Hypnotension comes to Berkshire

October 31st, 2011

I’ve been doing some training recently, as I do,  and I just completed the exam for – ‘passed with flying colours’ apparently, which is nice!

It’s an exciting thing, because passing the exam means I’m the first Hypnotension Practitioner in Berkshire.

So what?

Good question. Well, it means that I have had extra training to help people to naturally lower their high blood pressure, or hypertension, using hypnosis, NLP and various other psychotherapy ‘tools’.

Did you know that around 90% of hypertension has unknown medical causes. It’s possibly due to emotional stresses, maybe from childhood, perhaps because of beliefs about identity – ‘my mum had high blood pressure, so I’m going to get it too’ – that sort of thing.

The trouble is that GP’s don’t tend to have the time to help with anything but the physical symptoms. They want to get your blood pressure down if it’s too high, but they don’t have the time or resources to look into the emotional stresses that may be underlying the problem.

I do. And together I’m helping clients to take back the control around their hypertension. And who knows, that may be the difference that makes the difference. It may be that in a short time from now, they go into their GP’s surgery, and their BP is consistently low. It may be that in time, their GP is happy to think about reducing their medication. Because that’s the GP’s job, not mine, and we always work complementary to the medical professionals, not instead of.

Anyway, if you’re interested, or know someone who might benefit from a the Hypnotension Programme, get in touch for a chat. I’d be happy to talk about it with you.

Or you can look at the hypertension page on the website www.anitamitchell.co.uk under the How can I help you? section.

This was in the Guardian Newspaper last week…

May 23rd, 2011

http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2011/may/21/cognitive-hypnotherapist-what-really-thinking

This was written by my Friend and colleague, Lesley McCall, who is based in Farnham, Surrey.

She sums up beautifully, what it is we do.

Can you trick your ageing body into feeling younger?

September 15th, 2010

 This was on the BBC www.bbc.co.uk website today. I find this stuff really interesting as it helps to confirm what we already know about the mind/body connection and how what we think affects the way we feel. Read on to find out more… 

Actress Liz Smith in 1975 garb
Liz Smith – Nana in The Royle Family – found she could walk all but unaided

If elderly people dress, live and talk as they did in their heyday, does this help them feel younger and fitter? Michael Mosley explains how he tested this theory on six faces from the past.  

What’s your brain age?

Ugly Mugs game to test mental agility
 
Is slowing down with age all in the mind?

 To find out, I recruited six celebrities aged between 76 and 88 to live in my science lab – a country house decked out like a 1970s time capsule. The project was designed as a follow-up to an experiment first done by Professor Ellen Langer of Harvard University. 

In 1979, Ellen was investigating the extent to which ageing is a product of our state of mind. To find out, she and her students devised a study they called the “counter-clockwise study”.  

It involved taking a group of elderly men and putting them into the world of 1959. The question she wanted to answer was, if we took their minds back 20 years, would their bodies reflect this change?  

Our experiment had similar ambitions; to take a group of people and make them feel younger by recreating the world they had left behind 35 years ago.  

Michael Mosley

There were shag pile carpets to trip over, door ridges to step over and lots of slippery linoleum”  

End Quote Michael Mosley on the physical challenges

Our volunteers were actors Liz Smith (88), Sylvia Syms (76) and Lionel Blair (78), cricket umpire Dickie Bird (77), newsreader Kenneth Kendall (86) and former Daily Mirror editor Derek Jameson (80).  

They agreed to live in our time capsule house for a week, during which they dressed in 1970s clothes, slept in replicas of their very own 70s bedrooms, watched television from that era, and talked about 1975 in the present tense.  

It proved to be a fascinating but draining experience – for both experimenters and experimentees.  

From the beginning we made it clear to our volunteers that they would be expected to look after themselves. Research in nursing homes shows clearly that giving residents control over their own lives and their own choices has a hugely beneficial impact on health and happiness.  

