75 pages
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An Introduction to Hypnosis & Hypnotherapy , livre ebook

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75 pages
English

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Description

In this introduction to the subject, experienced hypnotherapist and trainer Damian Hamill takes the reader on an exploration of the exciting fields of hypnosis and hypnotherapy.

Assuming no previous knowledge, Damian helps the reader to:

- Learn an empowering and respectful philosophy for helping people change with hypnosis

- Explore the fascinating History of Hypnosis and meet many of the pioneers going back centuries

- Find out why Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung both turned their backs on hypnosis (or thought they had!) and why they were wrong

- Discover what people actually experience when they access hypnosis and how these natural phenomena can be used for therapeutic ends

- Find out about natural hypnoidal states and how hypnosis surrounds us on a daily basis

- Investigate what factors influence individual hypnotic susceptibility and find out why what happens in a research laboratory is not necessarily the best guide to what happens in real life

- Examine a number of classic theories and 'explanations' for hypnosis

- Discover different styles for inducing hypnosis, deepening it and communicating with your client in trance

- Learn how to handle the unexpected and how to engage with clients in a supportive and respectful way

- Be introduced to a range of therapeutic approaches for utilising hypnosis for therapeutic change.

Written in a friendly and accessible style the reader will find the subject clearly explained and de-mystified and will be left with a thirst to find out more.

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Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 21 février 2013
Nombre de lectures 2
EAN13 9781456609511
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0300€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

An Introduction
 
to
 
Hypnosis & Hypnotherapy
 
by Damian Hamill
 
Certified Hypnotherapist, Master Practitioner
& Trainer of NLP
Director of Training for Hypnotic Outcomes Ltd
 
 
This eBook is published by Hypnotic Outcomes Ltd,
220 Barry Road, East Dulwich,
London SE22 0JS
United Kingdom
 
 
© Damian Hamill
 


Copyright 2012 Damian Hamill,
All rights reserved.
 
Published in eBook format by eBookIt.com
http://www.eBookIt.com
 
ISBN-13: 978-1-4566-0951-1
 
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the author. The only exception is by a reviewer, who may quote short excerpts in a review.
 
Introduction - Waiting for the Miracle
“There were lots of invitations, I know you sent me some,
But I’ve been waiting for the miracle,
For the miracle to come.”
 
- Waiting For the Miracle , Leonard Cohen
 
In 1985, at the Evolution of Psychotherapy Conference in Arizona, the well-known therapist Rollo May estimated that there are over 300 distinct forms of psychotherapy currently being practiced (Zeig, 1987, p.212). If you think about it for a moment, this variety is bewildering. For each of these forms there is likely to be a theoretical underpinning, the satisfaction of which is necessary for that therapy to be viewed as having been ‘successful’ in its own terms. Even allowing for the probability that some of these therapies will share common elements of theory, this still leaves a staggering number of views on how people grow, function, develop problems; and what is necessary to resolve these problems.
 
Many of these therapies grew from early psychoanalytical models of human behaviour and bear their clear imprint. Even those that have developed a clear and unique identity of their own, such as Gestalt or Reichian therapy for example, were pioneered by disenchanted (or renegade, depending on your position) psychoanalysts - Fritz Perls and Wilhelm Reich, respectively. Despite the development of psychotherapy and its distancing in many cases from its psychoanalytical origins, there are several traits of the early psychoanalytical theorists that seem still to permeate many forms of therapy. The first of these is the insistence that the therapeutic model to which the therapist adheres is the only ‘correct’ model and that any other theories are necessarily ‘wrong’. The second is that therapeutic progress – human change - is a slow, laborious and often painful process.
 
The first of these traits brings with it a number of issues. If the adherents to a particular form of therapy believe that all other forms of therapy are ‘wrong’, then any change that these other therapies produce will be viewed as meaningless, transient or unsatisfactory in some other way. Furthermore, any change that a client experiences within the therapy of choice may also be viewed as meaningless, transient or unsatisfactory unless it fully adheres to and can be explained by the theoretical underpinnings of that therapy. Any change the client experiences that does not meet these criteria is often viewed as being temporary, superficial or, to borrow a psychoanalytical term, a ‘flight to health’. In considering the tendency of therapists to take this sort of position it is easy to come to the conclusion that the tail is wagging the dog – that the preservation of a theory of change blinds its theorists to evidence of change that does not fit the theory. Famous therapist and theoretician of change processes, the late Paul Watzlawick (Zeig, 1987, p.92), noted that a belief in possessing an ultimate truth about human affairs may encourage the holder to dismiss any evidence other than that which substantiates the ‘ultimate truth’ held. He characterised such ‘confirmatory bias’ as representing an apparent attitude that preserving a theory is more valuable than helping a client.
 
