On Nov 7, 3:32=A0pm, Hypnoexpert <hypnoexp...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> On Nov 7, 4:25=A0pm, Vance <Vance.L...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > On Nov 7, 12:49=A0pm, "Novice" <bardirectREM...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
> > > aneasthesia?
>
> > Sorry, I was writing quickly and forgot that there is a common
> > American spelling. =A0In my educational background people were
stickler=
s
> > about the language and you had to learn Greek, Latin, or German if you
> > were studying medicine because the terminology is all rooted in those
> > languages.
>
> > Either is acceptable in common usage and I should have thought about
> > that comment before I made it. =A0Anesthesia is and always has been a
> > bastard spelling in my mind and that prejudice slipped out. =A0My bad.
>
> > However, I am interested in what he was/is doing with hypnosis as
> > anesthesia/aneasthesia in a medical practice. =A0The OP's first post
> > doesn't quite pass the first sniff test as coming from an MD, but you
> > do get a strong whiff of GRPiness about it.
>
> > Vance
>
> What is GRPiness?
>
> I am retired from practice. =A0I was a GP and on occasion, when a
> patient was particularly anxious before a potentially painful
> procedure, I used hypnosis to help them relax and I suggested the area
> concerned would become numb. =A0Things like suturing without xylocaine
> or endometrial suction curretage for post meno-pausal bleeding were
> good uses. =A0When you grab a woman's cervix with a tenaculum to
> straighten it before inserting an endometrial probe or currette, you
> can be sure that hurts and hypnosis helped - but did not completely
> eliminate the pain.
>
> While I have become proficient at rapid induction and deepening, I
> have used it responsibly so as not to embarass the subject. =A0I do,
> however, enjoy watching skilled hypnotists manipulate their subjects
> to do essentially anything they want. =A0Personally, I do not believe
> that people have complete "free will" when it comes to the
> machinations of a master hypnotist.
>
> Do I pass the sniff test now? =A0By the way, there is a common clinical
> condition diagnosed with the 'sniff' test. =A0Anyone know what it is?
Not exactly. Why is a GP doing a procedure that a Gyno would
ordinarily be doing and why use hypnosis when using lignocaine would
be faster, more predictable and consistent in results - barring
contraindications to the local, of course? Never mind. It's not
im****tant.
The argument about whether a person has 'complete free will' when it
comes to the machinations of a master hypnotist would rest on to what
degree any person has free will sans the hypnotist. Past and current
research strongly suggests that people can be manipulated in hypnosis
in any im****tant dimension to the degree that they are manipulated
without hypnosis when the same influences are brought to bear.
GRPiness is posting with similar qualities to our late, unlamented,
Gordon Roy Parker, aka GRP, hence GRPiness.
Regarding your inquiry about *****c hypnosis videos, did you try
Google? It took me 7 minutes to pretty well identify the sources of a
full spectrum of *****c hypnosis tapes/DVD's to appeal to most any
taste.
Vance
>
> Its called Bacterial vaginosis - or Gardnerella.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -


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