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April 29, 2008

Inspiring Creativity in the Classroom

On 26 December 2008, I presented a workshop on "Inspiring Creativity in the Classroom" to senior studetns in an elite English program at Taipei First Girls High School, the top girls high school in Taiwan.

The program is an adaptation of one I have presented elsewhere to teachers and is comprised of improvisational language structures (which I have adapted from improvisational theatre games), guided imagery, and a demonstration of hypnosis for stress reduction and study skills enhancement (the students had signed parental consent forms for the hypnosis demonstration - the teacher tells me that every single student received parental permission, most enthusastically).

The three-hour workshop was a resounding success.  The teacher (a former university student of mine) tells me the kids got a LOT out of it and couldn't stop talking about the experience for days.

Here's a short video clip:

And . . . some photos . . .

More photos can be found here.

For other educators in Taiwan, I am happy to present this or similar programs by special arrangement for your students or events.  See http://www.briandavidphillips.com for contact details and more information.  If you don't see a specific program that fits your needs, email me and we will design something perfect for you.

All the best,
Brian

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Brian David Phillips, PhD, CH [brian@briandavidphillips.com]
Certified Hypnotherapist
President, Society of Experiential Trance
Associate Professor, NCCU, Taipei, Taiwan
http://www.BrianDavidPhillips.com

April 26, 2008

Ewan McGregor Quits Smoking with Hypnosis

Ewan McGregor, movie star and international heart throb, says he is having a generally better life after quitting smoking because of the peace of just relaxing and not having to hunt for cigarettes, ashtrays and lighters.

A number of news sites reports that he quit a little more than a year ago through hypnotherapy and is happy.  See here and here.

He said: "The idea of life without cigarettes is terrifying, but it's so much better... and it's so easy - you just don't smoke. I found the most annoying thing about cigarettes - apart from the fact that they give you emphysema and cancer and it makes you stink and not have any money, and you have to stand outside in the snow, and all of those things - is that you couldn't do anything without them.

"I couldn't stand the fact that I couldn't just sit down - I'd have to go and find my cigarettes and, 'Where's my ashtray and my lighter?' I'd always be looking for things... Now I can just sit down."

McGregor is confident that others can also quit smoking since he has been able to and added, "I did it as a second profession; I used to act and smoke."

While success rates vary between sixty to eighty percent from peer reviewed studies on the use of hypnosis to stop smoking, it is very clear from the research that hypnosis is the single most effective method to kick the habit, far higher than everything else, including cold turkey, willpower, nicotine replacement gum, and other methods.

If you are in Taiwan, I do offer hypnosis sessions to help folks in their journey to stop smoking.  I also have audio CDs available.  Just go to my webpages at http://www.briandavidphillips.com and take a look around.

All the best,
Brian

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Brian David Phillips, PhD, CH [brian@briandavidphillips.com]
Certified Hypnotherapist
President, Society of Experiential Trance
Associate Professor, NCCU, Taipei, Taiwan
http://www.BrianDavidPhillips.com

Hypnosis Before Breast Cancer Surgery

This piece is from the

National Cancer Institute and is well worth a looksee.

Summary

Women undergoing surgery for breast cancer who received a brief hypnosis session before entering the operating room required less anesthesia and pain medication during surgery, and reported less pain, nausea, fatigue, and discomfort after surgery than women who did not receive hypnosis. The overall cost of surgery was also significantly less for women undergoing hypnosis.

Source

Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Sept. 5, 2007 (see the journal abstract).
(J Natl Cancer Inst. 2007 Sep 5;99(17):1304-12. Epub 2007 Aug 28)

Background

Surgery for breast cancer, either for diagnosis or treatment, can cause side effects, including pain, nausea, fatigue, and discomfort. While drugs including traditional pain medications can help provide relief, they can have side effects of their own and increase the overall cost of a surgical procedure.

Researchers have become interested in finding approaches other than drugs to help relieve the side effects of surgery. One technique under study is hypnosis, a type of guided relaxation in which participants become more open to suggestion.

