The HBT Self-Hypnosis Programme - 21 and 22 July 2007 - Bournemouth
The great thing about self-hypnosis is that you will never have any doubt about who is in control. What is more, you will be able to create and install your own positive suggestions to improve your personal and /or business success in whatever aspect interests you. Self-hypnosis is easy to learn and very enjoyable. It is also available to anyone.
The Benefits
The benefits depend on what you choose to focus on. You could easily address any or even all of the following using these techniques.
- Increased self-confidence Improved performance in sports, careers, business and education
- Less stress and more relaxation
- Better self-management including health, fitness and even pain management
- Increased Decisiveness
- Increased capacity to deal with setbacks and challenges
- Self-induced changes unproductive behaviours and habits with ease and comfort
- Removal of phobias
- Greater self-control
- Improved memory skills
- Easy weight loss
- Stop smoking
- Better Presentations
Another simple fact about self-hypnosis is that it doesn’t require a great act of will-power. In fact, self-hypnosis works almost in the opposite way to will-power. Have you ever wondered why most people who go on time management courses or diets, eventually end up giving up, and often become even worse? The answer is an over reliance upon ’will-power’. Forcing yourself to do something through abstinence and artifically imposed restraints rapidly leads to back-sliding, disillusionment and misery.
Self-hypnosis, on the other hand, enables people to negotiate with their own unconscious mind to find positive solutions to their issues: solutions which do not involve ‘cures’ that are worse than the original ’dis-ease’. By testing out your self-managed suggestions with your unconscious mind, you are able to identify substitute behaviours and choices that will work for you on an ongoing basis, providing you with all the positive benefits you really desire. Forget feast and famine. Self-hypnosis is the proven way to get your business, career and life back on track.
The Programme
The HBT Self-Hypnosis Programme runs over one week-end. By the end of the programme you will be able to:
- understand how hypnotherapy works
- go into your own trance whenevr you want to
- create and administer your own self-hypnosis inductions
- understand the process of reframing
- design and deliver your own post-hypnotic suggestions
- utilise ideomotor movements to negotiate appropriate solutions with your own unconscious
- plan and implement your own programme of personal change built around key personal and professional goals
Dates
The next HBT Self-Hypnosis Programme will be in Bournemouth, over one weekend, 21 and 22 July 2007. The venue will be announced shortly. If you wish to apply for a place, please e-mail harvey@hbtuk.com or call Harvey Taylor on 07974 228396.
Programme Fees
Delegate fees for the programme are £299 including VAT
Come and meet Harvey and enter the wonderful world of HypnoBlissfulTrance!
April 24th, 2007 at 5:43 pm
Harvey, interesting, though too salesy for my idea of blogging. How about telling us how your last weekend went, the sort of people that turned up, what makes people turn up, what they’re scared of etc. etc. I think the intention of blogging is to log something that happened to you or get some discussion going. (Hope that agrees with marketing that works ‘what is blogging entry?)
April 25th, 2007 at 3:04 am
Hi Deskcoach
I am sure you are right, just experimenting, although I have never thought of myself as salesy! I haven’t run this particular workshop before, but to give you a feel for it….
I have been attending hypnotherapy training for several momths now and have completed my certificate with the the London College of Clinical Hypnosis and the British Society of Clinical Hypnosis and am mid-way through my diploma.
So for example, last weekend, had you walked into room 201 at Imperial College London, you would have stumbled across 40 or so people, including vets, doctors, coaches, a speech therapist, business managers, creative artists, a fireman, and several baldmen who bear an uncanny resemblance to me, all either completely zoned out (in spite of the extensive building work going on at The Natural History Museum next door) or doing the ‘zoning out’.
To what purpose? Well in one of these sessions (and we normaly spend about 40% of the weekend in trance) I was working on performance issues. Being in trance, you are able to access all kinds of memories and fantasies that are elusive in a more conscious state. You are also able to experience these memories and fantasies as ‘real’ - it’s called revivification. This is very powerful because the most effective learning is generally learning through actual experience.
As a performer myself (I did drama and music at university and I run training sessions and do public speaking), what I love about this process is that I can go to a place where I have no inhibitions…where I can literally feel able to be totally me, without any cosntraints whatsoever. One process I re-experienced was from my NLP training with Paul McKenna, called deep trance identification. In this process you literally, in your altered state of consciousness, step into the body of another person. I know it sounds nuts, but it is amazing. I don’t really believe I am stepping into the literal physical body of someone else….but it does seem incredibly real when you are doing it.
The advantage? Well it’’s akin to the NLP idea of modelling - finding someone who is brilliant at what you want to be brilliant at, and then copying them…only with deep trance identification, you don’t have to work at it slavishly and systematically, it just happens. Everything you had long since forgotten you knew about this person comes flooding back and you are there, awake, but in trance, being them - totally and without any doubts. I found there was a very small, separate part of me, sitti ng a little way away, watching and making sure everything was ok, but it was barely 1% of me, whereas, normally it would be about 50%. It felt totally safe and exhilarating.
I did Steven Berkoff (film and stage actor with an ego the size of the solar system) the first time I went through this. I can honestly say it was the most liberating experience of my entire life.
Anyway, that’s the kind of stuff that we will be working towards (not quite that far on this first session)…but with a fairly gentle lead in as people have to feel safe and comfortable with being in trance before going for the WOW! stuff. On the NLP course we got dropped in the deep end quite early and I think, whilst I loved it, it was probably a bit scary for some and ineffective for others, as a consequence.
Hope this gives more of an idea of what I am about!
Thanks for the feedback.
April 25th, 2007 at 5:56 pm
Ok - have to agree with Shirley the first Blog - blatant adverisement.
Reply - a sales justification with a touch of the real Harvey Taylor lobbed in for good measure. And the reason why you don’t think you are salesy is probably because (quite frankly) you are not so good at it!
At the risk of blatant pagerism here is the foot note to your newsletters:
“Basically, I work on ‘abundance mentality’. The more I share, the more comes back to me. There are a couple of rules I would like you to observe.
You can use the content of these newsletters in any context as long as you display the following statement in the quotes below:
“This material was created and is owned by Harvey Taylor and HBT (UK) Ltd. It may be used in any context for any life enhancing purpose provided this message is clearly displayed. ”
It would be good to see YOU in your Blogs + your caveat. This is precisely what Blogging (and networking) is all about!
LOL xx
April 25th, 2007 at 6:29 pm
Ouch!
This sounds too aggressive for me. I am just experimenting and I have no idea what BLOGs are really for or how to use them yet, but I will take it on the chin. I will take a different tack (although I am not totally sure whether I agree or disagree yet). I have never had any desire to be good at, or even involved in sales, marketing, or networking, I would love to just write and deliver, but needs must. There’s a lot more I would like to say, but I am going to park this and move on to something copletely different.
The next blog will address the contraidctions of a world in which there are more fish recipes, and fewer fish, than at anytime in the history of icthyology.
April 26th, 2007 at 10:32 am
Ops! I am so really sorry - must be more careful with my words late and night after a tipple or two. I really love your creative writing and want to see more of it.
So please roll out the fish dish soon