Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Study Finds Link Between Chronic Pain and Smoking

I came across this article today and it provides yet another reason to let go of the smoking habit. Your local certified professional hypnotist can help with this...

Study Finds Link Between Chronic Pain and Smoking

Women who smoke heavily are more likely to experience chronic pain, according to a recent study at the University of Kentucky.

Over 6,000 Kentucky women were surveyed on their smoking habits and symptoms of chronic pain. Researchers found that women who smoke and former smokers had a greater chance of reporting at least one chronic pain syndrome compared to non-smokers. Syndromes included in the analysis were fibromyalgia, sciatica, chronic neck pain, chronic back pain, joint pain, chronic head pain, nerve problems, and pain all over the body.

Women who smoked daily more than doubled their odds of having chronic pain (104%), while occasional smokers showed a 68 percent increase and former smokers showed a 20 percent increase.

Daily smoking had a stronger association with chronic pain than old age, education and obesity.

“This study shows a strong relationship between heavy smoking and chronic pain in women,” said Dr.David Mannino, co-author of the study and a pulmonary physician at the University of Kentucky’s College of Public Health. “But what is the direction of this association? Does smoking cause more chronic pain, or do more women take up smoking as a coping mechanism for experiencing chronic pain?”

Mannino believes female smokers experience more pain because their normal protection mechanisms are damaged by exposure to smoke.

Dr. Leslie Crofford, a study co-author and Director of the UK’s Center for the Advancement of Women’s Health, believes the next step for researchers is to see if female smokers can manage chronic pain better if they stop smoking.

“It’s possible that patients experiencing chronic pain could benefit from smoking cessation treatment in addition to the treatment for their pain,” said Crofford. “Similarly, it’s possible that appropriate treatment of chronic pain could increase a smoker’s chances of successfully quitting. Right now, more research is needed on these interventions.”

The study was conducted through the Kentucky Women’s Health Registery, which regularly surveys nearly 15,000 Kentucky women on their health, demographic and socioeconomic status.
© Copyright American News Report 2011
Link
Link to original article http://www.oh-yay.com/study-finds-link-between-chronic-pain-and-smoking-8812653.html

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Unleash Your Inner Winner

I just recently revised my sports improvement guide Unleash Your Inner Winner and posted on the major e-book sellers.

Unleash Your Inner Winner explores the tips, tricks and tactics that can give you the mental edge in golf as well as other sports.

Many top champions employ the services of professional hypnotists-while not letting their competition know so as to maintain their hidden advantage!

All sports, especially have golf, have a mental aspect as well as a physical one. Yet the psychological strategies that allow you to connect with your "Inner Winner" aren't given as much attention as they should.

In plain and clear language, some of the topics covered include:

-Visualization: creative ways to make this crucial mental skill work for you.

-Relaxation skills: each athlete has to find the correct balance between tension and relaxation to reach peak performance depending on their sport.

-The Power of Suggestion:the thoughts and images you focus on act like a form of software, make sure you are running the right program!

-Coming back strong from adversity: how do you avoid turning a setback into a slump? The right mindset can help.

Also included is instruction on effective and easy to use meditative and self-hypnotic techniques to give you the winner's edge.

Top athletes use these techniques and so should you!



Or for all the other digital reader formats (including basic PDF) please visit
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/111834

Friday, November 18, 2011

Tinnitus Tragedy

ew Jersey Hypnotist James Malone was saddened to learn about the recent death by suicide of a 52 year old UK man who developed tinnitus after attending a loud rock concert, saying it underlines the importance of making help available to the many people who need it.

The individual in question, a married father of two, took his own life after struggling with tinnitus for three months and apparently became despondent as he was unable to find adequate relief despite seeking medical attention.

Tinnitus, or the experience of continually hearing irritating sounds that do not come from the external environment is a condition that afflicts millions of people worldwide each year. Although exposure to loud sounds can trigger it, frequently the cause is unknown and it is often resistant to conventional treatment.

"Mind/body therapies such as hypnosis can be a complement to standard medical care and can help many people reduce the distress of tinnitus and help them regain their quality of life." states Malone who is the author of Calm Your Tinnitus: The Less You Fear It, The Less You Hear It.

He adds "the tinnitus sounds are thought to resemble phantom limb pain in that they do not originate in the ear but rather the brain. The more distressed someone is by their tinnitus, the more it increases their focus on it, which sets up a vicious cycle. A hypnotist who understands tinnitus can help the person discharge the emotional impact and enable them to become distracted away from the sounds and towards a calmer and more productive focus."

