Ivan Tyrrell – author of How To Master Anxiety
You are very creative with words, you talk to different parts of a patient's mind, it’s so powerful!
Kerin Webb – author of The Language Pattern Bible
You are the leaders in indirect Ericksonian Hypnosis
Dan Jones – author of Advanced Ericksonian Hypnotherapy Scripts
Your legendary hypnotherapy courses are the most highly regarded in the field
Igor Ledochowski – author of The Deep Trance Training Manual
Your training is unique, refined and dynamic, making each person feel an active part of the course
Bill O’Hanlon – author of Taproots, Solution-Oriented Hypnosis and a Guide To Trance-Land.
Stephen Brooks knows how to do effective Ericksonian Hypnosis and teach others how to do it.
Adam Eason – author of The Science of Self Hypnosis
Your course was eye opening, heartfelt and transforming for me personally and professionally
Dr Ernest Rossi – author with Milton H Erickson of the Collected Papers of Milton H Erickson
Stephen Brooks and the art of Compassionate Ericksonian Hypnotherapy surely sets the highest standard.
RECENT BLOG POSTS
Latest hypnosis research shows that hypnotherapy reduces chest pain and gastric reflux
Following a clinical hypnotherapy trial at Wythenshawe Hospital in Manchester, England, researchers say that hypnotherapy can help patients who experience non-cardiac chest pain. The researchers separated 28 patients into two groups. The patients within each group had experienced regular non-cardiac chest pain caused by problems such as gastric reflux, which is similar to heartburn. The first group received 12 sessions of hypnotherapy over a period of 17 weeks. The other group received placebo therapy with general patient support over the same period. 80% of the patients receiving hypnotherapy claimed they achieved significant pain relief compared to only 1 in 13 of the placebo control group. The researchers also claimed that the hypnotherapy sessions added to the patient’s sense of well-being and reduced their need for painkillers during the research period. Past research into pain control using hypnosis as a means of controlling the way the brain processes sensory information has indicated that a patient’s emotional response to pain can be influenced with hypnosis. This has been confirmed within the field of neuroscience using brain scans to identify which parts of the brain are affected by hypnosis and the experience of pain. It has also been suggested that hypnosis can be effective