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Kevin Martin
Member # 3501
Kevin Martin
  • Male
  • Lowell, MA
  • United States
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Kevin Martin's Friends

  • Ron Franks
  • Zack Randel
  • Brenda Martin
  • AK. RATHOD PsychoHypnotist INDIA
  • Colin O'Shaughnessy
  • Martha E
  • Nancy AngelWolf
  • Giselle Ross
  • Martin Allsop
  • Shawn Fetters
  • Suzanne Kellner-Zinck
  • Dennis Atkinson
  • Ron Eslinger
  • Chris Adshade
  • Jerry Valley
 

Kevin Martin's Page

Latest Activity

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Zack Randel left a comment for Kevin Martin
Hi Kevin, Thank you for your detailed response. I have been searching for a process that is precise as this one seems to be. I plan on ordering the book. I will let you know of my success! Thanks, Zack
Dec 4, 2011
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Kevin Martin commented on Michael Ellner's blog post 'Remembering Steve Jobs: Stay Hungry - Stay Foolish & Be @ Peace!'
I had never seen the whole Stanford speech.  That was GREAT!  Thank You.
Oct 7, 2011
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Kevin Martin commented on Chris Witherspoon's group 'Script Bank'
I'm not sure if this is a question that a script would be the answer but I want to ask - If someone wanted to bring back a language that they knew fluently as a child but had consciously forgotten, is there a script for something like…
Oct 5, 2011
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Kevin Martin commented on Michael Ellner's group 'Friends of HypnoThoughts.com Unite @ the NGH Conference...'
I am looking forward to meeting with all of you at the convention this weekend,  I'll be meeting with many local practitioners and enthusiasts there and am looking forward to meeting many of my hypno-thoughts buddies. If anyone is…
Aug 10, 2011
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Friends of HypnoThoughts.com Unite @ the NGH Conference...

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Are you planning on being at the NGH conference next weekend? - If you are - Let's meet at the NGH conference and enjoy a "friends of hypnothoughts" get-together. See More
Kevin Martin joined Michael Ellner's group Aug 10, 2011
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Zack Randel left a comment for Kevin Martin
Hi Kevin,   I just read about your success with your insomnia client back in '09 using Core Transformation and Timeline. Have you found that this technique works better for certain issues? Core Transformation sounds very interesting and I…
Aug 1, 2011
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Kevin Martin replied to Suzan Iscil's discussion 'Attention Deficit Disorder' in the group Script Bank
Like Bhadra said, there are many in our community who do not see this as a legitimate disorder. The key is re-framing this "ADD" for the child and parents so it is not a label or detrimental disorder and do the things Bhadra suggested. I…
Nov 11, 2010
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Kevin Martin replied to Timothy Greer's discussion 'NLP Books?' in the group NLP & Open Eye Trance
It depends on where you are. I love Frogs into Princes but for some reason I find a lot of people don't like it. I'm sure it's all on learning style. Frogs to Princes is a lot of transcript of demonstrations that Grinder and Bandler…
Aug 20, 2010
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Kevin Martin replied to Fiona McKeand's discussion 'Workshops - topics?' in the group How to build a private practice!
How about a general hypnosis workshop where you can explain hypnosis and the myriads of uses of hypnosis with several demonstrations. You could include stress, pain, and past life demos. I guess I should ask, what is the main purpose of the…
Jun 10, 2010
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Instant and Rapid Inductions Mastery Group

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This is a group to discuss techniques about instant and rapid inductions and how to master them!
Kevin Martin joined Taylor Sherman's group May 19, 2010
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Kevin Martin commented on Tommy Vee's group 'The Ultimate Stage Hypnosis Seminar & Tommy Vee'
I do some comedy magic before the show. The show is all about entertainment so it makes sense. So doing magic or mentalism allows for a good segway right into the show. And it warms up the audience. I am no where near a professional magician, but I…
May 11, 2010
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Kevin Martin replied to Tommy Vee's discussion 'How Important Is The Hand Clasp To Your Show?' in the group The Ultimate Stage Hypnosis Seminar & Tommy Vee
Tommy, I learned this from you and it works great! I use it both in shows and demos. In shows, it always gets me a few more participants. Thanks Kevin
May 7, 2010
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Kevin Martin commented on Tommy Vee's group 'The Ultimate Stage Hypnosis Seminar & Tommy Vee'
I took the seminar with Tommy and Jerry in Vegas 2 years ago. It was fantastic! I took it to help me learn some new techniques to help me in demos and with clients. I l;earned many things useful in that respect, however, doing stages shows are so…
Apr 6, 2010
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Kevin Martin commented on Tommy Vee's group 'The Ultimate Stage Hypnosis Seminar & Tommy Vee'
Thanks for the invite Tommy. Glad to be here.
Mar 30, 2010
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The Ultimate Stage Hypnosis Seminar & Tommy Vee

