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HypnoAnalysis April, 1984
Richard A. Blumenthal, M.S.
*The author acknowledges with gratitude the critical comments made by
Dr. Daniel L. Araoz and Dr. Albert Ellis in the preparation of this article.
ABSTRACT
The effective use of suggestion is important to all who practice clinical
hypnosis. In this article, the therapeutic goals and philosophical foundations
of RET are combined with the principles of cognitive suggestion, producing
a hybrid therapeutic approach, Rational Suggestion Therapy. Three phases
comprising a total treatment are explained, while exploring some of the
historic and current theories of suggestion and rational thought. Pertinent
concepts are drawn most notably from the works of Ellis, founder of Rational-Emotive
Therapy, Baudouin, practitioner and author at the original New Nancy School:
and Araoz, modern proponent of the New Hypnosis. Other references and
extrapolations attempt to join these independently effective approaches
into a coherent mode and encourage the use of the subconscious in psychotherapy.
INTRODUCTION
In recent years the rational ideas of Albert Ellis and others of the Institute
for Rational Emotive Therapy have served as a definition of mental health
for a large segment of American counseling and psychotherapy (Heesacker,
Heppner and Rogers, 1982; Smith, 1982). Since its inception, two ongoing
concerns of RET have been the speed and effectiveness of treatment, and
many varied techniques are employed in the pursuit of therapeutic efficiency.
Perhaps this willingness to expand its horizons combined with the adaptability
of RET's theoretical foundations are responsible for its continued success
and wide use.
Much of the effectiveness of RET depends on the completion of homework
assignments designed to act as relearning devices (Walen, DiGuiseppe and
Wessler, 1980). To be learned are ideas deemed appropriate substitutes
for irrational ideas. It is the aim of RET to enable the client to have
at his/her disposal ideas which comprise an appropriate philosophy of
life - an elegant solution to psychological difficulties (Ellis and Harper,
1975). If the client eventually is able to experience spontaneously an
appropriate emotion or behavior without conscious deliberation, it seems
proof of a breakthrough in treatment. The rational philosophy serves as
preparation for situations as yet unencountered and may be considered
as a consciously arrived-at body of autosuggestion. It has been theorized
that autosuggestion, rational or not, forms a subconscious predisposition
to specific emotional and behavioral reactions (Araoz, 1981). We seem
to be in a continual process of suggestion-reaction-suggestion. Autogenic
Therapy (Luthe and Schultz, 1969), coping statements (Meichenbaum, 1977),
rational disputation (Walen, DiGuiseppe and Wessler, 1980) and other self-talk
techniques are effective methods of conscious deliberate attempts to intervene
in unhealthy suggestion cycles. These may be supplemented with subconscious
therapy, the rational suggestion.
CONDITIONAL SPONTANEOUS AUTOSUGGESTION
Of the work at the New Nancy School in the early part of the twentieth
century, one of the greatest contributions was the recognition of conditional
spontaneous autosuggestion (Baudouin, 1922). Emile Coue reported numerous
cases in which he brought remarkable relief after one or two sessions
to individuals who suffered physical or emotional symptoms, experienced
in association with activating conditions. Each time the conditions were
experienced the same symptoms surfaced. Coue theorized that perhaps the
first time the event took place the reaction may have been due to a genuine
physical disorder. Thereafter, the expectation of the symptom alone was
strong enough to repeat the first reaction spontaneously. This expectation
Charles Baudouin (1922) called conditional spontaneous autosuggestion.
An idea learned from prior experience had been employed without conscious
deliberation when triggered by key conditions similar to the original
experience. With each subsequent experience, the autosuggestion became
more and more a part, of the event, and soon an entrenched habit was formed.
By using a counter-suggestion to replace the original autosuggestion,
thus forming a new and purposeful conditional autosuggestion, Coue showed
the power of autosuggestion as it reaches out from the subconscious (Baudouin,
1922).
