“If we can respond intently, we can choose wisely what we pay attention to.“
In this episode, we explore the world of hypnotherapy and hypnosis, focusing on its benefits for menopausal women. Our guest, Dr. Spiegel, shares insights about their app and guides us through a self-hypnosis exercise. We discuss the power of hypnosis in managing pain, improving sleep, reducing stress, and promoting positive habits. Dr. Spiegel’s mission is to make hypnosis more accessible and change the perception of this therapeutic technique. Join us as we dive into the fascinating potential of hypnosis.
Dr. David Spiegel is Willson Professor and Associate Chair of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, and Director of the Center on Stress and Health and the Center for Integrative Medicine at Stanford University School of Medicine. He has published thirteen books, 425 scientific journal articles, and 175 book chapters on hypnosis, psychosocial oncology, stress physiology, trauma, and psychotherapy for stress, anxiety, and depression. His research has been supported by the National Institute of Mental Health, the National Cancer Institute, the National Institute on Aging, the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, and a number of foundations.
In this podcast, Hypnotherapy for Menopausal Women: Pain, Sleep, Stress & Positive Habits, we cover:
- Unlocking the Healing Power of Hypnotherapy
- Empowering Your Mind & Body: Using Hypnosis to Navigate Menopause
- Exploring Brain States and Your Mind’s Potential
- Hypnosis: A Key to Resilience and Healing
Unlocking the Healing Power of Hypnotherapy
Now, I know what you might be thinking – hypnotherapy, isn’t that just about making people cluck like chickens on stage? By the end of this episode, with the help of Dr. David Spiegel, you’ll see hypnotherapy in a whole new light. In this conversation, you’ll learn how self-hypnosis can be a game-changer for issues ranging from chronic pain to hot flashes, anxiety, depression, and even sleep troubles.
Let’s start by breaking down some misconceptions about hypnotherapy. Dr. Spiegel explains that hypnosis is a state of intense focus, dissociation (putting things outside of conscious awareness), and cognitive flexibility. These elements come together to empower individuals to imagine a different reality and reshape their experiences. The best part? Self-hypnosis allows you to take control of your own mental and emotional well-being. You can learn to break free from thought patterns that no longer serve you and explore new, positive ways of thinking and feeling.
Empowering Your Mind & Body: Using Hypnosis to Navigate Menopause
Often misunderstood, Dr. Spiegel explains how hypnosis is revealed to be a powerful tool for rewiring your thought patterns and improving overall well-being. His journey into hypnotherapy began with a remarkable experience during his early medical career. One key aspect Dr. Spiegel emphasized was that many mental challenges, such as anxiety, stress, and even looping thoughts, are not solely brain-based but stem from the body’s response to stress.
Rather than immediately trying to analyze and solve a stressful situation, Dr. Spiegel suggests acknowledging how your body is reacting to the stressor. This is where hypnosis comes in – allowing you to calm your body’s physical response and, in turn, alters your perception of the situation. This shift in perspective can enable you to address the problem with greater clarity and emotional control.
Exploring Brain States and Your Mind’s Potential
In this episode, Dr. Spiegel confirms that during hypnosis, individuals indeed shift into brainwave patterns associated with greater receptivity, called theta rhythms. Who knew our brains were so powerful?! He explains the three distinct changes in the brain activity that occur when entering this state, as well as that all hypnosis is self-hypnosis. He explains that the person guiding you serves as a facilitator, teaching you how to better control your brain and body. There is no external force or manipulation of your thoughts; rather, you gain mastery over your own cognitive and physiological responses. This is why I always tell you how powerful you really are!
Hypnosis: A Key to Healing and Resilience
Our bodies, much like our brains, have a unique way of holding onto the experiences we’ve encountered throughout our lives. Some of these experiences can leave a lasting mark, shaping the way we interact with others, ourselves, and our environment. But the big question we’re exploring is this: Can we break from this unending vigilance? According to Dr. Spiegel, the answer is a resounding yes. Through self-regulation and a technique he explains within the episode, we can actually take back control and our power. He also mentions that even as we age, our brains in fact continue to build new connections. This is truly a reminder to challenge any preconceived notions about cognitive decline and menopause and commit to a lifelong journey to learning and self-improvement. Who’s with me?
Dr. Mindy
On this episode of the race Saturday podcast, I bring you Dr. David Spiegel. Now, not only is Dr. Spiegel, an incredibly brilliant man, Harvard Medical School did his residency at Stanford clinics. I mean, this man is quite brilliant, but he has this huge heart for bringing hypnotherapy to the world. Now before you click off, and you’re like hypnotherapy, oh, my gosh, I really am hoping that you are going to see hypnotherapy from a new light. Because what Dr. Spiegel is trying to get out to the world is that self hypnosis, and I think this is so important that when we learn the techniques of self hypnosis, we can start to turn everything from chronic pain issues to hot flashes, we talked about that to anxiety to depression to trouble sleeping, just by learning how to train our minds in a new way. so hear me out on this one, because this is so important. When we get our looping thoughts of anxiety when we’re struggling with the stressors of life, we are locked into a pattern of thought that may not be serving us. And what you’re going to learn in this episode is that self hypnosis can change and break that pattern of thought that is no longer serving you, and it can do it in an instant. So you’re going to hear him dive into why he’s so passionate about hypnotherapy why he’s on a mission to rebrand hypnotherapy. And you’re going to hear some examples of what he’s seen in clinical practice. In just one session of hypnotherapy, being able to change traumas that are have to happen to our body to our mind, and really get us our brains pointed in a real positive direction. So I asked Dr. Spiegel, to really explain hypnotherapy to give us examples. And then of course, to always put it in the context of what so many of us, as you know, women over 40 are dealing with and even though this episode is both for men and women, you know, my heart really goes out to those of us that are going through the perimenopause and menopausal experience. And we need more tools to be able to navigate the new symptoms, everything from hot flashes, to anxiety to trouble sleeping, we need tools to be able to nag navigate that moment. And what you’re going to learn is Dr. Spiegel has given us an incredible tool. And stay tuned all the way to the end, because he took me through a hypnosis that is unique, not unique to me. You can you can see how simple self hypnosis is. In fact, I’m doing this intro right now after he just hypnotized me. So if I sound a little off it, it’s because I’m coming out of a hypnotic state. But as you will learn, it’s a incredible self healing tool. And that’s what I want to bring you all is tools that you can do on your own to help yourself and Dr. Spiegel has given us one. And I’m so excited to bring it to you. So as always, I hope this helps. And I hope you enjoy the wisdom of this brilliant man. So enjoy. Hey, Dr. Mindy here, and welcome to season four of the resetter podcast. Please know that this podcast is all about empowering you to believe in yourself. Again. If you have a passion for learning, if you’re looking to be in control of your health and take your power back, this is the podcast for you. Enjoy. Okay, well let’s let’s start with this. i I just want to welcome you to the resetter podcast and so grateful for your not only you, your brain, your heart, but your mission that you’re on. So thank you. Let me start by just saying thank you for being here. Dr. Spiegel. I really appreciate that.
