Tuesday, October 7, 2008

American Journal Of Clinical Hypnosis

You're Getting Sleepy: The American Journal Of Clinical Hypnosis

Hypnotherapy, also called clinical hypnosis, is a serious medical treatment that requires licensed practitioners that need to take years of schooling. Although many people have gotten benefits from self-hypnosis, many more people prefer others to put them in a trance and plant helpful suggestions to help improve their lives. It certainly takes a degree of discipline to get through an issue of "American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis", the professional journal of the American Society of Clinical Hypnosis.

Not Light Reading

If you know anyone that's not a hypnotherapist who gets a lot of laughs from the "American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis", you really might want to sit a bit further away from them. This is a professional medical journal full of jargon, endnotes, clinical experimental hypnosis and citations from other papers that the reader is expected to know already. "American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis" is not written for the layperson.

A typical article title in "American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis" reads like this one from the April, 2007 issue, "Focused Analgesia in Waking and Hypnosis: Effects on Pain, Memory and Somatosensory Event-Related Potentials". Yes, I'll think I'll wait for the movie, too. But if you can't wait, this particular article can be read online.

BNet

Oddly enough, even though there is an official website for the "American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis", you can't read any articles for free at that site. You have to be a member of the website in order to do that. But some articles (such as the fifteen word title above) can be found on BNet, which publishes selected articles from trade and business journals for free.

There are also article summaries from "American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis" in case you can’t quite bring it into yourself to slog through the entire article. It is still preferable to paying for a subscription (which you can do through Amazon.com). A year's subscription costs over $80 (US) for a whopping four issues. In this day an age of high transportation and printing costs, the only way the journal has survived is by only coming out quarterly.

So, if you ever need to go to a hypnotherapist for whatever reason and wonder where all of your money is going towards, know that a chunk of it is most likely going towards a subscription to "American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis". Of course, your hypnotherapist could write it off as a business expense.

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