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You Are Getting
Thinner
This article on
hypnosis and weight loss was published in Oprah
Magazine August 2004 issue. Read it now and benefit from
some of the same slimming suggestions I give my hypnotherapy
clients.
Close your eyes. Imagine your food cravings floating away.
Imagine a day of eating only what's good for you. Imagine
hypnosis actually helping you lose weight -- because the news
is: It does. Harvard Medical School psychotherapist JEAN
FAIN gives you ten hypnotic suggestions to try right now.
When I tell people how I make much of my living – as a
psychotherapist hypnotizing people slim – they inevitably ask:
Does it work? My answer usually brightens their eyes with
something between excitement and incredulity.
Most people, including my colleagues at Harvard Medical School,
where I teach hypnosis, don’t realize that adding trance to your
weight loss efforts can help you lose more weight and keep it
off longer.
Hypnosis predates carb and calorie counting by a few centuries,
but this age-old attention-focusing technique has yet to be
embraced wholeheartedly as an effective weight loss strategy.
Until recently, there has been scant scientific evidence to
support the legitimate claims of respected hypnotherapists, and
a glut of pie-in-the-sky promises from their problem cousins,
stage hypnotists, hasn’t helped.
Even after a persuasive mid-nineties reanalysis of 18 hypnotic
studies showed that psychotherapy clients who learned
self-hypnosis lost twice as much weight as those who didn’t
(and, in one study, kept it off two years after treatment
ended), hypnotherapy has remained a well-kept weight loss
secret.
Unless hypnosis has happily compelled you or someone you know to
buy a new, smaller wardrobe, it may be hard to believe that this
mind-over-body approach could help you get a handle on eating.
Seeing is definitely believing.
So see for yourself. You don’t have to be entranced to learn some
of the invaluable lessons that hypnosis has to teach about
weight loss. The ten mini-concepts that follow contain some of
the diet-altering suggestions my weight management clients
receive in group and individual hypnotherapy.
1. The answer lies
within.
Hypnotherapists believe you have everything you need to succeed.
You don’t really need another crash diet or the latest appetite
suppressant. Slimming is about trusting your innate abilities,
as you do when you ride a bicycle. You may not remember how
scary it was the first time you tried to bike, but you kept
practicing until you could ride automatically, without thought
or effort. Losing weight may seem similarly beyond you, but it’s
just a matter of finding your balance.
2. Believing is seeing.
People tend to achieve what they think they can achieve. That
even applies to hypnosis. Subjects tricked into believing they
could be hypnotized (for example, as the hypnotist suggested
they’d see red, he flipped the switch on a hidden red bulb)
demonstrated increased hypnotic responsiveness. The expectation
of being helped is essential. Let me suggest that you expect
your weight loss plan to work.
3. Accentuate the positive.
Negative, or aversive, suggestions, like “Doughnuts will sicken
you,” work for a while, but if you want lasting change, you’ll
want to think positive. The most popular positive hypnotic
suggestion was devised by doctors Herbert Spiegel and David
Spiegel, a father-son hypnotherapy team: “For my body, too much
food is damaging. I need my body to live. I owe my body respect
and protection.” I encourage clients to write their own upbeat
mantras. One 50-year-old mother who lost 50-plus pounds repeats
daily: “Unnecessary food is a burden on my body. I’m going to
shed what I don’t need.”
4.
If
you imagine it, it will come.
Like athletes preparing for competition, visualizing victory
readies you for a victorious reality. Imagining a day of healthy
eating helps you envision the necessary steps to becoming that
healthy eater. Too tough to picture? Find an old photograph of
yourself at a comfortable weight and remember what you were
doing differently then; imagine resurrecting those routines. Or
visualize getting advice form a future older, wiser self after
she’s reached her desired weight.
5. Send food cravings flying. Hypnotherapists routinely harness the power of symbolic imagery,
inviting subjects to put food cravings on fluffy white clouds or
in hot air balloons and send them up, up and away. If McDonald’s
golden arches have the power to steer you off your diet,
hypnotists understand that a counter-symbol can steer you back.
Invite your mind to flip through its Rolodex of images until one
emerges as a symbol for casting out cravings. Heave-ho.
6.
Two
strategies are better than one.
When it comes to losing weight and keeping it off, a winning
combination is hypnosis and cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT),
which helps revamp counterproductive thoughts and behaviors.
Clients who learn both lose twice as much weight without falling
into the dieter’s lose-some, regain-more trap. You’ve already
tried CBT if you’ve ever kept a food diary. Before my clients
learn hypnosis, they keep track of everything that passes their
lips for a week or two. Raising awareness, every good
hypnotherapist knows, is a key baby step toward lasting change.
7. Modify, modify,
modify. The late hypnosis innovator Milton Erickson, MD, emphasized the
importance of using existing patterns. To alter one client’s
lose-regain, lose-regain pattern, Erickson suggested she first
gain weight before losing it – a hard sell nowadays unless
you’re Charlize Theron. Easier to swallow: Modify your
highest-calorie craving. Instead of a pint of ice cream, how
about a cup of frozen yogurt?
8. Like it or not, it’s survival of
the fattest.
No suggestion is powerful enough to override the survival
instinct. Much as we like to think it’s survival of the fittest,
we’re still programmed, in case of famine, for survival of the
fattest. Case in point: a personal trainer on a starvation diet
who wanted me to suggest away her gummy bear addiction. I tried
to explain that her body believed her life depended on the chewy
candies and wouldn’t give them up until she got enough calories
from more nutritious foods. No, she insisted, a suggestion was
all she needed. I wasn’t surprised when she dropped out.
9.
Practice makes perfect.
One Pilates class does not produce washboard abs, and one
hypnosis session cannot shape up your diet. But silently
repeating a positive suggestion 15 to 20 minutes daily can
transform your eating, especially when combined with slow,
natural breaths, the cornerstone of any behavioral-change
program.
10. Congrats – it’s
a relapse. When clients find themselves, against their healthiest
intentions, overindulging, I congratulate them. Hypnosis views a
relapse as an opportunity, not a travesty. If you can learn from
a real or imagined relapse – why it happened, how to handle it
differently – you’ll be better prepared for life’s inevitable
temptations.
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