Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Hypnosis Classic


We are in the office of the hypnotist. The therapist makes you sit in a comfortable chair and an equal voice, monotonous, boring, suggests: "Your eyelids are heavy, your body is relaxed, you feel a pleasant warmth, you fall asleep slowly."

What the patient feels at this point? Nothing. If you expect the emergence of a sense inconceivable, then I have to disillusion you. Slight drowsiness, the low murmur of the psychotherapist, and meanwhile you keep full control of the situation. Well yes, that's what it's like hypnosis. Hypnosis itself is a thing, apparently, you do not realize.

But how the psychotherapist finds there that you're under hypnosis? When your face is symmetrical, the skin on your face is tinged slightly pink and moist is when your breathing is calm and deep, you stand motionless in a sitting position, your eyes (if open) cillent rarely if you stopped to swallow, it means you're under hypnosis.

The psychotherapist who practices hypnosis is presumed to have passed the stage of the disease of "hypnosis to hypnosis" or "good, well now I'm going to hypnotize." Because the remedy is not hypnosis, but the suggestion therapeutic trance.

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