Dr. Spiegel
Well, alright, thank you for having me. I’m honored and pleased to be here.
Dr. Mindy
Let’s start with this hypnotherapy I think is really misunderstood. And this is from a lay person’s perspective. So tell us a little bit about what got you excited about hypnotherapy and why you see this is such a useful tool for the world and where their mental state is right now. Well,
Dr. Spiegel
hypnosis and hypnosis hypnotherapy is something of a genetic illness in my family because my I learned it listening to dinner table conversation both of my parents were a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, and they told me I was free to be any kind of psychiatrist I wanted to be and so you’re I am. But oh wait fascinating stories about it and I so I was naturally interested in when I went to medical school I took a course in hypnosis, which was fun. And the first patient I ever had doing hypnosis was a 13 year old girl. Had the nurse said steagle your neck patient is in room 243. And I can hear the wheezing down the hall. And I walk into the room and here’s the pretty redheaded 15 year old girl knuckles white bulked up right in bed, struggling to breathe. And she’d been unresponsive to subcutaneous epinephrine times two. They were considering general anesthesia and putting her on steroids. And I didn’t know what to do. So I said, Do you want to learn a breathing exercise, and she nods. And I got her hypnotized. And then I sort of broke out in the sweat when I realized that we didn’t got an asthma in the course yet. So I came up with something very clever. I’d said each breath you take will be a little deeper and a little easier. And within five minutes, he’s lying back in bed, her knuckles aren’t wide. She’s not wheezing anymore. Her mother stopped crying mother was standing next to me. Nurse ran out of the room. The intern comes looking for me and I figured he’s gonna say hey, great sleep, what would you do? And he said, the nurse has filed a complaint with the nursing supervisor that you violated Massachusetts law by hypnotizing a minor without parental consent. Wow. And Massachusetts has a lot of weird laws, but that is not on the list. And her mother was standing right next to me when I did it. And he said, Well, you’re gonna have to stop doing this. I said, really? Why? He said, Well, it might be dangerous. And I said, you’re gonna give her general anesthesia and put her on steroids. And you’re telling me talking to her dangerous, you know, and I’ll tell you, that is the problem with hypnosis is people either dismiss it at some weird stage, so thing, but they say terribly dangerous, God forbid you should do it, neither of which is true. So I said, Tell you what, I’m not going to advise my patient, I’m not going to tell you something I know isn’t true. So you can take me off the case if you want. But until you do, I’m gonna keep helping her like this. And there was a counsel of war among the intern, the resident, the chief resident, the attending over the weekend, and they came back on Monday with a radical idea. They said, Let the Ask the patient, I don’t think they’d ever done that. And she said, I liked it. Now, she had been hospitalized every month for three months. And that is because she did have one subsequent rehospitalization. But she went on to study to be a respiratory therapist, and I thought that anything that could help a patient that much violate a non existing Massachusetts law had to be worth looking into. And I and it was right before my eyes and in her body, I could see the change happening. And so we have this kind of prejudice in medicine, that the only real treatments are incision, ingestion, or injection, you know, treat the body like a broken car fixed apart, do a thing, put a thing in it or do something. And that’s, I’m a doctor, I prescribe meds, we do things like that all the time. But it’s only one part of our effective toolkit, as you know, so well. And there’s, it would be remarkable if the street pound organ that sits on our shoulders that connects with every part of our body controls, every part of our body couldn’t be better used to help people deal with all kinds of medical and other problems. And so I’ve devoted my career to figuring out how to use that organ. And, you know, it doesn’t come with a user’s manual. You know, people need to learn things. No, it doesn’t. Why we’re here, and so Right, exactly. So I devoted my career to demonstrating how it works and and understanding better providing evidence that it works in randomised trials. And the other reason I’m sitting here is that, that we’ve done it, and many other colleagues have done it too. But that hasn’t changed our the use of it very much at all. And I’m very frustrated. Because it’s the risk benefit ratio, great. Gnosis is so much more favorable than many other things we do, that it’s a real shame that people haven’t had the opportunity to take full advantage of it.
Dr. Mindy
So with that thought in mind, just so we start off this whole conversation with people breaking apart that mental image we have of hypnosis being like a, like a, like a, an, something you see at a conference where people make you do funny things because they put you in a hypnotic state and now you act a certain way. I am sure that has not helped the image of hypnosis. So let’s let’s create this new image that you’re seeing. What is hip Gnosis and why does it work?
Dr. Spiegel
There are three critical things that happen in hypnosis. It’s a state basically of highly focused attention. Have you ever gotten so caught up in a good movie that you forget you’re watching the movie and enter the Imagine world? Yeah. So hypnosis is a kind of believed in imagination where you get intensely focused. It’s like looking through the telephoto lens and a camera, what you see you see with great detail, but you’re less aware of the context. So that we call the context part we call dissociation, putting outside of conscious awareness, things that would ordinarily be in consciousness now, right now, for example, you’re so fascinated by what I’m saying that you’re hopefully unaware of the sensations in your body touching the chair, you’re sitting is that Am I right about that, if you were aware of them, we could stop right here. But so we naturally do it all the time. But in hypnosis, you do it more intensely. And the things you can put outside of conscious awareness or transform your perception of include pain, anxiety, compulsive impulses to do things you shouldn’t do. And so dissociation is a therapeutic tool as well, putting things outside of conscious awareness that would ordinarily, you would get too preoccupied with it. One of the problems with pain, one of the problems with menopause, is not just that there is real discomfort there that you’re having hot flashes, but that they really bother and irritate you. And that gets you to pay more attention to them rather than less so. So focus attention, does dissociation, putting things outside of conscious awareness. And the third thing, which is the thing that I think worries people the most about hypnosis, it used to be called suggestibility. But what really is, is cognitive flexibility, that enables you to see things from a new point of view. And it’s what worries people if somebody floats an idea in front of you, and you won’t be able to resist it? Well, you know, we’re social creatures, we do a lot of things at the advice and suggestion of other people, some of them good, some of them not so good. And hypnosis can be one more intense form of doing that. But what’s cool about it is, is it allows you to try out being different before you have actually even decided that that’s the way you want to be, you can just see what it feels like if you imagine the pain was instead of sense of cool tingling, numbness, or that the hot flash your feeling is different. If you imagine you’re floating in a mountain light. And you would think what you know, because most people feel sort of trapped by their sentence, I’ve got it, I’ve got to suffer with it. And you don’t you form a relationship to the symptom you have, and you can change it. And so what’s cool is that hypnosis puts you in a state where you can try out being different and see what it feels like.
