Hypnotherapy

Hypnotherapy is the use of hypnosis techniques for therapeutic purposes. The only requirement for achieving profound transformative results is that the person has a conscious desire to change or strong will to discover more.

 
 

Hypnosis itself is an altered state of consciousness involving an induced state of a combination of relaxation, concentration or awareness, and suggestion. In which deeper parts of the mind, the subconscious and sometimes superconscious and collective unconscious becomes accessible.

You can experience a trance-like hypnotic state every day for example:

Driving on a familiar route where you do not quite remember part of the journey, becoming totally immersed in an activity, watching a movie, yoga, playing a musical instrument, creating art, daydreaming or meditating.

Derived from the ancient Greek word ‘Hypnos’ meaning ‘sleep’, Hypnosis is actually a state between awake and asleep. In Greek Mythology, the God of Sleep was also known as Hypnos. Hypnosis dates back thousands of years and can be found in different eras across the world in one form or another, in ancient religious practices like fire walking and body piercing, mesmerism and magnetism and also in the pioneering of psychoanalysis.

 
  • Yes, provided a person has the ability to concentrate and relax, with a balanced psychological function. And as long as the person is willing, insusceptible people are simply not willing.

  • No. Hypnosis cannot detach the ego, if a client were given a suggestion that he or she did not agree with, they would either refuse, laugh, ignore or awaken. In stage hypnosis, the volunteers are usually under the influence of alcohol, and are there to relax and have a good time, therefore they are easily encouraged to act silly. It is true inhibitions are often reduced under hypnosis, But the seeker is more likely to experience their own inner character traits and motivations much more intensely.

  • No. If a person undergoing hypnotherapy wants to remember what happen under hypnosis, or have memories from the past, they will.  However, a certified Hypnotherapist can help a person transform a memory. The mind contains unconscious memories which generally are responsible for our decisions, attitudes, feelings and behaviors’.

“For the spirit is the life; the mind is the builder;

the physical is the result.”

Edgar CayceThe sleeping Prophet’ 262-28