Archive for March, 2006
Age regression to solve eyesight dis-ease
Posted by: | CommentsShallow men believe in luck. Strong men believe in cause and effect.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Age regression is a powerful technique that can be used to improve eyesight especially with problem like myopia.
One will age regress to an early time when he didn’t have myopia, then he or she will check that she wasn’t affected by myopia at that time from that point she will age progress to her current time and keep the good eyesight from early time.
This method works well but doesn’t deal with the hidden benefit or the inner feelings that caused the eyesight to deteriorate. I say inner feelings because most of the time, the feelings is at subconscious level without you being aware.
Below is a list of feelings of possible cause for eyesight dis-ease:
Circles Under:
- Bitterness
- Remorse / Regret
- Self-Condemnation
- Deep seed grief
- Feeling unfulfilled
- Resentment/hurt
Glaucoma: protracted hostility
Watery: Unable to express an inner grief
Not wanting to understand what you are seeing
Not seeing the truth
Fearing the future
Not wanting to see life as it is
Life is weak and out of focus
Not seeing eye to eye with another
Not forgiving
Inability to see ones own self-worth
(This list is from the book ‘Feelings Buried Alive Never Die, Karol Truman‘)
Using age regression or timeline therapy, you can directly work on the causes and fix the problem once and for all. Using the Bates method you can improve your eyesight condition for awhile but the eyesight dis-ease will keep coming back as long as you don’t work on the cause.
Technorati Tags: myopia, Glaucoma, Watery, age regression, timeline therapy, Bates method, eyesight
Tips to create suggestions for your self-hypnosis script
Posted by: | CommentsIn his book Trance-formations, Richard Bandler recommends to the people using self-hypnosis to always ask themselves in what your goal can be harmful to you and use the answer to make a better formulated goal.
You have to equally know the true reason that motivate you to commit a change.
Say you are overweight, you use self-hypnosis to lose weight and reach your ideal weight but constantly fail, you may query your beliefs further and find out that you have belief that you are not worthy and doesn’t deserve to be attractive. That’s an example.
Age regression is a good technique to discover your behavioural motivations.
Creating the script
You should ideally use emotive language that will arouse your imagination, it will have a bigger impact on your unconscious mind. Now, you should naturally use the 17 magic words to expand state elicitation and support presupposition of your script.
Naturally, Automatically, Unlimited
Experience, Wonder, Understand
Before, During, After
Among, Expand, Beyond
Causes, Because, And
Now, Stop
Avoid being ambiguous. If you feel tired, you can say ‘I need a break’, over and over again to find yourself a few weeks later with a harm or a leg broken. I need a break is too ambiguous to be understood clearly by the unconscious mind always use the present tense in hypnosis tomorrow never come.
Say what you really want
Our unconscious mind doesn’t know the ‘NOT’ clause. If you say ‘I don’t sleep’ your unconscious mind understand ‘I sleep’. So be extremely careful with that and not create negative suggestions.
One more tip , it is to use the more clause, ‘The more you write script the better you will be’ , you get the idea ? happy scripting.
Technorati Tags: Trance-formations, Richard Bandler, self-hypnosis, lose weight, ideal weight, 17 magic words, state elicitation, presupposition, unconscious mind
Borrowed Genius and Quantum leap
Posted by: | CommentsYou project your beliefs into events and objects and therefore interpret the world through those beliefs and solely through those beliefs. This is your world view. Most people are scared to step out of their world view to adopt a new stand point, however by doing that you can literally make a quantum leap in many of your endeavours. Let me give you an example, it will also serve me to introduce the technique of borrowed genius developed by Win Wenger, Ph.D, founder of Project Renaissance (Project Renaissance is a non-profit educational organization based in Maryland, U.S.A. Its core mission is to enable as many people as possible to become more than a match for the situations, opportunities, problems or difficulties they find around them, and to enjoy a richer quality of life and experience)
In 1977 during a workshop, Win Wenger asked a young girl with minimum experience as a violinist, in fact she has had only 1 lesson prior to the workshop to close her eyes and to do a procedure called the borrowed genius, where she will put her head on someone else in this case Jascha Heifetz a well known violinist, needless to say that after the experiment she was able to go directly in the advanced class. How come such a quantum leap is possible ?
Win Wenger talk about something he names the Raikov Effect, Dr. Raikov discovered that under deep controlled hypnosis patients could borrow the genius of other persons, Raikov made some paint just like Rembrandt, but, after the person emerged from deep hypnosis, he denied that he did the painting yet , the person was still able to keep some of the Rembrandt skill despite the denial. In the case of the Borrowed Genius Procedure the person is fully conscious there is no hypnotic trance involved. Thus made the method easier and more accessible for a greater number of people.
The Borrowed Genius procedure can help people to explore aspect of their creativity they are ignoring, expand or improve a current skills or talents.
The method is explained in details in the book Beyond learning and teaching by Win Wenger, Wendi Friesen at Wendi.com has a self-hypnosis with the Borrowed Genius procedure, so far, I used the CD once to explore one skill that I have but don’t use much, so far, I had good experience, I will review the CD soon and the 8 tracks on it. Stay tuned.
Technorati Tags: Project Renaissance, Win Wenger, borrowed genius, Jascha Heifetz, quantum leap, Raikov Effect, hypnotic trance, Wendi Friesen