Mr. Malone is a Certified Hypnotist with an office in Point Pleasant Beach, NJ and is the author of several online self-help books including Calm Your Tinnitus: The Less You Fear It, The Less You Hear It.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

George Bernard Shaw Quote

In today's culture of whining, I think this Shaw quote is particularly timely, what do you think?

"This is the true joy in life, being used for a purpose recognized by yourself as a mighty one. Being a force of nature instead of a feverish, selfish little clod of ailments and grievances, complaining that the world will not devote itself to making you happy. I am of the opinion that my life belongs to the whole community and as long as I live, it is my privilege to do for it what I can. I want to be thoroughly used up when I die, for the harder I work, the more I live. I rejoice in life for its own sake. Life is no brief candle to me. It is a sort of splendid torch which I have got hold of for the moment and I want to make it burn as brightly as possible before handing it on to future generations."

George Bernard Shaw, from Epistle Dedicatory in Man and Superman

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

7 Keys to True Self-Confidence Event 11/29/11

On Tuesday, November 29, 2011 at 7 PM I will be hosting a free workshop based on my latest e-book entitled "The 7 Keys to True Self-Confidence" at the Point Pleasant Beach Library.

You could very well call the present era the "Age of Reinvention" due to rapid and continual shifts in society, family and the workplace. We are constantly having to adapt-whether we want to or not!

Stress is simply our response to demands placed upon us. Coming from a place of true self-confidence allows us to weather these changes more comfortably and competently.

You will learn various techniques involving communication and physiology that will allow you to connect with your best self.

The library is located at 710 McLean Avenue, Point Pleasant Beach, NJ, 08742. Admission is free but preregistration through my meet up group is requested so that we have an approximate headcount.

http://www.meetup.com/Ocean-County-Stress-Relief-Empowerment/events/39064342/

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Steve Jobs APP for Fear

This article by Joe Robinson appeared in the Huffington Post this morning and I just had to share it. Have a great day!

Of all the Steve Jobs products that have become essentials of daily life -- iMac to iPod to iPhone -- the one that may be most needed is echoing virally around the Web in the form of his Stanford commencement speech: iCan. His advice to "stay hungry, stay foolish," and remember that, as mortal beings, we have "nothing to lose" has struck a nerve at a time when millions are up to their eyeballs in a babble of nonstop fear about what we can't do. He's reminded us that we can counter the fright fest with something we forgot -- courage, and our own wits.

The gloom-and-doom meisters have had their way for years now, freezing out belief and possibility with a steady dirge of dire forecasts. Jobs' message is a much-needed wake-up call. Yes, we have challenges, but we have it within ourselves to act despite our fears and rise above the naysayers and change phobics. Uncontested fear begets more fear. Like Franklin Roosevelt's exhortation that, "we have nothing to fear but fear itself," Jobs' speech tells us we can avoid the fear factor when we dig deep and rally self-belief over our insecurities.

Courage and self-belief are qualities we all have, but they often need outside stimulus to be activated. They can lie dormant for years like African killifish, whose eggs are buried in the ground and come to life only with the right amount of rain. Inspiration can rouse self-determination skills that trigger the risk-taking without which we can't move forward -- or be truly gratified.

Researchers tell us we can't satisfy our core needs to feel autonomous or competent, for example, unless we go beyond the familiar and do things that make us stretch. Our core psychological needs, says the University of Rochester's Edward Deci, author of Why We Do What We Do, are all about self-determination. The fulfilling life we want doesn't come from taking the safe road, but from what is challenging, reports Emory University brain scientist Gregory Berns (1).

As usual, Jobs' timing was impeccable. It's time to declare open season on fear and discover the courage to step into our futures without knowing the exact path they will take. It's time to break out the antidote to fear: risk. It's time to tune out the crystal-balling pundits and politicians and the incessant guessing about the calamity that's going to happen next. We're not psychics; we're adventurers. That's how we're made, from novelty-seeking brain neurons to big toes designed for marathon journeys.

Jobs' reference to the fact we can only connect the dots in retrospect hit the bullseye. Fear demands you know the whole journey before you've even embarked. If we have to know the end before we've even begun, we'll never risk or start anything. Joseph Campbell said the process of trial and error that is the human path is "like a tree growing. It doesn't know where it's growing next. A branch may grow this way and that way. If you let it be and don't have pressures from outside, when you look back, you will see that this will have been an organic development."

