Last
year in Ohio I attended a program entitled Guided
Imagery and Self-Healing in Cancer.
The speaker for the evening was Martin L. Rossman, M.D., Co-Founder and Co-Director
of the Academy for Guided Imagery and an award-winning author.
Dr. Rossman has been a physician for thirty years, and for twenty-eight of those
thirty years he has used guided imagery to help his patients who have chronic
illnesses. During this time, he has also employed various treatments from Chinese
medicine.
Although, he did not elaborate on
this phase of his practice during this presentation,
he did state that the best care for a patient is
a combination of medical practices from both Eastern
and Western philosophies.
For the evening's presentation, he referred to cancer patients only, but stressed
that guided imagery is beneficial for pain management in all-chronic diseases.
Throughout his talk, he interchanged the term, guided imagery, with hypnosis.
He gave his personal belief that medical doctors, in general, do not implement
guided imagery in their practices because of the amount of time necessary to
educate and guide the patient. He also felt that it is not being used because
no one really profits from it. There isn't a great deal of money to be made
for the medical profession or for the large drug companies.
Using
Imagery Skillfully
Dr. Rossman explained to us that
imagery is a way of thinking that is natural
to us. If we learn to use it skillfully we can create
healing.
He asked us to picture people being diagnosed with cancer, people moving along
in life, performing their daily routines and looking forward to the future.
Then they are diagnosed with cancer. The diagnosis causes these people to hit
a brick wall. For most, it feels like a death sentence.
Their lives stop and they feel out
of control. Suddenly they must make major
decisions about their care while at the same time fearing death.
During this period, most patients are reading everything that they can get
their hands on as quickly as possible. Some of the sources are good, but, unfortunately,
some are not. They may find that some friends avoid them, and that others are
giving them advice--again, some good, some not-so-good.
They are told that they must be positive at a time when they are naturally
panicky.
Relaxed
Patients are in Control
Dr. Rossman stressed several times
throughout the evening that when people are diagnosed,
they need to be as relaxed as humanly possible.
Yes, there will be fear at first and this is normal.
But relaxed patients, who are in control, stand
a much better chance of survival. They feel more
committed to the decisions they are making about
their treatments, and, very importantly, they are
a part of their own medical team.
In cancer treatment, the medicine treats the cancer. Healing is a way of treating
the patient. Patients must get actively involved with their illnesses. If they
don't, the only thing remaining is the medication. Dr. Rossman does not feel that the
medical community understands fully that the patient
must be involved, too.
With Western medicine, we prolong lives, but we do not work toward giving the
patient a better quality of life. The medicine has the sole purpose of eradicating
the cancer cells. Treatments such as hypnosis and guided imagery support the
patient and make the situation easier to handle.
These methods
promote Healing
Healing gives vitality and hope.
Patients become involved, and this gives them control
so that they are not at the whim of the cancer.
Healing is nourishing, supporting, vitalizing and
encouraging.
The proper way to treat cancer, or any other disease, is to have healing and
medicine working together. This would allow the patient to be a healthy person
living with cancer. This would also allow him/her to handle the difficult treatments
more easily.
Dr. Rossman used the following imagery to demonstrate his point: Imagine a
garden. A plant can have mites, spiders, etc. If the plant is not watered properly
and has poor soil, pests nibble on it. The plant hasn't been cared for. Then
the gardener sprays it with pesticides to rid the plant of pests.
However this is not enough. The gardener must also fertilize and water the
plant or else it will be vulnerable again. If the gardener takes care of the
plant, it can resist infestations. Always nurture in a proper way.
Dr. Rossman explained that there is something in us that knows how to heal.
When we were little we got boo boos and they healed. We may have had broken
bones and they are fine now. Any cold that we had is now gone.
We all know how
to Heal
We have been physically hurt many
times throughout our lives and yet we heal each
time. There is something in us that knows how to
meet these challenges and repair the damages. It
can be called God, life, nature, DNA or whatever
works for the person.
Medical knowledge does not understand all of this. It has been very narrow
in its focus. We need to learn to support the healing systems.
Studies are showing that guided imagery and hypnosis make a marked difference
in a person's healing. But can it cure cancer? Dr. Rossman feels that at this
time no one knows for certain, and he added that statistical data are unimportant
to an individual diagnosed with cancer. Patients should concentrate on their
own needs and their own care. Dr. Rossman cited several studies where guide
imagery and hypnosis were shown to help with the healing.
Carl Simonton was a radiation oncologist who taught self-hypnosis techniques
and used guided imagery. He believed that guided imagery could stimulate the
healing processes, and taught it to late-stage cancer patients. He had them
relax and imagine the immune cells attacking the cancer cells.
Direct correlation between
sessions and improvement
There was a direct correlation between
those who did the most sessions
and those who improved.
In 1986, psychiatrist David Spiegel of Stanford released his 10-year study
of women with metastatic breast cancer. He compared women who were randomly
selected to participate in a support group to women receiving standard medical
care. The participants in the support groups were encouraged to share their
feelings about having cancer, and also learned to use self-hypnosis techniques.
