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This site has been developed to provide affordable options and resources to people seeking ways to privately improve their quality of life.The content has been taken from areas of NLP, Psychology and metaphysical sciences. 

The basic premise behind the use of Anchor Rocks is that of conditioning. Pavlov pioneered this area of psychology and is best known for his experiments with dogs where he induced salivation by ringing a bell.

Perhaps a song or a scent brings back nice memories and makes you feel good. The scent or the song are examples of triggers that you may not have been aware of. These triggers are hard to access without hypnotic training and Anchor Rocks help solve that access problem.

Once an action or an item is associated with an emotion the state can be recalled by using that action as a trigger and the “training program” anchors the chosen emotion in your subconscious to the physical gemstone, we have called an Anchor Rock. Hypnosis can accelerate and strengthen the use of an Anchor Rock but also enables the stacking of multiple anchors to both the Anchor Rock and to a place on the individual that is not likely to be triggered by other people.

Anchor Rocks provide a tangible article with which to associate a feeling or emotional state that we may wish to recreate to meet a challenge or just to improve our state of being.

The gem stones used are identified and the natural therapies uses of the stones energy are noted for interest and guidance of the user. For some this may seem a little strange but we now know that everything in this universe is made up of energy which is manifested in material form. This is, it seems, where the intersection of metaphysics and psychology is occurring.

 

Articles, scripts and recordings to download free

Imagine right now the power of changing your life rapidly and having some fun and relaxation while you do it.
Article Recording
A Brief Introduction to Hypnosis -
“What does hypnosis feel like?”  An introduction to Hypnosis
An introduction to hypnosis
(5min 37 sec) What Is Hypnosis
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Definitions and Links
ABC Online : Catalyst – Hypnosis – ABC TV Science
In 2005 the Australian Broadcasting Corporation program Catalyst looked at modern day Hypnosis. You will find the transcript of the program interesting reading but the video is a “must watch” program for anyone with any interest in hypnosis. It covers weight loss, phobias and even complex abdominal surgery under hypnosis.
(There is a direct link to the video on the left margin of this page.)

Definition of Hypnosis
http://www.medterms.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=10809

Hypnosis: A part of healing from ancient times. The induction of trance states and the use of therapeutic suggestion were a central feature of the early Greek healing temples, and variations of these techniques were practiced throughout the ancient world.

Modern hypnosis began in the eighteenth century with Franz Anton Mesmer, who used what he called “magnetic healing” to treat a variety of psychological and psychophysiological disorders, such as hysterical blindness, paralysis, headaches, and joint pains. Since then, the fortunes of hypnosis have ebbed and flowed. Freud, at first, found it extremely effective in treating hysteria and then, troubled by the sudden emergence of powerful emotions in his patients and his own difficulty with its use, abandoned it.

In the past 50 years, however, hypnosis has experienced a resurgence, first with physicians and dentists and more recently with psychologists and other mental health professionals. Today, it is widely used for addictions, such as smoking and drug use, for pain controls, and for phobias, such as the fear of flying.

Hypnosis is frequently used either independently or in concert with other treatment, including the management of pain, reduction of bleeding in hemophiliacs, stabilization of blood sugar in diabetics, reduction in severity of attacks of hay fever and asthma, increased breast size, the cure of warts, the production of skin blisters and bruises, and control of reaction to allergies such as poison ivy and certain foods.

The term hypnosis comes from the name of Hypnos, the ancient god of dreams.

The Power of Hypnosis
Article provided by Psychology Today on www.medicenenet.com
http://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=36374

Metaphysics Visit : Answers.com

Home > Library > Reference > Britannica Concise Encyclopedia

metaphysics

Branch of philosophy that studies the ultimate structure and constitution of reality — i.e., of that which is real, insofar
as it is real. The term, which means literally “what comes after physics,” was used to refer to the treatise by Aristotle on
what he himself called “first philosophy.” In the history of Western philosophy, metaphysics has been understood in
various ways: as an inquiry into what basic categories of things there are (e.g., the mental and the physical); as the study
of reality, as opposed to appearance; as the study of the world as a whole; and as a theory of first principles. Some basic
problems in the history of metaphysics are the problem of universals — i.e., the problem of the nature of universals and
their relation to so-called particulars; the existence of God; the mind-body problem; and the problem of the nature of
material, or external, objects. Major types of metaphysical theory include Platonism, Aristotelianism, Thomism,
Cartesianism
(see also dualism), idealism, realism, and materialism.

For more information on metaphysics, visit Britannica.com.

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