Search Results Archives: July 2012

Repression Release and Healing in Hypno-Psychotherapy


Denied Access by Clara Nathan

Mind Hijack

Conscious thought is regularly hijacked by associations that capture the mind and hold it hostage in the past. While in the process of thinking we automatically find our thoughts pulled to past events or imagined future results. Thoughts that provoke fear and anger always lead us back to the past while worry and anxiety keep us stuck in the future. We spend most of our waking day in the past or the future remembering what has already happened and no longer exists or expecting something to happen that has not yet occurred. As a result, the time we spend fully in the present moment is minimal and this is the main reason why we are unable to correct this debilitating condition and heal ourselves without the assistance of a psychotherapist.

Action is Unconsciously Motivated

Imagine you are an observer watching a woman walking on the pavement. She was bitten by a dog when she was a child but you are not aware of this. You see her cross the street as she is approached by a dog and its owner.

Unless you knew that the woman had been bitten by a dog when she was a child you probably wouldn’t think anything more of her action to cross the road. As an observer you can only observe her action but not the thinking behind the reason why she crossed the road. I say the thinking behind the cause of her action because it is, strictly speaking, not her thinking that caused her to cross the road but her feelings and emotions. Let me explain … the sight of the dog transports the woman back in time to the incident when she was bitten by the dog as a child. She is not consciously aware of this regression because it has become an unconscious association and all she is consciously aware of are the emotions associated with the experience of being bitten. It is these feelings from the past that cause her to cross the road. She crosses the road to avoid a dog that is probably long since dead and more importantly escape the uncomfortable feelings she has buried and wants kept buried. To an observer who knows her past it would appear that she is only avoiding the dog.

Subconscious Strategies to Avoid Pain

We do things to seek pleasure and avoid pain, physical and emotional and this is one of the reasons why people drink excessively and over eat. Someone who drinks alcohol excessively or over eats has learned to use these actions as strategies to avoid uncomfortable feelings but strategies do not solve the problem they help manage the problem that never goes away.

Repression

The buried feelings I refer to in this article are the feelings felt at the the time a person experiences a trauma such as a dog bite and are called repressions. If you think back to your childhood you can remember a number of incidents that traumatised you but more difficult to consciously recollect are the feelings associated with the incident. The reason for this is that they have been filed in the subconscious and are then triggered every time it looks like you are about to experience a similar incident. This all happens below the level of your conscious awareness so you have no conscious control over your spontaneous reaction.

Hypnotised by Trauma

When a repression is triggered our conscious analytical or thinking mind is suspended and we become hypnotised. We are unable to think and our mind is in fact captured by an event that happened in the past and we are stuck there while the old video plays out below the level of our conscious awareness. It is only after the video of the past event has played out that we regain access to our conscious thinking mind but until then we are at the mercy of our repressions. We often wonder later why we were unable to think straight or take more effective action in a particular situation and many never realise that they are not in control during those times.

Hypno-Psychotherapy to Address the Emotional Root Cause

In Hypno-Psychotherapy, which is the therapy we provide at Setanta Hypnotherapy Clinic in Peel, Isle of Man, the client is given the opportunity to uncover the repressions that are responsible for their condition and ultimately release these repressions in a safe environment. Repression release results in spontaneous healing as the mind reclaims its thinking space and power to make conscious decisions in ways no longer determined by events in the past.

Video by Xavier and Mary Nathan Explaining Hypno-Analysis

To learn more about the subject of this article you might like to read the following articles:

Addressing the Emotional Root Cause of a Condition with Hypnotherapy and Psychotherapy

Using Hypnosis to Regain Your Freedom From the Past

Analytical Hypnotherapy

Hypnosis with Psychotherapy is a Remedy for Healing

Cure for Disease

Terence Watts on Clean Language in Hypno-Psychotherapy


Terence Watts

Terence Watts is the owner at The Essex Institute of Complementary Health and Sole Proprietor at Hypnosense. Terence has been a  practising Therapist since 1989. He has lectured extensively at home and abroad, published several books, written manuals and developed training courses for Hypnotherapists that are used all over the world. Following is an article written by Terence as guidance for therapists in their use of language before and during session. It also serves to help educate clients on what to expect of a trained professional. We are very grateful to Terence for giving us permission to post his article in our website blog

Clean Language by Terence Watts

Most therapists are trained, these days, to be sure to use only ‘clean language’ during their sessions – that is, never say anything or ask any question that might put an idea into their client’s mind. For instance, if a client is remembering ‘being in the park’, asking: ‘Who else was there?’ is not as ‘clean’ as: ‘Was there anybody else there?’