In one study, residents who were allowed to choose a plant to care for, and when and where to receive visitors, were found 18 months later to be significantly more cheerful, active and alert. They were also far more likely to be still alive.  

Another thing about our 1970s house was that it was full of physical challenges. There were shag pile carpets to trip over, door ridges to step over and lots of slippery linoleum. Research on mice has shown that those who live in a challenging environment live nearly 30% longer than those who in a secure but boring environment.  

In this spirit, on their arrival, our volunteers were asked to carry their bags up a flight of stairs to their bedrooms. It was the first time they’d been forced into such physical activity in many years, and they were not happy.  

But they rose to the challenge. When they started at the bottom of the stairs, a couple were adamant it would be impossible to make it to the top. Watching from a laboratory close by, it was hard to resist going to their aid.  

Slowly, step by step, they succeeded. We had made them question whether, perhaps, they were more physically capable than they had given themselves credit for.  

Dickie Bird in the 1970s, and right, dressed up in 1975 garb
Dickie Bird’s memory and stamina improved

It was a tough initiation, but a core element of Ellen’s original experiment was the idea that our prior beliefs play a huge part in how we perceive the world, and how we perceive ourselves. By immersing our volunteers in a 1970s world, we were hoping to make them think of themselves as younger, fitter and healthier.  

For many of them, the 70s had been a golden decade, a highlight of their careers.  

We took Dickie Bird back to Lords to relive the atmosphere. As he walked through the tunnel, onto the grounds, he blossomed before our eyes. Dickie had had a stroke, suffered 18 months of illness, lost confidence and come to think of himself as old. By the end of the week, his confidence was back and he showed remarkable improvement across a range of tests, including memory and stamina.  

Professor Ellen Langer, who did original experiment

It’s too easy to have everybody take care of us. But you can be helped to death”  

End Quote Professor Ellen Langer Harvard University

  • Tips for carers
  • Over the week we gave all the celebrities tasks to do, but we also left them to fend for themselves. For up to 12 hours a day, we observed them through our surveillance cameras and, just as Ellen had discovered all those years before, we saw great changes.  

    Half way through the week, Liz Smith took 148 steps with the aid of just one stick. For someone who had not walked without both sticks since her stroke – and who often relied on a wheelchair – it was a real breakthrough. She was no longer willing to be limited by the physical constraints she had imposed on herself.  

    At the end of the week we put our guinea pigs through the same rigorous battery of physical and psychological tests we had at the beginning. Memory, mood, flexibility, stamina and even eye sight had improved in almost all of them.  

    The results were not uniform, but in some cases they shed up to 20 years in their apparent biological age.  

    It made a compelling case for Ellen Langer’s argument that opening our minds to what’s possible can lead to better health, whatever our age.

    Wounds ‘take longer to heal when you are anxious or stressed’

    June 11th, 2010

     

    In my approach of Cognitive Hypnotherapy, we have long used it for helping the body to heal itself. This article explains a link with stress and anxiety and the body taking longer to heal itself. It would stand to reason then, that being able to deal with stress and anxiety in a positive way, would be condusive to better healing. Read on and let me know what you think…

    by That’s Fit Staff (Subscribe to That’s Fit Staff’s posts)
    Jun 10th 2010

    Categories: Mind and body

    EmailMore

     

    Woman putting on plasterScientists have discovered that stress and anxiety can make it harder for wounds to heal.

    Researchers inflicted small ‘punch’ wounds on healthy volunteers whose levels of life stress were gauged using a standard questionnaire. The wounds of the least anxious participants were found to heal twice as fast as those of the most stressed, and changes in the levels of the stress hormone cortisol reflected the difference in healing speed.

    Professor John Weinman, from the Institute of Psychiatry at King’s College London, has previously shown that healing can be enhanced by psychological help aimed at easing emotional stress.

    He says: “These studies focus specifically on how the life stresses people experience can impact on their ability to recover from different types of wound, such as those caused by surgical procedures and by different medical conditions, including venous leg ulcers.

