Entries Tagged as 'Subconscious'

New Self-Hypnosis MP3 Downloads Status

Nearly two months ago, I had finished writing scripts for five new self-hypnosis/hypnotherapy mp3 downloads.  I was just starting to do the recording when we decided to move.  Now that the house is sold and we’ve bought a new house, I’m back to work.  Here are a list of the new mp3s that should be showing up on the website in the next 4-6 weeks.

Incredibly Relaxed–This is a self-hypnosis induction that takes you into a very relaxed state in which your subconscious mind becomes so receptive and so sensitive to all the directions you choose to give to it.  This is likely the last of the self-hypnosis inductions I’ll do, as I begin to concentrate on more traditional hypnosis/hypnotherapy mp3s.

Sound and Peaceful Sleep–This insomnia relief mp3 has a very nice visualization where you go down to a private beach where a large comfortable bed sits under the shade of a group of palm trees.  There are also suggestions to let go of any stress or worries from your day.

Rainforest Meditation–This meditation takes you deep within a remote rainforest where your personal sanctuary is located.  From your comfy spot in the front porch of your sanctuary, you’ll listen to the soothing, calming sounds of the rainforest as you drift into a deep, meditative state.

Quiet Mind Meditation–This meditation helps you cultivate a quiet state of mind from which to direct your meditation inward as your observe the depths of your mind.

Morning Day Planner–Ever have a problem getting started or focused on things you want to accomplish?  This short download helps get you focused and energized on whatever it is you’d like to accomplish for the day.

So these five mp3 self-hypnosis/hypnotherapy downloads should be available around the end of June or first part of July.  And for the first day they’re available, they will be free.  All I ask for in return, is some feedback.

That Fuzzy Old Subconscious–Phantasmagoria and Lucid Dreams

I often marvel at just how fuzzy the subconscious mind seems to be.  I notice my subconscious mind the most when I’m about to go to sleep or when I wake up in the middle of the night and then go back to sleep.  It’s not unusual for me to begin to see rather weird random imagery (phantasmagoria) right before I drop off to sleep.  Images that seem to come out of nowhere and don’t seem connected to anything.  This usually occurs after my conscious mind has pretty much stopped being active and I move into that rare state where my conscious, thinking mind has shut down but I’m still aware and conscious.  It usually only lasts for several seconds or on and off again for about a minute before I drop off.  Another instance of being aware within our subconscious is lucid dreaming.

Many years ago I experimented with lucid dreaming and out of body experiences.  I had read several books on the subjects and decided to use hypnosis before I went to sleep at night to help induce lucid dreams.  I would read over my short little script before I went to sleep (I’d also include the subject I wanted my lucid dream to be about).  I’d often explore past lives.  The lucid dreams would occur in two ways.

Sometimes I would become aware that I was sleeping.  I would then roll out of bed (not my physical body, of course) and be on all fours on the carpet.  I could feel the carpet and I’d also feel a great sense of excitement that I was about to begin an exciting journey.  I’d get up and head towards the window at the east side of our bedroom.  Our bedroom was a large attic bedroom and the windows on each end were quite small.  But when I’d get to the east side window, the window would suddenly become quite large and I could open the window and jump out and begin to fly.  And before I’d know it, I was flying into a past life scene.  Extremely trippy stuff.

The second way in which I would begin a lucid dream is more typical of a lucid dream.  I would wake up in the middle of the night, and before I dropped off back to sleep, I’d repeat to myself several times, “I am awake in the dream.”  I’d repeat the phrase perhaps four or six times and then I’d try to keep my awareness intact as I dropped off.  And sometimes I would transition into a dream in an aware state.

Lucid states don’t generally last a long time, though I’ve had a few lucid dreams that have lasted quite a while.  There are a few things I’ve learned through my lucid dreaming I’d like to share.  I used to use some tricks I’d read about to keep a dream scene going when I felt it was about to dissipate.  But a friend of mine once suggested that rather than trying to control the dream, which I was apt to do, I should simply try to witness the dream without become emotionally involved or attached.  I tried it and the results were spectacular.

Normally in a lucid dream, the colors are very vivid and objects have a tangible feel to them.  When I would simply “witness” the lucid dream, the scenes would last much longer than normal and the colors were even more vivid than usual.

One side effect that eventually caused me to quit my lucid dreaming experiences was the lack of rest I got.  When you’re lucid dreaming, your conscious mind isn’t getting the rest it usually does during sleep.  I’d often be quite tired during those days after spending time the previous night lucid dreaming.

So why am I talking about phantasmagoria and lucid dreaming on a hypnosis site?  Because to experience or become aware of the transitional state–as happens when you experience phantasmagoria and lucid dreaming–between waking and sleeping can give you a better understanding of the state of mind you’re trying to achieve for hypnosis.  A state of mind in which you are extremely relaxed; your thinking mind is taking a little vacation; your mind is highly focused on the subject at hand; and yet, you are extraordinarily aware.

Hypnosis as a Tool to Move Past Intellectual Understanding

Wow, that’s some kind of title.  But this is an important point to understand for those who want to make important, powerful changes in their lives.

About 14 years ago or so, I began a spiritual journey that I hoped would bring me a higher understanding of our spiritual nature, and more importantly, a feeling or experience of enlightenment.  I devoured books on spirituality and looked at a number of religions.  After several years, I began to get an understanding (my own personal understanding) of what enlightenment was all about.  What I discovered was that it wasn’t all that difficult to attain an intellectual understanding of spiritual enlightenment.  But just because I had an intellectual understanding didn’t mean that I was having the actual experience of enlightenment or being enlightened.

Quite to the contrary, my new understanding gave me a painfully acute awareness that I was far from experiencing the sort of enlightenment I was looking for.  But that’s okay.  It was an important step for me to understand that I had to take what I’d learned and be able to incorporate that understanding into myself in a transformative way.  And that’s where hypnosis fit into my life.  I realized I had to incorporate the teachings I’d learned into a deeper level of my mind (my subconscious.)  I became a CHT (Certified Hypnotherapist) around the same time I had this new understanding, and hypnosis has helped me to become less judgmental of myself and others, to be more in allowance of myself and others, and is also helping me to learn to enjoy life more and not take things quite so seriously.

This anecdote rings true for just about any area of our lives that we might wish to change.  If you want to quit smoking, it’s easy to make that decision on a conscious, intellectual level.  After all, a decision to quit smoking is a fairly rational decision to make.  But quitting, making that transformative step from smoker to non-smoker, isn’t as easy as we’d like it to be.  Because we also have to get our subconscious mind to go along with the change we want to make.  And that’s where hypnosis can help us to move past the intellectual understanding of what we want to change and truly incorporate that change into our lives.