A Great Way to Bring Back the Wonderful Times of Years Past – Vol. 608, Dec. 1. 2022

This morning I did my usual morning activities while listening to some really beautiful Irish music from the medieval era. I like listening to this music because it reminds me of the amazing trip my friend Harry brought me on to Ireland back in 2005. His cousin was getting married and he wanted to bring me with him so he wasn’t attending his cousin’s wedding alone – the purpose of the trip. He also wanted to show me all the really cool places that he knew from his many visits over there throughout his life. His mother had immigrated to the US from Ireland. He showed me many places that the average tourist would never know existed never mind seeing them.
 
Harry passed away back in January of 2021 of cancer which his doctors never picked up even after having to go to the hospital many times for treatment for his heart disease and his hip replacement surgery.
 
I tell you this because sometimes we can bring back some of the best times we ever had when we find something that anchors us back to that time in our lives.
 
For me, this music always does that and leaves me in a contemplative mood.
 
I am not sad about Harry’s passing as he had an incredible life on so many levels traveling anywhere in the world he wanted, having an art collection that he loved that was worthy of any high-end museum, and having friends that truly loved and cared about him even with his many irritating ways.
 
He had green eyes with a sparkle in them, knew how to tell amazing stories, understood the art that he collected, loved to share amazing food with me usually on the water, somewhere, and knew much more about philosophy than your average UPS truck loader which is what he did for 23 years of his life during the middle of the night so the trucks were ready to go for delivery first thing in the morning.
 
Think about those people who have touched your life in a special way and who have gone to the other side.
Figure out a way to bring them back to life in a special way through those things that can anchor you to their positive influences on you. This is especially important in those cases where you may have mixed feelings about the person.
 
Trust me Harry and I had many times when I just could not deal with him and his negative ways of dealing with me at times due to his own issues…and yet…there were so many amazing experiences that he gave me through the 15 years that I knew him that to leave those out would be depriving me of some of the best times of my life.
 
Relationships can be complicated…and our job is to recall the best that they had to give us and let go of the rest once the person has gone to the other side.

How do therapists expect me to talk about my anxiety when my medication takes all the symptoms away? Should I go off my medication? Vol. 607, November 24, 2022

This question was asked by a person on Quora. Two very important issues were brought up regarding therapy and how best to deal with medication issues. Here is how I answered the question: 

First, congratulations on having the antidepressants get rid of the symptoms of anxiety. You are one of the lucky ones.

Second, if the medications are working why even go there in therapy? I don’t get it as a person who helps clients overcome anxiety regularly without medication and through the use of hypnotism. I much prefer my clients not to be on any medications for exactly the reasons you raised. Their feelings are blunted making it harder to do the true clearing work that I do with hypnotism. I am not interested in subduing symptoms as meds do, I am interested in releasing the cause for the symptoms and with that, the illnesses are no longer present.

I guess it depends on what you want to achieve with your treatment. Only you can make that choice – stay on meds forever, or deal with the underlying cause of the problems even though your therapist would NEVER want you you to do that because – well, you are so well chemically managed so if you stop the medication you are going to get your symptoms back most likely and from their training that is putting you at risk.

It’s an intriguing question which if the pharmaceutical companies didn’t own the US medical system, people would be learning how to self-regulate their emotions including those of anxiety which is nothing more than a fear of something that has yet to happen.

 

Can a person become a therapist if they are still dealing with deep emotional wounds? Vol. 606, November 17, 2022

Thank you for this question because few would have the guts to ask it.

I am going to be real honest with you and anyone who reads this answer because you deserve an honest answer to a honest question.

It is true that most people who come to work in mental health do so because they have come through their own difficulties, however, that is NOT what matters here in the least. What matters is whether or not they got the help they need to OVERCOME their deep emotional wounds.

One of the largest issues I have with these folks who believe that just because they have dealt with the trauma that makes them great candidates for doing this work. Quite honestly, I don’t know anyone above the age of 18 who hasn’t had some emotional issues in life to deal with because life is full of them be it dealing with parents who are too permissive and not giving guidance especially when it comes to figuring out what one can be doing with one’s life, because the parents were more interested in whatever they themselves were doing and gave little true emotional or practical guidance. Or, parents who were overly involved in their kid’s life to the point where the kid couldn’t do anything on their own because some unknown harm would occur if the parent ever lost sight of their kid – a huge problem in parenting after the kids of the 70s were brought up. These parents are known as ‘helicopter parents’ because their kids were never allowed to go out and play on their own constantly involved in adult-supervised activities be it sports, or any other type of activity.

