Translator: Queenie Lee
Reviewer: Peter van de Ven What if I told you, you might not be
who you think you are? What if I told you that your
very perception or idea of who you are has been weaved into your mind over time? What if you don't agree
with what your mind has to tell you? I've always had an inquiring mind.
I've always questioned everything. I felt the need to get
to the bottom of everything and never took anything at face value. This ever curious personality
would one day save my life. Let me tell you who I am.
Hi, I'm Danna. I'm a hypnotherapist, specializing
in trauma and chronic illness. I also do a lot of public speaking
about the Holocaust because I'm a third generation descendant, about trauma, and my favorite topic to speak about,
the subconscious mind and how it works, because, holy moly, it's fascinating. I want to take you
on a little journey, today, that will expose the connection
between your mind, who you think you are,
and the potential onset of disease. So if you may, please follow along
as we go through the human experience. From conception until death. OK, so it won't be that morbid. We, all of us, are born as blank slates. We, all of us,
then, through our experiences, are programmed to have certain beliefs about who we are, what we can achieve in life,
and what type of person we should be. From birth until six, we are essentially living life
in a hypnotic trance. It's why we learn languages
so quickly at this young age. We are sponges just joyously absorbing
everything around us. At this precious age,
we've set up the rest of our lives, that's right. What we learned from
about the age of zero until six is essentially the patterns or programming
we begin to develop from then and repeat again and again
from adolescence into adulthood. I want to tell you something
that might offend you: people, we are patterns. I also want to relate
something else to you: sometimes our patterns do not serve us. Those patterns are called disease,
depression, obesity, and the list, unfortunately,
goes on and on. OK, let's rewind for a minute. I want to rewind to a really
serious pattern that I had in the past. I had what's called
chronic fatigue syndrome, which later turned into fibromyalgia. Both are chronic illnesses
that, to put them lightly, are no fun, and to put them into context
can be seriously debilitating. I was 18 years old, and I would suddenly go
in and out of these intense spurts of not being able to function. I was dead tired to a point where if I couldn't take a nap
in the moment I needed to, I felt as if my heart would give out. The fact that I was so young,
I knew something was wrong. I went to many doctors, many doctors, who all told me
I was either stressed or depressed. And I looked at them, and I said,
"I'm a freshman in college. Really, what do I have
to be depressed about?" So for years, I did research
into why I felt the way I felt, and I became my own advocate. I began experimenting with diet,
with lifestyle, many different things, just to try to get a handle
on my symptoms. And I started to feel better, and I was able to really
get a handle on my life and to manage life really well. And when I finally
had a big handle on my health, I got severely knocked down again. And when I say knocked down, I mean almost killed
in a near-fatal car accident. T-boned, smashed, left hanging upside down in my car
until the firefighters came to cut me out, not sure if I was paralyzed or dead. Without going into the gory details, I knew that I was in
for a long ride ahead of me. I was handicapped for six months, and I developed what's called PTSD,
or post-traumatic stress disorder. And on top of that,
I began to feel sick again. In 30 seconds, I wasn't the same Danna anymore. I developed PTSD, and because I knew that I was one person
and I wasn't that person anymore, I knew I had to see someone
or do something about it. So I began to see this therapist,
and she was a very nice woman. She would tell me things when you
get to a stop sign, you need to breathe. So I thought to myself, am I really paying you
this much money for that? That I got. So eventually after six months
of minimal improvement, I met a woman who survived cancer, and she said she would not
have survived cancer were it not for this
trauma therapist she went to. So I said, "That's my woman." So I went, and the first appointment
with her, this trauma therapist, she looked at me, and she said, "I'm a bit alternative.
I hope that's okay with you." And I said, "I'm desperate,
whatever you got." She said, "I do this thing
called hypnosis." I said, "There is no way
you're touching my brain with that stuff." I was super skeptical, I had no idea what it was, and my only reference was show hypnosis, and hypnotherapy is not show hypnosis. So basically, after about six
or seven sessions of meeting with her, I decided that I liked her. She was smart, forward-thinking,
compassionate, so I thought to myself, "What the heck! What can it hurt?" So I walked into that session, I walked in feeling one way,
I walked out feeling another. I wasn't exactly sure what she did. I just felt better. Within six weeks, my PTSD was gone. The next month my depression,
the next month my anxiety. This woman saved my life. OK, so that's all interesting, and I want to tell you something
even more interesting. So I mentioned to you earlier
that I started with chronic fatigue and later developed
what's called fibromyalgia. I view these two ailments
as sisters, very similar. Yet fibromyalgia
on top of the intense fatigue is a serious muscular pain. Yet what's the interesting part is, I didn't develop this pain
until after my accident. So here's the interesting part. When I was healing my trauma
through hypnosis, the pain in my legs began to dissipate. Bit by bit, little by little, the pain in my body was leaving. I thought to myself,
"Wow, what's happening here?" So that brings us
to where we're going today. I want to walk you through the mechanics
of the hypnotic process and how it works, and how the mind and body
and disease and thought are all interconnected. But first, let's jump into the science
of how minds and bodies interact. So, how exactly are trauma
and disease correlated? I want to mention to you that trauma doesn't have to be
a near-fatal car accident; it doesn't have to be
coming back from war. In my mind, the way I view trauma is if you viewed the world one way
and then some situation happened to you and now you view the world
in a different way, that can be a traumatic circumstance. So it doesn't have to be
this overwhelming experience. Have you ever heard
the phrase "stress kills"? OK. So, I used to hear that phrase
and I used to scoff. Yet now, I see just how valid
that statement is. Physical and psychological stressors
cause inflammation to occur in the body. Inflammation is the keyword
in many diseases. Reducing inflammation
is the key to healing many diseases. Are you with me this far?