    “I hope that these findings can now be used to identify psychological interventions to help speed up the recovery and healing process.”

    Forgiving…

    May 28th, 2010

    Shared with me, by a friend – thoght I’d do the same…

    “Forgiving does not erase the bitter past. A healed memory is not a deleted memory. Instead, forgiving what we cannot forget creates a new way to remember. We change the memory of our past into a hope for our future. ”
    Lewis B. Smedes

    Dieters ‘underestimate how many calories they are eating’

    May 17th, 2010

    This article from The Telegraph (telegraph.co.uk) re-iterates what I say to people that come to see me for weightloss. Dieting doesn’t really work, because if we don’t address the relationship that we have with food first, once we stop dieting, and start eating ‘normally’ again, the weight will start to pile on again.

    I aim to help people get a better relationship with food, and then they don’t tend to need to overeat anymore, and their weight naturally stabilises over time. It’s great to be able to do this and know that you will never need to be on a diet again. Read below to find out what the article says…

    Most dieters vastly underestimate how many calories they are eating, according to a survey of GPs.

    Published: 7:30AM BST 17 May 2010

    Data from 10,000 slimmers and 200 doctors found 87 per cent of GPs believe dieters are in the dark about how much they actually eat.

    Meanwhile, more than nine out of 10 people (92 per cent) see their dieting attempts end in failure, with 18% ending up weighing more than when they started.

    Only around one in three (32 per cent people take up more exercise when they are trying to lose weight, while only 23 per cent check food labels before buying.

    Most (91 per cent) never weigh out food or control their portion size.

    Overall, 90 per cent of GPs said people needed to change their eating habits to lose weight and that losing excess pounds can be as difficult as quitting smoking.

    Two thirds (66 per cent) regard overeating as a form of addiction, while 73% of GPs said fad diets do not work, despite 51 per cent of Britons having tried them.

    Nutritionist Dr Chris Fenn said: ”People need to adopt a personalised approach to weight loss tailored to their own situation, challenges and strengths.

    ”They need to understand the causes of their weight gain and the barriers to weight loss, including their relationship with food.

    ”People are often ill-prepared to lose weight and underestimate what is required.”

    The survey was commissioned by Shape. Smart, which makes diet products.

    Locus of Control

    April 19th, 2010

    I have had a number of discussions recently with clients and their difficulties around taking responsibility for their own behaviours/decisions etc. It stems around where their locus of control is, either externally or internally.

    At the moment there is a great trend towards letting the Universe provide – ask, and it shall be given you. The trouble with this way of doing things is that the locus of control is external, ie it lies outside of you.

    I prefer to think that the Universe may provide things – and it may not, but I don’t have to sit and wait for it to happen. I can be doing much to help things happen for me in all areas of my life. This gives me an internal locus of control – I’m in charge.

    Now, I’m not saying the things always go the way I would like them to. I’m a fellow struggler through life, the same as everyone. So, of course, there is a downside to having an internal locus of control – who can we blame if it doesn’t go the way I want?

    Well here’s the thing. I could try and blame others for my faults and failings, couldn’t I? Afterall, it then gives me every reason to continue making mistakes and not taking any responsibility. It’s someone else’s fault then.

    However, I choose to take responsibility for both my mistakes, and my successes – they are mine too. And that’s the up-side, isn’t it.

    But I also choose to see mistakes, not as failings, but as learnings. As far as I’m concerned the only mistakes are the ones we don’t learn from. And I intend for my whole life to be a chance for me to learn whatever there is for me to learn, that means I progress.

    So, where are you going to put your locus of control? Is it outside, giving someone else the power over you? Or are you going to take responsibility, have an internal locus of control that gives you the power over your own path?

    The Universe might provide, but you could be a long time waiting if it doesn’t.