Spiegel designed this experiment
as a skeptic. Even though his father was a hypnotherapist,
Spiegel did not believe that support groups, relaxation
and self-hypnosis techniques would make a difference.
He was surprised to find that the average
survival time was approximately twice as long in
the women who were in these groups. His
study, published in the Lancet, has been rigorously
examined for experimental design and the results
were found to be significant.
Dr. Fawzy, MD, a psychiatrist at UCLA, reported an even more impressive study
in the Archives of General Psychiatry in 1993. Fawzy studied patients newly
diagnosed with malignant melanoma, randomly assigning them to a control group
or a six-week group where stress management, coping strategies, and relaxation
skills were taught.
Far Greater Survival
Rate
Six years later there was a dramatic
difference in the groups--participants in the treatment
groups had a much higher survival rate, a much
lower recurrence rate, better immune function,
and better psychological function than control
group subjects. The amount of difference for such
a brief intervention (90-minute sessions for only
six weeks) is startling.
A third more recent study was completed by Dean Shrock, Ph.D. and his colleagues
in Pennsylvania, and reported in the Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine
Journal in May, 1999. This study showed that early breast and prostate cancer
patients who participated in an eight-week support group based on the Simonton
method had twice the survival of the control groups.
Olness Review 1996: Guided imagery shown to increase the T cells, which are
in the immune system and kill the cancer cells. The T cells increase in number
and become more aggressive. In this area, guided imagery is more effective
than drugs.
These studies are very encouraging signs that something we do with our minds
whether it is sharing our feelings, being with others, learning stress and
emotional management skills or doing relaxation, self-hypnosis and imagery,
can have a positive effect on cancer.
If guided imagery and hypnosis were drugs, doctors would have to prescribe
them to nearly every person fighting cancer or run the risk of malpractice.
A Positive effect
on outcome
Having a positive effect on outcome
is not the same as a cure, but until there is a
cure, simple nontoxic approaches that have positive
effects are most welcome.
All patients need to be positive people. Guided imagery and hypnosis do the
following: reduce anxiety; eliminate hopelessness; help patients tolerate treatments
and allow them to be clearheaded in making difficult decisions; control pain;
change poor life-styles; motivate.
Anything is possible. People must break through the mental barriers. For
20 years, no runner could break through the four-minute mile. Then Roger Bannister
did it. The following year, 25 others did it. He showed them that it could
be done. We are very suggestible. We must believe that we can do it. Dr. Rossman
quoted Henry Ford, If you think you can't, or if you think that you can, you're
probably right.
Most use guided imagery
in worrying!
Dr. Rossman noted that the most common
way that an individual uses guided imagery is in
worrying. We think about things that might happen,
and this is not a productive use of the imagination.
Worriers can worry themselves sick, and this is
a very powerful mind-body connection. Each of us
learned how to worry--we were not born worrying.
Dr. Rossman suggested that we take the worrying
energy and turn it into positive energy. As a positive
energy it will have the opposite response in the
body--it will heal. He called it positive worry.
Dr. Rossman gave several examples of the mind-body connection. He asked if
anyone could salivate on cue. A few people raised their hands. He had us close
our eyes and do guided imagery. We were directed to go to our kitchen, cut
a lemon, and then taste it. Many in the room were surprised to find that they
salivated after this imagining. He also cited sexual fantasies as a very strong
mind-body connection.
He then talked about chemotherapy. He suggested that people should have a different
approach to it. He said that if it's what you choose, really choose it--want
it to happen in order to cure the cancer. He said not to anticipate the nausea;
it isn't necessary. Welcome the chemotherapy; savor it; feel it. Be afraid
if necessary, but allow many other good emotions to also accompany you.
At the conclusion, he asked us to meet our inner healer He said to see this
entity any way that we wish. There was no wrong way. Mentally talk to the healer
and ask questions The inner healer has the answers It can also give a hug when
needed We are never alone.
At the end he told us to take a deep breath. He said that every time we take
a deep breath we are giving our healing system a boost.
I benefited greatly from attending this program. It was the first time I presented
myself as a certified hypnotherapist to strangers. I distributed my business
card to others around me and easily answered any questions that were asked
Since Dr. Rossman spoke so highly about hypnosis to several hundred in the
room, I felt this was a seal of approval for what I have chosen to do. I shook
his hand after the program and told him how much I enjoyed it.
Improving golf games??!
I expected my practice to be mostly
weight loss, smoking cessation and
improvement of the golf game at the beginning. What I am finding is that more
people are interested in using hypnosis for pain management, guided imagery
and letting go of the past. I have already worked with several on these topics.
I also give my notes from this program to those who have questions. Many people
have told me that this gives them a feeling of hope.
Sandy Ewing, C.Ht., L.L.C. is a member of IMDHA. You can reach her by email
at hypnosis134@yahoo.com , or mail:
14 Mohican Drive, Girard, OH 44420. |