It's a choice between staying foolish -- not worrying what others think, taking the risks conventional wisdom says are dumb -- or staying in our bunkers. Foolish people are open to ideas wherever they come from. They're not afraid of making a mistake, since that's the nature of the learning process and all forward movement. They know that it's foolish not to make use of everything at our disposal to get the most out of our time on this planet. Foolishness short-circuits the left-brain rationality that says you can't do this and, instead, you say, iCan. Foolishness is freedom from fear. Fools are fueled by the most powerful motivator in life satisfaction -- intrinsic choice: doing what you like just to do it, not for a payoff. That's why fools have more fun.

To be more foolish and less defensive, we have to turn down the flood of fear and turn up inner strengths, such as locus of control, the belief that what you do and what happens to you depends on your choices. Overriding fear doesn't mean ignoring or avoiding it. That only eggs it on, since fear is a byproduct of unconfronted anxiety. The way out is managing it, reframing it, refusing to let what doesn't exist -- future projections, which is what most fear is -- to run your present.

Fear is a saboteur of bodies, minds, and workplaces, generating a host of stress-related conditions -- heart disease, back problems, stroke, burnout, irritable bowel, depression, diabetes, insomnia, paranoia, phobias, ulcers, damaged long-term memories, fractured attention spans and many more. Over 70 percent of doctor visits are stress-related. Companies squander $344 billion a year on stress-related issues, according to a study at Middle Tennessee State University. Fearful employees are two to three times more likely than non-fearful to have stress issues such as back pain or be taking tranquilizers (2).

Decisions made out of fear are never in your best interest. That's because no one thinks clearly when they're frightened. Fear activates the hub of your ancient emotional brain, the amygdala, which shuts off the rational thinking of the higher brain and defaults to a state of panic and catastrophic thoughts. Unless it's life-or-death, it's a false alarm.

When the amygdala is in charge, sanity isn't. You lose your ability to concentrate, to weigh pro and con, to see the big picture, to be creative, to see that the thoughts in your brain are distortions of a cornered caveman/woman. The stress spiral fixates on irrational thoughts until they appear real. Thinking is so impaired, it's hard to find a way out. In fact, resulting sadness has been shown to reduce the actual volume of your thoughts, according to Daniel Goleman in Social Intelligence.

Humans have an overactive fear reflex, dating back to the days when it helped the species survive sketchy hunter-gatherer days. But the amygdala wasn't designed for 21st century stressors, such as too much email, traffic, or wall-to-wall prognosticators of imminent apocalypse. None of those things is a life-or-death threat, but they can trigger fears and the stress response just the same, if they make you feel you can't cope (a subconscious message misinterpreted by the amygdala as Grim-Reaper time).

Researchers are getting closer to understanding the mechanism that runs the fear show, the amygdala, an organ which isn't all bad, since it also alerts you to real dangers. Scientists at the University of Iowa studied a woman with a rare disorder that destroyed her amygdala (3). They found that, without an amygdala, she couldn't experience fear. None of the usual suspects -- snakes, fright flicks or bugs -- scare her. She also can't recognize fear in facial expressions. The rest of her emotions, from joy to sadness, function normally. She just has no fear. What would you, could you, do without fear?

We know where that future is headed, so there's no time to waste in the foolish pursuit of an "insanely" fulfilling life, as Jobs might have put it.

Source of original article http://www.huffingtonpost.com/joe-robinson/steve-jobs-advice-_b_100...

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Calm Your Tinnitus: The Less You Hear It, the Less You Fear It

Below is an excerpt from my e-book Calm Your Tinnitus: The Less You Fear It, The Less You Hear It.

I’d like to start with a story that initially may not seem like it has anything to do with your tinnitus, but please bear with me.

Some years ago I had a social service job helping mentally ill adults from Union County in Northern New Jersey.

Part of my duties involved visiting them at their homes to see how they were doing. Many of their residences were in very close proximity to Newark Liberty International Airport.

This busy transportation hub has an endless procession of takeoffs and landings 24/7, 365 days a year. The massive jet engines create a booming sound that literally rattles the windows of the nearby residences. It can be a jolting experience for a newcomer.