The situation outlined above inevitably raises the question of what exactly therapy seeks to achieve. Does a therapeutic encounter exist solely to provide ongoing confirmation of the therapist’s particular theoretical orientation, allowing the therapist to dismiss any developments that do not ‘fit’ this orientation; or is the goal of therapy to produce change within the client, in the direction that he or she wishes?
 
It is reassuring to realise, however, that many experienced psychotherapists across treatment modalities that were historically considered incompatible have moved away from such limiting perspectives. Rather than engaging in pointless ‘turf wars’ or unproductive arguments over whose therapy is the ‘best’ therapy, such practitioners are oriented more towards looking for commonalities between psychotherapies - those points where maps meet, intersect and overlap. These can be the most fertile grounds for collaboration, mutual sharing of experience and generation of new pathways of growth and development. Pamela Gawler-Wright (2009) has developed this collaborative framework within the context of Contemporary Psychotherapy and observes:
 
“Whenever we speak of psychotherapy we have to ask "which psychotherapy?" as the numerous and divergent modules of theory and practice are confusing even to the professional practitioner. The last two decades has seen a greater integration of various denominations of psychotherapy, resulting in a "post-schoolist" movement where positive similarities are embraced more than negative differences are fought over.”
 
Those who take this perspective, whatever their original clinical orientation (and however forbidding its own therapeutic lexicon may be to others), have come to realise that different therapeutic maps and models are merely differing metaphors describing common experience. The hazard into which the profession of psychotherapy drifted over decades was the reification of such metaphors, as if the elements of any particular metaphorical explanation really existed in tangible form and therefore excluded the possible existence of any other explanation.
 
The respected psychotherapist, Steve Lankton (1980, p.186), elucidated the metaphorical, rather than literal, nature of psychotherapeutic models and the perils of failing to recognise this distinction when he stated:
 
“Each school of psychotherapy is a metaphor designed to help expand the limitations of its client’s personal metaphors…Each has its own set of tools, conceptual labels, presuppositions and techniques. A lot of them have the same stated goals and intentions and yet are considered rival theories by their respective proponents. As we shall discover, though the content of these stories of personality may differ radically, the processes by which they effect change in their clients are formally identical.”
 
When it comes to filtering for similarities rather than differences, I believe that a common thread running through many of the different psychotherapies is the use of hypnosis and altered states. Once the essential characteristics and phenomena of hypnosis are recognised and understood, its de facto presence can often be detected in psychotherapeutic encounters where the word is not even part of the vocabulary, let alone regularly uttered. This is also despite the fact that some therapists who undoubtedly indirectly use trance in their practices would have an apoplectic fit if this were pointed out to them. I am reminded of a series of conversations I had with a therapist who practiced a form of humanistic psychotherapy, and who never missed the opportunity to decry hypnosis for various reasons which showed she had a fundamental misunderstanding of its nature. Due to the vehemence with which she held these views and my own desire at the time for an easy life, I did not avail myself of the opportunity to correct her misunderstanding. Some time later, however, she described working with a client using what she would have described as a creative visualisation method yet which I instantly recognised as being blatantly hypnotic in its structure, delivery and function. Had I pointed out that she was effectively using hypnosis she would almost certainly been horrified and denied it completely. Her inflexibility in championing her own therapeutic model to the exclusion of others meant that she could not recognise or acknowledge when her own therapeutic approaches borrowed heavily from formal hypnotic approaches which she claimed to revile. It also deprived her of the opportunity to learn how to use the hypnotic states she was eliciting more effectively.
 
This book, however, is designed to welcome those from diverse psychotherapeutic modalities who are open to acquiring new skills and also those who may have already developed a sneaking suspicion that they are utilising hypnotic patterns in their work and who want to check out whether that is the case. A clearer understanding of what hypnosis is and how it may already be present in your work can enable you to use it with greater flexibility, intent and grace, thereby enhancing your confidence and your clients’ results. It is this desire to create a broad church, which holds some common tenets of faith but also allows wide diversity of application, that has drawn to some of my training courses students from a wide variety of therapeutic orientations. I have taught hypnotherapy to clinical psychologists, CBT practitioners, humanistic counsellors, psychodynamic therapists, medical doctors, nurses and so on. Some of these have applied their hypnotherapeutic skills in the fairly pure form in which I taught them. Others have taken hypnotherapeutic approaches and blended them into their pre-existing therapeutic framework to enrich its potency. Still others have done a little bit of both. I believe that whatever medical or psychotherapeutic background you come from (or if you are a complete newcomer to the world of therapy) developing flexi

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