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Hypnotic Realities - Hypnosis and Health PDF

234 Pages·2003·1.51 MB·English
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Hypnotic Realities Hypnotic Realities The Induction of Clinical Hypnosis and Forms of Indirect Suggestion by Milton H. Erickson Ernest L Rossi Sheila I. Rossi With a Foreword by Andre M. Weitzenhoffer IRVINGTON PUBLISHERS, Inc., New York Copyright © 1976 by Ernest L. Rossi, Ph.D. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any manner whatever, including information storage or retrieval, in whole or in part (except for brief quotations in critical articles or reviews), without written permission from the publisher. For information, write to Irvington Publishers, Inc., 740 Broadway, New York, New York 10176. Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Erickson, Milton H. Hypnotic Realities Bibliography: p. 1. Hypnotism — Therapeutic use. I. Rossi, Ernest Lawrence, joint author. II. Rossi, Sheila I., joint author. III. Title RC495.E72 615'.8512 76-20636 ISBN 0-8290-0112-3 (Formerly ISBN 0-470-15169-2) Printed in The United States of America 15 14 13 12 11 Reprint Edition 1992 Dedicated to an ever progressing understanding of the total functioning of the individual person within the self separately and simultaneously in relation to fellow beings and the total environment. MHE Dedicated to those clinicians and researchers who will further explore some of the approaches to enhancing human potentials described herein. ELR Dedicated to all those persons learning through hypnotherapy for personal growth and professional development. SIR ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We wish gratefully to acknowledge the help we received from the following friends and colleagues: Roxanne Erickson, Christie Erickson, John Hedenberg, Jack A. Oliver, M.D., Robert Pearson, and Kay Thompson. OVERVIEW CONTENTS Foreword, by Andre M. Weitzenhoffer / xii Introduction / 1 One A Conversational Induction: The Early Learning Set / 5 Two Indirect Induction by Recapitulation / 27 Three The Handshake Induction / 83 Four Mutual Trance Induction / 127 Five Trance Learning by Association / 149 Six Facilitating Hypnotic Learning / 205 Seven Indirectly Conditioned Eye Closure Induction / 233 Eight Infinite Patterns of Learning: A Two-Year Follow-Up / 281 Nine Summary / 297 References / 315 ANALYTICAL TABLE OF CONTENTS Foreword by Andre M. Weitzenhoffer Introduction ONE A Conversational Induction: The Early Learning Set Observation and Erickson's Basic Approach The Conscious and Unconscious in Clinical Hypnosis The Utilization Theory of Hypnotic Suggestion Truisms Utilizing Mental Mechanisms Truisms Utilizing Time Not Doing, Not Knowing TWO Indirect Induction by Recapitulation The "Yes Set" Psychological Implication The Bind and Double Bind Question The Time Bind and Double Bind The Conscious-Unconscious Double Bind The Double-Dissociation Double Bind A General Hypothesis About Evoking Hypnotic Phenomena Reverse Set Double Bind The Non Sequitur Double Bind Contrasting the Therapeutic and Schizogenic Double Bind Unconscious and Metacommunication Open-Ended Suggestion Suggestions Covering All Possibilities of a Class of Responses Ideomotor Signaling THREE The Handshake Induction Confusion in the Dynamics of Trance Induction Dynamics of the Handshake Induction The Handshake Induction Compound Suggestions The Paradigms of Acceptance Set, Reinforcement or Symbolic Logic Compound Statements The Paradigms of Shock and Creative Moments Contingent Suggestions and Associational Networks Multiple Tasks and Serial Suggestions FOUR Mutual Trance Induction The Surprise The Confusion-Restructuring Approach Therapeutic Trance as a State of Active Unconscious Learning FIVE Trance Learning by Association The Implied Directive Questions that Focus, Suggest and Reinforce Questions for Indirect Trance Induction The Fragmentary Development of Trance Depotentiating Conscious Mental Sets: Confusion, Mental Flux, and Creativity SIX Facilitating Hypnotic Learning Displacing and Discharging Resistance Multiple Levels of Communication: Analogy, Puns, Metaphor, Jokes, Folk Language The Microdynamics of Suggestion SEVEN Indirectly Conditioned Eye Closure Induction Trance Training and Utilization The Dynamics of Indirect and Direct Suggestion Indirect Conditioning of Trance Voice Dynamics in Trance Intercontextual Cues and Suggestions Right- and Left-Hemispheric Functioning in Trance EIGHT Infinite Patterns of Learning: A Two-Year Follow-Up Infinite Possibilities of Creativity, Healing, and Learning NINE Summary The Nature of Therapeutic Trance Trance Viewed as Inner Directed States Trance Viewed as a Highly Motivated State Trance Viewed as Active Unconscious Learning Trance Viewed as an Altered State of Functioning The Subjective Experience of Trance Clinical Approaches to Hypnotic Induction Orientation to Hypnotic