Archives for August 2012

How To Overcome Perinatal And Postpartum Feelings Of Depression

All people experience moments of sadness. For most people, these feelings last for only hours or days. Up to one-fifth of the world’s population, however, suffer from clinical depression, in which these moods last several days, weeks, or months. These moods cause the person to develop impaired performance in work, family, or social relationships, which can become severe.

Females who have signs of depression when they become pregnant are sometimes diagnosed with perinatal depression. This problem can begin any time after a woman becomes pregnant, and up till the baby is one year old. Typically, however, those who encounter this condition after childbirth are diagnosed with postpartum depression.

Perinatal depression or postpartum depression is linked with a number of factors. These factors may be physical. For instance, women who have a personal or familial history of clinical depression or other mental health problems are more likely to experience perinatal depression or postpartum depression. Moreover, alterations in hormone levels after childbirth, like decreases in estrogen and progesterone levels, can cause this condition. Postpartum thyroid problems may result in signs of depression such as tiredness, irritability, and hopelessness.

Often, mental depression results from emotional issues. Women often feel tired and overwhelmed in learning to manage the needs of the new infant. These feelings are often increased by a lack of assistance from family, friends, or significant other. Money issues can also contribute to the development of postpartum depression.

Perinatal depression and postpartum depression may have serious results for both the mother and her new child. Worry and depression can hinder a mother from connecting fully with her baby or being able to meet her infant’s physical and psychological requirements. This can further compound the mother’s feelings of worthlessness, guilt, and self-doubt.

The baby is also harmed by the new mother’s issues. Failure to bond with his or her mother can cause the infant to experience trust issues in emotional relationships throughout life. Moreover, children who do not get their physical or psychological requirements met typically fail to grow and develop properly. This condition, described as “failure to thrive,” can be very serious or even deadly to the baby.

Perinatal depression or postpartum depression can affect the entire family. The spouse or significant other may feel neglected or powerless to help these depression symptoms. This may irreparably wound their partnership. Older children in the family often experience comparable emotions, and develop academic or peer problems as well.

Depression damages the entire family. Therefore, women experiencing perinatal depression or postpartum depression ought to seek depression treatment as soon as possible. Many treatments are available, such as talk therapy and drug therapy. Medications, however, can be dangerous for nursing babies, and sometimes yield erratic outcomes because of the tremendous hormone variations a mother experiences during these hectic months. Furthermore, traditional counseling approaches are usually time-consuming and costly.

Two approaches for dealing with depression that do not require medications and can rapidly demonstrate incredibly effective outcomes are hypnosis and Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP). Traditional Hypnotherapy is most effective for persons who are easily hypnotized or can accept suggestions without needing to critique or understand them. Ericksonian hypnosis is quite effective for clients who tend to overanalyze. These techniques aid people to relax and eliminate tension.

For clients who are more critical or analytical thinkers, NLP is often more effective. With this technique, trained practitioners give individuals depression help by coaching them to restructure their mental processes. This approach can, quite literally, assist a client think through the depressive mood and conquer it.

Individuals can conquer depression by learning NLP techniques like anchoring. They are taught to focus on situations when they were happy and in control of their circumstances. Recalling the event revives these emotions. Clients are taught to put two fingers together and remember these emotions. The unconscious mind relates the touch of the two fingers with the emotions. Therefore, the finger touch becomes an “anchor.”

Then, if the client starts to become overwhelmed, he or she triggers the anchor by touching these same two fingers together again. This brings back emotions of self-control and creates empowerment.

Through another approach called the Flash, people learn to think away harmful emotions. They instruct their unconscious minds to automatically exchange positive thoughts for negative ones. When negative thoughts develop, the brain automatically substitutes them for positive responses. After developing this strategy, people find it nearly impossible to think negative thoughts!

Summary: Perinatal depression and postpartum depression can have disastrous effects for a mother and her new baby. The rest of their family may also be profoundly affected because of these problems. Because of the possible gravity of the results of this disorder, women with depression ought to seek treatment as soon as symptoms begin. Two quite effective strategies that do not use medicine or great outlays of time and money are hypnosis and Neuro-Linguistic Programming.

Alan B. Densky, CH specializes in stress and depression related symptoms as an NGH certified hypnotist. During his 30-year career he has helped thousands of clients. He supplies hypnotic depression therapy CDs. Visit his Neuro-VISION self-hypnosis site for the hypnosis article repository, or watch his free video hypnosis collection.

