Home » Always Assume Hypnosis

Always Assume Hypnosis

by Jeff S on April 1, 2011

If you have seen the YouTube videos or have purchased my course, you know that the single most important aspect of the process is…

INTENT!

Intent doesn’t begin when you start doing hypnosis. It begins before you ever step out on the street, in the office, whatever. Make up your mind before you ever start that there will be hypnosis and it will be a great experience for both your subject and yourself.

And my ‘trick’ is to Always Assume Hypnosis. I know… I know, “When you assume….” Well, frankly, I don’t care. (Those who have taken my course will understand that…)

Before you begin, assume that it will, of course, work out perfectly and the subject will go into hypnosis. Once you begin, assume that everything is going perfectly and is leading the subject into hypnosis. Once you do the induction, assume that it worked perfectly and that they will be in hypnosis until you bring them out.

Intent doesn’t end at the moment you say ‘SLEEP’ and the subject’s head drops. It runs through the entire process, right on through the part where you say “That’s it… WIDE AWAKE!… Feeling great… feeling fantastic!”

And, if you follow the previous advice I have given about having a sign or name badge, and you work with those people who approach you first, you will be working with great subjects anyway.

Until next time…

No related posts.

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

Rob@ learn hypnosis June 5, 2011 at 11:10 pm

Interesting, I don’t ever assume that induction has worked, in fact I do the complete opposite and often ask that if they can here me to life a hand
Rob@ learn hypnosis´s last blog ..What is hypnosisMy ComLuv Profile

Reply

Jeff S June 5, 2011 at 11:24 pm

I am not sure why you would doubt what is happening. I not only use this, but I teach it. And I have students all over who tell me that it makes all the difference in doing hypnosis wherever they go.

Please don’t misunderstand. AAH does not mean don’t test. When doing street work, I stick people to everything in sight and just about every other kind of phenomena; as do my students. However, it keeps them (and me) in the mindset that allows an added measure of boldness. Because I am not checking to see IF the subject is in hypnosis, I keep a roll and rarely find a phenomena failing.

Anyway, thank you for your comment.
Jeff S´s last blog ..Practice makes… a difference!My ComLuv Profile

Reply

Leave a Comment

CommentLuv Enabled

Previous post:

Next post: