Hypnotherapy is well known for healing trauma and pain relief. Hypnosis is also extremely valuable in working with sports enhancement, weight loss, motivation, self-esteem, anxiety, panic attacks, insomnia, increased confidence, smoking, phobias and stress related issues.

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Transformational Healing Method

Transformational healing can help people identify and disrupt negative patterns, and develop tools to move through blockages.

The Transformational Healing Method (THM) is a healing process for transforming darkness into light. Based on transformational hypnotherapy and combined with EFT, (Emotional Freedom Techniques), it is a profound and comprehensive healing modality for working with most emotional, physical and spiritual issues. With this method you can transform life’s challenges into states of well being, move through such fundamental challenges as physical issues, abandonment, abuse, addictions and habits, past issues, fears, emotions and sabotaging thoughts. Ultimately, you can move into your true essence of strength, love, healing, and positive redirection. You receive emotional and physical healing as well as support for spiritual transformation.

The Four Phases of a Session

THM has four phases: Interview, Tapping, Deep Inner Healing, and Recording. The Deep Inner Healing phase has three stages: Experience, Release, and Transform.

Interview: The interview process is an inquiry into past, present, and future.

Tapping: During the tapping phase, you learn and experience for yourself how to do EFT, a process in which you tap on specific stress-relief or acupressure points while talking about your issues. You find that the issues are reduced in intensity or completely released.

Deep Inner Healing (Transformational Hypnotherapy): In the third phase, you have the opportunity to relax very deeply and explore the deep inner mind for whatever is important for you to pay attention to. Here is where you look deeply into your own inner being to experience and understand your issues as fully as possible. You may do some tapping in this phase also. You can then release and transform your challenges into states of higher consciousness while you are fully relaxed. You are able to find relief, love, guidance and wisdom, deep peace, and great healing.

Recording: In the final phase, you will have to make a recording especially for you, which deeply relaxes you and gives positive expression to your life issues.

The THM healing system also includes special techniques to discover the root causes of your issues and to uncover the obstacles you’ve been experiencing in your life.

Some of the results of The Transformational Healing Method are:

  • Stress and anxiety relief
  • Release of fears and phobias
  • Trauma release
  • Spiritual growth support
  • Grief and loss relief
  • Relationship clarity
  • Pain relief
  • Habit cessation
  • Weight control
  • Regression therapy
  • Life transition support

This healing system embraces all levels of consciousness.

With the combined powers of your subconscious mind, higher consciousness, conscious mind and energy system, you can resolve the dilemmas of your life. You can do self healing or work with someone else.

The subconscious mind is a repository of all that you have been and done. It’s the storage place, the database, of all that has taken place in your experience. You can visit it and take a journey into its vast terrain. You can put it on “search mode” – ask it what you need to know at any given point in time.

Higher consciousness is a built-in enlightenment system. Through it, you experience the love, healing power, wisdom and compassion of the universe.

The energy system is a system of meridians or energy pathways in your body. Getting in touch with this system can help to create a state of well being in your body, mind, and emotions.

And because the quality of your thoughts naturally has a deep effect on your healing process, we also address your conscious mind.

The way out is through. This is a system for healing whatever in your life is obscuring your essence. The results are both practical and transcendental. Its philosophy is that “the way out is through,” that there is nothing inherently bad or wrong with anything you’re undergoing. Everything is material worthy of being paid attention to. Everything you’re experiencing is an opportunity for understanding and self-knowledge.

Inside your own being is an essence that is ready to shine beyond the difficulties that life presents. Through the Transformational Healing Method, you receive tools and techniques and ways of extraordinary healing. As you move through the stages of “Experience, Release and Transform,” you first allow yourself to fully experience your experience, to come to know what’s taking place within you. Next, you’re able to release the experience, and then you can transform it.

Every experience carries a richness and has value. Paying close attention is the first step in the process of self-knowledge. It is a process of looking with an inner microscope or magnifying glass and just seeing what’s there. It’s about looking, for example, at current experiences that are taking place in the body – pains, constrictions, tingling, holding – whatever is happening in the moment. It’s also about looking at the mind and emotions – seeing whether there is sadness or rage or tightness or shame. It’s about looking even more deeply at the experience, possibly finding the roots. The roots may be in childhood, or they may go all the way back to the womb. Or they may go to another lifetime, or to a belief or a tendency of the mind.

Sometimes release happens naturally as a direct result of “looking deeply” or “paying attention.” Other times, we can assist in the release process by using techniques such as energy therapy (EFT), which taps away old traumas, fears, resentments, guilt, grief, shame, anger and emotional trauma.

Release is a clearing out of your consciousness. It’s like cleaning out your closets and drawers, releasing old correspondence or outworn clothes. As you discard these, you ready yourself to invite in a new level of your life. You’re ready to initiate an opening of a reality that had previously been either closed or unknown.

Release, again, often takes place as a natural outgrowth of paying attention to your experience. As you stay with your experience, often a miracle happens. One person found a lotus at the bottom of a murky pond. Another felt as if she were experiencing a birth process through a very dark tunnel and out into an experience of light.

We remember that healing is the work of a lifetime, that healing is a cyclic process. We know that in this process we continue to transform darkness into light and to experience love, compassion, forgiveness, wisdom, the ability to stand back and see with greater perspective, and the ability to know the great power of healing.

Unresolved Relational Trauma get help with Hypnotherapy

Relational trauma is an aftereffect of abuse, neglect, and suffering.

Those whose are betrayed by people they loved, trusted, or relied on may encounter enormous mental and behavioral health challenges, as they attempt to forge interpersonal connections and cope with life’s many challenges.

Unprocessed trauma can have a negative impact on a person’s psychological, emotional, and physical well-being.

