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Milton H. Erickson - Indirect Techniques |  | Milton H. Erickson - Indirect Techniques: Encyclopedia II - Milton H. Erickson - Indirect Techniques |  | Where 'classical' hypnosis is authoritative and direct, and often encounters resistance in the subject, Erickson's approach is accommodating and indirect. For example, where a classical hypnotist might say "you are going into a trance", an Ericksonian hypnotist would be more likely to say "you can comfortably learn how to go into a trance". In this way, he provides an opportunity for the subject to accept the suggestions they are most comfortable with, at their own pace, and with an awareness of the benefits. The subject knows they are not being hustled, and takes ful ...
See also:Milton H. Erickson, Milton H. Erickson - Personal History, Milton H. Erickson - Trance and The Unconscious Mind, Milton H. Erickson - Indirect Techniques, Milton H. Erickson - Confusion Technique, Milton H. Erickson - The Handshake Induction, Milton H. Erickson - Resistance, Milton H. Erickson - Ericksonian Therapy, Milton H. Erickson - Shocks and Ordeals, Milton H. Erickson - Influences, Milton H. Erickson - Books |  | | Milton H. Erickson, Milton H. Erickson - Books, Milton H. Erickson - Confusion Technique, Milton H. Erickson - Ericksonian Therapy, Milton H. Erickson - Indirect Techniques, Milton H. Erickson - Influences, Milton H. Erickson - Personal History, Milton H. Erickson - Resistance, Milton H. Erickson - Shocks and Ordeals, Milton H. Erickson - The Handshake Induction, Milton H. Erickson - Trance and The Unconscious Mind, Neuro-linguistic programming, List of NLP topics, Hypnosis, Hypnotherapy, Transderivational search, Double bind, George Lakoff (one of America's foremost linguists, also (like Erickson) a strong believer in the significance of metaphor) |  | |
|  |  | Milton H. Erickson: Encyclopedia II - Milton H. Erickson - Indirect Techniques
Milton H. Erickson - Indirect Techniques
Where 'classical' hypnosis is authoritative and direct, and often encounters resistance in the subject, Erickson's approach is accommodating and indirect. For example, where a classical hypnotist might say "you are going into a trance", an Ericksonian hypnotist would be more likely to say "you can comfortably learn how to go into a trance". In this way, he provides an opportunity for the subject to accept the suggestions they are most comfortable with, at their own pace, and with an awareness of the benefits. The subject knows they are not being hustled, and takes full ownership of, and participation in their transformation.
Erickson maintained that it was not possible to consciously instruct the unconscious mind, and that authoritarian suggestions were likely to be met with resistance. The unconscious mind responds to openings, opportunities, metaphors and contradictions. Effective hypnotic suggestion, then, should be 'artfully vague', leaving space for the subject to fill in the gaps with their own unconscious understandings - even if they do not consciously grasp what is happening. The skilled hypnotherapist constructs these gaps of meaning in a way most suited to the individual subject - in a way which is most likely to produce the desired change.
For example the authoritative "you will stop smoking" is likely to find less leverage on the unconscious level than "you can become a non-smoker". The first is a direct command, to be obeyed or ignored (and notice that it draws attention to the act of smoking), the second is an opening, an invitation to possible lasting change, without pressure, and which is less likely to raise resistance.
Richard Bandler and John Grinder identified this kind of 'artful vagueness' as a central characteristic of their 'Milton Model', a systematic attempt to codify Erickson's hypnotic language patterns.
Other related archives1901, 1980, American, American Psychiatric Association, American Psychological Association, American Psychopathological Association, American Society for Clinical Hypnosis, Charles Tart, December 5, Double bind, George Lakoff, Gestalt Therapy, Gregory Bateson, Hypnosis, Hypnotherapy, James Braid, Jay Haley, John Grinder, List of NLP topics, March 25, Margaret Mead, Milton Model, NLP, Neuro-linguistic Programming (NLP), Neuro-linguistic programming, Richard Bandler, Stephen Gilligan, Transderivational search, Virginia Satir, brief therapy, double bind, family systems therapy, hypnosis, metaphor, modeled, psychiatrist, psychotherapy, self-taught, story, strategic therapy, therapeutic metaphor, transderivational search, transderivational searches
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Indirect Techniques", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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