I was reading an article the other day on a medical website
highlighting the best approaches for pain management. Among those listed was
self-hypnosis. The writer went on to say that even though it oftentimes
successfully works, how it works is not understood. I disagree. Once you
understand the dynamics of self-hypnosis, it is easy to comprehend how and why
it works.
Self-hypnosis assists a person in moving their attention
away from the pain to another place in time: a relaxing scene in nature, a pleasant
past memory, an enjoyable future image, or by simply distracting yourself by
doing something else. The greater your focus and concentration on the imagined
or actual task at hand, the more success you’ll have with managing physical and
psychological pain. As you do these things, you are altering your brain
chemistry with hormones and neurotransmitters that stimulate, support, and
bring about positive feelings. Once these chemicals enter the bloodstream, the
entire body healthily and harmoniously responds.
Hundreds of medical research studies using placebo medicine
or sugar pills report that the placebo oftentimes works as well as the actual
medication. This confirms one very
important principle of medical self-hypnosis and that is the power of
suggestion should not be overlooked or underrated as a healing agent. If you
believe that the pill, whether it is filled with medication or sugar, is going
to ameliorate your pain, it most likely will. If you believe that the power of
your mind and imagination can help you manage pain and that these powers will
rid you of it, then that can happen. Another interesting discovery about
placebo medicine is the pill’s color. Research has shown that people tend to
view dark red pills as sedatives and white pills as painkillers. The power of
belief put into action is an amazing force that can achieve things that some regard
as miracles.
In dozens of double-blind studies comparing placebos to
aspirin, placebos proved to be 50% as effective meaning that 50% of those who
used placebos had the same positive effect as aspirin for pain. Taking this a
step further, how about not even giving the patient an aspirin or pain killer
or placebo pill at all and just giving him/her a hypnotic suggestion that they
will not have any pain? All hypnosis is self-hypnosis meaning that if I give
you a suggestion for pain and you accept the suggestion and believe the
suggestion will work, then it becomes self-hypnosis.
Self-hypnosis works upon the principle of reframing.
Reframing is taking an image of something you perceive as uncomfortable or
painful and changing it into images that are pleasant. When you picture
something from your past, present, or anticipate something in your future that
is bothersome, you can alter that image
or thought so that it doesn’t affect you negatively anymore through the power
of your own creative imagination. Since how you see and experience your past
determines how you see and experience the future, clearing away those old
memories is important to your health and well-being and to effectively
addressing both emotional and physical pain.
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