The History of
Ericksonian Hypnosis (Published in “HEALTHMAP
MAGAZINE”)
By Douqlas O'Brien
When you hear “hypnosis”
you might think of the traditional form of hypnosis where the powerful,
authoritative hypnosis implants suggestions in his subject, such as, "you
are getting sleeeepy. Your eyelids are growing heavier and heavier. “You
will quit smoking," and so on. But really, hypnotic trance exists in many
different forms every day. Sometimes it is recognized and utilized
(hypnotherapy rituals, or dance, for example), but most of the time it goes
unnoticed (daydreaming, people's behavior on elevators, or irrational fears. to
name a few).
In fact, as a practicing
hypnotherapist, I believe that people live most of the lives in one trance or
another and my job is generally not to hypnotize them, but to de-hypnotize
them. The true hypnotists in life are teachers, religious leaders, and even
advertisers. The most powerful hypnosis in anyone’s life, are that
individual’s, parents. I’ll elaborate on that point in a moment.
But allow me to say a few words
about hypnosis, since there are many forms of hypnosis, and even more
misconceptions about hypnosis. Hypnotherapy is simply the usage of trance for
therapeutic purposes. Traditional hypnotherapy uses commanding language as in
the above example, called direct suggestion. This method sometimes works, but
not for everybody. Some people resist these suggestions, perhaps because they
resent authority figures, and they are sometimes labeled as
"resistant”, or worse, "unhypnotizable,” by traditional
hypnotherapists. But not all hypnotherapists believe in direct suggestions.
In fact, Ericksonian hypnotherapy
uses more what is called indirect suggestions. Indirect suggestions are much
harder to resist because they are often not even recognized as suggestions by
the conscious mind, since they usually disguise themselves as stories or
metaphors. An example of an indirect suggestion is “S” and perhaps
your eyes will grow tired as you listen to this story, and you will want to
close them, because people can, you know, experience a pleasant, deepening
sense of comfort as they allow their eyes to close, a they relax deeply.”
This would all be said in such a way as to mark out key words and phrases
(indicated here in italics) by subtle shifts in the tone of voice. The
person’s unconscious awareness thus responds to these "embedded
commands.” Think about the following scenario. A child of say four or
five years of age is carefully carrying a full glass of milk to the table. The
amateur parent of the child warns in a stern voice, "don't drop
that!” The child looks up at the parent, stumbles a bit, drops the glass
and spills milk everywhere. The now angry parent yells, “I told you not
to drop that! You’re so clumsy. You’ll never learn!” As
unintentional as It may be, this scenario, is an example of hypnosis, complete
with induction, suggestion, and post hypnotic suggestion. The powerful authoritative
voice (the parent), having created and utilized through indirect suggestion
("don't drop that”), an altered state (trance), has issued a direct
post-hypnotic suggestion ("You’re so clumsy. You’ll never
learn”). "Post-hypnotic because, if the child accepts the suggestion
(and children often do), he or she will always see him/herself as clumsy. This
post-
hypnotic suggestion by the parent
may well adhere to the directive in the future, sabotaging the child’s
success. We would do well to realize that in a sense we are all hypnotists, and
that if we are parents we have very suggestible subjects in our care on whom
our language may have great effects. We must learn to give our children
positive suggestions. Let’s explore how the parent could have handled the
situation more scrupulously: First of all there is the confusing directive,
“don’t drop that." Why Is that confusing? Because the human
brain does not know how to compute negations. Let me illustrate by having you
try a little experiment: For the next fifteen seconds do not think about your
breathing. Don't think about whether you are breathing up high in your chest or
down low in your abdomen, or whether you are taking deep or shallow breaths.
Just don't think about it at all. Okay. Be honest. How many of you started thinking
about your breathing if only for a moment. What?! But I specifically told you
not to! You see, in order to not think about something, your brain first has to
represent it in your mind, and then try to somehow erase the image. If you were
successful at all in this experiment, it was probably due to the fact that you
were able to direct your mind to think about something else instead. Back to
the parent-child scenario. One way the parent could have set the child up for
success would have been to say something like, "that's good honey",
stay balanced,” or "that’s right, be careful," and any
combination of words that are stated in the positive. Chances are the child
would complete the journey to the table with the glass of milk intact.
Let’s say for some reason the child does in fact spill the milk. The
savvy parent could say, “hmm. I guess we shouldn't fill the glass to the
full next time, huh? We learned something, didn't we? You are good at
learning." Milton Erickson, the innovative psychiatrist after whom Ericksonian
hypnotherapy was named, might have even made a game out of trying to get a
whole glass of milk to the table, or tell a story about carrying milk buckets
in from the barn as a child.
he was color blind, tone deaf, and
slightly dyslexic. These perceptual abnormalities may have led Erickson to a
road less traveled, but it wasn’t until his teenage years that his life
would take a truly pivotal turn - a turn that would affect his destiny and the
evolution of hypnotherapy as we know it. In the summer of 1919, at the age of
seventeen, he was stricken with his first attack of polio (his second would come
at the age of fifty-one). It was an extremely severe infection. He was not
expected to survive, and his parents were told that he would be dead by the
following morning. He lapsed into a coma. When he awoke three days later he
found himself completely paralyzed, unable to move except for his eyes, and
barely able to speak. Since there were no rehabilitation facilities in their
community, there was no reason to expect that he’d ever recover.
here?" I said, “I didn't
know”, the horse knew. All I did was keep his attention on the road. I
think that Is how you do psychotherapy. Often, Erickson didn’t use formal
trace induction. Instead he told stories that had a deeper meaning. Sometimes
that meaning was clear; most times it was not. At least not to the person's
conscious mind. For example, a twelve-year old boy was brought in to see
Erickson about bedwetting. Erickson dismissed his parents and began talking to
the boy about other topics, avoiding a direct discussion about bedwetting
altogether. Upon learning that the boy played baseball and his brother
football, Erickson elaborated on the fine muscle coordination it takes to play
baseball, compared to the uncoordinated muscle skills used in football. The boy
listened raptly as Erickson described in fine detail all the muscle adjustments
his body automatically makes in order to position him underneath the ball and
catch it: the glove has to be opened at just the right moment and clamped down
again at just the right moment. When transferring the ball to another hand, the
same kind of fine muscle control is needed. Then, when throwing the ball to the
infield, if one lets go too soon, it doesn't go where on wants it to go. Likewise
letting go too late leads to an undesired outcome and consequently to
frustration. Erickson explained that letting go just at the right time gets it
to go where one wants it to go, and that constitutes success in baseball.
Therapy with this young man consisted of four session that included talks about
other sports, boy scouts, and muscles. But bedwetting was not discussed, and
“formal hypnosis” was not conducted. The boy's bedwetting
disappeared soon thereafter. And what could you expect if you decided to go to
an Ericksonian hypnotherapist today? Hard to specify. In much the same way that
Erickson treated every patient on a very individual basis, there are as many
approaches to the continuation of his work as there are followers of it. There
is a joke that kind of sums it up: “How many Ericksonilan hypnotherapists
does it take to change a light bulb?" Answer: “Seventeen. One to
change the bulb and sixteen to argue how
Excerpted by:
Awie Suwandi
TranzWorks ~Institute & Clinic
for Hypnotherapy
awie@...