Hypnotherapy and Intuitive Hypnosis: The most effective therapeutic and explorative method of the 21st century
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Hypnotherapy and Intuitive Hypnosis - Aggil Loupescou
Aggil Loupescou
Hypnotherapy
and Intuitive Hypnosis
The most effective therapeutic
and explorative method of the 21st century
Copyright © Aggil Loupescou 2014
Published in England by AKAKIA Publications, 2014
Aggil Loupescou
HYPNOTHERAPY
AND INTUITIVE HYPNOSIS
The most effective therapeutic
and explorative method of the 21st century
ISBN: 978-1-909884-70-0
Copyright © Aggil Loupescou 2014
CopyrightHouse.co.uk ID: 166136
Cover Images:
Source: ShutterStock.com / Copyright: ARTEMENKO VALENTYN / File No: 193442912
Mixed and Designed by AKAKIA Publications
St Peters Vicarage, Wightman Road, London N8 0LY, UK
T. 0044 207 1244 057
F. 0044 203 4325 030
www.akakia.net
publications@akakia.net
All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, microfilming, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission in writing of the Author and the AKAKIA Publications, at the address above.
2014, London, UK
Dedicated to my dear teacher Alexios Gioutsos
with all the warmth of my heart and my infinite love.
As a small token of my respect for this great researcher
of psychic phenomena who represented
the alpha and omega in my career.
CONTENTS
AUTHOR’S PREFACE
PREFACE BY VITOR D’ ALMEIDA
President of the Pan-American Union of Hypnotists
THE OPINION OF NIKOS TSILIMIGAKIS, MD
Chapter 1: HYPNOSIS
The history of hypnosis
State and techniques of hypnosis
States of consciousness
1. State of alertness
2. Light sleep (slumber)
3. The state of dreams
4. The deep sleep
5. Hypnosis, ecstasy
Differences between hypnosis and sleep
Hypnosis and ecstasy
Hypnosis and suggestion
The therapeutic value of hypnosis
1. Regression
2. Projection
3. Interpretation of dreams
4. Hypnosis as a means of relaxation and therapy
5. Repression via hypnosis
Chapter 2: METHODS OF SELF-HYPNOSIS
Hypnosis and self-hypnosis
Relaxation and inner peace
a. Breathing techniques
b. Low-tone and calming self-talk
c. Focusing on the body
Inner dialogue and empowerment of personality
a. Entrapment in a situation
b. Rejection of obsessions or manias
c. Removing simple phobias
d. The multiple choices in your life
e. Developing your creativity
f. Imaginary stories and counsels for your life
g. Fighting contradictory feelings
h. Empowering self-confidence by means of pleasant childhood memories
Chapter 3: METHODS OF OTHER-HYPNOSIS
Traditional hypnosis
The image of the ideal hypnotist
The image of the subject of hypnosis
Four preconditions for successful hypnosis
a. Thorough knowledge of the history of the subject
b. Absolute rapport and trust between the two
c. Mutual participation of both in researching
the subconscious
d. Allaying fears related to hypnosis
Experiments regarding the patient’s receptivity
Resistance to hypnotherapy
Methods of hypnosis
a. Focusing on an object
b. The method of the index
c. Lifting the hand according to Erikson
d. Distracting attention
e. The direct look
f. The method of confusion
Hypnosis in children
Deepening the hypnotic trance
a. Breathing
b. Counting
c. Word repetition
d. Psychosomatic relaxation
e. Using a key-word
Stages in hypnosis
a. Dozing stage
b. Slight hypnosis
c. Medium hypnosis
d. Deep hypnosis
e. Sleep-walking
Chapter 4: USING HYPNOTHERAPY TO REJECT NEGATIVE MECHANISMS
Hypnosis and therapy
1. Arthritic pains
2. Overweight and metabolic problems
a. Principles of a healthy diet and metabolism
b. Healthy diet and metabolism
c. A technique for metabolism
3. Rejection of erotic anxiety
4. Fighting daily anxiety
5. Regaining lost self-confidence
6. Increasing vitality
7. Detoxing yourself from cigarette smoking
8. Rehab from alcoholism
9. Solving the problem of insomnia
10. Psychological detoxing from drugs
11. Expelling anxiety during labour
12. Fighting headaches
13. Increasing of personal appeal and attractiveness
14. Increasing your learning potential
Chapter 5: INTUITIVE HYPNOSIS
Two personal methods
General
Intuitive hypnosis
and the role of the medium
a. Search for crime
b. Communicating with the spirit of the dead father
c. Identifying an illness
d. Family problems
e. Searching for a missing person
f. In the maelstrom of narcotics
g. A marriage based on interest
h. Favourable contract terms
i. Identifying negative energy
j. Political conjectures
Chapter 6: HYPNOSIS FOR REGRESSION TO PAST LIVES
Regression to the past lives
A method for regression to past lives
Cases of regressions to past lives
a. The unfortunate repetition of a love story
b. Bodily pains from a past life!