However, what I observed is that while I would cringe slightly whenever a plane roared overhead, the locals paid it scarce attention. They would continue with whatever they were doing, unperturbed.

You see it is in the nature of human beings to acclimate and make peace with their surroundings.

People who live and work near the elevated subways in New York City don’t pay attention to the loud clatter and squeal of the cars passing overhead, while it often startles visitors.

After a time of living near the rushing thunderous sound of Niagara Falls, it is normal not to notice it. The locals have no problem having a normal conversation with one another, while a visitor might find it to be a challenge.

Parents of infants and small children tune their hearing too-learning which sounds the little one makes are OK and which ones are distress calls requiring immediate attention. And as any parent can tell you, sometimes prolonged silence lets you know something is wrong too!

It is an innate potential of the human brain and nervous system to be alert to sounds that indicate a possible threat and to tune out non-threatening sounds.

Sounds perceived consciously or unconsciously as dangerous will be paid attention to-and this the dilemma of the tinnitus sufferer. As will be intentionally repeated during this report, “the less you fear it, the less you hear it.”

Hypnosis as you will learn is not really some form of magic. Rather it may help you do something that you already do naturally; notice some things and filter out others.

In this report you will learn why for most people suffering with tinnitus a mind/body treatment like hypnosis can offer significant relief of your distress. Hope is realistic!

Note: A complete version of this book is available for free in PDF format at http://www.calmyourtinnitus.com or for a nominal fee at all the major online booksellers

Monday, October 3, 2011

Announcing the Weight Loss Jump Start Program!


Very often when people decide to lose weight they will enlist partners to help them stay motivated and to hold them accountable. This kind of support can be invaluable.

To this end I have started an offering called the Weight Loss Jump Start Program where you and up to 3 of your friends can have a small group hypnosis session at my office for the price of a single private visit-which can be a significant savings.

Each meeting will include a discussion of common goals, a guided hypnosis experience and instruction in some sort of self-hypnosis reinforcement technique.

There is no set number sessions anyone has to commit to. If refresher visits are needed, you have the option of coming in together or singly.

Any questions you may have are warmly welcomed, you can call me at (732) 714-7040 or visit http://bit.ly/r1AElp to learn more.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Controlling Outcomes

Controlling Outcomes by Dick Sutphen

When you live with expectations and desires, it follows you want to control outcomes. You want things to unfold in your favor.

But you can't control outcomes in life. The best you can hope to do
is increase the odds through wisdom.

If you're desiring a particular outcome, step back and ask yourself, "What's the fear associated with the outcome?"

Explore the fear, including the worst that might happen if things did not turn out in your favor.

If you're committed to an outcome, the fear will be related to loss: The loss of love, loss of control, loss of finances, or the loss of self-esteem. Which applies to your situation?

Then ask yourself, "What if I could take the fear out of my desire?"

If there were no fear, the outcome would not matter. Logical.

So we're back to resolving fear, a subject I write about a lot, because I'm working on it all the time.

As New Agers, we believe we can create our own reality, and I know this to be true when it comes to finding happiness, fulfillment and living an abundant life.

Reality is created by the way we view and accept what is. But don't confuse this with controlling outcomes that affect other people.

In other words, if you want Leigh to fall in love with you, that is not within your power to control, no matter how many mind programming CDs you use.

The same is true with winning the beauty pageant, getting your book accepted by a major publisher, or desiring a beautiful sunset.

Expectations and the desire to control do not work. Both are fear-based emotions, which we incarnated to rise above.

Many New Agers believe in controlling their thoughts. But it can't be done. You can catch yourself when you're thinking negative. You can use thought-stopping techniques which condition you, over
time, to reduce fearful thinking. But out-and-out control of your thoughts isn't an option.

What you can control is your behavior -- your actions.

Mystics have always said a wise seeker learns to live without desire. Easier said than done. Probably not going to happen in this lifetime, but finding a self-actualized balance seems to me a worthy goal.

Reprinted by Permission
Copyright 2011 Success.biz

Monday, March 7, 2011

How to Know if You Have Been Hypnotized

Hypnosis is not a commodity that can be weighed or measured. Nor surprisingly is it a state that can be defined by a specific type of brain wave activity or other physiological measurement.

Many people use the services of a certified hypnosis professional for self-improvement purposes. A frequent question that comes up is "are you sure I can be hypnotized and how will you or I know if I am?'