Dr. Mindy
When you say try it out. I mean, we’re talking about the difference between what I would call looping thoughts and this is something that I see happen to women as they go through menopause, there’s so many different symptoms that hit us that you get attached to those symptoms you and they start looping you know whether it’s anxiety or hot flashes or sleep, I mean, sleeps a big one for menopausal women. And then the brain starts going, why can’t I do this? Oh my god, I can’t get to sleep. Why am I anxious? Why do I keep getting you can’t break that pattern of thought. So what you what I just heard is when you when you hypnotize somebody, you’re taking some familiar thought, but you’re giving it a different perspective so that the brain can think about it differently. Is that right?
Dr. Spiegel
That’s part of it, maybe absolutely right. But there’s another component to that, that’s very important. And that is, we do it from the body up rather than from the brain down. So when you’re in bed at three in the morning, frustrated, you can’t get to sleep what you’re doing is waking yourself up, you’re triggering the the sympathetic nervous system, the arousal system, you get frustrated, your muscles tense, you start to sweat. And then you notice that and you think, oh my god, I will never get back. And so it that looping is exactly right. What you can do in hypnosis is, is first just get your body calm down, you know, kind of what you would do for a frightened or hurt child is the first thing you do is soothe and calm them down. And then you try and help them move whatever the problem is. So be a good parent to your own body. And imagine your body floating in a mountain like cool tingling, and if you do that, your body starts to feel different. And then you’re beginning to break that cycle of others must be terrible because I’m so tense and aroused and all this stuff. And then you can say the other problem but for high prices, for example. There have been studies very Elkins The psychologist in Texas who has been studying this very carefully for years. And he finds that the thing that seems to help women with menopause, the most in using hypnosis is just to imagine being in a place where their body would feel cool and comfortable. And so it’s a way of countering the, you know, the psycho physiological impact of the hot flashes. And there were we have evidence that people using hypnosis can actually change their physiology somewhat, but at the least, they change their perception of what’s going on in their body and can make themselves more comfortable.
Dr. Mindy
What I just heard in that in in something that I think is really people are starting to get I hope they’re starting to get is that some of the challenges mental challenges that we go through are not just brain challenges, it’s not just something that’s going on in the brain, but it’s information coming from the body to the brain. And, you know, the Body Keeps the Score was a beautiful example of of that, really, I’m sure you get quoted that all the time. But like, that is that is revolutionary, even though that book has been out for a while. Can you talk a little bit? Why we when we’re struggling mentally, we go at the brain, and what I just heard is, you could actually go at the body to change the brain, what do we need to understand?
Dr. Spiegel
That’s well played well. Bessel Vander Kolk. And I wrote the Body Keeps the Score. We’re residency together in psychiatry at Harvard a long time ago. And it’s a terrific book, and that on the Times bestseller lists for years, so you struck a nerve? There’s no question about that. So yes, the idea is to focus on what we call interoception. That is, we tend to think of perception hearing, seeing, you know, smelling, tasting, but there’s another kind of perception in which you are processing what’s going on in your own body, that’s information for us. And you’ll know that you’re anxious, in part because your gut starts to tighten up and you begin to sweat and your muscles get tight. You perceive that and then you think, Oh, God, this must be really good. And on it goes. So in the reverie app, which we’ve built to help people do this for themselves, we have instruction in dealing with stress, for example, to start with a physical reaction to the stressor. So before you try to figure out what to do about that nasty comment from your boss or something else, you imagine your body floating in events, like a hot tub, or just floating in space. And if you’re lying in bed at night, ruminating about all this stuff, you can’t shut it off, you just get your body floating. And then imagine you’re watching it as like a home movie. So you get it sort of outside your body, I see it, I see him I don’t like the way he looks. I don’t like what he’s saying. But you keep your body floating and comfortable. And as you do that, you’re beginning to allow yourself to face an old problem from a new point of view, without the immediate feeling that he’s got me because I’m tense already. And so you can you can the thing you can control before you figure out how to control the stressor, for example, is you can figure out how to control the effect of stressors having on your body. And so that’s already the first step to dealing with it. And then you think, Alright, well, you know what, the last time he said something nasty to me, I found a polite way to tell him that I didn’t agree with him. And here’s what we did next, or whatever it is, you can think it through more rationally and without getting so aroused. So the thing about hypnosis is that we know that it actually changes activity in parts of the brain that get us stressed and around. And so you can turn that down, face the same problem from the point of view of mastery rather than victimhood.
Dr. Mindy
Wow. Okay. So what I just learned in that is, if I’m going about my day, and stress hits me in that moment, I think what most humans would do is they would try to figure out what what’s why that stressor? Is there, what they can do to change it, who needs to change? How do you change your reaction? But what I just heard you say is how about the first thought is you go to how is my body reacting to this right now? And let me deal with the body experience of this stressful moment, and then the brain will change.
Dr. Spiegel
Right, exactly. And then I’ll be able to address the problem itself from a novel, novel point of view. I had a patient who was a lovely, pregnant mother, she had a very bad lower back disease and she was seven months pregnant. As the baby got bigger and bigger. They had more and more pain. She was more frightened and frustrated. They couldn’t use meds, whether She was quite unpredictable. And I had to imagine that she was floating in a in a like, mountain, like cool, tingly and numb. And the pain went from seven out of 10 to three out of 10 in a few minutes, and she opened her eyes. And she looked angry. And I said, What are you angry about? She said, Why in the hell are you the last doctor I got sent to instead of the first. I mean, they didn’t planted nerve stimulators, they’ve done all kinds of stuff that I’m working on. So by handling her perception of what was happening in her body, and seeing it as something that she could actually modulate. It just changed her perspective on the pain and she managed it much better. And also, I think you’ve put your finger on it that start with the thing you can actually do more about than you might think. And that is helping your body handle it better. And that’s what we teach people to do. And reverie. And we’re finding that nine out of 10 people using the stretch app and the pain app, report immediate relief within five or 10 minutes. And there aren’t many treatments in medicine. And this isn’t a treatment, it’s a health and wellness skill, but it’s when I use it in my office as a treatment. Same thing people can tell right away, whether or not it’s going to help them. And if it doesn’t time go on to something else. But most of the time it does. So it’s a way of learning to use a skill. And that’s where, you know, it frustrates me so much when people say I’m losing control, you know, the hypnotist will take my control away and all that. And I was a little nervous at first, we’ve got many, many 1000s of people using reverie. Now, the number of problems and they’re all minors, I can count on the fingers of one hand, and people are gaining control. That’s the thing that’s remarkable. All hypnosis is really self hypnosis. You’re just learning to better control your own body. And you feel so much better about yourself when you say, okay, you know, I’m having a hot flash again, but I can regulate it, I can control it. I can imagine I’m floating in my favorite mountain like cool tingling, numbness, I’m going to filter away that sense of too much heat. And instead of being frustrated about what’s going wrong in my body, this thing, okay, I know that I can help deal with it just the way you would with a child, you soothe and comfort and help them in the same way you do it to your own body.
