Hypnosis helps sleep-walking lawyer
When 30-year-old lawyers who practiced karate in her spare time gave her husband a black eye while sleep walking, she decided she should seek help.
The
But her husband’s slumber was disturbed most nights by her sitting up in bed and talking or getting up and moving around.
And when she lashed out at him in her sleep one night, giving him a black eye, enough was enough.
She sought treatment, concerned she might attack him again.
“It was a bit embarrassing for her husband too, having to say: ‘Oh, my wife did this accidentally’,” said psychologist Gerard Kennedy, a senior lecturer at
Sleep walking is one of a range of disorders that can be helped by hypnotherapy; the Australian Society of Hypnosis’s 35th annual congress in
Dr Kennedy told the conference the lawyer used to sleep walk three or four times a week before undergoing hypnosis.
At a four-month follow-up after four sessions of hypnotherapy, the frequency of her sleep walking had decreased to about once a month.
“They’ll never stop completely but you can reduce the frequency to very low,” Dr Kennedy said in an interview.
The woman told health professionals she tended to experience more episodes of sleep walking when she had been physically or mentally active before going to bed.
So if she’d played basketball, practiced karate or worked late, she was more likely to sleep walk.
Dr Kennedy, a consultant in respiratory and sleep medicine at the
However, the hypnosis sessions also included suggestions that if she did get out of bed, as soon as her feet touched the floor, she would wake immediately, be fully alert, return to bed and go quickly back to sleep.
Although another possible treatment would have been to give the woman sedative medication to take before bed, Dr Kennedy said she was unwilling to take drugs at that stage.
He said hypnosis was a relatively simple, non-invasive, inexpensive and effective means of treating sleep walking disorders.
The
Psychologist Kevin McConkey, of the
“The person who’s more open to experience, good at focusing their attention, the person who is comfortable engaging in fantasy, that sort of person is typically more, rather than less, hypnotizable,” Professor McConkey said.
He said hypnosis was used as an adjunct in a wide range of medical and psychological settings such as helping to relieve pain in childbirth and in patients with depression, anxiety or post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Patients thinking about trying hypnosis are advised to look for a qualified health professional that has been trained in hypnotherapy.
source: smh.com.au
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