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Hypnotherapy, yoga and
meditation, what's the difference? by Alice Penion |
An idea that takes root in the subconscious mind has no
capacity for reasoning and MUST be discharged in motor
action – whether a good or a bad idea. Essentially every
single word uttered to a subject in a hypnotic state such as
those experienced in any meditative or relaxation yoga
practices may result in uptake of post hypnotic suggestion
and thus influence that individual’s actions. Therefore it’s
of utmost importance that everything said or thought during
any yogic practice should not only be thought out thoroughly
beforehand but tailored to be only positive and beneficial.
To highlight the importance of the correct use of wordings
in suggestion I’ll use an example not only from clinical
hypnosis but self imposed diets restrictions we’ve mostly
all tried at some point. If you relax/hypnotise (same thing)
somebody and tell them (or yourself) “Don’t eat cake” the
subconscious mind will without doubt invert the “suggestion”
and that person will want to eat more cake than they’ve ever
thought possible – and seemingly can’t get the thought of
cake etc from their mind!
Instead however, if you use the suggestion “you are amazed
at how unbelievably easy it is for you to choose the foods
that will help you become and remain slim and healthy” the
subconscious, being the simple thing it is, will consume the
suggestion, internally digest (so to speak) and turn it into
the desired response i.e. no desire to eat cake or other
junk food – just good healthy stuff in the right amount etc.
In other words it’s important to think about what you want
and not what you don’t want.
So what exactly is hypnosis?
First of all it’s important to highlight that there is no
such thing as a “special” state of hypnosis. It’s a very
ordinary phenomenon that we pass in and out of several times
every day. That blurry place between sleep and awake and any
time in fact you are engrossed in an activity such as work,
a hobby, long distance driving and of course Hatha yoga,
meditation and relaxation practices – where external stimuli
are mostly blocked out. A hypnotic “state” is just a feeling
of being relaxed coupled with a heightened state of
awareness all of which is brought about by suggestion or
autosuggestion. In fact it’s often said there is no such
thing as hypnosis – only suggestion.
So what’s the difference between hypnosis and meditation?
One definition of meditation is the absence of all thought
and to just be. If a person is mulling over a problem during
meditation, they are actually thinking and therefore no
longer meditating in its truest sense.
Hypnosis on the other hand, is to have a specific thought
and affect a desired outcome, i.e. stop smoking, lose
weight, stress management, pain management etc. In hypnosis
just as in guided meditation the hypnotist may take you down
a path, but instead of just suggesting a stroll through
beautiful scenery the hypnotist skilfully uses suggestion to
achieve predetermined goals – reduce exam test nerves, stop
nail biting, develop confidence etc.
So as you can see if someone is participating in a guided
meditation, the guide is also suggesting everyone to see
this, hear that and experience with as many senses as
possible. Some people may smell the flowers, feel the
breeze, even hear sounds in this internal picture whilst
usually also deepening relaxation and lowering anxiety
levels albeit short term. Clearly this is no different in
concept from the hypnotists scripting bar the actual
suggestions themselves and resultant behavioural change.
So, hypnosis is just another word for relaxation. It’s what
you do or think about when you are in this state of
relaxation that differentiates between meditation,
hypnotherapy, day dreaming etc.
Both are an allowing process. No one can force you into
hypnosis. Otherwise hypnotists would already rule the world
by simply obtaining your bank account number for their
financial benefit and have you run around like a chicken for
their entertainment!
Similarly in guided meditation, no one can make you go down
the paths and smell the flowers if you don't want to.
Suggestions given in the hypnotic state that are against
your personal code of conduct, morality etc will not be
taken on board by the subconscious and thus will not be
acted out. It’s an all too common misconception that
hypnotists can “control” your mind. If only! Then my job as
a hypnotherapist would be far far easier! Sadly it’s a
common misconception, thanks to stage hypnotists, Kenny
Craig and other TV misrepresentations of hypnosis. Stage
hypnotists incidentally are just very adept at selecting the
more outrageous wannabes from an audience whose very
personality type is such that they are looking for any
opportunity to be the star of the show, however “silly” they
may be made to look. They do volunteer after all, don’t
they?!
Both hypnosis and meditation can be used for the better good
of the individual. You may quite simply need to decide which
word sits more comfortably with you. If meditation is a more
palatable word for you, then by all means meditate! However,
if you need more guidance or the mere mention of the word
meditation brings up thoughts of rigid discipline that sends
you screaming into the night, then by all means go find a
well qualified hypnotherapist.
