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Hypnotherapy
Hypnosis vs. Hypnotherapy
What is the difference between hypnosis and hypnotherapy?
First of all, it helps to understand that the subconscious mind is like a machine in some respects. Using the techniques of Hypnosis, you can deliver an instruction to your subconscious such as "Don't smoke," and for a time you will stop smoking. However, we're not just machines: we're living beings motivated by needs.
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Self Hypnosis
"All hypnosis is self hypnosis." —Andrew Weil, M.D.
Wouldn't it be great to be able to access your own inner power anytime, anywhere? Self Hypnosis is a key to the treasure chest of your inner power. The techniques of self hypnosis help you gain ready access to the extremely powerful abilities of our subconscious mind.
The effectiveness of hypnosis has been touted recently in Newsweek ("Rethinking Hypnosis") and Discover Magazine ("Hypnosis Works"). The field of medicine, long reticent to accept hypnosis as a viable treatment modality, is now welcoming hypnosis and self-hypnosis as the panacea for everything from pain relief and anesthesia to relief from irritable bowel syndrome (IBS).
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Buddhism & Psychotherapy
The teachings of Buddhism add crucial insights to psychotherapeutic work. Primarily, Buddhism holds a supremely exalted view of the true nature of our consciousness and being. A therapist's basic assumptions and attitude about the nature of a human being profoundly affect the outcomes of his work with clients. If you have a limited view of what a human being is, you'll get limited results. If you have an exalted view of what a human being is, you can get glorious results.
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Buddhism, Hypnotherapy & NLP
I began my practice and study of Buddhism at the age of 20. While Buddhism is commonly called a religion, it's actually a science of mind. A religion is based on beliefs, while science strives through empirical data to arrive at an understanding of the true nature of existence. This latter definition most accurately describes the practice of Buddhism.
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Inner Guidance
Because the process of hypnosis and hypnotherapy moves aside your ordinary thinking mind, it enables you to access inner guidance from many levels of your being. The variety of inner guidance available is vast, everything from praying to saints for healing to having shamanic encounters with entities from the plant and animal kingdom. The true inner guide is your inner Spiritual Master Guide, if you will, who knows you completely and knows the terrain of the subconscious completely. He/she knows the best path for you to take, moment by moment, to become fully established in your authentic being. As such, the inner guide is the one you can always go to for support of all kinds. You can even consult your inner guide as to the validity of any other forms of guidance, and to find out whether such guidance is important or suitable for you.
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Subpersonality or "Parts" Work
Even though you're one whole person, you experience yourself and organize your experience as if you were several different people. For example, you find yourself saying, "I never knew I had that in me," or "I never knew I could be so spontaneous." Or you have an inner conflict: "I really want that second piece of cake, but I should stick to my diet." In such moments it's as if two people are arguing within you-the one who wants the cake, and the one who would rather stick to your diet. These competing urges, which could be regarded as "subpersonalities" within us, can become so unmanageable that we lose the ability to successfully navigate our lives. With hypnotherapy, it is possible to bring these conflicted parts, or subpersonalities, into harmony with each other so that you can make rational choices that truly benefit you.
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Spirit Release (or Entity Release)
In the same way that, on a physical level, we can be invaded and infected by bacteria and viruses, on an energetic level we can be invaded and influenced by nonphysical, intelligent beings. Such beings are typically people who have died and who, for whatever reason, have not moved into the light to continue their soul's evolution. Instead they grasp onto a physically embodied being and try to live through them. Such attachments occur in varying degrees, from unpleasant recurring negative thoughts to outright compulsions and addictions that the person mistakes for their own.
Hypnosis, Myths & Archetypes
We contemplate the deep and expansive truths of life through the study of archetypes and myths. There are three levels of understanding any archetype: essence, form, and function. Every level is universal. The essence of an archetype is its substance, its being, and all archetypes are essentially pure. The form of an archetype, being universal, can be found everywhere. For example, the circle, the square, the rectangle are archetypal forms found everywhere in nature. All archetypes are dynamic; they have not only substance and form, but function. Three examples of archetypal function are contracting, expanding, and holding steady.
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