    The D-O-R Model

    April 5th, 2010

    This from Michael Neill’s newsletter received today. I couldn’t get the diagram to copy here, but I think it’s clear without it:

    One of the main questions I’ve been exploring and wrestling with over the past 20 years or so is how we create more of what we want in the world.

    Some related questions include:

    • What makes the difference between success and failure in any endeavor?
    • What are the key skills people need to develop to create more of what they want?
    • What can I do today to move forward in the direction of what I’m wanting?

    Recently, I’ve created a model that I’ve been teaching on courses and with my one on one coaching clients that seems to address most of what I’ve learned in a fairly practical way. 

    In order to make sense of it and put it to work in your own life, let’s go through each of the steps in turn…

    1. D is for Desire

    It would seem somewhat obvious that in order to create more of what you want in your life, the first step would be to know what it is that you want.  Yet the most common answer I hear when I ask people what they want is “I don’t know”.  My question in return is most often “why not?”

    Here are some of the most common responses: 

    • I’ve never really thought about it. 

    • If I start focusing on what I want, then I’m going to feel bad when/if I don’t get it. 

    • If I say what I want, then I’ll have to do stuff I don’t want to do in order to get it. 

    • If I admitted what I really wanted, everyone would think I’m a. selfish, b. shallow, c. foolish, d. grandiose, or e. all of the above.  And even if they didn’t think that, I would!

    And here’s the problem with all of these responses – you want what you want, whether or not you think you should want it and whether or not you think you can have it. Authentic desire is, well, authentic – it comes from somewhere deep inside us.  

    You can no more make yourself not want what you want than you can make yourself invisible (not that people don’t try).  The freedom comes in realizing that you don’t have to do anything about it.  Wanting what you want is natural; doing something about it is always a choice.

    The wonderful thing about desire is that when you begin to respect it, listen to it, and even experiment with following it, it will take you in the direction of the most wonderful life you can imagine.  This is the principle of effortless success, and as I wrote in the introduction to You Can Have What You Want:

    When you get really clear and honest about what you want, 
    everything in the universe conspires to help you get it.

    Which leads us on to the next part of our model…

    2. O is for Opportunity

    When I was an actor, I noticed a peculiar phenomenon – whenever I actively reconnected to my authentic desire to get acting work, opportunities to do or audition for that work started showing up.  In fact, I can recall three separate occasions where I was sitting in my car reading a trade newspaper looking for auditions when my agent rang to tell me about an audition that had come in for me.

    Coincidence?  Maybe – but just because two things coincide doesn’t mean they’re not also related.  And in the years since then, I’ve noticed again and again that when I’m in touch with my authentic desire, opportunities to fulfill that desire begin showing up.

    Here are the two main theories I’ve heard to explain that phenomenon:

    a. The Perceptual Snowplow

    There is a part of our brain called the RAS, or reticular activating system, which essentially filters information in such a way that we notice more of what we’re looking for and less of what we aren’t.  This is why when you first get a new car (or shirt or dress or pretty much anything) you begin to see it everywhere.

    The “perceptual snowplow” theory says that the reason opportunities follow on from desire is simply that acknowledging the desire sets up our perceptual filters in a way so that otherwise random data appears to us as meaningful and otherwise random events get recoded in our brains as “opportunities to fulfill our desire”.  By this theory, the auditions I got when I was sitting in my car would have come anyways – but because my perceptual snowplow was clearing the way to notice “auditions”, those phone calls showed up for me as significant.

    b. Harmonic Resonance

    In fields as varied as quantum physics, neuroscience, music theory and metaphysics, the theory of harmonic resonance suggests that all objects have a frequency or set of frequency with which they naturally resonate.  

    This is the science behind the “law of attraction” that has come into vogue through “The Secret” and the work of Abraham-Hicks. Since thoughts are a form of energy, when we think about something happening and resonate with the frequency of that thought (i.e. think it clearly enough to generate the corresponding feeling state in our body), it sends an actual vibratory frequency out into the universe and literally attracts anything with a similar frequency into the time and space of the person thinking those thoughts.