Emotional release in yoga, massage, meditation and
relaxation…
So what with the common experience of emotional release in
yoga classes?
You may have experienced or seen people crying their heart
out or experienced sudden deep feelings of sadness for
example during yoga and meditation, or just as commonly on
the treatment table during massage. Well essentially these
situations all induce the relaxed and therefore natural
hypnotic state which allows bubbles of emotion to break the
surface. It’s a bit like with a fizzy drink you shake it a
bit and the bubbles come up and pop as emotion and tears,
but each and every time you shake that drink in the state of
hypnosis those bubbles will be unstoppable. If you’ve
experienced this it demonstrates just how close to the
surface those emotions are within you. No doubt it’s usually
a very conscious and exhausting effort for you to ordinarily
keep all those bubbles held in the rest of the time. It
isn’t just these specific activities where emotions bubble
up but rather ANY time one is otherwise a little “relaxed”.
There are many of us who just can’t stop, can’t get to
sleep, can’t unwind, for if we let it go enough the jumping
monkeys of the mind break out of their cage to wreak havoc
in our otherwise ordered lives.
Really these experiences are a huge wake up call to go get
help in the form of Pure Hypnoanalysis to excise those
deeply rooted anxieties and free yourself from your problems
for good. If you are a meditator (or in this case someone
trying to meditate), or practice yoga but find your
experience is more distressing than relaxing then you must
also stop using mind wander meditation techniques that allow
brooding and rumination upon your problems. For certain
personality types this will actually increase your anxiety
levels (in Ayurveda they’re known as Pitta types or anally
obsessive in psychology speak).
It’s all about reading the signs.
In Pure Hypnoanalysis we go a hugely important stage further
than meditation’s observing and experiencing feelings. We
ask WHY there’s this blockage and leakage of emotions in the
first place. Pure Hypnoanalysis offers a natural, gentle but
effective way of stepping deeper into the
psyche/subconscious to release the true root cause of the
problem stemming from ones deepest bottled up emotions.
As long as these source emotions are bottled up, they will
have effects in the form of anything from life disrupting
phobias, fears, panicky feelings and bad habits to physical
symptoms, negative behavioural patterns etc that are all
seemingly within oneself but out of ones control. More on
this below…
Here, even the most dedicated of yogi’s “wanting” to
practice their Sadhana (dedicated spiritual exertions
towards achieving enlightenment) will not be able to escape
Emile Coue’s “Law of reversed effort” where the force of the
Imagination is in direct ratio to the square of the Will.
Essentially where there is conflict between the Imagination
and the Will, the Imagination wins hands down every time –
so the more effort the Will puts in to oppose or command the
Imagination the more the Will’s efforts are reversed and the
exact opposite is compounded. So the more you sit and think
“I am going to blank my mind, think of nothing and meditate”
the more thoughts will flood in by the truck load! A lot has
to be said for surrendering to the observing Ego state and
detaching from the thoughts themselves via the reliable
vehicle of self or induced hypnosis. Entering that very
natural state of hypnosis by-passes the critical factor of
the conscious mind, thus effecting negation of our daily
distracting thought stream. This is the very basis of
mindfulness meditation, chanting and other “one pointed
focus” practices.
These are practices that quite literally bore the
practitioner into a hypnotic/meditative state.
This law of reversed effort is also the explanation behind
the phenomena of subjects in hypnosis/relaxation
experiencing suggested physiological effects such as heavy
or light limbs, heavy eyelids etc. Most Yoga Nidra practices
(usually after deepening, internalising and body scan)
utilise the reverse law with suggestions of developing first
one sensation such as heat and then the opposite ice cold,
pain/pleasure, heaviness/lightness etc.
Yoga Nidra and other ancient practices have been using the
natural state of hypnosis therapeutically for thousands of
years. Hypnosis in itself is not a particularly useful
thing. It’s only when it’s coupled with positive suggestion
that it becomes useful and therefore therapeutic. In Yoga
Nidra this suggestion is your Sankalpa or a short positive
affirmation or statement of intent. If you can’t think of
one yourself then you can’t really go wrong with our man
Emile Coue’s classic cover all for everyone…
”Every day, in every way, I am getting better and better and
better”.
Pure Hypnoanalysis lays the path towards true peace of mind.