Dr. Mindy
I really love that idea of the child. And I think a lot of women can really grab on to that. Because what I see a lot of women do especially as they go through menopause, and they lose estradiol and they lose the progesterone that calms the brain is that when stress hits them and hits them so acutely. And because we don’t understand what are the changes our brain are going through, we often turn on ourselves and we start to think, oh, whatever XYZ and situation that’s going on in my life must be because I did something wrong or I it you know, I’m I’m the one at fault. And what I’m hearing from you is you’re saying, let’s just put that aside. And let’s reprogram the body into into feeling more calm without turning on our own selves. So
Dr. Spiegel
yeah, most of the Monday we’d rather feel guilty than helpless, you know. And though we blame ourselves for things, that we’re not responsible for the clearest example I just yesterday, got an email back from a patient I’d seen about six months ago, a lovely woman from a country whose, which is not well known for treating women well. And she went she was a little girl there. She was raped by their landlord when she was 12 years old. And the family was afraid to do anything about it. They were afraid they’d be thrown out. And she told me that she was walking on the streets as a teenager, she realized her body wasn’t around and could say anything, they want it to her. She finally got out she got to the US she became a healthcare professional. But she was chronically depressed. And she retired early and was just miserable. And I choose very hypnotizable and it was clear to me that what you were talking about is what was going on that she was blaming herself for events she didn’t control. And that’s very common, it’s common and people who have been traumatized and what people who have been sexually assaulted that they you know, I shouldn’t I should have known better than to walk to the drugstore three in the afternoon through the park, you know, that kind of thing. And, and so I said, I want you to picture yourself as your 12 year old girl fall. And she starts to cry. And it’s very intense for her and I said, I want you to look at her and tell me something was that her fault was her fault and she cried harder and she said I’m stroking her hair, stroking her hair. And and she cried for While and we came out of the state of Self Hypnosis. And she said, You know, I have always sort of blamed myself somehow. And, you know, I made trouble for the family. And, you know, why was I there with him at that moment and all that. And she called me about a week later. And she said, My psychiatrist wants to know what you did to me, because I’m not depressed anymore. And I just yesterday, got a six month follow up note, she sent to me, saying, you know, it was a blessing of God, that that you got to see me and my life has changed. And so we carry this burden that we don’t have to carry. And when I said earlier Monday, that hypnosis allows you to very quickly try out being someone different. That’s what she did, she could let go of this lifelong burden of blaming herself for a right that he was not responsible for. And and so sudden changes like that can happen. And and you can try out what it means to be different and be different.
Dr. Mindy
Do you do you think when you go into hypnosis, you’re also going into a different brain pattern that makes you more receptive, like, my understanding is right now we’re operating from a beta wave brain pattern. But when you go into like meditation, or you go into into a sleep state, you’re going back into like alpha and then into theta, and that it’s in that moment that you can start to see things a new is that a little bit of what’s
Dr. Spiegel
going on with your training and neurophysiology is coming out there. Yes. And in fact, there are studies that show that the highly hypnotizable people in hypnosis have more left frontal theta and in particular left frontal cortex. So you do go into these kinds of theta rhythm. But what we’ve done studies using functional magnetic resonance imaging on what happens with people when they go to Dave Gnosis and we find three things happen. One is that you turn down activity in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, it’s part of the salience network, it’s the part of the brain that does pattern matching says, Oh, that loud noise might be a shot, you better do something, or it’s what gets activated on on some of these social media, when they say there, we now know that 12 Girls are better looking than you are. And you know, so the threat, you turn down activity in that part of the brain to keep your attention from being hijacked. That’s how you get into this state of highly focused attention. The second thing that happens is there’s more functional connectivity. So cooperative activity between the prefrontal cortex, the cognitive executive control network, and the insula, the intelligence, little island, that means it’s the Lummi island in Latin, that is a processor of brain to body and body to brain information. So it’s a region through which you can control what’s going on in your body, we’ve shown that people in hypnosis can control how much gastric acid they secrete. If they think about eating food, there’s an 80% increase in gastric acid secretion, if they think about something other than that there’s a 39% decrease. And so it processes the executive control region does that through the insula telling the body what to do, but the insula is also presenting to the brain information about how the body is reacting interoception Are you tension Are you relaxed, and you affiliate with something that makes you more comfortable. So that’s the second thing. The third thing is inverse connectivity between the executive control network and a part of the brain, the posterior cingulate cortex that we call the default mode network is when you’re just sitting around not doing much ruminating about who you are, what people think about you, self reflection, it goes on in that area. And so what this means is that when you’re doing something in hypnosis, you’re turning off the part that says, I can’t do that, you know, or I couldn’t do that, or my neighbors will like me, if I do whatever it is, you just turn that off and say, I’m going to be different. That’s the cognitive flexibility that comes with hypnosis. So you’re turning down distraction, you’re focusing intently, you’re connecting more intently between your brain and your body, both ways, controlling it and also responding to it. And you’re turning off your usual set of expectations about what you can or should do. That’s the state you go into in hypnosis. And all hypnosis is really self hypnosis. So this is a state you can control and you can use it to help yourself feel better.
Dr. Mindy
So and I just want to highlight because you’ve said this a couple of times, and I and my hope is that a podcast like this will help rebrand the way we look at hypnosis. It’s all self hypnosis, you’re just accessing your own thoughts in a different way, the person who’s putting you into the hypnosis, or hypnotic state doesn’t have an influence over the control of your brain.
Dr. Spiegel
It’s your they’re teaching you how to better control your brain. So all hypnosis is self hypnosis. That’s right. You’re just learning how to do it better. And if you’re not capable of hypnosis, nobody’s gonna make you do it. Nobody can do it. Now, we are, of course, social creatures. So we take in information from others, and we act on it. You act on investment advice, you do all kinds of things, some of which is good, some of which isn’t. So are you can you be influenced by people? Yes, if you’re intensely focused on it, and suspending your salience networks activity of watch out what might be happening. So you choose the situation and the information you learn about? Carefully. You do it as carefully or more when you’re going to use it in a hypnotic way, because you’ll judge it, but you’ll judge it later. You’ll think about it later. Yeah, you know, what
Dr. Mindy
I just thought of is, we’re in a bit of a hypnotic state when we’re watching TV. And like the news, the way that the news can influence people. I mean, I don’t know what the brain pattern is when we’re watching the news. Yeah, but I would think you’re a little in a maybe an Alpha Theta, brainwave state that allows that information to get in? Well, am I accurate?
