Clinical  Hypnotherapists

are educated, trained and duly certified by

qualified experts as practitioners

in the art and science of  therapeutic hypnosis.

They do not demonstrate hypnosis or use it to entertain.

     It needs to be understood that Hypnotherapy is in an exclusive and distinctly different
stand alone profession requiring very different education, preparation, skills and
qualifications than is required of  psychologists, psychotherapists, psychiatrists,
therapists counselors and others such a social workers.
Although many of the latter do some brief training in
hypnosis and employ it to some degree in their practices they rarely do so
in
any comprehensive manner. Their education and training is also specifically
designed based on their individual schools of thought /theory
and practicing methodology.
They are required to be licensed by the sates in which they practice.

One does not have to be a licensed psychologist or medical doctor
or any other kind of licensed practitioner of the psychological arts and
sciences to be a qualified hypnotherapist.

Hypnotists and hypnotherapists are specialists in a highly specialized field.  
A college degree is also not a requirement.
Although a good and varied background in psychology
is an essential ingredient to prepare them for the work they will be doing.  

There are a few states that require hypnotists to be licensed,

Michigan is not one of them.

Elaine Kissel’s

educational history and  qualifications  follows.

Since age 15 Elaine Kissel has been exploring the realms of psychology and psychic
phenomena, including hypnosis; her own varied psychic
experiences led to her
investigations into the field of parapsychology in an attempt to understand the
sources of,  and verify extra sensory information she received.

When Elaine’s first born daughter was diagnosed with brain damage,
cerebral palsy and epilepsy, Elaine began to study the
mind and brain with great intensity
However, it wasn’t until she met Carolyn Sall MD, the Kissel family’s doctor,  that the subject of
hypnosis
came into clearer focus,  and how it had been the subject of research and experiments
by the Society of Psychical Research in England for almost a hundred years, she had never had
the opportunity to actually
experience it personally or meet a practitioner of the art. She
discovered that Dr. Sall was also a medical hypnotist and
hypnoanlayst and very interested in the
subject of ESP:

Dr. Sall knew of Elaine’s psychic abilities and invited
Elaine to participate in some hypnosis
experiments;
her aim was to determine if hypnosis enhanced the accuracy and reliability
of the phenomenon.  
 While engaging in those experiments, during which Elaine was hypnotized
and tested for ESP
in and out of hypnosis, Dr. Sall encouraged Elaine to learn all she could
about hypnosis and to become a hypnothearpist.  
 She told Elaine, that with her gifts, her in
depth studies of psychology,
her compassion, her incredible ability to attune to people’s
inner workings and needs and  her innate desire to help people,
she would make an exceptional
practi
itoner of the art and science of hypnosis. “You are a natural,” she said.

Although Elaine was interested in learning all she could
about hypnosis and its uses, her goals at
that time,
besides raising her four children, were to develop her Mind Mastery course, and help
other people develop their own psychic ability. She also wanted to devote more time to her
creative and journalistic writing.

However, during that time Dr. Sall become pregnant and
she began to seriously consider moving
to California. When her baby was born with its heart on the wrong side, Dr. Sall decided to sell
her family practice and make the move to California;
she persuaded Elaine to continue the
experiments and her training
to their completion before she left.

By the time Dr. Sall left Michigan Elaine had
spent almost two years under the tutelage and
supervision of
Doctor Carolyn Sall, but did not plan to develop her own hypnotherapy practice;
partly because what Elaine called her “apprenticeship”
was not certified and documented by Dr
Sall; also because
Elaine still strongly believed then, as she does now,
that we all have ESP and it only needs to be
recognized
as a natural human faculty and be developed to be of use.  She decided to go forward
with her plans to start teaching psychic development
and Mind Mastery skills, and in 1977 she
opened
The Elaine Kissel ESP Development Center in Southfield, MI.

Elaine employed hypnosis experimentally in various psychic development and research projects,
and though this her
students  turned to her to help them overcome a variety of problems with
hypnosis
;soon word got out about her remarkable success rate, and her hypnotherapy practice
soon took up a
larger and larger amount of her time.

Because of the integrity of her work and her highly
respected practice of hypnosis, Elaine was the
first to be allowed to advertise her
hypnosis services in the public media. Newspapers and TV
personalities and news casters
who had given her attention because of her unique ESP training
and self development courses,
now also sought her out as an expert in the field of hypnosis.  
She became a well known and respected figure as an
expert on local radio and TV interview
programs.
She was also written about, not only because of her innovative approach to employing
therapeutic hypnosis,
also because of her intuitive as well as her down to earth and scientific
approach to the subject of parapsychology
hypnosis and related subjects.

Elaine conducted, with the help of her husband Don,
countless para- psychological experiments
and did a great deal
of research on hypnosis and healing, engaging her ESP course
post grad students in the process:
At times employing hypnosis in the endeavor to explore its
relationship to helping people to actualize their
potential in every aspect of their lives.

It was Elaine’s innovative idea to provide healing
and supportive therapeutics via hypnosis to
cancer patents that also
brought her work to the attention of the medical community, and once
again the TV and newspapers.

Elaine was certified as fully qualified hypnotist practitioner by
the American Association of
Professional Hypnologists in 1969 and
The American Association of Hypnotist examiners.

