sink into an altered state of consciousness are good candidates. My answer is yes provided that you’re willing to allow yourself to become deeply involved in your experience.
It’s like reading a book. While you are reading, you allow yourself to get into the flow of the action, become deeply involved with the characters in the story and often times draw pictures in your mind about what the characters might look like, their setting, perhaps what they’re feeling, etc. This is a form of hypnosis and if you can look at it that way, you will be very successful. You wouldn’t say, while reading this book, that this isn’t really happening, its just words on a page and my imagination is making it up. You become involved in the action and often get your other senses involved. This is what I find is most helpful for people doing regression work.
What Results Can I Expect?
Past Life Regression is one of the most effective psychological and transpersonal tools available and often saves many years of psychotherapy, however, nothing is a panacea and rarely does just one or two sessions solve a lifetime of problems and habits. People often notice profound changes after one or two regressions, but without continued work and follow-up, these changes tend to be short lived. Rarely does one past life hold the answer to all of our problems, nor does one regression cover all the subtleties and insights of a given life. Our past lives were lived in the same way that your present life is, with growth spurts, times of stagnation, moments of sorrow as well as joy.
Dedicated and consistent effort in your healing process provides the best results. In the case of regression therapy, you will find that a series of lives around this issue. Successful lives around particular problems can be accessed to give you more resources and energy to move forward, difficult and painful lives can be brought to closure and redirected, again to give you more energy and resources to your own personal search.   Fort Smith Hypnosis Fort Smith AR  www.fortsmithhypnosis.com