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Altered States
by David Noonan
Hypnosis can help with problems from anxiety to pain. How it works and what it does in the brain.
Christina Bodie, 48, was driving with her parents seven years ago when her car was rear-ended. All three suffered whiplash and bruises. Long after the physical pain was gone, Christina would find herself clutching the wheel and hyperventilating. "I found driving very difficult and would suffer panic attacks," she recalls.
At one point she stopped driving altogether, doing her work as a
pension manager at a London firm from home. When she'd had enough, she
called Harley Street London-based hypnotist Tim Martin
.(www.altogether-mbs.co.uk)
He had her visualize a white cloud that absorbed all her problems and then taught her to make the cloud turn black and disappear. Martin walked Bodie through her car accident as though it were playing on a move screen, adding humorous touches - like putting a clown nose on the policeman.
Bodie hasn't had a panic attack for a year now and memories of the accident no longer haunt her. Hypnosis, she says, "This is powerful, I genuinely feel that Mr Martin gave me the confidence to take control of my life".
Despite widely held misconceptions about hypnosis (in part because of its long history as a type of entertainment), a growing body of research supports the ancient practice as an effective tool in the treatment of a variety of problems, from anxiety to chronic pain.
Today, as practitioners work to assess and refine the clinical applications of hypnosis, they are also exploring its underlying mechanisms, using state-of-the-art imaging technology to document changes in the brain that occur when someone is in hypnotic state.
This increased understanding of how hypnosis works and what it does makes it a legitimate option for patients whose needs have not been met by more traditional methods.
To appreciate the therapeutic potential of hypnosis, you first have to forget about things like swinging watches and hapless audience members who prance around onstage, crowing like roosters.
"One of the interesting ironies about hypnosis is that old fantasy that it takes away control", says Tim martin
"It's actually a way of enhancing people's control, of teaching them how to control aspects of their body's function and sensation that they thought they couldn't".
Hypnosis is "a form of highly focused attention," says Martin -an induced state of mind that enables people to alter the way they perceive and process reality. During a typical session, the doctor guides the subject into a state of receptive concentration, asking him to imagine he is in a safe and comfortable place.
Once the patient is in a state of hypnosis, the practitioner makes specific suggestions - a hockey player with back spasms was told that when his pads touched his back, the muscles relaxed - to address the problem. (This focus on a problem distinguishes hypnosis from more passive states, like meditation).
The doctor then terminates the trance and teaches the patient how to use self-hypnosis to reactivate and maintain the therapeutic effect. The benefits can last for years.
Besides pain management and stress reduction, habit control is another popular clinical application of hypnosis; it's routinely used by people who want to quit smoking.
It has also been used successfully as an alternative to sedation during invasive medical procedures like angiography. And at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Dr. Peter Bloom, clinical professor of psychiatry and past president of the International Society of Hypnosis, sometimes uses it to enhance therapy sessions.
"Hypnosis allows us to interact with the people who seek our care in more than one dimention," says Bloom. "It involves the totality of the person. Clinically, when I get stuck, I use hypnosis and see if that gives me a different way of linking up with them."
As it is practiced by professionals like Bloom and Martin , hypnosis is generally safe, though there are occasional surprises, such as the unplanned recall of a forgotten trauma (something a lay hypnotist might not handle as well as a doctor or psychologist).
Practitioners often use vivid imagery when making hypnotic suggestions. Tim Martin uses a detailed, seven-session hypnosis protocol for the treatment of irritable bowel syndrome, a disorder often accompanied by abdominal pain.
"One of the ingredients is visualizing your stomach and your intestines and visualizing a strong, protective coating being applied inside your intestines," ex-plains Martin . "And this special protective coating only allows pleasant sensations through and keeps all uncomfortable sensations out.
And then it is suggested that this protective coating grows stronger and thicker and harder day by day."
It's well known that some people are more responsive to hypnosis than others. Hypnotizability, experts say, is a trait, like eye colour. As a rule, the more 'absorbed' a person is able to get in things - movies, sunsets, day dreams - the more hypnotizable he is.
Several studies using positron emission tomography (PET) have looked at what goes on in the brain during hypnosis. In one, hypnotized subjects had their hands immersed in 'painfully hot' water but were told it was comfortably warm. This not only altered their perception of the pain but also altered blood flow in pain-related parts of the brain.
In another study, highly hypnotizable people were shown a black-and-white pattern and asked to see colour. The results: the regions of the brain normally activated during colour perception were activated in the hypnotized subjects. "It's not just a fantasy," says Martin .
"It's not just telling people things because that's what you think they want to hear. If you think you are seeing colour, you actually see it and your brain acts as thought it's seeing it." It's easy to see why, in the field of hypnosis these days, nobody is getting sleepy.
A recent article published in Newsweek magazine by David Noonan