Induction Approaches to Hypnotic Induction Depotentiating Habitual Frames of Reference Indicators of Trance Development Ratifying Trance The Forms of Hypnotic Suggestion The Nature of Hypnotic Suggestion Indirect Approaches to Hypnotic Suggestion Structuring an Acceptance Set Utilizing the Patient's Associative Structure and Mental Skills The Facilitation of Human Potentials REFERENCES Foreword For the many who never had the opportunity and never will have the opportunity to attend workshops led by Milton Erickson, this work will serve as an invaluable surrogate. Psychotherapists, in general, as well as hypnotherapists, will find the work rewarding reading and study, for Erickson is above all a psychotherapist, and his modus operandi transcends clinical hypnotism. As for academicians and researchers, I believe they will find enough food for thought and research here to keep them busy for some time to come. My first encounter with Milton Erickson was in 1954 or 1955 at a meeting of the Society for Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis in Chicago. When I met him he was engaged in conversation with a small group of colleagues in a hotel lobby. I had never seen the man or even a photograph of him. Yet in a strange way, as it then seemed to me, as I saw him from some distance out of hearing range, I knew this was Milton Erickson. I have thought back to this incident a number of times. Conceivably I had heard somewhere that he had had polio and the fact he leaned on a cane might have been the clue to his identity. I cannot be sure, but I am inclined to believe the clues were more subtle. In a way, I had encountered Milton a number of times previously—through his writings which I had studied exhaustively. Through these, I had begun to appreciate the uniqueness of his person. I believe that some of the qualities which have made him the individual he is, were communicated to me through these writings, and that I experienced them more directly as they were manifesting themselves as he interacted with others. In the years which followed I was to have other occasions, by far too few to suit me, to meet with him, watch him demonstrate, watch him doing therapy, and listen to him talk about hypnotism as well as other matters. More particularly, I had the opportunity to see why, as the years have gone by, he has grown into a quasi-legendary figure to whom the title of "Mr. Hypnosis" was once given. I have also had the opportunity to see in action such famed stage hypnotists of the forties and fifties as Ralph Slater, Franz Polgar, and others, many of whom billed themselves as "America's Foremost Hypnotist," the "World's Fastest Hypnotist," etc., and who extolled their fantastic prowess ad nauseam. Good entertainers, yes. As hypnotists, however, they came up poor seconds to Milton Erickson, and yet there never was a more quiet, unassuming man. It is not surprising then that many professionals have tried to emulate him. None thus far have ever truly succeeded, although a few have managed to become a fair approximation. Some of the reasons for this become clear on reading this work. Some of these will still remain unclear. If the authors have failed to deal with them to the extent that their importance calls for, it is only because they are not exactly the kind of things one can adequately teach merely through the written word. Perhaps it is also because they are not teachable and, I suspect, there is some unwillingness on their part to admit this to themselves and the reader. As the work makes it most clear, not only what one says to the patient or subject, how one says it, when one says it, and where one says it are all extremely important factors in the effective use of hypnotism, particularly in a clinical, therapeutic setting. It also becomes clear that one must view the hypnotherapeutic interaction in its totality and not piecemeal, and go even a step further by viewing it within the totality of its utilization. This takes the use of suggestion, and more broadly, of hypnotism out of the domain of the use of simple magic formulas and places it within the framework of the science of interactional and communication networks. Erickson, however, is not just a master of verbal communication as the work makes evident. He is equally adept at non-verbal communication, which is one of the aspects to which the work does not and can not really do justice. This is unfortunate but unavoidable and certainly not an oversight on the part of the authors. One of the more memorable demonstrations of his skill at non-verbal communication that he has given in his career was in Mexico City in 1959 when he hypnotized and demonstrated various hypnotic phenomena with a subject with whom verbal communication was impossible. He spoke no Spanish and the subject spoke no English. From beginning to end, communication was carried entirely

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