The study described below tested whether a brief hypnosis session before breast cancer surgery could reduce the need for anesthesia and pain medication, reduce side effects experienced after surgery, or ease recovery.

The Study

Investigators from Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York City recruited 200 women scheduled to undergo either surgical breast biopsy for diagnosis or lumpectomy for treatment of breast cancer. The investigators randomly assigned participants to either the hypnosis group or a control group. Women scheduled for biopsy were randomized separately from women scheduled for lumpectomy, to evenly distribute the two types of surgery between the groups.

Women in the hypnosis group received a 15-minute hypnosis session within one hour prior to surgery. Psychologists trained in the use of hypnosis in the medical setting used a script including suggestions for relaxation, pleasant thoughts, and reduced experience of pain, nausea, and fatigue, as well as instructions on self-hypnosis for use after surgery. Women in the control group spent an equal amount of time with the psychologists within an hour of surgery to talk and receive emotional support.

All women received the drugs propofol and midazolam (anesthetics), and fentanyl and lidocaine (pain medications) during surgery. They also had access to additional pain medications after surgery, as needed.

Before leaving the hospital, the women reported their experiences of pain intensity, pain unpleasantness, fatigue, nausea, physical discomfort, and emotional upset. The investigators also collected information on the amount of anesthesia and pain medication used during and after surgery, the time spent in surgery, and the cost of the procedures, medications, and staff time.

Because the women knew their group assignment, the investigators took several precautions to reduce potential bias in the results.

  • The same psychologists met with patients in both groups.
  • The hypnosis and control sessions took place in a private room away from the anesthesiologists and surgeons, who did not know the group assignments.
  • Data on anesthesia used was taken from computer records, not recorded by clinical staff.
  • The psychologists did not collect the patient-reported data after surgery. Instead, research assistants who did not know the group assignments asked the women about their perceptions of pain and discomfort.

Results

Women in the hypnosis group required significantly less propofol and lidocaine, the doses of which were adjusted for individual patients as needed during surgery, than women in the control group. Use of fentanyl and midazolam did not differ significantly. Although use of pain medication after surgery did not differ between groups, women in the hypnosis group reported significantly less pain intensity, pain unpleasantness, nausea, fatigue, discomfort, and emotional upset than women in the control group.

Women in the hypnosis group also spent an average of about ten and a half fewer minutes in surgery than women in the control group. The researchers weren't able to say why this was so, only that the finding was statistically significant and resulted in cost savings. On average, the surgical procedures cost about $770 less per patient in the hypnosis group.

Limitations

One limitation of the study was that group assignment could not be hidden from participating women, since they actively participated in either the hypnosis or control sessions. When both participants and researchers in a study are unaware of the final group assignments, this is called a double-blind clinical trial, and is considered the best way to reduce potential bias in collecting results.

However, the researchers took precautions to make sure that the results were collected by staff that did not know which of the women had received hypnosis. The authors believed that their precautions "make it unlikely that either research or clinical staff were aware of study group assignment."

Also, in this study, the hypnosis was performed by specially trained psychologists, who may not be available at every hospital. More research is needed, explained the authors, to test whether other members of the clinical team could be taught to effectively give a similar hypnosis session.

The trial design did not allow for a definitive answer as to why the hypnosis group spent less time in surgery. "It is possible that the shorter procedure times in the hypnosis group were due to the patients being easier to prepare for surgery and to sedate or due to less time having been spent administering medications to patients," write the authors. "However, we did not investigate these mechanisms, and therefore, these possibilities are highly speculative."

Comments

"Overall, our results support the present hypnosis intervention as a brief, clinically effective means for controlling patients' pain, nausea, fatigue, discomfort, and emotional upset following breast cancer surgery beyond traditional pharmacotherapeutic approaches," stated the authors. "The present brief hypnosis intervention appears to be one of the rare clinical interventions that can simultaneously reduce both symptom burden and costs."

