Stealth Hypnosis Tactics

Stealth Tactics in Hypnosis: What Are Stealth Tactics

Conversational Hypnosis is an art of communicating suggestions to other while they are in a state of trance.  The suggestions you are giving to audience should be ones that will help them to live happier, healthier and more fulfilling lives.  The question becomes how to get the very suggestions in to a persons mind when they reject them.

Everyone has what we refer to as a critical filter.  This is the mechanism inside your mind that analyzes and criticizes information coming in from outside sources.  The critical filters decide what is safe to allow inside our minds.  They are also responsible for creating resistance for hypnotists.  They look at all the messages being sent to the mind and either reject or accept them.

There are times when a person’s critical filter has become overactive and will start to reject even the good and wise suggestions coming from anyone.  A good example of this is when a friend, someone you would normally trust, gives you a great piece of advice and you just outright reject and discard it with no thought.  The critical filter has come to a point where it is simply not allowing any information in.

Stealth Tactics are the tool hypnotists and you will use to get past the critical factor.  They were created in a way to assist in helping to influence people in a positive way that still bypasses the critical factor inside the mind.  There are other ways to get past the critical factor although they are largely damaging and can cause emotional and mental hardship which should not be your goal in hypnosis.  In fact quite the opposite.

Stealth Tactics are a secretive way of getting past the critical factor that doesn’t resort to bullying.  These concepts are based on a set of principals that will allow you to use people’s strengths against them in ways that will help them to improve their lives in the ways they want.  True they are a bit sneaky, as you will see, but all intentions with Stealth Tactics are truly good intentions.  It is simply an alternative way to get inside the mind so you can begin your work as a hypnotist.

There are five Stealth Tactics that we will give a brief explanation of here and then dive further into in future articles.

The first Stealth Tactic is the Law of Reversed Effect.  This principal is very powerful like most of the Stealth Tactics.  In the Law of Reversed Effect the concept is that the harder you try to do something the more likely it is you will fail.

This happens mainly because a person that is consciously trying to do something that should be taking place unconsciously.  The effect of the conscious mind interfering with the fluid movements of the unconscious mind is confusion and failure.

The reason the Law of Reversed Effect works for Conversational Hypnotists is that when put into action it causes a person to fail at something, you cause a person to fail at a requested task.  That failure will cause the person to step away from their resistance and allow your suggestions in.

The second Stealth Tactic is to Redirect Resistance.  Redirecting Resistance is the art of giving a person something they can resist you over so they feel validated and powerful in their abilities to control their own mind.

Now the beauty here is that while they are busy resisting you over an idea that you are really not concerned with you have the opportunity to give your suggestions to them.  Many times they will be so busy consciously resisting the one aspect that the important suggestion is never even noticed going in.

Refocusing Attention is the third Stealth Tactic and it can be used right along with Redirecting Resistance.  We will cover that aspect in a future article.  The importance here is that you have a brief summary of Refocusing Attention.

Refocusing Attention is when you subtly place the suggestion you want to get across in conversation and then distract or refocus the listener’s attention elsewhere.   This is a simple and easy process once you get the hang of it but can be very powerful when put to full use.

The fourth Stealth Tactic is Implication.  Implication is the power of how to use body language, facial expressions and tone of voice in order to imply a thing.  This is considered a Stealth Tactic because when you imply something to someone it usually bypasses the critical filter simply because we assume implications are true.

People don’t typically stop to analyze them because this is a lot of hard work and effort to put in to an implied idea.  This tactic is used everyday in the natural ways we speak and can be a great tool in hypnosis.

Presuppositions are the fifth Stealth Tactic we will eventually cover in depth.  As for a quick introduction, presuppositions are simply linguistic assumptions.  These are the things that are automatically assumed to be true based solely on the language we use to convey them.

This may sound complicated at first but once you get into the habit of using presuppositions they are very easy to use and you in fact use them everyday.  Presuppositions have a lot in common with implications simply because they are assumptions.  Again this Stealth Tactic is very powerful and can be like all the Stealth Tactics layered with the others to make a more powerful affect than when used alone.

Finally the sixth Stealth Tactic is called Binds and Double Binds.  Binds and Double Binds are a strategic way of phrasing a statement or question that gives the illustration of a choice but that choice really does not exist.  It was thought in the 1970’s that binds and double binds were the cause of schizophrenic symptoms resulting from childhood.

A bind or double bind is a sneaky way of redirecting the resistance of a person because they simply do not have a choice in the matter.  You sound as if you are asking a question or giving a choice but you are really getting a much bigger question answered in the process.

