Procrastination: Hypnosis Can Help You Overcome ItWritten by By Teri B. Clark
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- "Just what I need - more things to get done that I can't get done."
- "If I can't finish one big thing, what makes me think I can finish many small things?"
- "Who cares if you break it down? You still won't start it until it is due!"
And this kind of self-talk from your judgmental conscious mind is what you can expect whenever you try to overcome procrastination. So, what can you do? One way to overcome procrastination is with hypnosis. Put An End to Procrastination With Hypnosis Hypnosis can help you overcome procrastination forever. How? By detouring around your conscious mind! Procrastination is nothing more than a bad habit. Your conscious mind doesn't like change and will "talk" you right out of changing. However, if you can get those suggestions into your subconscious mind without judgmental filter, you can change from being a procrastination to being an achiever. Hypnosis is stronger than willpower because it puts suggestions straight into your subconscious, way advertisers do. By time suggestions reach your conscious mind, they will have already been accepted by your subconscious - so no more defeating self talk to contend with! Best of all, your changed status from procrastinator to achiever means that you will achieve your goals and still have time left over. Instead of using up all your spare time with worry and guilt and frustration, you can use your spare time for enjoyment and relaxation! Hypnosis is an effective and lasting way to overcome procrastination. Use your willpower on procrastination one last time and get your hands on a hypnosis program today! Learn to Overcome Procrastination in 8 audio sessions over 14 days! The advanced hypnosis techniques used in Dr Neil Fiore's program will help you eliminate your problems with procrastination, permanently. Dr. Fiore is a licensed psychologist with more than 30 years of research and testing experience. His powerful hypnosis techniques will help you easily become a producer instead of a procrastinator. Imagine, in just as little as two short weeks, you can eliminate your bad habit, have more time for your friends and family, and be much more successful at work and at home!

About The Author Teri Clark’s interest in the new and different has led to a successful online writing career as an editor, researcher, ghostwriter, and author. The North Carolina resident has a degree in psychology and her work includes hundreds of articles and several books and e-books on the subject of hypnosis. This article is free for use on web sites, blogs, and newsletters, with the condition that it is not changed in any way.
| | An Algorithm to Remove “Hurt” from PainWritten by Abraham Thomas
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Similarly, response to an emotion was an algorithmic action. If fear was generated, a deer bounded away. A bird took flight. A fish swam off. But, such escape was hardly possible by heading into predator. An algorithmic intelligence remembered, evaluated and instantly chose best of multiple escape routes to increase distance from danger. That region responded to pain, with a massive search for escape routes to avoid pain. While nociceptors selectively reported pain, action region generated a powerful drive to escape from it. That algorithmic drive was “hurt” part of pain. Hypnosis was known to still that drive. A similar result was reported for an older surgical procedure, which cut neural link between perception of pain and dynamic response to it. Both treatments had patients reporting disappearance of “hurt.” Pain was an awful affliction. Chronic pain sufferers had to endure it over extended periods. Physicians recommended acceptance of pain as a solution. They suggested that a patient's attitude was also critical to treatment of pain. But, “acceptance” and “attitude” were difficult concepts. How could one accept continuing pain? How could a subconscious attitude ever be changed? This was where an appreciation of independent algorithmic processes of mind helped. Practical steps could yield a trusted result. Remove “hurt” part, distress, of pain. Learning “acceptance” was a worthy endeavor. The mind had unique ability to see itself. Across centuries, sages looked inward and recognized their own feelings and thoughts. In same way, it was also possible to identify your own drives. The key was awareness. And, insight that identification was possible. The vital secret of atomic bomb was just that it was possible. The drive to escape pain was a unique entity. Its operation had recognizable symptoms. By consciously identifying its physical symptoms, a patient could learn to identify it as a distinct mental event. Identify tensions of urge to escape, of impatience, of desperation. When urge was recognized, it vanished. Later, this drive became a familiar entity, which vanished, on recognition. Recognition and practice stilled “hurt” drive. The pain was there, but it did not hurt anymore. Which went on to prove that even “acceptance” could also be an algorithmic process.

Abraham Thomas is the author of The Intuitive Algorithm, a book, which suggests that intuition is a pattern recognition algorithm. The ebook version is available at www.intuition.co.in. The book may be purchased only in India. The website, provides a free movie and a walk through to explain the ideas.
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