"If you can decrease the amount of pain using a technique such as hypnosis, and you can also at the same time reduce the cost involved in treating these patients, I think it's beneficial both ways," said Sonia Jakowlew, Ph.D., program director in the National Cancer Institute's (NCI) Cancer Cell Biology Branch. "It helps the patients and it helps the physicians as well."

Further studies are needed, explained the authors, to measure which specific parts of the hypnosis intervention are most effective, to see whether hypnosis had a long-term effect on the control of pain and discomfort, and to test hypnosis in patients with different types of cancer and from different demographic backgrounds. "Investigators should attempt to replicate [this study] and see if these are consistent findings," agreed Jeffrey White, M.D. director of NCI's Office of Cancer Complementary and Alternative Medicine.

All the best,
Brian

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Brian David Phillips, PhD, CH [brian@briandavidphillips.com]
Certified Hypnotherapist
President, Society of Experiential Trance
Associate Professor, NCCU, Taipei, Taiwan
http://www.BrianDavidPhillips.com

April 12, 2008

Parts Party at Its Best

Steven Barnes (who cowrote a number of good reads, including one of my favorite books) writes about his experience with The Parts Party: Ericksonian Hypnosis at Its Best . . . Barnes trained in Ericksonian hypnosis and NLP years ago but gave it up after he found the language patterns were a bit more effective than he was at that time comfortable with.  Yes, you read that right, Barnes actually stopped practicing the art of Ericksonian NLP because he was getting much more powerful and effective results than he was ready to handle.

In any case, he describes an experience with a young woman who was nervous about performing at a recital who he helped with a little hypnotic magick with wonderful results.

The rest of his blog is a good read too.

All the best,
Brian

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Brian David Phillips, PhD, CH [phillips@nccu.edu.tw]
Certified Hypnotherapist
President, Society of Experiential Trance
Associate Professor, NCCU, Taipei, Taiwan
http://www.BrianDavidPhillips.com

Parts Integration and Psychotherapy

Richard Bolstad goes a little hog wild in his essay Parts Integration and Psychotherpy in which he discusses the concept of parts integration, which he characterizes as an NLP term, and other areas such as a neurological model for understanding the task of therapy, neural networks, Ericksonian NLP, psychodynamic therapies, transpersonal therapy, body therapy, cognitive therapy, and more.

It's an interesting essay, an attempt at sort of a universal model of parts work.

Well worth the read.

All the best,
Brian

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Brian David Phillips, PhD, CH [phillips@nccu.edu.tw]
Certified Hypnotherapist
President, Society of Experiential Trance
Associate Professor, NCCU, Taipei, Taiwan
http://www.BrianDavidPhillips.com

April 08, 2008

TAROT TRANCE . . .
. . . with Brian David Phillips . . .
. . . May 25, Taipei

On May 25, I will be conducting a three-hour workshop on TAROT TRANCE in Taipei (actually on the Keelung side of Shijr, very convenient to the Shijr train station).

The Tarot Trance workshop will teach participants a number of processes for directly accessing the archetypes of the Tarot within the subconsious for introspective mediative learning through a form of experiential trance.

Anyone is welcome.  Participants are encouraged to bring your own decks (three, if you have them) but I will have a few decks on hand for those who do not have their own.

This is a hands-on workshop.  I will demonstrate the processes and then participants will practice with one another so come prepared to learn by doing.

Previous knowledge of Tarot or experiential trance is not required.

One thing I love using Tarot for is introspective meditation and I have developed a number of processes using hypnosis or focused trance where I guide others through the gates of Tarot into a special world of the unconsious where the archetypes of Tarot become very vivid within an experiential hypnosis context that is very worthwhile for the trance partner as they discover hidden lessons for self-benefit.

Within the Tarot Trance workshop, we will explore a number of these experiential trance techniques, including variations of a few that I have previously taught and a number of new ones more recently developed.

  • Single Card Journey Technique
  • Three Card Foundation Spread
  • Five Card Reading
  • Tarot Reading without Cards
  • and much more!

