I was reading an article the other day on a  medical website about the top approaches to pain management. Among those  listed was hypnosis. The writer went on to say that even though it  oftentimes successfully works, how hypnosis works is not understood.
I have specialized in hypnosis for over 20  years and I can tell you from experience not only that it works but how  it works for managing pain.
Hypnosis assists a person in moving their  attention away from the pain to another place in time. Most people that I  see that have pain are needlessly focusing on the pain. I teach them to  bring their focus and attention someplace else: a relaxing place in  nature, a past memory of something pleasant, a future image of doing  something that brings joy or success, a future image of being without  the pain and enjoying life. Once their unconscious brings forth an image, I suggest  that the person bring all their senses into the experience: visual,  auditory, kinesthetic, olfactory and gustatory. Bringing all the senses  into the picture expands and deepens the good feelings associated with  it. As a person does this, he is altering his brain chemistry with  hormones and neurotransmitters that stimulate, support, and bring about  good feelings. Once these chemicals enter the bloodstream, the entire  body positively responds. This response set results in feelings of  harmony. 
Spending time in the future in your mind  and imagination thinking about feel-good  experiences goes a long way in reducing and healing pain. Again,  learning to train your mind in the sojourns it takes is an awesome skill  that will help you to positively alter your own brain chemistry and  will bring about greater health, harmony, and peak performance.
Hundreds of medical research studies using  placebo medicine or sugar pills report that the placebo works  as well as the actual medication.  This confirms one very important  principle of medical hypnosis and that is the power of suggestion should  not be overlooked or underrated as a healing agent. I have worked with  thousands of students with pain and have helped them use the power of  their own mind and imagination to both manage the pain and completely rid themselves of it.
Hypnosis works upon the principle of  reframing. Reframing is taking an image of something that is experienced as unpleasant and changing it into something that is pleasant. Your mind  and imagination have the amazing ability to transcend time. You can be  in past time, present time, and future time in a matter of seconds.   When you picture something from your past, present or anticipate  something in your future that bothers you, you can alter that image or thought  so that it doesn’t affect you negatively anymore. Since how we see and  experience our past determines how we see and experience the future,  spending time clearing away those old memories is important to our  health and well being and to mitigating pain. 
Much of the pain we experience is directly tied to past hurts, disappointments, and losses that have not been resolved. Unresolved grief can create all kinds of health problems. Hypnosis can help you address these issues in two ways: seeing them for what they really are and by seeing them differently and thus experiencing them differently. In terms of the latter, it has nothing to do with avoiding feelings and everything to do with seeing things in a different way from a new and healthier vantage point. Much of the past that haunts us haunts us because of the way we see it. Many people suffer unnecessarily by accepting the blame or the guilt associated with childhood events that were clearly not their fault. Hypnosis works on the principle of separating truths from untruths. When we live with untruths, we needlessly suffer. Once the truth is uncovered, we are free. This state of freedom is the ultimate goal of self-hypnosis and meditative practices.
Another approach is locating the pain  within the body and gently breathing into that painful place. As you breathe  into the painful area and feel it opening and breaking up, the pain typically subsides. Asking a person who  is experiencing  a stress headache to describe what the pain looks like  helps transform the pain into a metaphor that represents the pain. Once  the metaphor is created, “It looks and feels like a rope tightening  around my head”, the person can then go in and loosen or untie  the rope. This imaginative experience can slowly relieve the headache. 
It is always important to make certain that  you do not have a medical condition that needs to be addressed.  Research does confirm, however, that most health issues are stress  related. Learning to effectively deal with stress via self-hypnosis or  meditation, therefore, are outstanding ways to help you dramatically  improve your overall health and well being.
Another reason why and how hypnosis  works is, “Where the mind goes the body will follow.” The 2000 Olympics  is a perfect example. Olympic diver Laura Wilkinson was in 8th place when I turned on the TV. The Chinese women’s divers were in 1st and 2nd place and then Laura began diving perfect ‘10s’ and slowly moved from 8th place to 1st  place.  By the time the event was over, Laura Wilkinson won the Gold  Medal. When the interviewer asked her how she regained her composure and  did this amazing feat, Laura told him that she began to see herself in  her imagination diving perfectly, moving towards the water with perfect  form, and entering the water perfectly. In her imagination she saw the  judges hold up signs with a 10 on each one and heard the roar of the  crowd enthusiastically applauding.  In future time, Laura saw perfection  and her brain chemistry, feelings, and body responded with perfection. 
Deep breathing, relaxation, reframing,  creative imagery, traveling through time in your mind and imagination,  metaphor, separating truths from untruths are all effective  self-hypnosis processes. Self-hypnosis, creative imagery, and  imagination can work miracles as you learn to use the inherent God-given  power within you to effect change.
John A. Tamiazzo is the author of Returning  to the Land of Oz: Finding Hope, love, and Courage on Your Yellow Brick  Road available at Amazon.com, Amazon.ca, and barnesandnoble.com. Returning to the Land of Oz is also available at Amazon.com as a Kindle  e-book. 
 
 
 
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