Some people have the mentality that asking for help is giving up, or makes them less masculine, less independent, etc.
Whatever the case may be I want you to know that sometimes asking someone for a little helping hand is the best thing you can do.
Some people have the mentality that asking for help is giving up, or makes them less masculine, less independent, etc.
Whatever the case may be I want you to know that sometimes asking someone for a little helping hand is the best thing you can do.
Is hypnosis just like guided meditation? The answer is to this question requires a little bit of explanation…
Whenever I explain hypnosis to people, I give them a rough comparison to guided meditation. Because there’s so much myth and misconception surrounding hypnosis due to do Vegas stage acts and television depictions, I want to give people a ballpark idea of what it is before I launch into the ‘science of neuroplasticity’ or ‘post-hypnotic suggestions.’
“If you change the way you think you can change your life”. This is the main philosophy of NYC hypnotist Dr. Errol Gluck who believes that there is a solution to every problem and if you change the way you look at things – the way you perceive it – you can change your destiny.
For Dr. Gluck, when a person comes to his Manhattan office with a problem he sees an opportunity for a solution because he truly believes that there are NO problems that cannot be solved.
Whether I’m coaching a recent college graduate looking to get his life on track or a business woman in between jobs, I tell everyone the same thing: It’s all about connections, or as the saying goes, “It’s not what you know; it’s who you know.”
In order to fully understand what I do, it’s important to give a background of what hypnosis has been in history, and where it is now.
Most people understand hypnosis as a stage act in Vegas where a member from the audience forgets the number six. That’s not what it is. At all. But let’s go back…