Dr. Spiegel
We have plenty of examples of uncritical acceptance of things that we just know are not true. You know, they’re 70% of Republicans think that Trump won the last election, you know, it’s, it’s disturbing How influenceable We are. And the problem isn’t hypnosis. It’s the people were. And you’re right, though, that, you know, television, I was one thing in the Bigfoot stadium here in San Francisco. And it was one of those things where you could watch the field or you could watch the television monitor this huge TV screen that showed the game. And so I could feel myself in a different mental state when I was watching the game on the field, because I was making all the executive decisions do I look at third base? Do I look at first base, but you know, where they’re, the director of the show is telling you what to look at. And so you’re using less judgment in defining your field of attention. So it did feel like less mental work for me. less fun, but less work to watch the monitor versus watching the field. And I think you’re right, that that happens. And it tends to pull for that kind of uncritical acceptance of whatever it is they’re presenting to you.
Dr. Mindy
Yeah, I mean, it makes you really conscious of where you want to put your brain and what environment you want to put it in and who you’re going to let in there. When you realize that we can go into these brain states and absorb this information and start to look at it as truth. That’s an example of doing it in a negative way. And what you’re saying is, let’s use hypnosis to do this in a positive way. That’s
Dr. Spiegel
very well put, that’s exactly right, that if we, if we can respond and respond to tactfully, let’s choose wisely what we pay attention to. And I have a modest proposal, wherever he would be one example where you can use it to help yourself, GET TO SLEEP control pain, do better with dress, stop smoking, eat more sensibly, there are all kinds of things you can program your brain to do to help you live better and happier.
Dr. Mindy
So if we go back to this woman that you just talked about, because I think this is I see this so much in our in our platform, I mean, we get messages from millions of women every month, talking about the suffering that they’re going through in menopause. And it’s multifactorial is the way I always look at it. And yet, this thread of hypnosis is something I would be 1,000% in agreement with you that we need new tools. So if we go back to that woman, she had this new understanding that it wasn’t her fault. She mothered her own child, her own her own her own inner child. Did it did it stick after that hypnosis like is now does she have that conscious change?
Dr. Spiegel
She just wrote me six months after he’d seen me once. And she said, I still I feel like a different person. And I thank God that I got the help that I got from you. And, and I thank the doctor who referred me to you, and she’s still feeling different. And she said her friends don’t recognize her. They just they say you’re different. You’re happier. You’re so yes, so it’s not it lasted. It’s less than half a year so far.
Dr. Mindy
So but that was one hypnosis where she had like a real Aha, yep. And now everything is changed right?
Dr. Spiegel
Right, because all the elements were there, you know, and it was partly what I know about how people who have been sexually assaulted, tend to respond, but partly what I heard from her and given what her life had been like and what she had accomplished in her life, it didn’t make sense for her to be as down on herself as she was. But that turned out to be the root cause of it. And, and she could feel it for herself. It wasn’t me telling her it wasn’t your fault. It was me asking her to look at herself as that 12 year old girl, and ask yourself is the circle? Is this your fault? And she figured it out?
Dr. Mindy
You just have to question. Yeah, you just reframed it and gave her a new way. So again, another example of where you didn’t put something into your her brain, you asked a question that got her brain looking in a new direction. That’s
Dr. Spiegel
a very astute observation. That’s right. And it stuck because it fit because she did it for herself within her own context. And it made sense to her.
Dr. Mindy
So let’s then go back to the body things. So the other the other really interesting piece that I pulled out of the Body Keeps the Score is this escape plan, this alarm system that that happens in the body, and I’ll use myself as an example. I had a near death experience. About 17 years ago, I swam into a pile of Portuguese man of war when I was down in Cabo San Lucas. Yeah, it’s quite, it’s quite a story. And I had the life review, I went down the tunnel, like I was out, and I and I came back. And when ever since that moment, I haven’t been able to relax much. And when I read the Body Keeps the Score, there’s a story that he tells him there have a couple that watched a very intense car accident. And they could never after that car accident, they were involved in it. But after that car accident, they could never sleep because their brain had identified that if I let go, I will die. And when I saw that, my my brain went, Oh my God, that’s me. That’s why I can’t relax because I had to save myself in that moment. So he goes on to talk about how the amygdala and creates this whole escape plan when we have a trauma. Can you talk a little bit about if there’s so many people and it’s everything from major events, like what I had two minor events, like a car accident, like my son was just in a minor car accident, he’s so jumpy when he gets in the car. Now, there’s like this, this body reaction that we have to all these traumas in our life, because the amygdala is keeping you trying to still keep you safe. It does hypnosis break that? And can you speak a little bit to that because I think a lot of people are struggling, that escape plan that’s still activated?
Dr. Spiegel
Absolutely it can, it can help with that. There are two parts of the autonomic nervous system, the primary stress response system, the sympathetic nervous system, which is mediated by adrenaline, increases heart rate, blood pressure, it prepares you to fight or flee. The parasympathetic system is this the rest and digest system, it allows you to soothe yourself calm down, slows, heart rate slows blood pressure, lowering blood pressure, and, and when you’re in the middle of real physical trauma, you probably saved your life by struggling to get away from this horrible mess you had swum into, and you needed to do it, that’s what it’s there for. Right? Trouble is that then your brain tends to generalize from the world is generally safe to the world is generally dangerous. And I have to be ready at any moment. And it’s understandable that you would feel that way for a while. But there comes a point where your brain’s ability to vividly reenact or relive or remember, trauma like this becomes more of a liability than an asset. And to go to sleep, you really have to turn off your sympathetic nervous system. That’s what happens when they sleep, and turn on the parasympathetic nervous system to allow your body to calm to self soothe. And what you can what hypnosis does is it turns down activity and the stress response network, particularly the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex. And so that’s a part of the brain that flags trouble when it’s there, it matches patterns. It’s, most of the time things are quite peaceful and safe. But if there’s some irregularity, and the brain thinks this could be trouble, it will do that. So what happens is you then overgeneralize the sense of threat because of the recollection of the threat that you experience. And it is possible to just assume your body to say yes, that was then this is now so it’s under Sandoval that your body would be jumping. But at the same time, let’s find a way to soothe your body. It’s not that you’re wrong that That’s that situation was dangerous. It’s just that it is not now dangerous except and how it continues to arouse you. So the idea is put your body say I get it, I understand why my body is aroused. But think of your body as if it were an upset child, a young child who, you know, just, you know, bang his arm on a door or something, got his finger caught in the door and you, you first thing you do is just sue the child, it’s a yet setting, it was a sudden surprising thing, it felt awful. But the first thing to do is just to get your body imagining it somewhere safe and comfortable. You were at rescue you, you were in danger. But you’re not now. And so you can start out by just saying the body’s arousal is understandable, the brain is signaling to do what it needed to do at one time. But by saying taking over and saying I can tell that I’m not in danger again right now. And I’m going to put myself in using self hypnosis, as we do on every to pick for yourself being somewhere safe and comfortable.