Those familiar with my periodic Hypnocasts know that I have covered a couple Tarot Trance processes before (I've noticed that more professional hypnotists have begun offerring readings based upon these processes).  The Through the Gate into Tarot mp3 hypnocast is still receiving positive comments and feedback.  Of course the video episode with Tarot Trance demonstrations has garnered even more positive comments:

In addition to my full day workshop on advanced techniques of hypnosis, I also taught a seminar on Tarot Trance at Hypnoticon last February.

This upcoming Tarot Trance workshop is an indepth preview of one of the processes that will be taught in my upcoming Metaphysical Hypnosis courses (June 21-22 in Taipei [here], July 26-27 in Los Angeles [here]).  Of course, the Metaphysical Hypnosis course covers a great many more processes, many used by trance wizards and more.

Many of you know that I love Tarot, I collect various decks for their artistic and historical value, have a hobbyist interest in their history, am the list owner of one of the oldest and more respected email lists related to the subject (TarotL), and even occassionally do readings, albeit usually not of a divinatory nature (see the Metaphysical Trance Services section of my webpages at Brian David Phillips Waking Dreams Hypnosis for my various Trance Wizard activities).

The Tarot Trance workshop on May 25 begins at 2:00pm and ends at 5:00pm.

This workshop is part of my work with the Taipei Experiential Trancework Workshop and is open to anyone.  The workshop is presented in English (Chinese interpretation is available - contact Lorraine Phillips here for details).  Because this is a special event presentation we have a special pricing structure for the event.  The workshop fee is NT$1000 (NT$800 for those who register before May 11, sorry, no refunds after May 11).  Contact Lorraine Phillips to register via email at yuklan.law@msa.hinet.net and she will provide you with further details and instructions.

See http://www.briandavidphillips.com/workshops/tarottrance.html for details.

All the best,
Brian

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Brian David Phillips, PhD, CH [phillips@nccu.edu.tw]
Certified Hypnotherapist
President, Society of Experiential Trance
Associate Professor, NCCU, Taipei, Taiwan
http://www.BrianDavidPhillips.com

April 06, 2008

Fairy Dragon Variations . . .
. . . adapting a hypnotic process to your needs

Since my recent post on the Fairy Dragon Experiential Trance Process (The Magick Egg), I have received a few comments and have responded.  Here are the bits and tidbits and morebits . . . most from the discussion thread at the Hypnosis Technique Exchange . . . please realize that some of these comments are taken out of context as I am only repeating the relevant parts here (please read the original thread on the forum for more details) also keep in mind that this conversation with various folks is still very much ongoing (I have removed attributions here so please go to the original forum for the background and to keep folks straight) . . .

The Fairy Dragon is a lovely piece.

Thank you.  It really is one of my favorite bits.  It can be adapted to pretty much any context as well (therpeutic through simple recreation or entertainment - I used it in my last show and afterward I saw the young woman who received the dragon gift was swarmed by audience members eager for her to describe the experience).  By now, there are quite a few folks walking around who have fairy dragons of their own.

While I reccommend The Magic Egg by Frank R. Stockton, I evidently need to note that the process is not based upon the story, rather the story was inspiration for the process pretty much in that it's hypnosis and there's the suggestion of an egg with a magical creature that hatches out of with magical consequences.

I have delievered the Stockton story as a suggestive patter in performance as part of a presentation of hypnosis in Nineteenth Century literature at an academic conference.  I hedged the telling of the tale by using language patterns and focused movement (miming all of the appropriate actions as if the physical items were there - not unlike the lemon taste suggestibility effect) with very good effect.  Folks familiar with some of the suggestive magical presentation styles of folks like Kenton Knepper, Richard Busch, Brother Shadow, Enrique Enriquez, Ford Kross, Orville Meyer, etc. will understand what I was going for.  It turned out wonderfully and right now I am working on more narratives and techniques for a magickal suggestion-based performance.

I work with a diverse clientel.  Soft and gentle will be good in some cases; but with hardhats, red necks, bikers, blue collars, cops, I dare not use "fairy dragon."  I would think of something more macho...like a Tom Thumb (something).

