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Bedwetting is more common than parents realize and affects millions of children in the US every night. Statistically, more boys than girls experience bedwetting, and children with ADHD experience it more often than any other group.
Bedwetting at night is the medical term for bedwetting and can be very embarrassing for children.
Children suffering from enuresis often feel isolated. They are often ashamed to talk about it and usually avoid social situations where they sleep away from home. For the devastated child whose bedwetting becomes public knowledge, they are often bullied or even embarrassed by family members who may not mean it but think they are helping in some way. Usually, children who wet the bed blame themselves and feel extremely guilty, but really can’t help it.
Bedwetting can cause serious problems of low self-esteem and psychological stress for both the child and the family. Bedwetting can be caused by stress itself, and sometimes it’s simply a matter of an immature bladder or a number of other physical factors.
It might sound weird to those new to the idea, but guided imagery and hypnotherapy can actually eliminate bedwetting. Through the combination of deep relaxation, guided imagination, and positive subconscious suggestions, your child can use their powerful subconscious to create definitive change. Through visualization, kids can de-stress and then subconsciously focus on being dry all night. The subconscious and the beliefs represented there are the basis for our behavior. This applies to adults and children alike. When a child is able to tap into this subconscious pattern and create a new foundation regarding bedwetting, magic happens.
No child consciously chooses to wake up in wet sheets and pajamas. A child wants to stay dry, feel good about being controlled. Parents want to say goodbye to plastic covers and set the alarm for 11pm just to wake the child to go to the bathroom. It’s a frustrating experience for everyone.
Guided Imagination with Hypnosis is a simple, natural, and extremely relaxing tool used to treat many emotional and physical disorders, including bedwetting. Children learn to release feelings of guilt and disappointment in themselves, and then train their bodies to easily hold liquids longer and wake them up when they need to go to the bathroom. For some children, this works practically overnight, especially if they are emotionally ready.
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