Dr. Mindy
So okay, so talk a little bit about because I can tell you that a lot of the women specifically that are listening to this podcast, struggle with sleep. We struggle with it menopausal women struggle with anxiety. So what is so intriguing amongst many things about your message is really that there’s some way we can do this at home, right. And so talk a little bit of a difference between like actually sitting in a therapists office or a practitioner who’s hypnotizing you. And using an app like yours, to start to reprogram the way you think how let’s go into the application.
Dr. Spiegel
Sure. So you can get to reverie by downloading it, if you have an iOS phone from the app store. Or if you have an Android from Google Play. We have a website www.graebert.com, where you get all the information about what we’ve done the research behind it, and how to get to the downloads that you want to go that way that it’s ar e v e r, I know he at the end. So the idea is you go into an altered pleasant mental state. And what I what you can measure your hypnotize ability, that’s one of the first steps in the app if you want to see how hypnotizable you are. And then you can use your particular great event the possibility to hear my mellifluous voice guiding you into a state where you imagine that you’re floating in a bed to like a hot tub, you’re floating in space. And if you need to picture some stressful situation, but do it after you’ve gotten your body calm and comfortable. And for getting to sleep or getting back to sleep, you know, I used to I used to worry that reverie wouldn’t be as good as sitting in my office. But then I thought, if you wake up at three in the morning and need to get back to sleep, hopefully I’m not there in your bedroom telling you what to do. But I but I am on your smartphone. And so you can hear me doing. And we actually have structured reverie so that it’s interactive. So I’ll say a certain point is your hand floating up in the air if it is we go on to the next thing. If not, we help you get to that point in the in that Plaza. So it tailored the way I actually use it in the office to help move people into the state. And so you can use it to calm yourself to help yourself get to sleep. For get back to sleep deal with stress to deal with pain. With menopause, imagine you’re floating in a place that is cool that makes your body feel cool and comfortable. Because a component of problems like anxiety and menopause is is all of the associations you have to it just like with trauma, with menopause, their associations down getting older, you know, my body is changing. And, you know, the I’ve decided that the only thing worse than getting older is not getting older. So I voted.
Dr. Mindy
Well said that’s a good reframe.
Dr. Spiegel
So I’m there to help you deal with the stressor at the time, but put it into perspective. And just say that part of it is a real is a symptom I’ve got to deal with but part of it is all of this other stuff that I’m struggling with mentally but I can deal with, you know,
Dr. Mindy
and do you find like I’m I’m excited to try the app because there’s a part of me that is like, Well, when I fall asleep, a lot of my busy brain just can’t turn off. So if I start using the app, is there a point at which you probably get so used to the messages or the the relaxation that happens and the visuals that you don’t even at some point need the app, you could just go to that, that visual and the brain is now trained to be in that state. Every time you go to sleep, that’s exactly
Dr. Spiegel
right. That you you, we did a study and end with women who had metastatic breast cancer and they wouldn’t eat once a week and a support group, and we’d help them deal with their fears of dying, they help one another they became real friends and colleagues and dealing with the stress of real cancer and they had pain and so I would teach them. At the end of each group, we do itself hypnosis exercise, when they would imagine that pain, there was a sense of cool thing numbness, they could rub it with ice or do something else that filtered the hurt out of the pain. And what they found was that, whereas before when they get a new painting, they’re just like, Oh, my God, it’s a new metastasis, you know, the cancer is progressing terrible. So it would make the pain feel heard more. And it would arouse them more. And it was like this snowball effect of you know, the stress the body reaction or stress. And they found that they would just say, Oh, that, yes, I know what to do. And they would do it by the end of the year. And this randomized controlled trial, the women who were randomized to the support group had half the pain that the control group did on the same and very low amounts of medication. And they said, I would just do it. So you’re exactly right. At first, it’s nice to have the app to keep going through it with you and help you through it. But after a while, you just know how to do it, you internalize it, and you do it when you need it.
Dr. Mindy
So you’ve said a couple of times, if you’re hypnotizable you can see if your hips so how are some people not able to go to that state and and what is what makes you hypnotizable?
Dr. Spiegel
Well, hypnotize ability, it turns out is a very stable of trade in adult life about at least two thirds of adults are at least somewhat hypnotizable, about 15% are very methodical, there’s about a quarter to a third who aren’t very advisable, they can still benefit from the approach we take. Because we teach people have to focus on what you’re for, rather than what you’re against. You know, don’t don’t fight the pain, but filter, the hurt out of the pain, transform the pain. And so that can help people even who aren’t even hospital, but most people are hypnotize ability, I’m increasingly thinking of it as a kind of residue of the state, we’re all in as children, you know, all most eight year olds are hypnotizable, highly hypnotizable, that work and play are all the same for them. It’s a shame, we try to make them into little adults, because they enjoy learning so much. And that capacity to absorb I think, is our brains way of learning maximally, when you’ve got an empty brain that you got to fill with knowledge and experience. And some of us lose that as we mature through adolescence and start to value reason more than experience. By the time you’re 21, you’re hypnotized abilities is a stable trait as your IQ, and it just doesn’t change. So what we do is we assess people, we have sort of three groups of people, the the researcher, or people who tend to be a lot less than the guys will want to judge and evaluate everything all the time. There’s a diplomat that people who are moderately evitable, who negotiate what it means to be in that state versus whatnot, compare the differences and decide what to do. And then there’s the poet, the people who are just highly hypnotizable. And they just get it all the time. And in fact, their problem is, they’re sometimes too sensitive to other people’s input. They’re usually very empathic people. And they see things from the other person’s point of view more than their own, which can be an advantage or a problem sometimes. So and once you learn that about your style, you can then use the techniques we have in conjunction with your style of fish wanting to
Dr. Mindy
do you think something that I’m thinking about when you’re you’re talking about the the growth of or the way that our brain matures with this aspect of being hypnotizable? Were in that like when I were little our brains are so neuro plastic, and new neurons are growing all the time and where new connections are being made, but one of the challenges for the menopausal woman is when we lose Astra dial, we lose BDNF, and we lose acetylcholine, and we start to lose that neuro plastic capability. And so one of the things I’ve been trying to bring to my community is like, there are a lot of different things you can bring the neuroplasticity back, like learning something new or even exercise is showing some neuroplastic capabilities. We’re doing hypnosis help with neuroplasticity? And what if you’ve got a 65 year old woman where her you know it’s those neurons are getting really rigid up there and maybe she’s going towards a more state of Alzheimer’s or dementia where does hypnosis fit into that?
