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HYPNOSIS HISTORY
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Hypnosis throughout the years :

Just as medicine combines both art and science, so does hypnotherapy.
Although hypnosis has existed for hundreds, if not thousands of years...the modern medical use of hypnotherapy...as sanctioned by the American Medical Association...achieved its formal recognition in 1958.
The fascination and curiosity surrounding hypnosis has spanned over two hundred years. In an attempt to explain this incredible phenomenon, several theories emerged early on in this scientific quest, contributing to common misconceptions about hypnosis.

In the late 1700s, Franz Anton Mesmer believed that man could redistribute the quasi-magnetic fluid, existing in all humans, to bring about healing. Shortly after the rise of Mesmer's theory, James Braid, a Scottish surgeon working in Manchester, England coined the term "hypnosis".

Although the word "hypnosis" comes from the Greek word "sleep", the hypnotized individual is not unconscious, asleep or any other such thing. In fact while an individual is hypnotized he or she is more alert than ever.

After a session of hypnotherapy most clients express feelings of profound relaxation and peace. Hypnosis is a feeling that one must experience to fully appreciate.

During the 19th century, medical scientists attempted to establish a link between hypnosis and various pathological states. It was not until the late 1800s that theorists began to suggest that the subject controlled hypnosis.

In 1882, Hippolyte Bernheim, a professor of medicine at the University of Nancy, France put forth the idea that while under hypnosis all of the power resides in the patient. Once considered a technique involving the surrender of the subject to the will of the hypnotist, it is now understood that the full cooperation of the subject is required for an effective hypnotism.

By the 1920s psychologists, such as Yale Professor Clark L. Hull, conducted experimental investigations in hypnosis. Hull demystified the technique by proposing that hypnosis was essentially a normal part of human nature. The most important factor involved in hypnosis, Hull maintained, was the subject's imagination.

Recently, using the latest state-of-the-art brain monitoring system, Neuropsychologist, Pierre Rainville, from the University of Montreal, established that the brain experiences several physiological changes while under hypnosis, namely the production of mental images, sustained attention and relaxation.

Modern hypnosis has evolved into a well-respected practice and today it is used by certified hypnotherapists, doctors, psychologists and law enforcement. This technique is utilized in a variety of ways, for instance, pain management, stress-related disorders, anesthesia, psychotherapy and memory recall. It is also used the management of a wide range of phobic, anxiety and other psychological disorders.

Hypnotherapy is completely safe and helpful. It is often used in the control of pain, cancer treatments, stress disorders and in cases where other medical practices would be inadvisable, such as the anesthetic of choice with patients with severe heart disease.
Hypnotherapy is also very useful in areas where there are few other effective medical treatments...other than drugs...such as stress reduction, sexual problems, phobias, insomnia, smoking cessation, weight loss and lack of motivation. Hypnotherapy is useful in areas of law, sometimes being the only way vital pieces of evidence are discovered.
If you, or you doctor, ever thought that your problem is "all in your head", then hypnotherapy may be your ideal solution. If your mind created your problem, then your mind can also be used to make you well.
The only people who cannot be hypnotized to a depth that will be helpful are the feeble-minded, the insane and the senile. Also very young children who have not yet developed sufficient mind power cannot be hypnotized...since it does take mind power to use hypnosis.
Hypnotherapy usually saves a client time. As you know, time is money. People who can be helped by hypnotherapy will see changes rapidly. Of course, the client should be strongly motivated and have a strong desire to change.


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