A famous Marx Brothers line that is a double bind is when a man asks the hotel manager, “So are you still beating your wife, yes or no?”  The bind is in that no matter how he answered the question he would be admitting guilt of beating his wife.

Binds and double binds are a very powerful way to bypass the critical factor as are all the other Stealth Tactics.  You will learn much more about these and how to use them as you progress through the next five articles.  Until then the main concept you need to know is that these are principals that can be combined with one another and the other language skills you have been learning in order to really know how to begin to communicate hypnotically.

For more information please visit http://www.conversational-hypnosis.com

 


Using Confusion To Hypnotize

The Language of Confusion in Hypnosis

Now normally we don’t like to try to confuse people.  When done purposefully it can seem in a way cruel.  However, confusion related to Conversational Hypnosis can be a fascinating and powerful tool as the master hypnotist Milton Erickson has shown us throughout history.

Milton Erickson was a great hypnotist and one of the pieces of his profession he was most admired for was his ability to get the most stubborn and resistant people into a state of hypnosis.  His secret weapon in this was simply to confuse them.  Confuse them to the point that the critical factor within them is too busy trying to get unconfused and make sense of it all.  This allowed him to simply slip past the critical factor and induce a hypnotic trance in those who were very resistant.

So let’s take a closer look at Mr. Erickson’s secret weapon of confusion. How can confusion be used to create a positive outcome, after all that is the point of hypnosis in the first place.

Confusion in Conversational Hypnosis is very powerful. The language of confusion with in the context of hypnosis will allow you to do things that would normally not be allowed due to the strict surveillance of the critical factor.

Your ability to confuse people will assist you in sneaking by the critical factor to insert your suggestions into the unconscious itself.  When you master the technique of confusion you will be able to bypass the critical factor easily and efficiently.

So how exactly do you get past the critical factor with the language of confusion?  Confusion will simply keep the critical factor busy trying to sort out all the different messages that it has received; it gets all tied up, giving you the opportunity to send in the suggestion with little to no detection by the critical factor.  The unconscious at this point is like an open door just waiting for you to walk into.

The goal here is to get enough confusion going that the critical factor is completely overwhelmed and preoccupied.  The first way to really concentrate the language of confusion is to layer it in, much like you learned to do with ambiguous messages.  When you use this layering effect is sure to include double meanings as this is what really gets the confusion going.

Layering the double meanings on top of one another, each time using a different context for the word and doing it repeatedly will be a difficult task for the critical factor to sort out.

Let’s give an example in which you use the words ‘left’ and ‘right’ in your conversation.  Just these two words, left and right, with all their different meanings and in all different contexts, one right after the other.  As the conversation proceeds the meanings will start to get confused.  Your listener’s critical factor will want you to slow down so it can analyze it all, however the information from you will just keep coming.

The quick smooth relay of all the different meanings of the same words used in different contexts will be very overwhelming to the critical factor.  The confusion becomes so much that the critical factor will just give up at some point and let down its guard.

This language of confusion can be used anytime you come across a word with multiple meanings.  Keep in mind that the word and its meanings will need to fit into the context of what you are trying to get across to your listener.  It seems that the need for adequate context would limit your abilities here, it does to a point but you will be surprised at how often this layering can still be done.

Another confusion pattern in called the double negation.  It is otherwise known as double negatives.  The way the double negation confusion pattern works is to use two negatives in the same statement, you can use more but you should start with two and work up from there.

In this technique the mind has difficulty because it does not like to deal with negatives.  Negatives are confusing because if you really stop to think about it, a negative does not exist.  Dealing with something that is non existent is more difficult than dealing with things you can see, hear, and touch.

When your mind hears a statement about something you don’t have there is a process to go through in order to understand that statement.  First your mind recognizes the subject, (the thing you don’t have) then it has to take it away realize what you are left with.

It is important to understand how hard the mind is working here, mainly because most people never think about it.  Speaking with one negative comes so easily that unless you read this you may never know how hard your mind is working when it hears more than one negative in a statement.

So how double negations work is you make a statement with two or more negatives in it.  For example, “I don’t have a piece of gum that you can’t chew.” After you have made a statement to a person with two or more negatives in it you will simply attach the suggestion to the end of it.  “I don’t have a piece of gum that you can’t chew anymore than you can relax right now.”  Notice how you focused on figuring out whether or not I actually have a piece of gum for you?

Statements with two or three negatives are generally confusing enough to the mind that the critical factor will too be busy dealing what you do an don’t have that the suggestion you attach to it will slip in unnoticed.

For more information please visit http://www.conversational-hypnosis.com