Somehow, I just don't see a little Tom Thumb as eliciting great waves of macho.

I have modified it to a fairy cat for women who are cat crazy. Instead of a dragon, it's a little cat with small wings.  Honestly, I have run the process with more women then men but with the men, the dragon still seems to work fine.  You know, a lot of those red necks have hunting dogs.

Of course, you are correct, adapt any process, metaphor, or idea to suit the trance partner and you're going to be much more effective. There are folks for whom the fairy dragon image is definately inappropriate and for those you need to adapt.

Yes, a tiny dog, maybe, or pit bull !  hee hee    And, ok; a Tom Thumb-size leprechaun, for instance...not THE Tom Thumb.  What I really meant was something that would appeal more to a male of the sort I mentioned.

Uh, a "fairy stripper" perhaps?  Been there, done that.

Seriously, one approach is to simply allow the trance partner's subconscious to decide by saying something along the lines of "this is a very special egg, it's a magickal egg and inside is a fairy animal, which is a small magickal creature that has very special properties. It can be a small version of a mythological creature or a miniature fairy version of a real creature.  Now, I don't know what sort of fairy creature is inside your egg because every egg is different and the creature that emerges from the egg is always just the right sort of creature for the human who bonds to it.  Now, inside your magickal egg, there is a fairy creature and that creature is of just the right sort for you.  Now, this occurs because of a kind of magickal bonding between you and the aether, a kind of magickal airy solution, within the egg.  Even now, at this very moment, you may even notice a slight change in the quality of the air around you or a gentle small sensation of something happening, a charge of positive energy as even now that aether begins to make the appropriate manifestation and transformation of energies that even now call forth the right sort of energies so that when your egg opens, magickally and wonderfully, the creature inside is exactly of the right sort for you . . . now, the fairy creature could be a fairy version of your favorite animal but it could also be a fairy version of something else, something perhaps unexpected but which is just right for you, I don't know, only your unconscious can know as the magickal aether is guided by the energies within you so that this particular egg . . . right now . . . as you notice the weight of the egg shifts and now perhaps feels more solid . . . now the egg holds within it, as it begins to move and perhaps begins to hatch, a fairy creature that is just right and appropriate for you . . . I wonderful what it is . . . as it begins to hatch . . . now."  Or something to that effect.

Um, I think word that she is feeling that some of her clients may have a problem with is not "dragon" but . . . "fairy".

Then perhaps they need a "fairy fairy" to pop out of the egg.   I know he is joking here (I hope) . . . but . . . it is a point for some folks . . . while it's not really likely in the moment and within the context, unfortunately, there really are a very few folks who are so incredibly homophobic that the word fairy really does set 'em off into their delightful little feelings of ickiness.

I don't usually get clients in that range.

However, one does not have to use the word "fairy" . .  magickal, elven, juju, hsiao, or other words are fine.  Even just saying small, miniature, or tiny will work with the magickal aspects implied but not explicitly stated.  Some folks are uncomfortable with terms like magick as well.

Find the phrasing that maximizes your success with that particular trance partner.

Actually...I know where you have gone with this...and it wasn't the fairy reference to being gay; it is the gentle, airy-fairy sound of it.  I just can't imagine a tattooed biker sort stroking a little fairy and carrying on with that upper Chakra, heartfelt > stuff they might call woosy!

I can.  Actually, the idea of that image makes me smile.

You are correct that to most folks that would not be your stereotypical behavior for bikers types.  However, there are definately more than a few who would feel comfortable doing just that . . . in a private session where they aren't in front of their buddies and where they are allowed to just relax and let go of the posturing for a moment or two.  Although, running a process like that might be better following the adaptation I suggested of allowing the client's unconcsious to decide what "fairy creature" manifests and then perhaps with another twist that "the creature brings with it whatever resource your unconscious needs most, magickally drawing from the aether that which is already within you but which requires reminding and perhaps intensification, for our own good, just as some of the great mages, witches, warlocks, or sorcerers of olde had familiars with them, magickal beings of power that improved and focused asnd intensified the powers already dormant within the mage, so does your fairy creature improve, focus, and intensify your own positive energies . . . I don't know which emotion, energy, or attribute your particular creature brings out within you, but your unconscious does, and that's all that is needed as you begin to . . ." or the like.

