FUTURE SCHEDULE  HOME  |  CONTACT US  |  SITE MAP

 
 

HYPNOSIS TO
STOP SMOKING

Click here for
DATE & LOCATION

Stop smoking in 2 hours. No withdrawal No weight gain.

Click above link
for full details



 

HYPNOSIS TO
LOSE WEIGHT

Change appetite, eating, drinking & exercise habits.

CLICK FOR
DATE & LOCATION

 

 

 

 

If you have any questions you would like to discuss with
Dr. De Grazia

PHONE
708-383-1700  
24/7

No deposit is necessary to make a reservation.
If you stay to be hypnotized you can pay then with cash, check, Master Card, or Visa.

FREE BONUS
If you print this coupon & bring it
to the session.

Click here for

DATE & LOCATION

of stop-smoking session.

 

 

WEIGHT LOSS DIET HYPNOSIS CHICAGO AREA

Click for more information

 

Hosting by Yahoo!

for full details
 

 

 

HYPNOSIS

AND

JUDAISM


          by Don De Grazia


          "Lest anyone accuse hypnosis of lying outside the fence of what normative Judaism permits, let me invoke no less an authority than Jacob Ettlinger (1808-1871), the teacher of Samson Raphael Hirsch. When asked, he investigated hypnosis and defended hypnotism against a charge of witchcraft (Responsa Binyan Zion, No. 67). He derived his ruling from a discussion of healing powers in the authoritative code of Jewish law, Yosef Ram's Shulhan Arukh."
--Brigadier General Paul G. Durbin, Ph.D.
    U.S. Army chaplain, Retired.
 

Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch (1808-1888) has been called the most renowned German Jewish leader of the nineteenth century and the father of modern German Orthodoxy.

There are many contemporary rabbis who are also psychologists and who use clinical hypnosis in their practices.

Rabbi S. Glasner is one such rabbi.  He is also a psychologist who uses clinical hypnosis in his practice.  Rabbi Glasner published a scholarly article in the Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, in which he and his co-author compared the state of autohypnosis with the Jewish cabbalistic state of kavanah. (1)

I don't know much about the concept of kavanah, but I know that the very distinguished rabbi, Dr. H. G. Enelow has written that it contains suggestions of empathy, rapport, righteousness, and steadfastness (2),  and that the great medieval Jewish philosopher, Maimonides (1135-1204) has said that a prayer without kavanah is no prayer at all.

Rabbi Glasner reported that the experiences he observed in people who are in a state of hypnosis are similar in some ways to the experiences he has observed in prayer.  He is referring, of course, to the psychological experiences and not the religious experiences.

In 1982 I participated in a series of workshops focusing on various aspects of clinical and experimental hypnosis which were co-sponsored by Beth Israel Hospital in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

 

References:

(1)  Bowers, M. and Glasner, S.: Auto-hypnotic aspects of the Jewish cabbalistic concept of kavanah. J. Clin. Exp. Hypn., 6:50, 1958.

(2)  Enelow, H. G.: Kavanah--the struggle for inwardness in Judaism. In Enelow, H. G.: Selected Works, vol. 6, pp 252-288. Private printing, Kingsport, Tenn., 1935

 

 

© Copyright 2007 Don De Grazia

FUTURE SCHEDULE  HOME  |  CONTACT US  |  SITE MAP