110 degrees magazine - Index

110 degrees magazine - 110° Magazine - July 2007 - Through the gates of Hell - Index

“we assist patients in
blockages my patients have. Patients identify them
and then get rid of them on their own. I’m merely a
facilitator; the individual does the work.
A ROAD TO HEALTH
As the patient goes under hypnosis, the depths of
the mind — the SCM — suddenly become clear and I
begin talking to the person’s subconscious mind. I
tell the mind to scan completely all seven levels of
the subconscious.
“Scan these seven levels completely,” I tell it. “Then
let me know when you are finished.”
When patients say that they are done, I ask them
if they found any blocks. If they say, yes, I ask them
how many. They can always tell me because, amazing
as it seems, my patients come back from the
first working session with an absolutely clear
understanding of what blockages they have, and
how many of them.
Sometimes they have found only one. Sometimes
there are many more. In one case a patient reported 144.
The nature of the event is common for everybody, but the
experience changes depending upon the person’s character.
removing their own blocks
Based upon how we interact with the world we are
divided into four classifications: visual, hearing,
smelling, and touching. We all have all of these qualities
but one is most dominant. The majority of us are
visual, but some people experience the sub-conscious
in one of the other sensory ways.
After patients are back to CCM, I ask them to tell me
about their experience. They describe the clarity that
comes to them. Some of them see the sub-conscious
as a cloud beneath them. Others see words, numbers,
colors, or faces.
Once they are conscious of the blockages, during
subsequent sessions the patients can desensitize,
unlock, and remove them. After each session I ask,
“Have the blocks or obstacles been completely
removed?” If the answer is no, we go back in again. We
keep doing that as an iterative process until the
answer to the question is yes!
Once the blocks are finally gone, patients are free of
pain, perhaps, or they no longer have crying jags. Or
they can stop eating once they are full. Whatever
problems they have that were caused by mental
blocks are finally gone.
Some people think hypnotherapy is weird, but I’ve
seen huge successes that even amaze me. One client,
for example, came in for a weight issue. When we
started delving into her sub-conscious mind she
would report having dreams of things she didn’t
remember that had happened to her. I told her that it
was a good thing that she was stirring up things so
she could get rid of them.
By the end of our time together she had gotten rid
of all the blocks through sleep and dream activities, as
well as the sessions in my office. She lost weight, got
her confidence back, and one day called, in tears, to
report that she had fallen completely back into love
with her husband. She hadn’t even realized that she
had fallen out of love with him.
I’m in a happy place of doing something that is amazing
and interesting, and most of all, provides for people
real relief for problems that have been dragging them
down, in some cases for years. My life as a hypnotherapist
is a great fit for me and is satisfying my desire to
make the world a better place one person at a time. °
For more information see www.anjahealthcenter.com.
July 2007 www.110mag.com 55