It seems to me that the technique itself (at least as it appeared to me in BDP's video) invokes an age regression ... and not too many children would have trouble with the fairy dragon ..... and children rarely have tatoos ...

Not an age regression per se, at least not an intended formal one, but an elicitation of childish curiousity and playfulness that is drawn through with vocal tone and mannerism.

Of course you could even do this more overtly ... begin with an age regression to childhood and then introduce the egg.

Hadn't actually thought of it that way, might be interesting to play with.  For the most part, the idea is to create a playful quality within the adult.  BTW, actual kids absolutely love this sort of thing.

This is a delightful piece with lots of room to maneuver.

Thanks.  I am glad you enjoyed it.  I plan on introducing some similar and other new variations in July for the folks in the classes - http://experientialtrance.blogspot.com - albeit, we're going to play with a whole slew of things on those fronts.

All the best,
Brian

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Brian David Phillips, PhD, CH [phillips@nccu.edu.tw]
Certified Hypnotherapist
President, Society of Experiential Trance
Associate Professor, NCCU, Taipei, Taiwan
http://www.BrianDavidPhillips.com

April 03, 2008

Taking Trance Training to the Next Level

A recent post in a forum on Hypnothoughts http://www.hypnothoughts.com asks the question of what does one do when you've already taken basic hypnosis training and even taken advanced courses from the likes of Gil Boyne.  Where do you go if you still want advanced training but don't want to get stuck in a class with basic material being repackaged.  The querant lives in Los Angeles, to put some of my answer in context . . .

I can certainly understand where you are coming from.  Your background has given you a nice solid foundation but it seems true that most courses are focused on the beginner.  The bulk of hypnosis training is indeed in the basic courses which means the folks who already have that background have difficulty finding something new.  The bulk of the courses and workshops I offer on this side of the pond are intended for folks who have previous experience (or, if previous experience is not required, it certainly is encouraged) but when I look around at other courses in the local market, they tend to stay focused at more elementary or entry-level material.  This is because most folks see new certifications as the bottomless pit of students. This is not true - and becomes obvioius more readily in the smaller markets - as eventually the market becomes oversaturated.  Most basic courses are focused on hypnotherapy but not everyone interested in hypnosis wants to be a therapist.  Many organizations only focus on the basic courses so don't have advanced training or specialization options for those who wish to actually move forward in their work.  It is the exceptional individual who does continue to learn more and the particularly exceptional individual who moves on in a way that empowers them to create new processes for others to learn.

Of course, taking a basic course from different sources isn't always a complete waste.  I read a LOT of material and even read books I know to be trash just to mine perspectives and get the odd tidbit that might be useful.  Devour anything and everything.

However, you can only really justify paying someone money to teach you the progressive relaxation or Elman inductions so many times.  You need advanced fodder.  Every once in awhile, an advanced trainer will indeed offer a truly Advanced course but they are few and far between.  The last time I taught my Advanced Techniques course I just made it an open forum so that the students (most of them were professional trainers and some of them were the top trainers in the country) could ask me about any subject and I would play with it and we'd dissect it and get to techniques appropriate to them and it worked beautifully.  My wife has been encouraging me to offer that course again as it's been awhile since I've put it on the schedule.

For your purposes, look for trainings that offer new perspectives, models, or skillsets.  Extra points for new orientations to approaching hypnosis and even more points for courses that encourage you to synthesize multiple models and create your own techniques and processes.  Improvisationa and spontaneity are essential at this point for you, your already well past the basic rote learning, so it's important to find material that you can jump in and play with.

