Archive for April, 2010

Hypnotherapy for golf on ABC 12

April 14, 2010

See Marc Jacobson’s 4/13/10 video story, “Improve your mind, improve your golf game” on ABC 12—Mid-Michigan’s local station.

Here’s an excerpt from the online transcript:

The weather is warming up, and for many of us, that means it’s time to hit the golf course.

After a long winter, hitting the green isn’t necessarily an easy thing to do.

A potential solution could be hypnotherapy.

Hitting a little white ball straight down the fairway is easier said than done.

“It’s like Zen and the art of golf. When you’re totally relaxed, your mind relaxes and everything is easy,” said John Tomlinson from Tomlinson Medical Hypnotherapy.

Tomlinson is a certified medical hypnotherapist. His four-session Mental Side of Golf program is designed to break golfers free from their two most-common problems. “If you fix inconsistency and self doubt, the same thing with business, if you go into a sales meeting with self doubt, you’re not going to make that sale.” Read the rest of the transcript or watch the video here.

Singer Steve Mason’s depression helped by hypnotherapy

April 8, 2010

In his 4/6/10 Guardian article, “Steve Mason: Out of the blackness,” Dave Simpson writes about Steve Mason’s history of severe depression and how hypnotherapy and antidepressants helped. Here’s an excerpt:

In 2008, Mason briefly returned as Black Affair, a curious electronic project that he says arose out of a whirlwind relationship with a woman who shared his love of 1980s electro music. When the pair broke up, he found himself at rock bottom again, and finally sought serious, long-term treatment.

Gradually, with antidepressants and gruelling six-hour sessions of hypnotherapy, Mason has taken these experiences and turned them into the best music of his career. In the new single Lost and Found, he sings about being discovered “at the base of a river”, which draws on the time he jumped into Loch Lomond and saw daylight disappear above him – although he insists the song’s suicide pact theme is fictional. Read the whole article here.

Hypnosis at the zoo!

April 8, 2010

See Gemma Jones 4/6/10 article in the Australian paper, The Daily Telegraph to read about the Taronga Zoo’s innovative hypnosis program that helps patrons get over their fears.

Here’s an excerpt from “It’s called ophidiophobia – the fear of reptiles can be cured:”

Now, in an effort to overcome their fears, those afraid of reptiles are undergoing hypnotherapy, mind, and neuro linguistic training at the zoo.

One participant was so scared of blue tongues her neighbor had to check her yard for her before she could hang clothes on teh line.

Warrick Angus, manager of the zoo’s Australian Fauna Precinct, said the woman and the other course attendees who feared reptiles like Jub Jub, a 60cm green iguana, were all cured of their problem – called ophidiophobia. Read the rest of the article here.

Hypnosis for Golf

April 8, 2010

In his 4/5/10 Time Magazine article, “Tiger at the Masters: An Ultimate Test of Toughness,” Sean Gregory discusses the challenge Tiger Woods faces as he returns to golf. He includes the advice of hypnotherapists in the excerpt below.

When Woods was a teenager, he worked with a hypnotist to help place his mind in the proverbial zone. And given his recent revelations that he’s reconnected with Buddhism, it’s fair to assume that Woods is doing a fair amount of quiet introspection. Do more of it, say the psychologists. With practice, you can enter an altered, hypnotic state on the golf course, though not to the point where you’re barking like a dog on command. “You are aware of what’s going on,” says Ken Grossman, a Sacramento, Calif.–based hypnotherapist who has worked with many athletes. “You’re not out in left field.”

For example, Jennifer Scott, a golf hypnotherapist from Phoenix, suggests staring at some object on the course — perhaps a leaf on a fairway tree — and taking a deep breath while waiting to take a shot. “Your eyes are very powerful,” she says. “If you’re darting your eyes back and forth, you lose focus.” Summon the subconscious and give yourself a mantra. “Think peace, harmony, relax, relax,” Scott says. “The golfers I teach love those words.” Denise Silbert, a hypnosis expert from La Jolla, Calif., recommends selecting a physical trigger, like holding a golf ball while walking down the fairway, which will signal your brain to slow down. “As I hold the golf ball, I feel a calm energy,” Silbert says. “I let go of the conscious riffraff, I’m reprogramming the unconscious mind. The verbiage in my mind is affirming: ‘Fairways of power, greens of solace.’” Are you in a trance yet? For Woods, Scott suggests a less hippie-sounding mental chant, perhaps, “I’m the greatest player in the world, see each shot as it lands.”

While affirming his greatness, Woods should also visualize his most triumphant moments. “I’d have him channel a mental movie,” says Grossman. “While he’s in that relaxed state, he should recall his 2008 U.S. Open championship win against Rocco Mediate. He would want to remind himself he won that with a broken leg, and here at the Masters, he’s not even feeling any pain.” Read the whole article here.


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