Dr. Spiegel
Well, I would say that, you know, neuroplasticity, we don’t have evidence yet about that hypnosis changes with the possibility, although we are actually doing some studies now, using transcranial magnetic stimulation to stimulate the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in SR. And we have some preliminary evidence that we’re actually able to enhance it. advisability, transiently doing that. So we it may well be and there is a sort of rule in neurobiology that neurons that fire together wire together. And one reason we need sleep and why it’s so frustrating, if you don’t have it, is it sleep is a time when we prune synapses we don’t need anymore, if we kept building new synapses, our brain would burst out of our skull, you know, you have to re define the brain to keep shaping it and building it. And while there’s certainly less of that going on as we age, there isn’t it isn’t none. And a lot of it is also how you use whatever you’ve got whatever wiring you got how to best use it. And so I think the issue is to sort of not be trapped in your old assumptions about what you can do and what you can’t. And I think even as we get older, we retain the capacity to learn, we create new synapses, and get rid of old ones that we don’t need maybe certainly not at the rate you do when you’re eight years old, or 12 years old. But it doesn’t the process doesn’t just stop. So I would say, even if you’re driving an old car, drive it well use it well, you can you can get get the brain to do things. Yeah, it’s not it’s not just fixed and stopped in shaping itself and growing with with dementia, it’s a bit of a different problem. Because there, it’s harder to just recall what you’ve done and what you need to do and how. And so although the interesting, it’s actually a good argument, frankly, for laying down the pathways while you can. So I would say I’m taking and so you know, menopause is a perfect example. It’s a kind of warning of you know, what the head your body is changing, it’s a good time to get into new health practices of the kind that you teach people. So that even if your capacity to reshape your synapses, your neuroplasticity decreases. You built a better structure for the time when you’re going to have more difficulty changing.
Dr. Mindy
Yeah, I mean, that’s what I hear is, for the women out there that are losing word recall, or they walk into a room and they’re like, Why did I go in here? Like, to me, that would be like an initial warning sign that we’ve got to keep that neuroplastic capability up, and learning new ways to use your brain would be a really smart thing to do when those subtle cues are showing, would you?
Dr. Spiegel
Absolutely, absolutely. Well, as you mentioned earlier, the these these self regulation skills are saying that as you learn them, they become sort of second nature that you start to react instead of reacting to menopause is a sign that my meaningful life is over. You say it’s a time when my body is changing, and I want to live the best life I can given the changes that are occurring. And I’m going to learn how to do that. And I’m going to program my brain to help me continue to do that. So, you know, I would take it as a sort of an opportunity to get yourself through the transition as well as you can, because you’re laying down abilities that you will continue to be able to use even if your ability to create them declines over time.
Dr. Mindy
Yeah, that’s beautiful. So again, this is what one of the big things I’m trying to help women with is that we go rushing into the peri menopausal years, and we have all these body and brain changes. And the only discussion that we’re having in our culture is HRT, or no HRT. Women don’t understand themselves, they don’t know how to read their symptoms. That’s why I look at a podcast like this has been Life Saving literally, if we can give a tool to a woman who’s really struggling, and now it’s on an app, she can go and use it in her own bed and start to create some new patterns of thought, like, I get why you’re so excited about the hypnotherapy because there’s no other tool that I see that can work that quickly.
Dr. Spiegel
Well, I’m very glad to hear you say that. And yes, that’s why I want to do it. And I think, you know, for people going through menopausal issues, there’s no time like the present. So it’s a challenge you’re facing, deal with. And, you know, you can look back on your near death experience, that it was horrible, and I wish it hadn’t happened. But you know, you saved your life. You know, give yourself so and that can be a way of kind of restructuring that experience that you fought for your life and you want and so you can see not just the terrible thing that happened but Also how determined and strong you were in saving your own life. It was just you. And if you hadn’t done it, you might not be here interviewing me now. And I would really miss that. So
Unknown Speaker
thank you. I would miss it.
Dr. Mindy
There’s a lot of things I would have missed that would have
Dr. Spiegel
been I have to live. Yeah, exactly. It’s another way, it’s a way of using this shifting in your capacity to comprehend and approach problems in a way that may be surprising, but helps you focus on some aspect of yourself. That is really positive that you wouldn’t have known if you hadn’t been through that. And so you know, you’d rather not have had the lesson, but you can profit from it.
Dr. Mindy
Yeah, that’s so beautiful. So can you take me through a hypnosis just so everybody can kind of see what it is? And I don’t know if you can make it general. I don’t. I don’t know how we do that just so people can understand what this might feel like for them. Sure. And that it’s not completely about me. Yeah, sure. So
Dr. Spiegel
I’ll do that. All right. So get as comfortable as you can. On one, do one thing, look up all the way up eyes, you can do two things. Slowly close your eyes and take a deep breath. And three, do three things. Let the breath out slowly let your eyes relax, which isn’t closed and let your body float. Imagine you’re floating in a bath or like a hot tub or just floating in space. Take another breath in halfway hold. Now fill your lungs completely. And then slowly exhale through your mouth.
Dr. Spiegel
Good, one more halfway brush in your belly and then it stand your chest. Chill your lung and slowly exhale through your mouth. Imagine you’re floating in a bath the lake our temper is floating in space. And with your eyes closed and remaining in the state of concentration. Please describe how your body’s feeling right now.
Dr. Mindy
Calm, common, heavy,
Dr. Spiegel
good. Good. So notice how quickly and easily you can use your stored memories in your imagination to help yourself and your body feel better. Now please take your right hand and and let it float over and tuck the back of your left hand and stroke from the tip of your middle left middle finger all the way back along the back of your hand over your wrist to your elbow. And let your left hand float up in the air like a balloon.
Dr. Spiegel
Your hand will remain light and in this upright position even after I give you instructing to concentrate on other thing, please describe now how your left hand is feeling. airy fairy All right. Now if I asked you to pull your left hand back down, it will float right back up to the upright position, you’ll find something pleasant and amusing about the sensation. Later, when I asked you to touch your left elbow, your usual sensation and control will return. So right now take your right hand and pull your left hand back down and then let go of it and tell me what happens to your left hand.
Dr. Mindy
Well, there’s there’s a lot more awareness in my left hand. I feel like I’ve I feel a sense it. It does want to float back.
Dr. Spiegel
Look back. Now raise your right hand. Put your right arm back down. Are you aware of a relative difference in sensation and your left hand going up compared to your right?