Go to the TED lectures site and similar sites and listen to anything and everything having to do with the brain, the mind, and . . . well, pretty much anything and everything else . . . and as you do so, don't just watch.  Recently one of the TED lectures has been making the rounds of the hypnosis groups . . . as well it should as it's fascinating . . . but most folks just watch it and set it aside, at your stage of development, you want to be asking yourself after you watch something like that (or any and all other materials) is "how can I play with this and use this in my work either as an impetus for a wholly process or as a means to enhance the techniques I already use?"  Then answer that question, preferably withing a spirit of playful curiousity and wonder.

Going to the ACHE convention is probably very worthwhile.  Consider going to other conventions as well.  The HYPNOTICON open community convention probably has some topics you have no previous exposure to and as such might be very worthwhile for you to explore (folks, contact David Fontenot regarding that convention, I am no longer involved with the administration for that convention).

I don't get to the US very often (while I was "just" in Atlanta and LA in February, that was my first trip to the US in seven years and only my third since 1989), but will be in Los Angeles in July and as you live in that area, I have a couple courses coming up which might be appropriate for your needs - the Experiential Hypnosis course explores indepth an orientation to trancework that many folks are unfamiliar with and while some of the skillsets are familiar the orientation and session model changes it (there are a number of processes explored in that course that are not explored anywhere else) - the experiential trance model is one that I have written about for years but have only actually taught formally very rarely, Richard Clark talked me into bringing my full course to the US and so this will be the first time we've taught the full material in the US . . . while the Metaphysical Hypnosis course is definately material most folks are unfamiliar with but presented in a way that makes them useful techniques for more practical contexts beyond their esoteric origins.  See http://experientialtrance.blogspot.com for the information and contact Richard Clark in LA to signup.

Speaking of Richard and his organizations, the LA Hypnosis Network is worth joining to check for local practice groups . . . http://groups.yahoo.com/group/LA-Hypnosis-Network . . . a number of very good people who also happen to be exremely good hypnotists meet up for exchanging techniques and live practice sessions, if you are not a member, check into the California Hypnosis Network (David Snyder is the Director) through that group.

Of course, participating in online forums like Hypnothoughts http://www.hypnothoughts.com and the Hypnosis Technique Exchange http://groups.yahoo.com/group/hypnosistechniqueexchange is very helpful as well . . . particularly as you read posts from folks who are also trainers.  If their information tends to be resonant with you then they might be appropriate as folks whose courses you might wish to take.  If their posts are less resonant with you and lack valuable information then that might also indicate they're less appropriate for you to seek further training or guidance from them.

I hope this has been helpful.

All the best,
Brian

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Brian David Phillips, PhD, CH [phillips@nccu.edu.tw]
Certified Hypnotherapist
President, Society of Experiential Trance
Associate Professor, NCCU, Taipei, Taiwan
http://www.BrianDavidPhillips.com

Fairy Dragon Experiential Trance . . .
. . . The Magick Egg

A recent query via email . . .

Brian, could you explain that Fairie Dragon thing you did at the wrokshop?

That would be the Fairy Dragon Experiential Trance (Magick Egg) process.  I love that process.  I also received some wonderful comments about it both at Hypnoticon and at the Walkabout.

The process itself was the result of spur of the moment on the fly playfulness.  I made that up years ago just in the moment as I was running a playful session and had some time left and had been reading "The Magic Egg" by Frank Stockton, the Nineteenth Century author.  The hypnotist in that story mesmerizes the entire audience and has then watch experientially as he has them believe he has a phoenix egg which hatches.  Well, I'm not so big on phoenixes but love fairy dragons and so I ran with the concept and improvised the first fairy dragon session (folks who have taken my courses know that I absolutely LOVE to play with things and improvise new processes on the fly - using the underlying hypnotic operators/elements/components/juju to leverage response, intensify imaginative involvement, and apply sensory enhancement (yes, the folks who attend the upcoming Experiential Hypnosis and the Metaphysical Hypnosis courses in July will be doing the same thing, and more - see http://experientialtrance.blogspot.com for details and contact Richard Clark soon if you want to take advantage of the deep discount program which won't stay on the table long).  The process idea worked beautifully so I kept at it and played with it and tweaked it.

