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Use Stealth Hypnosis to Help Others
In a previous post, I suggested that you use stealth hypnosis
hypnosis to help other people. While most people probably think of stealth hypnosis as a way to seduce women, make a sale, get ahead at work, or to achieve other self-serving ends, it can also be a powerful tool to help others achieve a goal, solve a problem, overcome a phobia, eliminate bad habits, fight pain, and the list could go on and on. Take a look at the list below of typical issues dealt with by hypnotherapists to see just a few of the possible ways that stealth hypnosis can be used to help others:
Addictions
Alcohol and Drug Dependency
Allergies
Becoming a Calm Public Speaker
Bed wetting
Body, Mind Healing
Catastrophic Illness
Chronic Pain
Co-dependency Issues
Compulsions and Obsessions
Depression
Diabetes
Disabilities, MS, RSD, etc.
Eating disorders
Fingernail Biting and Hair Pulling
Fears and Phobias
Fibromyalgia
Finding Lost Articles
High Blood Pressure
IBS (Irritable Bowel Syndrome)
Improved Concentration
Improving Sales Performance
Inner Child Dialogue
Insomnia
Intuition Expansion
Medical/Dental Procedures
Motivation
Overcoming Stage Fright
Pain Management
Pain of Child Birth
Panic and Anxiety
Public Speaking
Regression Therapy
Relaxation
Raynaud’s disease
Self Confidence
Self Healing: Body, Mind and Spirit
Sexual Dysfunction*
Sports
Stress and Tension
Stuttering
Tension Headaches
Test taking/Study Habits
Tinnitus (ringing of the ears)
Tourette’s syndrome
Visualization for health problems
Hypnosis can produce sometimes seemingly miraculous results in persons working with a hypnotherapist to deal with their problems and issues. Unfortunately, one simple four letter word can undo or negate all of the work the hypnotherapist has done to help his or her client and that word is hope. When someone goes to see a hypnotherapist for help with whatever it is that brought them there, it is usually after they have exhausted every other possible means of dealing with their problem. So out of desperation they finally decide to try hypnosis. They don’t know if it will help them, but they have heard stories about others who have been helped by hypnotherapy and they desperately hope that it will help them too.
This mindset of hoping that hypnosis will help virtually guarantees that it won’t. There may be a short-term improvement, but it probably won’t last because, having undergone hypnosis and hypnotherapy for a problem no one has been able to help them with before, they aren’t sure it will help, but they hope it will when what is necessary is for them to absolutely believe that it will work. If they hope or try to make it work, it won’t.
Stealth hypnosis is different. The person being hypnotized doesn’t know he is being hypnotized. He or she thinks that the other person is just having an interesting conversation with them and the ideas being planted and reinforced in their subconscious will be accepted without interference because that critical factor of the conscious mind never comes into play. It has been effortlessly bypassed through the skillful application of stealth hypnosis.











































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