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Behavior Modification
When most people think of hypnotherapy, they associate
it with behavior modification. Some examples include:
* Stress Management * Eating Disorders
* Mild Depression * Eliminating Bad Habits
* Insomnia * Improving Memory Recall
* Unhealthy Relationship Patterns
* Clearing Anxiety, Panic, & Phobias
* Weight Reduction (addressed separately)
* Smoking Cessation (addressed separately)
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Hypnotherapy De-Mystified
Hypnotherapy is a method that uses relaxation to access and change the
patterning (or programming) of the subconscious mind.
Ultra Depth® Hypnotherapy uses deeper states of relaxation than traditional
hypnotherapy. If you were to consider the deepest level that traditional hypnotherapists normally use a depth of 5, then UD Hypnotherapists are
trained to start with level 5 and then move down to two deeper levels.
Why do we use such deep levels with UD?? Many hypnotherapists will tell you
that only a light level of hypnosis is necessary for changes to occur. This
is true. However, deeper levels provide greater/ more lasting results, and
the depths we use in UD are stages you go through every day before/ after
sleep.
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What does Hypnosis Feel Like?
It feels like a wonderful state of relaxation. The word
"hypnosis" comes from the Greek "hypno" which means sleep. This is
a misnomer though - it was given this name because subjects often look like
they're sleeping, but most people are actually aware of everything that
happens during a session.
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Will I Remember Everything?
Most people remember their entire session
easily. On the occasions when people do not remember, it is because they
have gone to the deepest stage (called the Sichort State) of hypnosis. This
stage is not usually used for the initial therapy, so most subjects will not
go to that state unless they trust the Hypnotherapist and have practiced
relaxing deeply at home with a conditioning tape.
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What is Hypnotic Conditioning?
In order for a subject to get used to
relaxing deeply, an initial conditioning session (or sometimes a tape to
work with at home before the initial session) is used to allow the subject
to practice relaxing to the three deepest levels of relaxation. This makes
any therapeutic hypnosis much more effective.
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Will I Lose Control?
Your subconscious mind is aware of everything that
happens whether you are awake, sleeping, or in hypnosis. Think back to a time
when you were driving on "auto-pilot". Your conscious mind was occupied with
thoughts of work, chores, family, etc., but your subconscious mind was always on
guard, making sure you stopped at red lights and took the correct exit. It
functions the same way in hypnosis. Your subconscious will always protect you,
so you don't have to worry about revealing where you buried the treasure!
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Will You Make Me Bark Like a Dog?
Only if you don't pay for your session.
(Just kidding.) That is stage hypnosis, not therapeutic hypnotherapy. In a
stage show, most of the time the people that are up on stage are agreeing
(consciously in the beginning and subconsciously throughout the show) to do
what is asked for the fun and entertainment of it. The people are in
hypnosis, but their subconscious allows suggestions that it wouldn't under
normal circumstances, since it is seen as a game. In addition, many people
attending hypnosis stage shows are under the influence of alcohol, which as
we all know, can make people do things they wouldn't anyway!
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What if I Can't Be Hypnotized?
Almost everyone can be hypnotized! The only
people who can not be hypnotized are those with severe mental handicaps.
Now, many people don't know how to relax right away, but that's the job of
your Hypnotherapist!
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So You'll Teach Me How to Relax?
Surprisingly enough, teaching clients to
relax is one of the biggest jobs of a Hypnotherapist. We live in a
fast-paced, ambitious society, where most people will tell you there aren't
enough hours in a day. With this lifestyle, is it any wonder that most
people don't know how to relax? Even our sleep suffers because we can't
quiet our minds enough to truly relax!
One of the wonderful benefits of any good hypnotherapy program is that by
virtue of using the hypnotherapy, you will learn to relax more than you
already are. However, for those of you who are looking to be able to relax
or meditate more deeply on your own, self-hypnosis training is invaluable.
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Self-Hypnosis
There are many methods of self-hypnosis. Most people learn simple techniques
from books or the internet. Here is one such technique:
1. Get into a comfortable position where you will not be disturbed for a few
minutes.
2. Close your eyes and take three deep breaths, each one longer and slower
than the one before.
3. Loosely curl your fingers in to your palms, and state the following
affirmation in your mind:
Every day, in every way I am better and better.
4. Repeat the affirmation silently 10 times. Every time you say the
affirmation, uncurl one of your fingers. This way you don't have to think
about the counting, and your mind is more free to make any necessary
changes.
Pretty easy, right?
That technique and others like it are helpful if you are just beginning to
learn to relax. However, many people want to achieve a deeper lever of
relaxation so that their changes are easier and more lasting. And since UD
Hypnotherapy is all about relaxing deeper, there is a way for you to achieve
deeper levels of relaxation with just a little training and practice.
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"Staging" & Hypnotic Depth
Levels
In
Ultra Depth® Hypnotherapy, we call our method of Self-Hypnosis
"Staging." It trains you to go to the three deepest levels of hypnosis
(called Somnambulism, the Esdaile State, & the Sichort State) on your own
using only one word for each level, and one word to bring yourself to full
waking awareness.
Once you have completed the staging process, you will be able to instantly
bring yourself to whichever level of hypnosis you desire, depending on your
desired results. Here are some examples of what's available at each depth:
Depth 1 - Somnambulism - receiving suggestions and making positive
behavioral changes, regression therapy, accessing suppressed memories;
Depth 2 - Esdaile State - excellent for pain management, full-body
anesthesia, etc.;
Depth 3 - Sichort State - conscious mind completely gets out of the way, so
subconscious is able to give information and make necessary changes without
conscious interference, (often subject does not remember what takes place in
this stage, may think they fell asleep).

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Deep Memory Process (DMP)
Deep Memory Process is a technique developed by Roger Woolger, PhD. that
combines Jungian Analysis, Psychodrama, and Shamanic Healing (including Soul
Retrieval/ Spirit releasement) to heal clients through catharsis. The goal
is to help clients to be fully in their body, without the need to detach
from circumstances that happen around us.
It can be used to release ancestral issues/karma, clear personal issues
(including: fears/phobias, anxiety, emotional eating to "insulate" self,
unhealthy relationship patterns, etc.), and heal unexplained physical
problems.
DMP is a much more physically active process than hypnotherapy. Instead of
the client laying in a recliner, couch, or massage table, the client lays on
a padded mat on the floor. This facilitates the psychodrama, by allowing the
client to move freely (which may include kicking, hitting, pushing objects
[props] away, etc.). This allows the client to physically release negative
memories that are held in the body. Often after a DMP session, the client's
muscles will be more relaxed, their posture better, pain gone, etc. as a
result of releasing the negative energy held in the body.
Deep Memory Process is also quite useful in treating traumatic events. The
client is able to fully release traumas affecting their body, mind, and
emotions, and gains a fuller idea of what makes them unique. The more you
learn about yourself, the better able you are to cope with whatever
situations you are presented with.
In a Deep Memory Process session, clients may experience "stories" that are
not their own. This is where the term Deep Memory comes from. Carl Jung
called these stories the collective unconscious, a memory base common to all
humans based on our collective experiences. Many people believe that these
stories are from our past lives, when we incarnated in other times and
places. Others refer to these stories as cellular or ancestral memories as
well, implying that the stories of our ancestors are stored in our genetic
coding. Still other people (including many psychologists) refer to these
stories as therapeutic imagining, meaning we make up a story to explain what
we're going through by attaching it to other people/places so it's easier
for us to deal with.
It doesn't matter how you perceive these stories, if you have negative
emotions weighing down your body, you'll benefit by removing them!
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