For more explanation, there is a video of me explaining and then demonstrating the process at http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=6371037115055193199 (although the handheld quality during the explanation does get in the way for a bit):

The manual that I provide for my Walkabout Trance course and the Speed Hypnosis courses have copies of a transcript of that hypnocast.

It's a nice little piece and I get emails from folks from all over the planet who use it in their hypnotherapy sessions as well those who use it for recreation or entertainment (the last show I performed in Taipei included that bit).  The girl I ran the process with on the very first run emailed me years later that she still occassionally lets her dragon out to play with it.

In addition to a number of other experiential processes as well as solid hypnotic skillsets, an updated version of the process within a sensory-enhanced context is included in the Experiential Hypnosis course coming July 14-18 in Los Angeles - see http://experientialtrance.blogspot.com/2008/03/experiential-hypnosis.html for more information and signup now if you want to take advantage of the discount pricing (the Deep Discount of this course and the Metaphysical weekend at major pricing advantage will not be available for much longer).

All the best,
Brian

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SPEED HYPNOSIS
Taipei, Taiwan (12-13 April 2008)
METAPHYSICAL HYPNOSIS
Taipei, Taiwan (21-22 June 2008)
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Los Angeles, California (14-18 July 2008)
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Los Angeles, California (26-27 July 2008)
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Hypnosis Shows, Sessions, Training . . . and MORE!
See http://www.BrianDavidPhillips.com for details!

Brian David Phillips, PhD, CH [phillips@nccu.edu.tw]
Certified Hypnotherapist
President, Society of Experiential Trance
Associate Professor, NCCU, Taipei, Taiwan
http://www.BrianDavidPhillips.com

April 01, 2008

War of the Worlds . . .
. . . media, influence, suggestibility, guillability . . .
. . . and scaring the bejeepers our of ourselves

Radiolab produced a wonderful episode dealing with Orson Welles' infamous Halloween, Oct. 30, 1938 broadcast of a radio adaption of War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells.

This is a fascinating discussion of just HOW Welles and friends were able to create a broadcast event that literally scared the bejeepers out of thousands (over one million of the listeners believed the "hoax" about Martian invaders was true and that the events being portrayed on their radios were genuine.  Also discussed is the WHY listeners believed it.

The Welles hoax has been copied elsewhere, leading to riots, panic, and death.

Some characterize Welles success (accidental be that it may be) as based upon a time when folks were naive.  Not so, it's been repeated and resulted in panic.

The Radiolab commentators note how the emotions elicited by Welles are reminiscent of the emotions Americans felt during the aftermath of 9-11.  Coincidentally, after the aftermath of Welles' performance, one government offical called Welles and the rest of the Mercury Theatre to be "radio terrorists."

Read the background of the Radiolab production here.  Download the Radiolab audio file here.  Read news stories about the original Welles performance aftermath here, a transcript of the broadcast here, and download an audio file of the original Welles performance here (along with others).

Members of the Hypnosis Technique Exchange might enjoy exploring how this broadcast fits into our recent discussion of hypnotic operators.

All the best,
Brian

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SPEED HYPNOSIS
Taipei, Taiwan (12-13 April 2008)
METAPHYSICAL HYPNOSIS
Taipei, Taiwan (21-22 June 2008)
EXPERIENTIAL HYPNOSIS
Los Angeles, California (14-18 July 2008)
METAPHYSICAL HYPNOSIS
Los Angeles, California (26-27 July 2008)
TRANCE-ACTING
Los Angeles, California (2 August 2008)
Hypnosis Shows, Sessions, Training . . . and MORE!
See http://www.BrianDavidPhillips.com for details!

Brian David Phillips, PhD, CH [phillips@nccu.edu.tw]
Certified Hypnotherapist
President, Society of Experiential Trance
Associate Professor, NCCU, Taipei, Taiwan
http://www.BrianDavidPhillips.com