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Alchemical Hypnotherapy But what does it mean?
listed in hypnosis, originally published in issue 18 - March 1997
Thirst has a meaning: you should drink. Hunger has a meaning: you should eat. Sam, a friend of mine, suffered eleven heart attacks and decided they had a meaning: his job was hurting his heart and he should leave – Sam happened to be head of the Czech intelligence desk at the CIA. He left; twenty years later, his heart is fine.
There is impressive evidence of cures and remissions when people search for a meaning in their symptoms and assume a part of the unconscious mind creates their illness psychologically.
The mother of Robert Dilts, one of the founding fathers of NLP (Neurolinguistic Programming [NLP] is a psychological toolkit with very wide success in management and individual therapy), had a recurrence of breast cancer metastasised all through her body. Dilts used NLP techniques to let her modify her beliefs around healing and the transitions of her life. Seven years later when he wrote Changing Beliefs, Robert Dilts' mother was symptom free, fit, and active.
In his excellent book Love, Medicine and Miracles, the American surgeon Dr Bernie Siegel demonstrates the emotional roots of cancer: the most accurate way to predict if a cancer biopsy will prove malignant is a questionnaire testing emotional repression, traumatic loss, and hopeless despair. He describes many disease reversals obtained by allowing emotions to flow and lead to positive life changes (including positive attitudes to surgery).
Siegel asks his patients directly: What is the meaning of your disease? And to elicit answers they can't give consciously he has them draw coloured pictures of their body and treatment. Advanced methods of trance work (hypnotherapy) allow deeper unconscious beliefs to be found and resolved.
The methods of this work are psychological, but the foundation is love: love between the therapist and client, and the love for themselves and others which the client can always discover deep within themselves, original, intact, shining and singing.
Both NLP and Alchemical Hypnotherapy explore (in broadly similar ways) unconscious forces behind behaviour patterns in life and relationships. Can cellular, microbiological activities of the body be regarded as unconscious behaviours in the same way? According to David Quigley, the originator of Alchemical Hypnotherapy, "In my experience, everyone I've worked with who has been committed to finding a spiritual, emotional or metaphysical meaning behind their symptoms has had at least some healing or remission."
To start, you don't need a conscious belief that "I am creating this disease, I am creating this disease." All that's needed is the commitment to go on a voyage of discovery.
Such a friendly tumour
The most basic approach is, in trance, to visualise a journey to meet and talk to the symptoms (See Box 1: The Nature of Trance?). It can be surprising to a person to find that a visualisation they have imagined gives answers they don't expect!
Case example 1
(All case examples are given to Positive Health by David Quigley)
A woman aged thirty had a cancer the size of a grapefruit in her ovary. In trance she imagined entering into the ovary. Inside she found the image of a baby whom she had aborted a year previously. She persuaded the baby to depart, and she found it in herself to forgive herself for the abortion. At her next medical check, the tumour was gone.
Another big surprise is to find that the disease symptom is friendly. Often, people hate their disease and expect the disease hates them – they expect that, in David Quigley's terminology, the disease is an "internal saboteur." This is rare. Commonly, the the part of the mind which led to the symptoms has a positive underlying intention towards the person.
For example, a woman may develop a disease because her life-force is choked off; and that's because she cannot express anger; and that's because her parents punished her for being angry. The underlying intention of the part of the mind preventing anger, hence causing disease, may be "to keep you safe from your parents." In trance this part of the unconscious mind can meet the conscious mind and learn that the parents are gone now, and life is different.
This separation of intention from behaviour is a deep key to trance work. You can fight and fight and fight with a negative behaviour, but when you meet the positive intention, the behaviour just dissolves. It's no longer needed.
Dr Jean Spencer, a Bristol-based doctor and psychiatrist who has trained with David Quigley, points out that the intention of most symptoms is a positive message: after all, the only way the body can say "Take your hand away from that hot stove" is pain.
Case example 2
One client's search in trance for the cancer entity turned up a green monster who said: "I'm here to make you leave this miserable marriage . . . one way or the other!" Now the choice was no longer perceived as surgery vs. radiation, but more importantly as divorce/marriage counselling vs. death.
Another basic approach is to visualise the body's inner healer and to ask for wisdom in treating the disease. And you can visualise healing forces dealing with the disease (not necessarily "attacking" it). Such meditation is a vital part of healing, but blocks such as negative decisions about life may prevent healing images arising.
It is wrong to "try to be positive" and push away these (or any) negative forces; the more you push away, the more they push back.
Typically, not always, the approach in trance is to visualise each block to healing and tell it that you understand it is doing a good and positive job for the person, and ask what that job is.
Picture for example a tiny, intelligent baby who wanted to work out what on earth was happening around her as destructive parents did crazy things. That baby might come to a wrong but baby-intelligent conclusion that she herself was at fault. Thirty years later she may have a part of her mind saying "I'm not good enough to live." But the job the part is doing is harmless: "to work out what on earth is going on around me." Such parts love to be given a new task. If asked to "work out what on earth is best to deal with this disease" it will drop the old belief, cease to be a fragmented part, and re-integrate into the healthy Self.
When such blocks are "re-framed" and reintegrated, images of inner healing archetypes can arise. Many schools of healing stop when a single archetype is contacted, perhaps an Inner Healer or Inner Child. The distinctive feature of David Quigley's work is that he continues until many highly positive archetypes arise. At first there will be images of healthy, loving Inner Child and Inner Parents and Mate, and beyond that images bringing metaphysical guidance. A person can sit in meditation with these images, and the need for much further therapy is abridged.