Unknown Speaker
Yeah, the right felt harder to live or
Dr. Spiegel
did you let him feel as if it’s not as much a part of your body as your right hand?
Unknown Speaker
Yes. Yeah, it doesn’t feel like it’s part of my body.
Dr. Spiegel
Now, are you aware of a difference in your sense of control over your left hand going up or go to your right.
Unknown Speaker
actually feels really comfortable.
Dr. Spiegel
That surprise you?
Unknown Speaker
Yes. So this is yes. Because Go ahead. Yeah, yes,
Dr. Mindy
yeah. No, because I would think my muscles would be tired.
Dr. Spiegel
Good. Alright, so now I want you you to imagine that you you’re lying in bed, you’re floating, comfortable. And I want you to picture an imaginary screen to be a movie screen, a TV screen or a piece of clear blue sky. Picture pleasant scenes and where you enjoy being. What do you picture now?
Dr. Mindy
A beach and quiet.
Dr. Spiegel
Terrific. All right now notice again how quickly and easily you can change the way your body feel. You can picture being somewhere that makes you feel comfortable. But let’s suppose for a moment while your body is floating and comfortable, your left hand floating in the air. Picture something that would make it harder for you to sleep. Yeah, my hand wants to come down now. All right.
Dr. Mindy
No, but I know I pictured it. And then I could feel my
Speaker 3
body. You see, yeah, I could feel the change in my body when I thought of something floating
Dr. Spiegel
back. And now I want you to keep your body floating, because it’s your body’s response to this image. So you can go back to the beach in Hawaii, if you want. And now put that image the troubling image on the left side of the screen but try to keep your body floating. And on the on the other side of the screen picture one thing you did or could do to help deal with that stressor.
Dr. Spiegel
Okay, how’s your body feeling now?
Dr. Mindy
Well, when I thought of the one thing I could do, I actually wasn’t really thinking of my body. My brain went somewhere else. Like I forgot about my body.
Dr. Spiegel
It’s fine. And what did you picture?
Dr. Mindy
I pictured myself sitting and relaxing. Yeah, it was more just relaxing and pausing, pausing. Something I’m working on in my life right now and not reacting to stress.
Dr. Spiegel
Right. Okay. And you could feel that in your body too. Yes. How’s your left hand in are enjoying?
Dr. Mindy
The hand feels like it’s air. The right arm is a bit fatigued.
Dr. Spiegel
Okay. All right. Well, now take your right hand and touch your left elbow.
Dr. Spiegel
Now let’s go. And what is your left arm want to do now?
Unknown Speaker
It wanted to go up. Okay, yeah, it’s
Dr. Mindy
like going higher. Now the elbow one’s higher than the ad.
Dr. Spiegel
Right. Once again, take your right hand, touch your left elbow, let go. And now shake both hands and tell me now I want you to go down when the control becomes Yeah. So how’s your body feeling now?
Dr. Mindy
I feel centered. Good. That’s how I feel
Dr. Spiegel
good. Good. So the state that you’re in now is different from the way you felt just a few moments ago when you were thinking about something stressful. And you see also how your body reacts to your thoughts and your thoughts react to your body. And you can learn to control that. So right now we’re going to come out of the state of Self Hypnosis together by counting backwards from three to one. And three, you’ll get ready to with your eyelids closed rolled your eyes when your eyes open at 321
Dr. Mindy
Yeah, I definitely feel I definitely feel calmer. I definitely feel calm. Yeah, good. Yeah, you know it. You know what it kind of reminds me of like, the athletic part of my brain. I was a competitive tennis player, as a child as a young, young adult. And, you know, if you are working out and you’re thinking negative thoughts, the workout is much harder.
Dr. Spiegel
Right? Because you’re fighting whereas if you
Dr. Mindy
think about positive thoughts,
Dr. Spiegel
that’s exactly right. You focus on what you’re for. Yeah, we people who use hypnosis like to say that the worst thing you can tell someone is don’t think about purple elephants. You know that. That’s where you’re going to go as you say, with a workout. If you’re focusing positively on what you’re training your body to do. It’ll be much easier than if you’re in a struggle about what to do. You’re not fighting it. Yeah, you sound covered. Yeah.
Dr. Mindy
Right, I feel calmer. What would you I can’t even ask you a question now. I must be highly. I figured as such, what would you say as we finish up, you would want the world to know about hypnotherapy.
Dr. Spiegel
It is safe, effective. Try to feel like it and every is a place to go, I poured my career along with this fabulous team, we have at reverie to create an app that will help you help yourself that will help you deal with stress, pain, mental focus, eating well, stopping smoking. It’s, it’s a tool for you to use to expand your toolkit of abilities to control your brain and your body. And so give it a try. I think it can be very helpful.
Unknown Speaker
That’s amazing. Well, I
Dr. Mindy
just appreciate you and I, you know, I, I love chatting with Mission heart based people that have found a healing modality that can help the world. And for someone like you who makes a decision to how do we bring this to the masses? Yeah, that that is. So we need more doctors like that. We need more people showing up to really think outside of the clinical box. So I really appreciate everything that you’ve done for that. Okay. Yeah, and again, now I’m gonna bring my try to bring my brain back online. But I want to, I want to finish with this question that I asked every, every guest, there are actually two questions. One is, do you have a self care practice? And if so, what is it? And then what do you what do you feel like your superpower is that you bring the world?
Dr. Spiegel
Well, the self care practice is is part of, you know, walking the walk, not just talking to talk. So I do take care of my body, I exercise I connect with the people I love and care about and who love and care about me. And that means the world to me. And I guess, the superpower if I have one is maybe the capacity to connect with people quickly, and help them quickly to sort of see what an issue is. And be able to feel what they’re probably feeling and thinking and then use that to help them that. If I’ve got one, I guess that would be it.
Dr. Mindy
That’s it, that is a heck of a superpower. So own it, own it. That’s why I asked the question. I think we all have superpowers. And we don’t always step into those and embrace it. So I think that was really well said, where do people find? How do they find the app? I just want to make a note. So
Dr. Spiegel
you can download the app, the reverie app from the App Store or from Google Play if you have an Android phone in the app store if you have an iOS or go to www dot reverie, ar e ve ri.com And there’s a lot more information about about the app and that’s the way you can get to it.
Dr. Mindy
Amazing Dr. Spiegel I appreciate you keeps screaming from the rooftops I hope that my audience grabs on to this uses it shares it so grateful for your your wisdom. So thank you very much for joining us. Take care my pleasure. Thank you so much for joining me in today’s episode. I love bringing thoughtful discussions about all things health to you. If you enjoyed it, we’d love to know about it. So please leave us a review, share it with your friends and let me know what your biggest takeaway is.
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