How Fast Can Root-Cause Hypnotherapy Cure a Panic Attack?
Firstly, the exact method applied, next the willingness of the patient, and thirdly the specific condition of the patient.
There may exist conditions where what manifests itself as a "classic" panic attack, may in fact have a different nature, and may only yield to medical treatments.
In my experience, the "purely psychological" cases dramatically outweigh the "physical.
" In fact, in over 3,000 panic attack cases I've treated over some 30 years, only just around 40-or-so cases didn't yield to my RCH therapy.
They may well have been examples of those "physical" cases - or perhaps they were just totally unwilling to participate in their own recovery.
Given that the hypnotherapeutic method is well constructed and meets all the key "specifications," the recovery time can often be almost "miraculously" fast.
So fast, in fact, that many in the medical profession dismiss these results either as fakes or misunderstandings.
Their methods require years of treatments, thousands of dollars in drugs - and they rarely if ever produce total cures.
So how would you feel if someone came along and cured your "hopeless case" for you in a couple of weeks? You would either have to accept that your methods - and years of training thereof - are inadequate...
or you'd start smelling a rat.
Or you might start trying to tear those "alternative" results down.
Question everything.
Perhaps even attack the patient.
Or - the psychologist.
In my experience around 10% of the cures happen after just one session.
Another (roughly) 10% of cases take 8 weeks or longer.
The rest take between 2 and 7 weeks.
It's not a fast rule, but that's what I've been observing.
If you're suffering from panic attacks or know someone who does, please don't go promising them instant cures.
It really is NOT about speed of the cure but that it happens: at a time when the patient is ready.
And that readiness depends on many factors.
Patients who are undergoing psycho-medical treatments are often less responsive, at least initially.
Patients with strong prejudice or doubts about hypnotherapy may also take longer (providing they stick with the treatment to begin with).
Patients who do not agree with the logical premise of panic attacks being "psychological" rather than "physical" in nature, may also take longer to recover.
This last case is often due to the person's preconditioning: if it's "all in your mind" then this must mean that you're "weak" if you're not able to deal with it yourself! But nothing could be further from the truth.
If anything - the opposite is often true.