Many who have histories of adverse experiences in their life may not be consciously aware that their unhealed trauma can influence their thoughts, feelings, beliefs, and choices within their friendships and romantic relationship.

However, many tend to subconsciously attract toxic people in their life that reinforce their unhealed wounds.

This can include choosing the same kind of person over and over or choosing someone who exhibits behaviors, personality traits, or similar negative patterns that resonate with traumatic experiences.

If unrecognized or denied, these can be carried with a person where old wounds are replayed with each new partner or within a friendship.

Here is common patterns where unprocessed trauma can replay in a person’s life:

1. Conditioned to Chaos

If a person has experienced unpredictable, unreliable, or chaotic environments as “normal,” they may become dismissive or distrusting of a friendship or relationship that is calm or without extreme highs or lows.

Some may struggle with peaceful moments and be “waiting for the other shoe to drop.” Many times, a person who has been conditioned to chaos will create problems by testing their partner’s investment or by smearing their friend to others as a way of triggering a response.

If the person “takes chase,” it can, in turn, reinforce more problems within the relationship, creating a cyclic pattern that can be difficult to break.

2. Dichotomous Thinking

All-or-nothing thinking can be linked to adverse experiences in childhood, including traumatic events that may have played a role in developing these kinds of cognitive distortions.

Categorizing people or situations in absolutes can begin as self-protective as part of learned conditioning.

For example, a person may have accepted beliefs taught to them about themselves or the people in their life as “factual,” where these beliefs may become internalized and reinforced.

These same beliefs can be “triggered” in a friendship or romantic relationship, especially during conflict.

In time, these distorted views can affect self-worth, self-esteem, and the quality of their relationships.

3. Relational Sabotage

This pattern is especially common if a relationship is healthy or shows promise, as vulnerabilities can tap into feelings of unworthiness, fears of rejection, or engulfment.

Many who have histories of sabotaging friendships or romantic relationships struggle with a cruel inner critic that convinces them they are going to be left behind, that the other person is going to abandon them, or that the person does not care about them. In more extreme situations, they can subconsciously attract toxic friends or partners to them that creates a self-fulfilling prophecy.

More common, is that they often discard one relationship for the kind of relationship that “validates” their beliefs that they are undeserving of better.

4. Constantly on the Go

This is common with “flight” trauma responses.

A person may feel as though they constantly need to do more in order to outrun their childhood pain.

Or some may find themselves in a pattern of overachieving, over-committing, workaholism, or perfectionism as ways of trying to emotionally numb unprocessed trauma.

At the root of this behavioral pattern are unmet needs to feel good enough and accepted for who they are, which can create barriers in their relationships where constant busyness may not leave time for friendships, intimacy, or connection.

5. Inner Critic

Traumatic experiences may have left their indelible mark in the form of an inner critic, which may act up in times of feeling vulnerable, lonely, or disempowered.

The “goal” of the inner critic is to make a person buy into its misbeliefs, some of which may surround deep feelings of shame or feeling unworthy of love.

In time, if a person begins buying into their inner critic’s messages, it can take a negative toll on their relationships.

6. Boundaries

If a person grew up in an environment that did not offer stable or consistent boundaries, they are at an increased risk of becoming an adult with shaky or nonexistent boundaries.

Some may feel guilty for setting a boundary for themselves out of fear of being shamed or abandoned.

Others may find themselves in a friendship or romantic relationship with a narcissist who limits their ability to establish and maintain firm boundaries or who violates boundaries they try to set for themselves.

7. Feeling “Behind” Others of Similar Age

Experiencing early or chronic trauma in a person’s formative years can make them fall behind developmentally or emotionally from their peers.

Because trauma can overwhelm a person’s emotions, physical body, and psychological and mental development, they may get “stuck” at the age at which their trauma occurred.

They may act or dress younger than their age or may revert to age-regressive behaviors such as tantrums, emotional immaturity, excessive anxiety, an inability to be soothed, or dissociative behaviors – all of which may negatively impact their relationships.

8. Mistrust

Trauma can affect a person’s ability to feel safe or secure in their relationships, which may leave a person feeling scared or anxious.

Mistrust is formed early in a person’s infancy if they cannot consistently rely on their caregiver to meet their basic needs for love, safety, security, food, or shelter.

Mistrust in infancy can generalize to overall distrust of others in their adult relationships because of early conditioning.

As a result, some may struggle to understand other people’s motives and may get involved with toxic friends who smear them or partners who use them, which reinforces their feelings of mistrust.

Others may internalize narcissistic adaptations (choosing self over others) because of a limited ability to trust.

9. Fear of Abandonment

Having experienced actual or perceived abandonment can predispose a person to misbeliefs that they will again experience abandonment.

These fears may generalize to a need for control, possessiveness, intense jealousy, or an inability to self-soothe if those in their life want to spend time with others or they need time alone.

10. Pushing Away

A pattern of pushing away is often learned in childhood.

Those who did not receive unconditional positive regard or who were shamed or harshly disciplined for being vulnerable may become more avoidant in their relationships.

These types of early experiences may condition a person to feel that they can only count on themselves or that relationships require too much effort.

Hence, if their relationship reaches an impasse or emotional vulnerability is on the line, they may find themselves shutting down or pushing away and preferring time to themselves.

Healing Suggestions

These behaviour patterns are learned survival adaptations that some may struggle with in releasing from their life.

While living with these conditioned patterns can create further distress for a person, letting go of them can be frightening, especially if it is all a person knows (or has been conditioned to believe).

You can heal from and be free of Unresolved Relational Trauma.

However, speaking to a clinician who specializes in trauma can help you overcome these barriers, as well as provide you with insights and tools for building self-empowerment.

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