Where this becomes problematic is that a large swath of the general public equates being hypnotized with some sort of zombie-like trance state where the person gives up mental volition or self-control to the hypnotist-potentially scary stuff if that were true!

Hypnosis is not really about one person controlling the mind of another. Instead many experienced practitioners have come to realize it is more about creating shifts in perception.

The kinds of problems a hypnotist works with inevitably deal with people's faulty perceptions of themselves or the world around them. All of us are guilty of the mental error where we believe that we perceive reality with perfect clarity. Nothing could be further from the truth.

A hypothetical example: a woman asks a Certified Hypnotist for help in quitting smoking. During the initial interview process she is asked about why she want to quit and what has prevented her from stopping up until now.

The motivation to quit includes health worries, the foul smell of smoke on her clothes and hair as well as the expense. Although these are wonderful reasons to change she goes on to say "but cigarettes are a friend that have always been there for me at the toughest times in my life and I would feel lost without them."

Can you spot the mental illusion at work in this woman's situation? The dictionary defines a friend as "a person somebody trusts and is fond of." For starters, since a cigarette is not a person in any way, shape or form, it cannot be a friend.

And besides, if you have a friend who endangers your health, makes you smell bad and wastes your money, it might be time to raise your standards a bit!

However, perception is what is important and who wouldn't resist losing a trusted friend?

Part of the hypnotist's duties then would include shifting her perception of cigarettes to what they are really are in her life-filthy toxic weeds wrapped in burning paper that harm her health, cleanliness and finances. Once that shift in perception and belief has occurred, quitting should be much simpler.

Now during a hypnosis session many but certainly not all clients will report pleasant feelings of mental and physical relaxation, often reported as either a warm heaviness or a light floating sensation.

The relaxation is a pleasant by-product, but not necessary for positive changes to occur. What really matters is the hypnotist's skill in helping the client alter negative patterns of thought, feeling and behavior.

So to answer the original question, you know hypnosis has taken place when you notice the shift in your perceptions.

James Malone is a Certified Hypnotist from Point Pleasant Beach, New Jersey who wants to give YOU some FREE self-improvement e-books. To claim your copies, please visit: http://www.njhypno.com/therapeutic_metaphors.html

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Primed for Success? Let's try a fun experiment. Answer the following questions out loud and without hesitation. What color is snow? What color are clo

Let's try a fun experiment. Answer the following questions out loud and without hesitation. What color is snow? What color are clouds? What color is whipped cream? What color are polar bears? What do cows drink?

If you answered the last question "milk," think again-cows drink water. What you just experienced is called the priming effect, where previous stimuli subliminally influence your current perception and response-in this case repeated mental images involving the color white.

Although the priming effect is a very popular subject amongst research psychologists, it is probably even more beloved by those in the multi-billion advertising industry. And it is a topic you should know more about too if you are looking to lead a happier and healthier life.

In one study a group of 120 school children watched a cartoon show; half were shown food ads during the program, the other half saw ads that were not related to food. A bowl of goldfish crackers (not one of the advertised food products) were made available to the kids while they watched.

It was discovered that the children who saw the food ads ate a whopping 45% more crackers than the control group. The priming effect generalized beyond the specific food products being promoted to an overall motivation to simply consume.

In another experiment involving adults, it was discovered that viewing the McDonald's logo in a mere flash too fast to be registered consciously created a brief but tangible change where the person becomes jittery, impatient and less able to delay gratification in any form.

It is hypothesized that the fast food industry symbolizes speed, efficiency and instant gratification in our collective subconscious.

Dr. Chen-Bo Zong, one of the lead researchers noted that the while the effect of one fast food logo exposure is short-lived, the cumulative effect of seeing dozens or even hundreds of them on a daily basis could have very significant effects on your self-control.

He states, "We're finding that the mere exposure to fast food is promoting a general sense of haste and impatience regardless of the context."

Has the information above perhaps "primed" you to the idea that mindless consumption of media may lead to other forms of mindless consumption?

Some ideas:
-Trade some of the time spent in front of the TV for time in natural surroundings.
-If possible, use the new TV technology that allows you to easily record programs and zip past the commercials.
-Intentionally program yourself every day using affirmations or self-hypnosis.

References for this article were "Fast Food is Stirring Us All into a Hurry" by Chris Gourlay, writing in the London Times, 4/18/2010 and Sleight of Mind by Macnik and Martinez

Note: this article was first published in the Creative Calm Newsletter.