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This group is all about Stage Hypnosis. In addition to information on our seminar, all areas of Stage Hypnosis will be discussed & dissected here. Welcome aboard - I look forward to sharing with you.See More
Kevin Martin joined Tommy Vee's group Mar 30, 2010
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Kevin Martin commented on Zoilita Grant's group 'How to build a private practice!'
Forgot to mention, I will have CDs on hand to sell. Thanks for the input Treveor. This sounds more and more exciting.
Mar 20, 2010

Profile Information

Where do you live?
Lowell, MA
Hypnosis Experience:
Part Time Practice
What are you looking for on this site?
Connection and collaboration with other hypnotists
Areas of Specialty:
hypnotherapy, stage hypnosis, NLP
About Me:
I am a personal development specialist, entrepreneur, seasoned telecomm professional, author, and professional speaker.
I truly believe in life long learning and following your passions. I also believe that "You can have everything in life that you want if you will just help enough other people get what they want. " (Zig Ziglar) An underlying mission in my life is to help people achieve what they want out of life - hence the author, speaker, and personal development specialist.
I am a certified master hypnotist and NLP practitioner. These skills help me in my businesses as well as professional career.
My strength is communications and people skills. My business strengths come to fruition when I find (or train) others in my businesses to have the same strengths. Anyone can learn a professional or technical skill, but to be able to communicate well and win over people (customers, colleagues, management) is a real powerful career builder.
Hobbies:
Writing and reading
Your Hypnosis Website:
http://www.poseffects.com
My LinkedIn

Comment Wall (11 comments)

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At 6:42pm on December 3, 2011, Zack RandelZack Randel said…

Hi Kevin,

Thank you for your detailed response. I have been searching for a process that is precise as this one seems to be. I plan on ordering the book. I will let you know of my success!

Thanks,

Zack

At 9:14am on August 1, 2011, Zack RandelZack Randel said…

Hi Kevin,

 

I just read about your success with your insomnia client back in '09 using Core Transformation and Timeline. Have you found that this technique works better for certain issues?

Core Transformation sounds very interesting and I would like to learn it. Did you learn from a seminar or through the book/DVD?

 

I'm in Vancouver so I won't have access to any of the live trainings, however I'm wondering if ordering the book or DVD set will suffice. 

Any advice is greatly appreciated.

 

Best,

Zack

At 8:08am on July 14, 2010, Ron FranksRon Franks said…
Thanks Kevin and I enjoyed meeting you through your website.
At 2:16am on October 28, 2009, Chris WitherspoonChris Witherspoon said…
Welcome to Script Bank. I hope you find it helpful and will post a script in the future

Chris
At 6:40pm on March 9, 2009, Kevin MartinKevin Martin said…
Ron, that was a fantastic and significant article. There are some very concrete findings in there. Can you tell me which publication you found that in?

Thank you.
At 3:48pm on March 9, 2009, Ron ThompsonRon Thompson said…
Two


Cancer patients should be offered hypnosis therapy to help reduce their pain, researchers said yesterday after a series of scientific studies.


Cancer patients should be offered hypnosis therapy to help reduce their pain, researchers said yesterday after a series of scientific studies.

Tests with patients as young as six found they reported and showed less discomfort when they were hypnotised or learnt how to hypnotise themselves.

The children were undergoing treatments such as lumbar punctures - where a long needle is inserted into the spine - and who suffered continual pain from cancer, said Dr Christina Liossi of the University of Wales in Swansea at the British Association Science Festival in Exeter.

"Hypnosis improves the quality of life for children and adults with cancer," she said. "It may also improve the length of life, though we are not yet sure on that. We need to put it into clinical practice. We now have experimental evidence that hypnosis is an intervention, at least with children who undergo painful treatment procedures."

Her call came after the outcome of a study with 80 children in Greece, who clearly showed less reaction to pain when hypnosis techniques were used. Children who were not hypnotised, but simply engaged in comforting conversation, reported and showed more pain than hypnotised ones.

Although hypnotism is often made available as an alternative therapy, the work by Dr Liossi suggests that it should become part of standard clinical practice. She is now about to start a second full study in Swansea.