Parenting is not an easy thing to do, however, kids do need to have age-appropriate autonomy, and the ability to make misjudgments and learn from them over time.

So, the point here is that whatever the issues are that a kid may interpret as trauma, including true trauma where they were abused in some way be it physical, emotional, or sexual, not until that person has healed whatever that issue was, because each person is going to have his or her own interpretation of what the depth of that ‘damage’ was, it is INAPPROPRIATE to get involved in doing any type of therapy for anyone else. The reason is that the patients that pay to use your services need you to be stronger than they are and NEVER be ‘triggered’ by similar situations in their lives as you had in yours. This includes women who came out of abusive relationships who love to blame males in their patient’s lives for all their patient’s problems when the fact is that if they never hear the other side they can not know as has occurred in many of my clients’ cases, that it was the woman who was the aggressor, maybe because of alcoholism or drug abuse issues – and NOT her partner who caused any of her problems – she had them before they got together. This is just one very common misguided notion of hurt women wanting to help another woman who is incapable of listening to a male perspective which by the way is keeping the woman she is supposedly helping a ‘victim’ instead of helping the woman overcome her serious issues.

I was in a business development group for all types of personal development professionals and I left it because the people who were there to receive business coaching needed therapy to deal with their own issues – too little time was spent on building businesses and too much time was spent on helping potential mental health professionals work through their own issues with being ‘triggered’ by their clients/patients or thoughts about what would happen if they were ‘triggered’ by those who were to employ them. If anyone is worried about being triggered by a patient or client they need to heal all those issues around those triggers FIRST.

So, get your healing done first and when you are no longer ‘triggered’ or even concerned by those issues of your past history, you are capable of helping others in a very strong and productive way.

Wounded healers wound others which is why so many people on Quora are disgusted by the therapist that they have employed. I know because I get their questions as to why it is so hard to find a capable and helpful therapist every day.

Healed Healers are the best people to help others learn to grow up and overcome their ‘triggers’ by helping them heal. Many people don’t want to heal – they want to complain endlessly about their wounds. When they get help from me we do the clearing work necessary and then they need to deal with how to shift their energy from ‘victim’ to ‘victor’ which means taking responsibility for their lives and trust me, many are not up to doing that – because it is much easier to blame mommy and daddy or maybe their ex-partners for all their problems – and that will NEVER heal them.

We need to understand that hurt people hurt others and as such give them the same understanding that we want for ourselves. It is just that they created defense mechanisms in a different manner – period because people who abuse were indeed abused themselves. Not a thought many want to deal with until they are forced to see that reality and then forgiveness and healing take place.

Because it is with that understanding and forgiveness we release ourselves from needing to be ‘right’ the other ‘wrong’ and let go of the anger that is killing that person who is carrying it around inside them when the abuser is totally incapable of understanding what they did and as such, there is no reason to hold onto it. There is only a reason to leave the situation and get on with life in a healthier manner.

How can you ensure your patients understand you during appointments without sounding condescending? Vol. 605, November 10, 2022

This was an interesting question from a person on Quora asking therapists to respond. I found this particularly important because it is rare when therapists are asked to reflect on how it is that they interact with their patients. Here is how I answered this question: 

This is an interesting and important question that I have never seen asked before in my years here on Quora.

I am a hypnotist so there are many issues that folks have given the misrepresentation of what it is in. the media – especially the movies. So, I have to spend a lot of my time educating the public and my prospective clients on what it is.

I do this by explaining how the hypnotist is able to work in the subconscious mind by using the hypnotic trance state to work in the hippocampus and amygdala of the brain – the emotional centers bypassing the reasoning, rationalization, and judgment that occurs in the conscious mind – the prefrontal cortex. This allows the client to easily transform negative emotions such as anger, sadness, fear, and guilt along with limiting beliefs to positive feelings while letting go of the limiting beliefs.

You see, it is simple to do this as long as we are being factual while explaining the concepts that need to be understood.

Almost every answer that I write here on Quora is an educational piece of information on mental illness, hypnotism, neuro-linguistic programming (NLP), and other related topics such as how patients can better interact with or understand their therapist. I get many questions of that type.