The other form of hypnotherapy known as Pure Hypnoanalysis
works very differently from suggestion therapy. Instead of
putting suggestions into the mind as with clinical
hypnotherapy, seemingly conversely it removes the source of
ones problems from the mind – permanently, safely and
effectively. Its amazing results are most commonly life
changing for those individuals with deep rooted anxiety
related problems. So not only for the aforementioned yogi’s
experiencing emotional uprisings but also anyone suffering
from any of a plethora of anxiety symptoms. Those yogi’s
outbursts will be without a shred of a doubt just the tip of
the symptomatic iceberg of their emotional problems and
those rising emotional bubbles are simply a call to action
to address a deeper rooted problem that needs to be released
with the assistance of a professional Pure Hypnoanalyst
(located here:)
http://www.hypnoanalysis.com/map.html
Pure Hypnoanalysis simply is THE most effective therapy
available for the total resolution of anxiety, depression,
phobias, fears, negative behavioural patterns, panic attacks
and other psychological and emotional problems. Pure
Hypnoanalysis is a powerful, specialised and highly
developed form of analytical hypnotherapy that achieves
amazing results by totally resolving the root cause of
unconscious anxieties. This total resolution leads to life
long liberation from symptoms - not just short term relief
from the worst of the eruptions of that bottled up anxiety
but complete and therefore life changing relief from the
emotional baggage that has been lugged around for most of
the sufferers life.
In fact as an insight into oneself Pure Hypnoanalysis has no
rival.
If you are on a search for deeper Self Knowledge as most
folk (let alone Yogi’s) are to some level or other, then you
would do well to surrender yourself to the process of
analysis. It doesn’t take years, or a great intellect but
quite simply 8-12 weekly sessions of about an hour long
each.
Pure Hypnoanalysis utilises this powerful natural phenomenon
of hypnosis to allow the individual to swiftly and naturally
locate the reasons they’re stuck in certain thought
patterns, behaviours, reactions, or beliefs about
themselves. Once the problem is found and cathartically “let
go” the mind is then permanently freed from those
troublesome paths of thought or unconscious forces that
surround the thing that is inside yourself but out of your
control and can once again realise its normal, natural,
efficient and healthy quality of functioning.
Often people who come to Pure Hypnoanalysts have tried to
deal with or manage their anxieties using many other coping
mechanisms such as NLP, EFT, alcohol, drugs, counselling and
other talking therapies to varying degrees of success. But
they typically find that although they feel better for a
while their problems return, or crop up in some other area
of their life to trouble them further.
Even Yogic practices can be classed as coping mechanisms.
I’m sure those of us who’ve been to a half decent yoga
session have enjoyed the great feelings after class but they
do wear off after a while and even with regular practice may
not contain those persistent leaking emotions – in fact if
not an engaging practice it may bring them on all the more
in certain personality types. Yoga and the above mentioned
coping mechanisms can calm frazzled nerves or anxiety for
the short term and they certainly do have their place in the
world but will never alone go deep enough to RESOLVE the
deepest issues at their root source which is where your IAPH
Hypnotherapist comes in.
The beauty of Pure Hypnoanalysis is reflected so tidily by
Yoga’s twin sister Ayurevda (the ancient Indian health
system), where the underlying principle is to tailor
practices in order to achieve total alleviation of symptoms
by dealing with problems from their root source as opposed
to the temporary sticking plaster of continual symptom
management. A salve is one thing one thing but complete
relief from symptoms is the ideal that can be achieved with
this amazing and unique therapy.
Enhance your meditation and whole life with hypnotherapy
Hypnosis is a wonderful, powerful tool to amongst other
things locate the reasons why you’re stuck believing certain
things about yourself. Once you find the source of the
problem, you can let it go fully. Once you let it go, your
mind is emptied from old negative qualities of thinking.
Once you’ve done that your mind is clear and you can finally
move into a quiet state of peace and meditation and connect
with your True Self.
This is proven time and time again at the culmination of
Pure Hypnoanalysis where the subconscious is finally free
and untroubled by anxiety. The mind is just incredibly
quiet, at peace and able to rest in a truly meditative
state.
To link directly to this article use this link:
http://www.hypnotherapyarticles.com/ArtG/articleg00056.htm
Author's details:
Alice Pinion BSc (Hon’s) DHyp MIAPH, IAYT is
an IAPH therapist holding clinic in Cambridge, Hertfordshire
and Essex
www.alicepinion.com
Alice is also a published author and
internationally respected Yoga Teacher and Ayurvedic Yoga
Therapist.
© Copyright 2009
Alice Pinion, all
rights reserved
Article posted
21st September 2009
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