Scientists agreed that after years when debate has raged over whether hypnosis has a real basis or is just a pretence, there is now clear data showing that important brain functions change when somebody "goes under" a hypnotist's spell.

"Brain scans show that in hypnosis there's a disconnection by a part of the brain called the anterior cingulate gyrus, which monitors what we are doing in the here and now," said Dr Peter Naish of the Open University.

"In stage hypnosis, the reason why people can do outrageous things that they wouldn't normally do is that that structure, which monitors the emotional consequences of our future behaviour - what if I do this or that - doesn't understand the consequences of following the hypnotist's instructions."

Scientists are less clear how hypnotism works in the easing of pain - although they now feel sure that it does. "Studies in the US show that rather than ignoring pain, hypnotised patients appear to be attending to it, focusing on the pain in order to deal with it," said Dr Naish.
At 3:39pm on March 9, 2009, Ron ThompsonRon Thompson said…
Hi Kevin this is the first one

June 26, 2007 Hypnosis is a process in which critical thinking faculties of the mind are bypassed and a type of selective thinking and perception is established. The term hypnosis was coined by Scottish physician, James Braid, using the Greek word for sleep for the technique which he pioneered as a surgical anaesthetic. Last week a university study presented to the European Neurological Society meeting in Rhodos demonstrated that hypnosis can offer significant reduction in pain awareness without any effect on non-painful aspects of the subject's perception. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging to measure brain activity, the studies found hypnosis reduced acute pain perception by about a third.

The ways in which hypnosis may reduce a patient's sensitivity to painful stimuli at the level of neuron activity has not been well understood. A study by teams of researchers at the Universities of Liège in Belgium and Copenhagen, Denmark, has now demonstrated that hypnosis can offer significant reduction in pain awareness without any effect on non-painful aspects of the subject's perception. Hypnosis is most effective in altering perception of acute pain, experts reported at the 17th Meeting of the European Neurological Society from June 16 to 20 in Rhodos (Greece).

The study used 13 healthy subjects and tested them twice, once in a normal state and once while hypnotised. During the two sessions functional magnetic resonance imaging, which traces which regions of the brain are active at a given moment, was used to observe how pain was registered at the level of neural mechanisms. Each participant received 200 laser stimuli in increasing intensity on the left hand. They were asked to rate their sensations from no pain perception, on a five point scale, to intense pain. The results then underwent statistical parametrical mapping, which allows researchers to screen out background neural activity from the brain scans and highlight neuron activity related solely to the area under investigation, in this case neural response to pain stimuli.

“Perception of intense pain was significantly altered while participants were under hypnosis”, says Dr. Steven Laureys from the Coma Science Group, University of Liège. “Measured by brain activity, hypnosis reduced acute pain perception by about a third. However for levels of pain at the low end of the scale, hypnosis barely altered perception of the stimuli.”

The map of the brain scans allowed the research teams to identify which areas of the brain were affected in the hypnotic state. It appears that pain continues to be registered in what is known as the primary somatosensory cortex, which is the the main sensory receptive area for the sense of touch in the brain, in the hypnotised state. Other areas of the brain involved in pain perception such as the anterior cingulate gyrus, which allows sensory stimuli to trigger appropriate physical reactions and affect emotions, areas governing the processing of new memories or the links between emotion and sense perception, were shown to respond to stimuli significantly less in the hypnotic state, as compared to the normal state.

Dr. Laureys: “We were able to demonstrate clearly at the level of neural mechanisms that hypnosis has actual effects in reducing pain perception.”
At 5:58pm on March 4, 2009, Suzanne Kellner-ZinckSuzanne Kellner-Zinck said…
Hi Kevin,

I am finding out that there are a lot of very cool people here as I take some time to see what all has been happening on the site.

Suzanne
At 12:54pm on March 4, 2009, Suzanne Kellner-ZinckSuzanne Kellner-Zinck said…
Well said, Kev. There is little that matters as much to my life as my profession and so it is important for me to be with these like minded people who are coming from the perspective of mutual sharing and learning. Thanks for the invite to the site.

Suzanne
At 9:49am on March 4, 2009, Suzanne Kellner-ZinckSuzanne Kellner-Zinck said…
Hi Kev,

I figured if you found this to be a helpful place that I had everything to gain to become a part of it. Certainly it is probably a better use of my time than many other things that may be out there to take me away from that which I need to be doing with my time. Look forward to another wonderful Meetup next month.

Suzanne
 
 
 

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