Hypnotherapy for irritable bowel syndrome: the response of colonic and noncolonic symptoms.
There is now good evidence that hypnotherapy benefits a substantial proportion of patients with irritable bowel syndrome and that improvement is maintained for many years. Most patients seen in secondary care with this condition also suffer from a wide range of noncolonic symptoms such as backache and lethargy, as well as a number of musculoskeletal, urological, and gynaecological problems. These features do not typically respond well to conventional medical treatment approaches, but fortunately, their intensity is often reduced by hypnosis. The mechanisms by which hypnosis mediates its benefit are not entirely clear, but there is evidence that, in addition to its psychological effects, it can modulate gastrointestinal physiology, alter the central processing of noxious stimuli, and even influence immune function.
J Psychosom Res. 2008 Jun;64(6):621-3. Epub 2008 Apr 28. Whorwell PJ. University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom. peter.whorwell@manchseter.ac.uk
https://www.hypnosisresearchinstitute.org/trackback.cfm?C079D23F-C09F-2A3B-F64F319776B8FB72
In 1983, when I enrolled in the course of Alchemical Hypnotherapy when I was 30, I went into a past life session to seek the origins. My student practitioner was unskilled and although I saw the original incident as a "wicked step-mother" who poisoned me with berries in my porridge, I actually suffered a horrible bout of pain for about 2 days from that session. I realized I had unfortunately connected people professing love to me with a pain in my stomach up until that point in my life. Luckily, for the last 25 years I may not have even suffered more than a handful of times again and can't actually remember when the last occurance was. My colon and I are both doing very well, and sometimes when I think back it feels like a miracle.