Self-Hypnosis
Self-hypnosis is the autonomous practice of hypnosis, allowing self-induction of an altered state of consciousness. A powerful empowerment tool, it extends and reinforces the effects of hypnotherapy sessions.
Overview
Self-hypnosis is the ability to induce a hypnotic state without the presence of a therapist. Historically, Émile Coué (1857-1926) was one of the first to formalize this practice with his famous method of conscious autosuggestion ("Every day, in every way, I am getting better and better"). Milton Erickson considered that all hypnosis is fundamentally self-hypnosis, with the therapist merely being a guide facilitating a natural process the patient can learn to reproduce alone.
Today, self-hypnosis is taught as a complementary tool in most hypnotherapy protocols. It allows patients to become active participants in their well-being between sessions and after the end of therapeutic follow-up. Scientific studies have shown that regular self-hypnosis practice significantly improves therapeutic outcomes, particularly in chronic pain management and anxiety.
Core Principles
- Patient autonomy: self-hypnosis transfers power from the therapist to the patient, making them an active agent in their change process
- Autosuggestion: the practitioner formulates and uses their own positive suggestions, adapted to their specific needs
- Ritualization: regular practice (even 5-10 minutes daily) creates a habit that facilitates and accelerates trance entry
- Inner safe place: construction of a mental space of absolute security the practitioner can access at any time
- Anchoring and self-triggering: associating a gesture, word, or breathing pattern with entering the altered state
Main Indications
- Daily stress management
- Sleep quality improvement
- Chronic pain management between sessions
- Preparation for stressful events
- Self-confidence reinforcement
- Craving management (tobacco, food)
- Concentration improvement
- Relaxation and rapid recovery
- Maintaining therapeutic gains after treatment ends
Self-Hypnosis Session Structure
A basic self-hypnosis protocol lasts between 10 and 20 minutes:
- Preparation (2 min): choose a quiet place, a comfortable position (seated or lying down). Define the session's intention and desired duration. Close eyes
- Self-induction (3-5 min): several possible techniques — counting down from 10 to 1 while visualizing descending stairs; mental fixation on an imaginary point; the "3-2-1" technique (3 things seen, 3 heard, 3 felt, then 2, then 1); deep breathing with extended exhalation
- Deepening (2 min): mentally descending additional stairs, or imagining floating in a relaxing place (beach, forest, cloud)
- Inner work (5-10 min): repetition of chosen autosuggestions, visualization of the achieved goal, dialogue with a part of oneself, exploration of the inner safe place
- Return (2 min): progressive counting from 1 to 5, each number bringing back more alertness and awareness. "At 5, I will be fully awake, relaxed and confident"
Variations and Advanced Techniques
The "safe place" technique involves mentally constructing a space of absolute security that the practitioner can instantly recall through an anchor gesture. Betty Erickson's technique (Milton's daughter) uses conscious/unconscious dissociation by alternating what the conscious does and what the unconscious does. "Flash" self-hypnosis in 30 seconds to 1 minute is adapted for emotional emergency situations (before an interview, after a conflict). Mobile apps and guided audio recordings facilitate learning for beginners, though they don't replace professional instruction.
Contraindications
- Active psychosis (risk of confusion between inner states and reality)
- Untreated dissociative disorder (self-induction may trigger dissociative episodes)
- Severe depression without therapeutic follow-up (autosuggestions can be negatively diverted)
- Vehicle driving or machine operation (never practice in these situations)
- First session without professional guidance (initial learning should be guided by a qualified hypnotherapist)