What escapes many, though, is that this determinedly non-leading approach should be used from the moment the client walks through the door, not just during the session itself. Everything you say from the moment a client arrives in your office will set up a train of thoughts in their mind so you might as well make sure the thoughts are directed towards a successful therapy! Even something like: “How’s work been this week?” might distract them from where you need them to be, while: “Tell me about your week,” is perfectly acceptable. Even if ‘work’ has been an issue, they might well have been going to tell you about something else. The golden rule is never say anything that points in a particular direction or towards a particular concept.

I sometimes say something like: “Tell me about the best and worst parts of your week – the worst part first.” Because they tell us about the ‘best bit’ last, it encourages them to look for where improvement has occurred in their life, rather than to see if nothing is changing. Another way is to ask: “What good things have happened for you this week?”. The foregoing statements are definitely better than: “What sort of week have you had?”. When you ask that sort of question, the natural human tendency to focus on problems will encourage them to tell you about miserable stuff – and that can lead them to thinking the therapy isn’t working…

Yes, it can be hard work, staying that middle ground of interest without influence (the influence, of course, comes during the session with any suggestion work you are using) but it can pay great dividends!

You can find out more about Terence by visiting his websites:

Hypnosense and  The Essex Institute of Complementary Health

Hypnosis to Stop Self-Sabotage


Self Conflict by Skyler Porter

Inner Conflict

Self- sabotage is the main reason why people fail to achieve what they set out to do. Unless we get out of our own way progress will always be difficult.  For every step we take forward we take three backwards.

Nobody deliberately sets out to sabotage themselves.  Self sabotage is a subconscious activity and evidence of the split mind. I am not suggesting that we are all schizophrenic but merely describing the human condition of inner conflict we all share.

Can’t Stop

There are many, many people who wake up every morning telling themselves that today is the day that they will definitely quit. Some wake up pledging never to smoke another cigarette, others promising that they will never drink or gamble away their hard earned money again and others wake up vowing never to lose their temper again. Each of these people wakes up every day making the same promises to themselves and breaking them at almost the same time of day, every day.

We all do things that we may not be happy about but keep doing them anyway but there is a big difference between the consequences of biting your nails or the inside of your mouth and smoking or drinking to excess! However, regardless of the behaviour these people all share the same frustration. They all fail to achieve the goal they set themselves every day.

Hypnosis to Break the Cycle

If you are one of these people who fall into this category then imagine if you could make a decision to do something and then just do it. This would require your conscious mind, the part that makes the decision, to be supported by the subconscious, the real power behind your life. Imagine making the decision to lose weight and just doing it! Imagine deciding to stop smoking and simply doing it! Imagine making a decision and not having to think about it anymore confident in the result you naturally expect. Hypnosis gets the conscious and subconscious to talk to each other. Hypnosis develops the all important connection between the conscious and subconscious mind which make your decisions manifest in your reality.

Hypno-Psychotherapy

Here at Setanta Hypnotherapy Clinic in Peel Isle of Man Xavier and Mary Nathan help people address this inner conflict using a combination of Hypnotherapy and Psychotherapy. Xavier and Mary have been successfully treating people for years at their private practice in Peel and doctors regularly refer their patients them. If you or your doctor agrees that your condition has an emotional root cause then Hypno-Psychotherapy may be your ideal solution. If your mind created the problem then doesn’t it make sense to conclude  that your mind can also be used to solve the problem?

By first resolving the inner conflict responsible for your self-sabotage your road to recovery becomes smooth and efficient.

To book an initial consultation free of charge call Xavier or Mary on 01624 842938

Links to Related Articles

Hypnosis to Create the Life you Truly Desire

New Year Resolution to Stop Smoking using Hypnotherapy

Conflicting Parts

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