    So by this theory, the auditions I got when I was reading the trade papers weren’t coincidental at all, but rather the natural fruits of the seed of my desire.  Desire is the cause; opportunity is the effect.

    So which theory is correct?

    I don’t have a clue.  And fortunately it doesn’t seem to matter – people who believe in the perceptual snowplow seem to have as many opportunities turn up as those who believe in harmonic resonance – and neither belief system appears to be a prerequisite for creating more of what you want in your life.

    What does seem to matter is two things:

    The first is clarifying your desire – getting really clear and honest with yourself about what it is that you’d most love to happen, even if you don’t think that it can or will happen and even if you think you’re a terrible, silly person for wanting it.

    The second is spotting opportunities as they arise and stepping into them by taking action. (See my recent tip on “Event-Action” for more on this.) The best thing about opportunity is that it is not, contrary to popular mythology, a one-off event.  In fact, when you get really clear about what you want, opportunity knocks so hard and so often it has bloody knuckles.

    But if desire and opportunity are so readily available, why doesn’t everyone have everything they want?  Is it just laziness, or lack of discipline, or lack of clarity?

    The answer to this question comes in the third element of our model…

    3. R is for Readiness

    I was having a conversation with my mentor George Pransky, when he pointed out to me that perhaps the reason a project I had taken on hadn’t worked out was that “it wasn’t in the cards”.

    Slightly horrified at the inference that I didn’t completely control the universe and that occasionally even with all the will and cleverness in the world there was still an element of fate that played a part in how things turn out, I asked him to clarify what he meant.

    He told me the story of a 19th century Hungarian physician named Ignaz Semmelweis who had discovered that if he and his nurses washed their hands before handling babies, it reduced infant mortality rates from as high as 35% to below 1%. And yet, this ran so contrary to state of the art medical knowledge at the time that his “radical” theories were rejected and he was fired from his job, committed to a mental institution, and died as a societal outcast.

    In other words, while what he had to say has long since been proven and accepted as “common sense”, at the time he was saying it there was no readiness for its acceptance. And therein lies the key to understanding why some great ideas don’t catch on, great projects don’t come off, and great actors don’t get jobs :-) – sometimes, even when everything else seems to be in place, the world just isn’t ready for whatever it is you want to happen.  

    And if you know this, it needn’t be a problem. Very few trees seek out therapy or life-coaching in the fall or winter, even though to an outsider it might appear that their “strategies for successful blossoming” aren’t working out.  And I’ve yet to have an acorn call me to complain that despite it’s positive attitude and repeated use of affirmations (“I  want to be an oak tree, I will be an oak tree, I am an oak tree!”), it’s just not growing as fast as its fellow acorns.

    The fact is, some stuff just seems not to be in the cards – for now. But if you get clear about what you want and continue to step into each opportunity as it arises, you’ll maximize your chances for success and minimize the stress, guilt, and striving that thinking it’s all up and down to you tend to bring.

    Have fun, learn heaps, and may all your success be fun!

    With love,

    Michael

     

    PS – Do you want to reduce your financial stress by 75% or more?

    OK, OK, I know – it’s a stupid question.  Of course you do.  Which is why Steve Chandler and I have created a Financially Fearless mastermind group to assist a small group of committed people in mastering the 4 aspects of money and making fear irrelevant in their lives.If you book by the end of the week (April 10th), we’ll also include additional one on one coaching between now and the start of the event in July!

    To take advantage of this offer and begin to transform your experience of money for the better today, click here.


    Get your daily inspiration (and some random musings) on Twitter – click here!

    Chat about this tip and more with fellow geniuses on the Genius Catalyst Discussion Forum!

