Conversational Hypnosis
Conversational hypnosis is a form of indirect hypnosis practiced within natural conversation, without formal induction. Developed from Milton Erickson's work, it uses hypnotic language, metaphors and embedded suggestions within seemingly ordinary exchange.
Overview
Conversational hypnosis induces hypnotic states naturally during conversation without formal induction. Derived from Milton Erickson's work and modeled by Bandler/Grinder, it bypasses conscious resistance using strategic language patterns. Particularly effective with resistant patients, adolescents, analytical people, and skeptics.
Core Principles
- Milton Model: vague linguistic patterns forcing unconscious gap-filling
- Rapport and pacing/leading: synchronize then guide
- Embedded commands: suggestions hidden in ordinary sentences
- Therapeutic metaphors: stories paralleling the patient's situation
- Utilization: using resistance and symptoms as therapeutic levers
Main Indications
- Patients resistant to formal hypnosis
- Adolescents and children
- Anxiety and phobias
- Chronic pain
- Professional stress management
- Medical accompaniment (pre-operative, dental)
Session Structure
45-60 minutes resembling normal therapeutic conversation: welcome/exploration (15 min), conversational work integrating metaphors, presuppositions, embedded suggestions, reframes (25-35 min), anchoring and closure (10 min).
Variations
Jeff Zeig's pure Ericksonian approach, Jay Haley's strategic conversational hypnosis, hypnotic coaching, medical conversational hypnosis, Ernest Rossi's hypnotic communication.
Contraindications
- Active psychosis
- Paranoia (covert nature may feed manipulation fears)
- Severe hearing/comprehension disorders
- Acute intoxication
- Ethical requirement: only within therapeutic framework with informed consent
Medical Disclaimer
The information presented in this article is provided for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment prescription. If in doubt, always consult your physician or a qualified healthcare professional. The techniques described do not replace conventional medical treatment.