c. A fateful site for both lives
d. The karmic fate of an academic
e. Obsessions and self-suggestion
f. the ‘third eye’ of a person
EPILOGUE
BIBLIOGRAPHY
NOTES
AUTHOR’S PREFACE
After working on hypnosis for more than three decades, I feel the demanding need to write a simple and practical guide on the methods of other- and self-hypnosis, to familiarise the reader with a spiritual technique that typically causes scepticism in all those who ignore it. Hypnosis, the mother of Psychology and Parapsychology, which has been used as the basic means of treating psychosomatic diseases for thousands of years, was literally ostracised from human conscience and was labelled as a risk-prone technique!
But what an irony! Today that science is overly hyped up as the panacea of all man’s problems, many university-level scientists were forced to resort to hypnotherapy for the prevention and treatment of diseases. This book is not against science, but instead tries to prove the reasons for which hypnosis is necessary in parallel with any medical or psychotherapeutic treatment of the patient.
In the pages that follow, the reader will quite soon familiarise him or herself with a plethora of hypnotic techniques, which can be applied just as easily alone or with the help of a proven capable hypnotist. Very soon he or she will be surprised not only by the efficiency of the hypnotic method but also by its simplicity. The reader will understand that the basic logic on which hypnosis is based consists of a suggestion to the subconscious. From the moment the reader will come to realise this simple truth, I am certain that the usefulness and mainly, the power, of the subconscious in our daily life will be demonstrated.
By exercising the subconscious and feeding it the form of commands and desired suggestions to free ourselves from bad habits, vices, addictions, psychological problems, we shall come to realise that we can transform our everyday reality, free ourselves from the bonds of conscience and use the other half of our brain whose existence we have forgotten.
Do not forget the undeniable truth that physical diseases have psychological causes. Man is a psychosomatic entity. Find your psychic balance and discover the unknown powers that are hidden in you, thanks to the hypnotic techniques and the dialogue with your subconscious. Good luck!
PREFACE BY VITOR D’ ALMEIDA
President of the Pan-American Union of Hypnotists
Our Union which I have had the honour to be president of for five years, has more than 7,000 member scientists around the world who are committed to conducting strict scientific work in hypnosis research and promote its re-introduction in many medical sectors in the Americas. Apart from the member researchers of the Union, there are about fifty collaborating fellows who inform us on new hypnotic techniques during annually-held seminars.
Aggil Loupescou, a fellow for more than a decade, has shown us new hypnotic techniques, the effectiveness of which is already under examination by the scientific committee of the Union. What I find impressive in the case of this author is that she has not only never stopped experimenting in the field of hypnosis and creating new methods, but she also explores and researches new fields of study. Apart from the hypnotherapy which she practises for the treatment of psychosomatic problems, a commonly known method the world over, she has also invented an additional two methods of hypnosis and demonstrated their astounding efficiency: intuitive hypnosis, via which she can trace and diagnose a upcoming disease, but also point to details about the life of third parties, through her famous regression to past lives! Aggil Louperscou has demonstrated through the examination of a plethora of case studies that the psychosomatic pathology of a person may indeed be related to a past life. This is the reason she has become known to the world community of hypnotists and a figure in the international seminars on hypnosis.
Here is then a book which contains the covenant of the knowledge and experience of a figure enjoying international renown in the field o hypnosis! A book, which, as Aggil Loupescou explained to me while in the process of writing it, wanted it to be a practical guide to hypnosis and familiarise the reader in a few hundred pages with a method that is used as much by medical science as by the field of parapsychology. This is an ambitious and quite demanding endeavour. I would like to think that the author’s target has been completely fulfilled, but I better leave this to the readers to decide.
Rio de Janeiro, 25/06/2004
THE OPINION OF NIKOS TSILIMIGAKIS, MD
I unreservedly characterise Ms Aggil Loupescou, a scientific phenomenon and a particularly gifted person. Via her unique capacities, she becomes a capable aid to the medical profession and a significant researcher as far as the prevention, diagnosis and correct treatment are concerned.
I myself conduct research on the influence of the soul on the body and the tracing of diseases that have not manifested clinical symptoms.
With Ms Loupescou we conducted experiments on several of my patients. Her capacities are impressive, wondrous, I would say. I had a wonderful collaborator who could proceed with a diagnosis without using any instruments and offer proper advice leading to complete treatment. In cases, more particularly, where medical lab examinations could not indicate the disease of my patient, Ms Loupescou was able to correctly pinpoint to poisonings due to heavy metals, tumours in unfathomable places of the body, endocrinal dysfunctions, etc.
I am convinced about the power of Ms Loupescou and consider her a necessary aid to the medical science.
With her contribution we have much to gain in our efforts but also appropriate guidance in the treatments we use.
Chapter 1:
HYPNOSIS
The history of hypnosis
Hypnosis is an age-old therapeutic technique, which was used by all the great civilizations of humanity. In fact, even the Sumer, the oldest known civilization has been known to have used hypnosis since the 4th millennium BC! Indeed archaeological research has brought to light excerpts from the works of the famous priesthood school of Erech, according to which, the practicing doctors used hypnotic suggestions as a means of treatment for the while the patients were asleep. We should note here that they ranked hypnosis according to three stages: light, medium and heavy. In India, hypnotherapy for treating diseases was particularly popular. Besides, even in our days, the school of Yoga teaches a plethora of self-projective techniques leading to complete relaxation and meditation for higher truths! In the same manner, the Egyptian priest – healers practiced hypnotic techniques. According to the Ebers scroll, a very popular hypnotic technique was the following: the priests held in front of the patient’s eyes shiny objects, such as a golden disc, so as to tire them and force them to close. By means of the other-suggestion, they tried not only to diagnose the disease but also cure it. Ancient Greece could not be an exception in this medical practice. As was the case in all other scientific sectors, the Greeks developed it even further. It is perhaps enough to stress that the Greek priest-healers practiced the inducement of trance for medical reasons even during the first Christian centuries, particularly in the Asclepeions. To be successful, they used suggestion while their patients were in deep sleep. They were able to activate inner powers of self-suggestion which could lead to self-healing. For those patients that could neither dream nor be hypnotised, the priests took up the role of the medium, re-establishing contact with the god Asclepius¹. But also, Pythia’s oracles at Delphi were due to a hypnotic trance she was induced into while she breathed in, sitting on a tripod, the vapours that escaped from a crack on the ground.
Christianity never officially accepted hypnosis as a means to prophesise or heal. But since the 16th century, the study of ancient sources has favoured researching the phenomenon, which however is now conducted on the basis of scientific observation. Paracelsus² mentions that the monks of his time healed patients by forcing them to look at shiny spheres. They thus were induced into a hypnotic trance and the monks proceeded with the proper suggestions. The first observer who by means of experiments understood that apart from humans, animals could also be hypnotised was the mathematician N. Schwender. In 1636 he observed that he could hypnotise a chicken if he placed a piece of wood in front of its beak. He validated therefore whatever was already referred to in a multitude of folklore fables and fairytales, themselves the results of age-old observations of nature by almost every people on earth. A classic example is the hypnotic look of the snake cast upon its unwilling victim.
The Swiss doctor Frantz Anton Mesmer³ (1734 – 1815) who had his practice in Vienna, is considered by the historians to be the first theorist of hypnosis. He was the first to support the claim, circa 1766, that there is an animal magnetism (magnetismus animalis) across the whole universe, which impacts on people’s health.
Abbé de Faria, a contemporary of Mesmer, will be the first to use repeated phrases to induce suggestion to his patients, like the particularly laconic command ‘sleep’. A few decades later, the famous Swiss magneticist La Fontaine with the Englishman James Braid⁴ performed real miracles by using the hypnotic method and magnetism. It is worth noting that the oculist Braid started on his experiments because he wanted to invalidate La Fontaine’s theory. Not only did he validate it, but he was the first to use the Greek word ‘hypnotism’ to describe the phenomenon under study in his book ‘Neuro-hypnology’ (1843).
In 1865, a revolution takes place in surgery with the discovery of chloroform. This anaesthetic set aside all hypnotic techniques, which were the only available then antidote to pain. Even so, two great schools of hypnosis are founded almost then in France, those of Nancy and Salpêtrière.
The Nancy school was founded by doctor A.A. Liebault⁶, and the famous University professor H.