     Copyright © 2010 Michael Neill. All Rights Reserved  

    Hypnotherapy ‘can help’ irritable bowel syndrome

    March 25th, 2010

    This was posted on the BBC News (http://news.bbc.co.uk) on 17th March. It suggests that research is backing up the claim that hypnotherapy can be very effective in the treatment of Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS).

    woman with abdominal pain
    Irritable bowel syndrome causes abdominal pain and bloating

     

    Greater use of hypnotherapy to ease the symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome would help sufferers and might save money, says a gastroenterologist.

    Dr Roland Valori, editor of Frontline Gastroenterology, said of the first 100 of his patients treated, symptoms improved significantly for nine in 10.

    He said that although previous research has shown hypnotherapy is effective for IBS sufferers, it is not widely used.

    This may be because doctors simply do not believe it works.

    Widely ignored

    Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a common gut problem which can cause abdominal pain, bloating, and sometimes diarrhoea or constipation.

    Dr Valori, of Gloucestershire Royal Hospital, said the research evidence which shows that hypnotherapy could help sufferers of IBS was first published in the 1980s.

    He thinks it has been widely ignored because many doctors find it hard to believe that it does work, or to comprehend how it could work.

    It is pretty clear to me that it has an amazing effect
    Dr Roland Valori, editor of Frontline Gastroenterology

    He began referring IBS patients for hypnotherapy in the early 1990s and has found it to be highly effective.

    “To be frank, I have never looked back,” he said.

    He audited the first 100 cases he referred for hypnotherapy and found that the symptoms stopped completely in four in ten cases with typical IBS.

    He says in a further five in 10 cases patients reported feeling more in control of their symptoms and were therefore much less troubled by them.

    “It is pretty clear to me that it has an amazing effect,” he said.

    “It seems to work particularly well on younger female patients with typical symptoms, and those who have only had IBS for a relatively short time.”

    Powerful effect

    He believes that it could work partly by helping to relax patients.

    “Of the relaxation therapies available, hypnotherapy is the most powerful,” he said.

    He also says that IBS patients often face difficult situations in their lives, and hypnotherapy can help them respond to these stresses in a less harmful way.

    NHS guidelines allow doctors to refer IBS patients for hypnotherapy or other psychological therapies if medication is unsuccessful and the problem persists.

    Dr Valori thinks that if hypnotherapy were used more widely it could possibly save the NHS money while improving patient care.

    Dr Charlie Murray, Secretary of the British Gastroenterology Society, said: “There is no doubt that hypnotherapy is helpful for some patients, but it depends on the skill and experience of those practising it.

    “But the degree to which it is effective is not well defined.

    “I would support using it as one therapy, but it is no panacea.”

    Just for today…

    February 26th, 2010

    This was shared with me today, and it made me stop and think, so I thought I’d share it with you too.

    by Che von Lindbergh, 2006

    Today I will delete from my diary
    two days: yesterday and tomorrow
    Yesterday was to learn
    and tomorrow will be the consequence
    of what I can do today.

    Today I will face life
    with the conviction that this day
    will not ever return.

    Today is the last opportunity
    I have to live intensely,
    as no one can assure me
    that I will see tomorrow’s sunrise.

    Today I will be brave enough
    not to let any opportunity pass me by,
    my only alternative is to succeed

    Today I will invest
    my most valuable resource: my time,
    in the most trascendental work:
    my life;

    I will spend each minute
    passionately to make
    of today a different
    and unique day in my life.

    Today I will defy every obstacle
    that appears on my way trusting
    I will succeed.

    Today I will resist
    pessimism and will conquer
    the world with a smile,
    with the positive attitude
    of expecting always the best.

    Today I will make of every ordinary task a sublime expression,

    Today I will have my feet on the ground
    understanding reality
    and the stars’ gaze
    to invent my future.

    Today I will take the time to be happy
    and will leave my footprints and my presence
    in the hearts of others.

    Today, I invite you to begin a new season
    where we can dream
    that everything we undertake is possible
    and we fulfil it,
    with joy and dignity.