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Hypnotic Band Weight Loss
If you are considering using hypnotic band methods to lose or
manage your weight, please read the following article which
appeared in the Autumn Edition of the National College Student and
Alumni Guild E-Journal
Don't get on the gatric bandwagon
I don't know about you, but it seems to me that you cannot turn
around, read a newspaper or watch a human interest story on
television without seeing some-thing on the Hypno-Band, or Hypnotic
Gastric Band and how it is revolutionising weight management for
people who have tried to lose weight for years. Of course, when
something gets positive press, some enterprising folk will at-tempt
to cash in on it by selling courses for practitioners to learn
these ―secret or ―unique techniques, at a very hefty price tag. But
of course, you will recoup your money quickly, especially if you
charge £1000 for four sessions of therapy. I would like to ask you
all not to jump on the Gastric Bandwagon.
First, let us consider the process itself. One
is hypnotised to believe that they are actually experiencing the
surgery itself. Okay it is not impossible to convince the
unconscious of a number of things, but one could ask is it ethical
to pretty much lie to one's client? Also, in many ways this is
simple aversion therapy, which had popularity in the 1960s and
1970s but has been pretty much abandoned due to the likelihood of
relapse when the stimulus causing the aversion is removed. In the
case of gastric band, clients should be aware that if they received
the surgical treatment the band would eventually be removed and
that they would be required to maintain their change in eating
without the band. The same must therefore be true of the
hypno-band. However, in the reports of its use very little is said
about the practitioner teaching the client about changing the
client's relationship with food or healthy eating or providing
nutritional advice (which the vast majority of
hypnotists/hypnotherapists are not qualified to give). So in
effect, this procedure requires the client to maintain any change
on their own without qualified guidance to assist them. Like with
so many diet programmes, the client is encouraged that they cannot
maintain the change without the external programme, so therefore
one either needs to keep the hypnotic band on for life or attend
more therapy or fail
Second, much has been made in the media about
how much weight is lost by clients, which of course may well be
true, but it may also be true that the clients utilised other
approaches in order to augment, or even override the hypno-band
procedure. Also, there are no legitimate long term studies as to
how effective this treatment's efficacy. At best the information in
the media is anecdotal, at worst the most disgusting of self
promotion which gives false hope to people who are desperate to
lose weight but find it difficult to maintain. I say maintain,
because even utilising will-power alone, most people can lose a few
pounds by simple, short term approaches to weight loss, be that
crash dieting or a bit of extra exercise.
The third point I would like to make is that
this approach not only gives false hope to clients but also to
practitioners. With the cur-rent economic climate, it is natural
that practitioners are concerned about their ability to earn a
sustainable income in order to survive as a practitioner. When a
practitioner is faced with this, it is all too easy for
unscrupulous persons to offer the emperor an impressive pair of
shoes to go with his new outfit. Some persons ask for a license fee
to be paid for this revolutionary approach which you have to write
in to get, thus creating a database for the organisation involved
whether you eventually pay for a license or not. Others do not
bother with a license fee and just charge on the inexpensive side
£340 for a workshop, script and marketing advice (which, based on
the site I found this information on, must include the saturation
of your site with testimonials referring to you as being Amazing,
and what you do as a Miracle). Still others go for the big ask of
any-where between £1600-£3000 for your training course (often
training of no more than a few days) which will equip you for a
£100K potential income to entice therapist to come on board.
Quite frankly this is non-sense, in order to
earn these fees, you need to charge between £200-£500 per session
which in most practitioners experience is not feasible or desirable
as we got into this profession to help people and not fleece them.
There are no quick fixes for our clients, and sadly there are no
quick fixes for therapists as well. It should also be noted that
for persons that undertake the surgical option, patients need to
already be losing some weight as a means of showing willingness to
change. There is no such requirements for those who undertake the
hypnotic band option.
My final point is that for weight management,
the first thing clients need to do is to reconsider their
relationship with food. This is not an easy or short term thing, as
this relationship has been in development for a number of years if
not indeed all of their lives. Then clients need to burn off more
calories than they ingest. It is as simple and as complicated as
that. By using hypno-psychotherapy as a vehicle for this change in
relationship is a very effective way for clients to have a healthy
relationship with food, which will enable clients to achieve a
weight that they are most comfortable with.
Before consulting a "Hypno-Band" practitioner,
ask him/her to point you in the direction of verifiable,
independent research showing that this technique is effective. This
does not mean was it in the newspaper, but was it in a professional
peer reviewed journal. My bet is that they will not be able to cite
a single verifiable reference to validate the claims made in their
marketing.
If you are interested in managing your weight
with hypnotherapy/hypno-psychotherapy in the Greater Manchester
Area. Contact Shaun Brookhouse on 0161 881 1677 or email
enquiries@hypno-manchester.co.uk
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