Hypnohealing
Bill Atkinson-Ball, the founder of the Atkinson-Ball College of Hypnotherapy and HypnoHealing, first used hypnohealing when he developed osteo-arthritis following multiple injuries sustained in the RAF. Medical treatment had been unable to help but after using self-hypnosis for a few weeks he became free of pain and was able to resume an active life.
Mind and body together
It is now widely recognised that illness stems not only from physical processes but is also profoundly influenced by one's emotional and psychological state. The concept of psychosomatic illness is now generally accepted, so why not psychosomatic wellness?
HypnoHealing therefore works on the basis that the mind and body work together.
For example, a doctor may set a broken arm but it is the subconscious mind that orchestrates the combination of bodily processes which allow the bone to knit together and healing to take place.
Once this is understood it is not difficult to see that through hypnosis the subconscious mind can be encouraged to concentrate extra healing effort on an affected area, particularly when we consider that the body is in any event in a constant state of renewal as it replaces worn out cells.
Wound Healing
Research at the Harvard Medical school demonstrated a link between hypnosis and healing of broken ankles. Those who had hypnosis healed faster than those who did not. In fact, at six weeks after their fractures they showed the equivalent of eight and a half weeks healing.
Another study at the Medical school revealed similar results after breast surgery. Those who received hypnotherapy healed faster than those who did not, even though some of these were given supportive psychological attention.
Irritable Bowel Syndrome
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