Jean Spencer finds this whole approach particularly respectful to the client. Therapist and client together are excavating the jewels and gold of the patient's inner treasures. And the therapist is truly a facilitator and not an authority. "In some of the best sessions I've done," she says, "I really say almost nothing. Once the client learns how to relax into trance easily, I can just be a silent presence and she will guide herself on the journey, trusting that as she talks, just the right words will come to take her deeper and deeper. Bright joyful images spontaneously replace dismal ones. It's a very client-centred therapy, very respectful."
Seeds of the bodymind
Case example 3
T was HIV positive and after a clear period had a severe recurrence of AIDS symptoms. In deep trance he had past life recollections of being a guard in a Nazi concentration camp who had committed crimes against humanity. T visualised his victims and spoke to them and obtained forgiveness on condition that he devoted his life to ending political oppression. T did do this and his symptoms disappeared: at a follow-up five years later, his remission was still complete.
Case example 4
A 50-year old nurse had a breast tumour that was malignant on biopsy. In the period between biopsy and excision, she had a single 3-hour session. She talked to the cancer symptoms and released an explosion of guilt and grief and loss stored from past lives. She completed and released relationships with past life lovers and family. When the lump was removed a few days later, no trace of malignant cells could be found and on 5-year follow-up the lump had not returned.
These examples include past lives, and that notion troubles some people. Are past lives real, or nonsense? The answer is, it doesn't matter.
T, the HIV-positive man, discovered a remorse inside himself which was painfully real. He found real fulfilment and a lasting sense of purpose, and long-term remission of symptoms. In between, for a few hours, he experienced certain vivid images with a memory-like quality.
Were they true memories? It doesn't matter – the healing is real.
If you wish, you can think like this. In deep relaxation and after a long journey of exploration in trance, the nervous system enters a certain open state. Profound fantastic symbols emerge: the unconscious mind is telling how it secretly believes the very fabric of reality is woven. It is reasonable that such fundamental fantasies cannot be scenes of everyday events and may have a weird or unusual quality.
Whatever their origin, these images are the seed-pearls of thought around which the bodymind has grown itself. If at this level there are simple happy pictures of (say) heroes and heroines loving each other, then the person will have a healthy body and a happy life. If there are images of Nazi torment, then quite the opposite.
People talk, often to their own surprise, about contracts and agreements made in past lives, and pre-conception agreements made in the space before entering the womb. They describe suffering as victims of violence and betrayal in past life. They recover guilt and remorse from perpetrating so-called "overt karmic acts:" abuse of power, betrayals, and crimes against humanity. Profound life relaxation comes when these strange images are released into consciousness.
Box 1
The Nature of Trance Many people view Inner Mongolia as closer to home than the unconscious mind. A few indeed see the unconscious as a dangerous deserted mine, sealed with rusted chain and guarded by the tri-lobed signs of nuclear waste: “Keep Out – Radiation.” |
Can this work for me? OR The courage to be healthy
"Can this work for me?" Plain to ask; a little subtle to answer.
Doctors are the practitioners of choice for acute illness and much else. Then, some diseases are basically nutritional. In these cases hypnotherapy can mobilise resources, but will not itself heal the roots
That's clear. On the other hand, some people's symptoms are created entirely by their thought patterns; that's also clear. On an everyday practical level, how you decide for yourself is by your own intuition and emotional common sense. With a little experimentation, you will then gravitate to the acupuncturist, naturopath or hypnotherapist whom you need. The very action of travelling towards your own decision puts you at cause in your life and that's what matters most.
Strangely, it's most difficult to answer "can this work for me?" in just those cases where hypnotherapy can really help. For an aspirin tablet changes only symptoms. But healing the unconscious mind changes you. Understanding will release aliveness. Will you live that aliveness?
The man who visualised the green monster warning him about his marriage had to change himself. If that miserable relationship was too safe and secure, maybe he won't. Maybe he'll rather die; some people do. David Quigley says: "My failures are those few people who have a profession as victims."
Indeed, even beyond making life changes, a person may need a willingness to have a whole new identity as a healthy person.
Transformation never happens to the person who sought it. That person was a miserable person, and that misery is gone. The new aliveness may carry the person away from their old lover, away from their old career, into a whole new life.
My friend Sam moved from middle management at the CIA to repairing power tools in a meditation community. That's a big change of identity: when his new friends heard what he used to be they laughed until they rolled on the ground (this was America, the land of expressive extroverts). I was working at the next bench, I saw it, and I heard Sam laughing loudest of all; a big, big change of identity.
T experienced change at even a higher level than Sam. T gained a sense of purpose for his whole life, a mission. Robert Dilts thinks it is no coincidence that remission literally means re-mission, the re-gaining of a sense of mission and purpose. He speculates that cure of life-threatening illnesses may always require that the person contacts their life energy deeply enough to acquire a sense of mission.
That sense of purpose will require an appropriate identity, perhaps different from the familiar identity which friends and family are attached to. It may mean changes at the level of job, relationship, and security. For when disease does have a message, it is perhaps always in essence the same: be more alive.
Box 2
A self-exploration to try Try this simplified exploration of the roots of a health or any other problem. It gives a flavour of how a hypnotherapy session would start. You may not reach the same depth as in a session – but you may. This will depend on your previous experience of meditation. In any case, it’s fun. |
References
Love, Medicine, and Miracles, Dr Bernie Siegel, Arrow Books 1986. Overflowing with love and science, this wonderful book is essential reading for those who want to explore their own mind-body link and take responsibility for their health.
Changing Belief Systems with NLP, Robert Dilts, Meta Publications 1990. This book for practitioners describes Dilts' precise depth techniques for changing negative beliefs resulting from forgotten trauma.
Alchemical Hypnotherapy, David Quigley, Lost Coast Press 1989. A beautiful, concentrated book for everyone interested in trance. Quigley describes a complete therapeutic journey to recover the healing and wisdom forces within a person and to communicate with these though archetypal images.
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