Stress
Management
with Hypnosis
The human brain receives messages from several sources,
each dealing with separate types of information. Input dealing
with everyday matters, such as news, music, jobs, relationships,
weather, etc. comes from the external environment. Our own bodies
provide data concerning movement, digestion, tension, pain, etc.,
all in the form of message units sent to the brain.
The conscious mind deals with reasoning and logic, decisions,
goals planning and conscious activity. The unconscious mind, which
includes both the subconscious and the superconscious, wields
the greatest influence. It receives all the message units from
our social, spiritual and genetic backgrounds, and all the conflicts
and disturbances which
enter our consciousness each day. The unconscious mind receives
and holds its information, neither accepting nor rejecting the
messages. It does not evaluate. That procedure is reserved for
the conscious mind.
From primitive times the human animal has possessed an escaped
mechanism that even today, under severely threatening conditions,
can cause regression to primitive behavior. The fight/flight syndrome,
always a means of dealing with fears, threats, attacks, and other
disturbances, has gained tolerance through evolution with the
addition of reaction Vs
action and repression Vs depression. Without these, when the message
input volume reached overload conditions, the escape would be
toward the denial of reality. However, the desire for social acceptance
provides motivation to cope with and adapt to reality.
Nevertheless, when the conscious mind can no longer handle the
message units overloading the brain, the subconscious prepares
us for fight or flight - the heart pumps harder, blood pressure
rises, super-strength can be generated. But sometimes there is
nothing to fight. We can't fight the environment. We can't fight
a job, an accident, a bad
decision. What now?
ENTER STRESS/ANXIETY
Unable to fight, the reaction turns to the alternative of flight,
which in present day life can prove impossible. Often a state
of apathy, depression and/or hypersuggestibility ensues. Negative
input finds acceptance. Futility and melancholy develop and an
overreaction to the senses develops together with a loss of tolerance.
The road turns downhill.
Imagine a group of musicians playing together. Imagine the trumpet
player getting a measure or two ahead of the rest. Imagine the
saxophone player, trying to figure out what the trumpeter is doing,
dropping a measure behind. Imagine the drummer, becoming confused,
missing his beats so that the whole group gets off beat. Imagine
the conductor waving his arms, desperately trying to orient the
players. Imagine the cacophony as the musicians collapse, give
up and quit playing.
A person experiencing continuing stress may well
become subject to such a frenzy, in the process developing any
of several forms of stress - related illness. While certain types
of stress are even desirable (romantic stress, job promotions,
winning a lottery), stresses that produce debilitation, depression,
excessive smoking, overeating, anger, grief, and similar reactions
need attention and usually professional help.
The first recognition of a therapist dealing with stress is likely
to be that while the world, or the past if it is a factor in the
condition, cannot be changed, it is possible to alter the client's
perception of and reaction to them.
Again, causal factors need to be investigated. And not infrequently
regression can be helpful in this process. Stress may be a reaction
to people, places, events, or things. The threats may be real
or imagined. Remember, the subconscious mind does not analyze,
and usually by the time depression appears the conscious mind
has lost its ability to do so. However, there are several common
basic causes of stress which can be recognized, defined and often
eliminated.
WHAT'S BEHIND IT ALL
Why me? Stress victims ask the question quite often. Many factors
enter into the picture of possibilities. Over-achievers, typical
Type A personalities, are hyper-competitive. They can be addicted
to stress, to the point where it gets out of control. Victims
can learn stress early in life from parents, teachers, relatives,
and others. Through early experience they simply consider stress
a normal part of life; they see it all the time.
Fears, valid or otherwise, can lead to the development of symptoms
of stress. They can expand into full grown phobias and psychiatric
disorders. Unrelenting pain or worries over health situations
are factors, as are repressed emotions such as hurt, anger, grief,
etc. Specific incidents are frequently involved, such as the necessity
to speak to a group in the course of job performance when such
activity is uncomfortable.
Medical conditions, including dietary deficiencies, can lead to
stress, as can such female experiences as PMS. External factors,
such as continuous or intermittent bothersome noise levels can
create or add to stress levels.
Every individual is different in tolerance levels, coping abilities,
reactions and therapeutic needs. Dealing with stress is best accomplished
through a trained, experienced and sensitive professional who
can determine caused and evaluate reactions. Sheer willpower is
not the remedy in stress cases. Effective and permanent relief
occurs through desensitization, which can be brought about through
hypnotherapy.
It is important to analyze the stress stimuli and the physical
and/or emotional responses which they bring about. Through hypnosis
positive new responses can be created to replace the devastating
reactions of the past. Buried feelings can be brought to the surface
and released. Outside pressures can be relieved. And finally,
new responses to old disturbances can be induced with major changes
in attitudes and reactions.
Copyright, 1991 National Guild
of Hypnotists
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