OK, beautiful. When events happen in life,
they're recorded; when stressful events happen,
they are recorded as is. And that creates a certain level
of shock on the mind, which therefore sends distress signals
down the nervous system, which in turn will tell
the endocrine system to increase adrenaline and cortisol, and while those levels are increased,
our immune levels are lowered. The fact that we have
these stress responses initially is not a bad thing, yet the fact that our minds
compound all of these situations over time without ever letting them go. Every situation builds upon each other. So the real reason
we experience stress in reality is for our own good,
for our own safety. If you think of an animal,
for example, a mouse. A mouse sees a cat, gets anxiety,
has stress levels. Why? Because it needs to make
the decision to run away. Yet once the mouse runs away,
once the mouse finds cover, that anxiety is gone. The mouse doesn't over-analyze
what the cat was thinking, how to feel about it now,
and what to do about it. No, that's only something humans do. Humans encounter a stressful situation, we instantaneously attach meaning to it,
and then it's recorded forever. So the initial stress isn't bad, the continual attachment
to the stress is bad. Follow me so far? Good, OK. So just to reiterate, when we experience stress there's a recording
in the subconscious mind. And enough of those recordings, over time, will cause havoc and
an overstressed nervous system, which in turn will cause
an overproduction of stress hormones and a suppression of immune function. So, now the golden question:
How do we reverse all of this? So there's a new study
dedicated to all of this called psychoneuroimmunology. Psychoneuroimmunology, meaning the branch of medicine that deals with the influence
of emotional states and nervous system activity
on immune function, especially in relation to disease. So that's the textbook definition. In reality, the best way that I have found to take the study off of paper
and into real life, to intervene in the influence
of stress on immunity, I have found is hypnotherapy. How? Let me tell you. So I do this fascinating therapy,
it's called regression therapy. Essentially what this means is I take my clients to the first time,
the very first, first, first initial time, that a stressful event or events
caused the ailment at hand. For example, let's say
we're working with depression. I'll guide a client
through a visualization, through their subconscious mind, it's very cool, and then through this visualization, I'll say something like this:
"We're going to go to the first time, the very first time you
had emotions around depression." And so what happens
in the subconscious mind is the subconscious mind then links up
with these specific memories that are tied to that specific ailment. So it goes something like this: A client would describe something that happened
when they were two years old. "I was two, my parents were fighting, I felt very upset, confused,
responsible for my parents, etc." So then I start asking them
questions like this: "In that moment, how did you
need to feel as a two-year-old?" And then they would respond
something to the effect of: "I needed to feel like a baby,
like a two-year-old, comforted, etc." So at this point, I would then direct them to feel
as if in that memory, they were filling their body
as the two-year-old with the resources that he or she
needed in that moment. In that moment, there is healing. You cannot change what has happened
to you in the past. Instead, you're changing
the mind's perception and the weight of the heavy feelings
that the past memory holds. Then after resolving that memory, we would then proceed through other
memories in a similar fashion. So what exactly is this doing? It is completely allowing
the subconscious mind to cope with things
it never got to cope with in the past. This reduces the recorded stress
that we've carried around our whole lives. When the subconscious mind heals,
it allows the nervous system to relax. When the nervous system relaxes,
there are less erratic signals. When there are less erratic signals, the endocrine system does not need to be
in a chronic state of fight or flight, therefore sending out inflammatory
hormones like cortisol and adrenaline. You see all this is all coming together? OK, I know I overloaded you
with a ton of information. So I want to finish up with this. A bit of an experience I had
with a client who came to see me. There's a woman, she came to see me,
and she came to see me for weight loss, which many people do, many people come
to see hypnotists to lose weight. And I asked her: "What's the issue? No motivation to get to the gym,
you don't have a taste for healthy food; what's going on?" So she said, "No,
I have motivation get to the gym. Yet every time I go,
I get into more pain." So I asked, "Why are you in pain?" I said, "Oh, am I familiar?" So I said to her,
"Let's start from the inside out. Instead of working on your
motivation to get to the gym, we should work on your
fibromyalgia pain first." I asked her: "Where do you feel
most of it right now?" She said in her neck. I said, okay, let's go for it. We did a regression session
around the pain in her neck. And the memory that came up
was at the time she was 12 years old, her and her brother got into a fight. He pushed her down the stairs and she essentially
got a stiff neck for a few weeks, and then it went away. Ten years later, it came back, and she told me that for 20 years
she couldn't move her neck. We resolved that trauma - the trauma surrounding
that memory and a few others. When we finished,
she came up out of hypnosis, and she went like this. For the first time in 20 years,
she moved her neck. My mouth dropped and so did hers. We carry our lives with us
not only in our minds yet all over our body. Our bodies and minds
are intrinsically connected. There's so much more detail
I can go through on this topic, yet really, this is the takeaway
I want to give to you today: The mind and body are resilient and have the innate ability
to heal themselves. Yet sometimes they just
need a bit of guidance. My wish for you is to be informed and to know that there are
resources out there to help you feel like the best you. I was told, time and time again,
that I would be sick or have PTSD forever. I was told by many doctors that I'd have to be
on high-level antidepressants, that there was no hope for me - this was the pathway of my life. Yet, in reality, I knew, and I was determined
with every ounce of my being to get back to who I knew I was: that girl that existed
somewhere deep down inside me. And now, I speak about chronic illness
and PTSD in the past, behind me, no longer part of me. If there's someone you know
who doesn't feel good, please tell them that there is hope. If you can heal your mind,
you can heal your life. So here's to you,
your healthy mind and body, and here's to never give up
the fight for your vitality. Thank you very much. (Applause)