While continuing her independent studies in psychology and related fields,
Elaine was busy
attending myriad workshops, courses and symposiums;
often as a popular educator and speaker;
conducting workshops,
teaching other hypnotists how best to employ hypnosis and to
increase their skills and broaden the scope of their practices.

In 1980 Elaine was awarded the coveted
Hypnologist of the Year Award  by The American  
Association of Professional Hypnologists (AAPH)
for her contribution to the art and science of
hypnosis;
a major contributing factor was that she had  proven in a scientific experiment that
blood sugar could be controlled with hypnosis.
That, like so much of what Elaine did in her clinical
practice,
and in public appearances, and giving lectures, she proved that hypnosis had more and
better
uses than that of entertainment, popular “one shot” and group practices in hotels etc. She
educated the public
to the fact that the popular media and public perceptions about hypnosis
were sadly misleading.

Her reputation as a highly qualified and effective
hypnotherapist grew so that people were coming
to her from around the country.

When the American Institute of Hypnotherapy (AIH)
developed and was authorized by the State of
California to do so,
they began to offer on and off campus courses for higher learning, including
PhD programs exclusively for hypnotherapists,
Elaine was intrigued. By that time her practice was
as well established
as her enviable reputation. However, she thought that if it was a legitimate
course sanctioned by the highly critical CA state boards,

she would be interested in what it had to offer her.

Elaine says,
“At first I was skeptical; I wasn’t interested in buying a degree from a diploma mill.   After I
discovered that it was the renown Dr. Krasner
who was heading the institute, and I learned of the
contents and requirements of the program,
I decided that it wouldn’t hurt me to engage in a
course of study like that.
Surely I would not only learn, I would be contributing to the profession
while earning a valid degree.  
 However, I wanted to be sure before enrolling, so I asked a lot of
questions
.It was when Dr. Krasner himself contacted me and persuaded me of the value and
authenticity of the credentials of the Institute and teachers those
I would learn from if I proceeded
with the program, that I seriously considered it.

I also wanted to be sure I could follow through with my commitments
to my clients as well as the
course work without sacrificing any of the quality
that has always been so important to me.  When
I do anything I give it my all!

Dr. Krasner told me that my name and reputation would help
set the standards for other students
as well as the AIH; a compliment
he did not have to give to encourage my trust because I already
knew of Dr. Krasner reputation and work.
However, when I expressed concerns about the lack of
accreditation,
he told me they were in the process of getting accredited.

The only thing he said could be omitted from the course
in my case was the supervision aspects;
because of all my years of proven safe
and effective practices. I was also given a huge amount of
credit for my years o
f experience and contributions to the profession, including credits for my
Mind Mastery Course, all of my recorded lectures (47),
plus my ESP development courses and
the many self help and other
self development workshops I had created and conducted.
Of course they all had to be submitted to be examined by
the teaching staff and board before
they could qualify
for any credits were given for them.

I was first required to get my Master’s degree, which I did through the AIH.

Because of my years of study and experience most of the
Masters and the PhD course content
were already familiar to me.
However, it was good to know that this was all included.

It took me almost 19 months to complete the
required PhD courses and pass the examinations
and then submit my thesis for approval.
I did my Thesis on the control of blood sugar, hypnosis
and healing,
and was awarded my PhD. This coincided with my move from the office in Southfield
we had inhabited for
ten years to our now famous address on Telegraph Road in Southfield,
where The Elaine Kissel Hypnosis Center spent the next 20 years.

Shortly after my book, The Mind Is Willing, was published
I learned that the AIH had changed
hands
and was then under the direction of an entirely different management and training team.
It was some time later that I discovered it was with
a less impressive curriculum; and that  my
degree was no longer on public record.
To my dismay I learned that the current reputation
of the AIH seems to be tarnishing its predecessor’s reputation
and de-valuing the credentials of
those who graduated with an AIH PhD degree.


   Having employed my PhD status alongside
my name for so long, and believing that it is as valid
now as it was then,
I have no plans to discard it. I earned the degree, not just through my years
of my empirical knowledge,  education and practical experience before I was duly
awarded the
AIH degrees,
also in my more than 25 years of highly reputable practice since
it was awarded to me and the entire
35 plus years of having earned my fine reputation.”  

    For those people who feel degrees and licensing in and of themselves provide personal safety
and security for patients,
and assurances of professional competence, genuine caring and
integrity,
I would suggest that they look beyond the letters after a person’s name and the number
of certificates on the wall.
That is not to say that degrees and certificates are of no consequence;
however, their value naturally depends
on who is practicing under their auspices.  Reputation,
experience, genuine compassion,intuitiveness, commitment and many other qualities
are sadly
not included in any certification process.

Passing examinations does not a good people helper make:
ce.

.

It is always recommended that when seeking any
professional help to inquire as to all of the
qualifications of the provider; not just the academics .

Experience, an affinity for the work, a genuine commitment to clients success, skillful and creative
use of hypnosis etc. Teaching the client how to support the hypnotherapuetic process, teaching
them self hypnosis and how to be a good hypnotic subject,  
A good psychology background and expert language skills
among other things are essential  in the effective practice of hypnotherapy.


Neil Simon, one time president of the AAPH said,
 “Great Hypnotherapists, like Elaine Kissel, are
born, not made
. She is one of only a few who truly understands hypnosis, who knows how to
employ it to its best advantage ,and is a credit to the profession.”

All the degrees and letters after a person’s name
mean nothing without the talent to put to use their education.