I do my best to be respectful to those who asked the questions because they are looking for information that they need yet, may have no other way to get the answer – or so they think as there is a ton of information by professionals all over the internet most especially the videos done by doctors and nurses on Youtube. I have learned a lot from them over the years and continue to. They teach in a manner akin to professors in front of their classrooms explaining things in layman’s terms.

So it can be done and needs to be done so those that we are here to serve can make informed decisions about the care that they are being asked to consider.

What do you do if your family doesn’t believe you when you speak of your experiences with an abusive person? Vol. 604, November 3, 2022

This was a question I received from a person on Quora and this is how I answered it: 

The one thing that I have learned is to stop sharing my personal heartaches and negative experiences with the family. They don’t even really know the person that they are commenting on but think they know the person better than you. It’s crazy-making because it is ludicrous.

So, this is what you do instead: You stop talking to these know-it-alls about your private stuff, and you get competent help to help you sort it out. It is not up to you to defend anything, and by having your family make such unsupportive comments, they are telling you that they are hopeless to understand. So, move on and forget about them. It isn’t their business anyway, is it? This is your life and as such, it is up to you to figure it out with someone who had the ability to guide you through it, in a supportive and constructive manner because that someone truly understands the personality of which you are speaking. Your relatives do not. So stop asking them to understand that which is out of the range of knowledge.

How Do Therapist Help Their Patients To Process Trauma (including C-PTSD) Vol.603, October 27, 2022

This was another great question from a person on Quora, and this is how I answered it: 

I am answering this question as the hypnotist and neuro-linguistic master practitioner I am.

Surprisingly easily and quickly with the help of my client’s subconscious mind.

With neuro-linguistic programming techniques, we easily take the emotional charge off the traumatic event. The client remembers them, however, the response after the work to them is ‘no big deal.’

I use deeper hypnotic trance states to quickly do forgiveness work for those who caused the trauma.

Then I do the inner child work also in a deep hypnotic state for each age when the specific traumas happened.

Generally, it takes 3–4 longer sessions done all on consecutive days for 2.5 hours to 3 hours depending on the amount of work that needs to be done and how quickly the client can do the processes.

So, no one need to be living with trauma ruling their lives for weeks, months, years, or forever when it can be cleared out of one’s life quickly and forever! I have 20 years of experience doing this work and for anyone who truly wants to be done with dealing with their trauma it most certainly can be done.

please note: My clients tell me their story once during their detailed personal history – a treatment plan is written and in the next sessions we do the clearing work.

All my work is done online from the comfort of your home. Gets rid of hassles of traffic plus I can work with anyone with decent English from around the world as I have been traveling for the past 2.5 years now myself!

Thanks for the question.

 

As A Therapist, Do You Take Notes During The Session: Why Or Why Not? Vol. 602, October 20, 2022

This was a question that a person on Quora asked. It is an important question based on the feedback that my clients have given me over the years. Here is how I answered it: 

This is a great question because my clients have told me that they are very glad that I do actually take notes during all my client sessions. Why? Because many therapists write their notes after the session, many times leaving many details out what is going on with their patients. At least my clients have told me that they were not sure that their therapist cared about their case because they never could remember what was said from one session to the next. This has a negative effect on the therapy because the trust is never there from the patient’s point of view with this lack of knowledge of their situation on the part of their therapist who is supposed to be the one person that they can tell anything to and have it respected and recalled at least from their point of view.

It is because of the copious notes that I know exactly where we are in the treatment plan and what new information has come up that needs to either be integrated into the work or ratified for successful implementation of the guidance given during the previous session. Both of these actions make it clear to my clients that I am on top of their situations which allows them to feel respected and cared for in the manner in which they want their health care provider to demonstrate.

I know for those who are licensed there is a thought process as to what is necessary to put into their patient’s charts based on the professional standards and what they would prefer to omit for the confidentiality of the client based on if the case ever goes to court where the notes will be part of the record.

I am unlicensed and really do not have the same issues because of that situation. I have no problem recording whatever I feel I need is required to make sure that I never omit anything that needs to be acted on knowing that I really do not have a memory to help me and further realizing that our memories are by their very nature less than perfect recorders of what actually occurred during any event that we may remember.

Thank you for this very important question. Because I really do not believe that most mental health professionals understand the importance of taking decent notes could mean for their patients’ trust in the care that they are receiving – or not.

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