– Alan B. Densky, CH

How To Lose Weight With The Atkins High Protein Weight Loss Diet

In spite of the popularity of the Atkins Diet, it is often greatly misrepresented! Popular, but slightly exaggerated depictions of the plan portray dieters devouring nothing but vast amounts of meat and fat. Although the diet is not quite this simple, many people have used it to successfully lose weight and improve their health.

On this plan, dieters follow a very specific regimen based on restricted carbohydrate intake. The nutritional aspects of the diet are emphasized over exercise and other factors, although getting physical activity is also important to weight loss. There are 4 phases to the Atkins diet:

Induction: For the duration of this two-week stage at the beginning of the diet program, dieters can only have up to 20 grams of carbohydrates each day. Dieters can ingest high protein foods such as meat and poultry, fats such as oils and butter, and other food with little to no carbs. Many foods containing carbohydrates are not permitted at all, including alcoholic beverages.

This initial phase is intended to help the body switch from burning carbohydrates for energy, as it normally does, into burning stored up fat (the state called ketosis). Most dieters start to lose pounds during this stage.

Ongoing Weight Loss: During this stage, dieters gradually increase their intake of carbs by adding 5 grams of carbohydrates into their diet every week. Dieters fine-tune their diet, losing weight to put themselves within 5-10 pounds of their goal weight, before transitioning into the Pre-maintenance phase.

Pre-maintenance: Dieters use this stage to find out the maximum amount of carbohydrates they can ingest without experiencing weight gain. During this stage, dieters increase carb intake by 10 grams a week. Once dieters reach their target weight and can keep it stable for a month, they move into the Lifetime Maintenance stage.

Lifetime Maintenance: For lasting results, the Atkins program is supposed to be maintained throughout the dieter’s lifetime. Using the techniques that helped the dieter reach their goal weight, the dieter maintains an eating and exercise program to stay at their goal weight. Individuals can revert to previous stages if they ever start to regain weight.

Dieters who can stick to the Atkins diet are usually successful in losing weight; however, many people cannot follow the program and end up quitting early on in the initial induction stage. In general, most diets fail simply because dieters cannot stay on the plan.

Many people struggle to stay on diets because they experience strong food cravings, have problems with compulsive overeating, can’t regulate their appetites, or simply are not motivated to lose weight. Getting over these mental obstacles is the most challenging aspect of losing weight.

One reason why many people struggle to control their eating is because they are emotional eaters. Such people eat in response to their feelings, such as when they are bored or upset. However, this practice programs a “conditioned response” into the unconscious mind. This means that when individuals experience the same feelings that made them initially overeat, they will feel compelled to overeat once again.

Hypnotherapy works by helping our unconscious minds disassociate our emotions from our eating habits. To eliminate the conditioned response to overeat, a hypnosis weight loss program is used to break the bond in the unconscious mind between overeating and specific “trigger” situations.

For example, if you tend to overeat when you feel bored, hypnosis can disassociate boredom from eating in your unconscious mind. Hypnotherapy techniques can then be used to replace the urge to overeat with another activity, such as exercising. This way, the next time you suffer from boredom, instead of overeating, you will feel motivated to exercise, resulting in natural weight loss.

Hypnosis is an excellent stress relieving tool as well, helping us deal with our stressful emotions and relieve tension without eating. As a relaxation tool, it calms the mind, helps you develop strategies to manage stress, and boosts your self confidence to motivate you to lose weight.

Hypnosis can also be used to end the emotional anxieties that keep you from losing weight. Many overweight people hide behind their weight for emotional protection. For example, after ending a relationship, people often find themselves becoming overweight so they can avoid new relationships and avoid experiencing emotional pain again. Through hypnosis, we can think more positively and focus on having better health instead of becoming overwhelmed by our emotions.

Not only is hypnosis an ideal motivation tool, it relieves tension, extinguishes conditioned responses that cause overeating, and can be used to overcome many mental obstacles that prevent weight loss. Hypnosis is very effective at helping people stay on a diet plan, such as the Atkins plan, and naturally lose weight.

Alan B. Densky, CH is certified by the NGH. Visit the self-hypnosis website for Free NLP newsletters, videos, and downloads. He offers several ways to lose weight, including hypnotism to lose weight DVDs and weight loss hypnosis CDs.

– Alan Densky