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  1. It's one of those stories that takes hold and gets people talking. After an item on Crimewatch showed a shopkeeper being robbed it is now all over twitter and facebook as they explain that the shopkeeper was robbed after being hypnotised. But was he really ? Derren Brown may have been able to do this on TV but he wouldn't do it in this way. As a Clinical Hypnotherapist, perhaps I can shed some light on what is going on here...

    Because there is video with this story it appeals to all the online news outlets because people love being able to watch a short clip rather than have to read something. The interesting thing about this is that when the story was reported on Crimewatch he was a pickpocket and now he is supposed to be a hypnotist.

    "Experts say" is the quote that is being used and yet strange to say no names of experts have emerged. There is a simple reason for this. It's been made up by lazy journalists looking for an angle to get people to click on their website for the story, or did they get the idea from somewhere else? It didn't come from the police we do know that...

    Let's see what the story says...

    According to The Guardian:

    ‘Hypnotist thief’ robs shopkeeper after appearing to put him in a trance

    Man seen removing bundle of cash from London man’s pocket after touching him repeatedly on stomach.
    The Metro says:

    Hypnotist thief puts shopkeeper into a trance before robbing him

    At least Sky news had a little more sense...

    'Distraction Thief' Caught On Shop's CCTV

    The shopkeeper said it was like he had been hypnotised as a man rifled through his pockets to steal hundreds of pounds.

    So this is where the story starts to unravel... the shopkeeper said he was hypnotised!  Bingo!shopkeeper robbed by hypnosis

    Take a look at the picture... it shows that he put his hand up and this meant that the shopkeeper was hypnotised because he didn't move! Surely that's how we all have conversations with people? I stand still rather than run away when I am talking to someone, don't you?

    Here's more on the reporting of that story...

    A thief was able to rifle through the trouser pockets of a shopkeeper to steal the day’s takings after distracting him with a story about his pregnant wife.

    Aftab "Aziz" Haider, the owner of wine merchants Hops And Pops in Highgate, North London, said he was "stunned" by the theft of hundreds of pounds.

    CCTV of the unusual robbery shows the suspect brushing past Mr Haider and tapping him on the arm.

    Moments later, the suspect shakes his hand at eye level before taking the shopkeeper's wallet out of his pocket.

    The thief, talking all the time, then taps Mr Haider's shoulders and torso and makes a series of bizarre hand gestures before reaching into the other pocket to steal the day’s takings.

    Mr Haider tries to stop the man, but he had already run out of the shop.

    It was earlier reported that he might have been hypnotised, but Mr Haider it was only like he had been placed in a trance as the man told him an elaborate tale in broken English.

    Scotland Yard has released the CCTV of the theft which took less than a minute at around 9.45pm on 11 September.

    Detective Sergeant Dave Bullock of the Met Police said: "The victim in this incident said that he was momentarily unaware of what had happened to him.

    "The suspect's distraction tactics appeared to have worked as he robbed the victim of cash from his pocket. If anyone recognises the suspect or has been a victim in similar circumstances, please contact us."

    The suspect was wearing a black bomber jacket and dark jeans. Police have described him as being between 30 and 35 years old, Eastern European and slim with short black hair.

    Here's the video of the shopkeeper being robbed by a hypnotist criminal!

     

    I understand that he may say that because of course being robbed is an embarrassing thing, especially when it is on CCTV.

    Who are the experts who think he was hypnotised? How laughable. No one is naming anyone here of course. In fact the police day nothing about hypnosis for crime being part of this at all.

    He is being pickpocketed by a man who is just distracting him by asking about a pregnant wife. I don't know about you but I often stand still when someone is talking to me rather than dance around the room. You've seen too much Derren Brown if you think this is anything other than a shopkeeper who got robbed and is embarrassed to admit that he didn't realise what had happened....oh hang on a minute...no one on Crimewatch even suggested he was hypnotised so perhaps this is just the angle made up to make the story more interesting.

    It's a simple distraction crime and the media have seized upon it because it makes good copy.Let's hope the man is found before he can distract other people and rob them too!

    Rest assured that you will be able to go about your daily life without this happening to you!

    Hypnosis is just being relaxed. If you want to experience a few minutes of letting go then you can listen to my Hypnosis relaxation MP3 HERE and see how it doesn't take control of your mind at all !

     

  2. News about LIghter Life diets emerges today about Coronation Street star Denise Welch and an advert for the company that has been banned by the ASA.

    Frankly the Lighter Life company don't seem to be bothered. In fact Denise Welch talks about her weight loss and defends the advert despite the fact it is encouraging you to lose weight in a very unhealthy way indeed...

    A report in The Guardian explained:

    An advert for the weight loss programme LighterLife featuring former Coronation Street and Loose Women star Denise Welch has been banned after the actor lost weight more quickly than regulations deem to be safe.

    Welch attacked the ruling, saying weight loss companies were “trying to help people, and yet they aren’t even allowed to tell us what they can do for us”.

    The social media page featured before and after images of the actor and said: “Denise lost two stone in just two months.”

    Responding to a complaint challenging whether the ad complied with rules on weight-loss advertising, LighterLife described Welch as overweight with a “very high” waist circumference when she began her programme, adding that she was at high risk of health problems.

    The company said Welch lost more than 2lb (around 90g) a week while on the programme.

    But it said that Welch’s rate of weight loss was in line with expected results for those on a very low calorie diet (VLCD) programme and, while the rate was greater than 2lb a week, this did not mean that it was incompatible with good medical and nutritional practice.

    The company said National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) guidelines stated that a diet of less than 600kcal a day should be used only under clinical supervision, but the minimum daily intake for those on a VLCD LighterLife programme was greater than 600 kcal and those who required medical supervision received it, in line with company policy.

    The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) noted that the Committee of Advertising Practice code stated that claims for an individual to have lost an exact amount of weight must be compatible with good medical and nutritional practice.

    The ASA said: “We understood that Denise Welch had been classed as overweight when her weight loss programme began and also that her waist circumference was very high, which put her at high risk of health problems.

    Are you aware that many celebrities who have DVDs for weight loss or work for diet companies EAT and Put on Weight first ?!

    It's just shocking that people buy into products such as this. Losing weight in this way doesn't work in the long term. You put it all back on and statistics show that you often put more on than you started with. The thing is that people say how great it is that they are losing weight as if it is a surprise. You are taking in only 600 calories a day! of course you are losing weight and damaging your health for nothing at all. I work with people helping them to lose weight and if they come to me on any of these low calorie diets then I explain that I can't work with them because if you just want to lose the weight you put on over years in a few weeks then you are looking at it the wrong way. Although I am a Clinical Hypnotherapist I am not doing anything incredible when I work on weight loss...just helping people to eat more healthily, end emotional eating and exercise more. That's it.

    You may need help to motivate you to do those things but if you do them you will lose weight...over the long term...and keep it off. Please don't be suckered into giving the diet industry more money. They wouldn't have a good business if it worked because you would only ever go on one diet in your life wouldn't you?!