It would appear that the principle of conditional spontaneous autosuggestion
is at work to a more or less degree in every problematic situation which
could be the focus of an RET treatment. Even under previously not experienced
conditions, autosuggestion will arise from actual or imagined similarities
to prior conditions. Reintegration learning theory (Hulse, Deese and Egeth,
1975) shows that a part of either the stimulus (conditions) or the response
(learned autosuggestion) is enough to elicit the entire learned stimulus/response
pattern. For this reason, ideas translated into autosuggestions may have
extremely wide applications. This is especially true of ideas concerning
the self.
It is desirable to attempt to alter unprofitable autosuggestion with rationally
developed autosuggestion in advance of anticipated conditions. This technique
may be used for the immense benefit of the individual whose current ideas
are working against his/her own best interest.
The aim of Rational Suggestion Therapy (RST) is to master autosuggestion
by using the therapy arena to enable the individual to control the source
of autosuggestion. The conscious self becomes the source. A rational decision
is made by the client to seek a change in ideas. We may call this decision
making process, the first of three phases in RST, the theoretical phase
of treatment. In the light of RET, the client with the aid of the therapist
imagines and agrees to more appropriate ideas. The practical phase is
next, offering the new ideas to the subconscious. This is followed by
the spontaneous phase which occurs outside the treatment arena, during
in vivo experience, The spontaneous phase is the measure of success of
the treatment because it is in this phase that the client either experiences
the desired spontaneous autosuggestion or not.
THE THEORETICAL PHASE
RST is a cognitive technique making a basic assumption: that suggestions
be aimed at ideas rather than behavior or emotion. The idea is the genesis
of emotional or behavioral expression (Ellis, 1973). RST does not block
expression. It attempts to improve the ruler of expression, ideas. If
the symptom alone is blocked without a fundamental improvement in the
causal idea, that idea will exert influence on another area (Ellis, 1973),
seeking to establish a new association of conditions and behaviors, as
real and imagined alternatives become available to the individual.
Because the suggestion is a rational idea (Ellis, 1973), its use may have
positive results in more than one set of conditions, wherever the idea
may he applied. The subconscious finds a means for the in vivo realization
of the suggestion, even if the specific means has not been suggested.
This is known as the law of subconscious teleology (Baudouin, 1922), and
explains the movement of ideas implied by one experience and applied to
a different one. For example, an idea assimilated in childhood may be
the cause for adult behavior because of the symbolic yet logical nature
of subconscious thought. No matter the dissimilarities of the material
conditions, if autosuggestion is at work, the subconscious will find a
way to make the idea suit the event symbolically and achieve the suggested
outcome.
It is therefore imperative that suggestions deal in ideas, which may be
usefully applied to many possible situations. If an idea is truly to work
for the person, it will work in the most extreme applications, and in
conjunction with other rational ideas. Rational suggestions agree with
and support one another, creating a rational philosophy.
In RST, the therapist's function is not to trace the original conditions
of the autosuggestion, simply identify the autosuggestion and, if need
be, enable the client to replace it. It is also important to note that
RST involves an exchange of ideas, not only the elimination of an inappropriate
one. Without a new idea to take the place of the unwanted one, there is
no telling where then new autosuggestion will come from and the results
will probably be lacking.
THE PRACTICAL PHASE
Once the client and the therapist agree upon the new ideas, the practical
phase of RST begins. Conscious opposition to spontaneous autosuggestion
is difficult. There appears to be a direct conflict between the conscious
and the subconscious. Baudouin (1922) called this the law of reversed
effort, observed time and again at the New Nancy School. Attempting to
force the acceptance of a new idea against the wishes of the subconscious
has the reversed effect of obsessively concentrating the mind on the undesired
idea, frustrating the individual's willful efforts.
If we are to resolve this conflict between conscious and subconscious,
the subconscious must be appealed to in order for it to conform to the
will of the rational conscious. It is postulated that induction into
a suggestible state of consciousness is actually focusing the mind's attention
on the creative, imaginative part of the brain, the right hemisphere (Araoz
and Bleck, 1982). When right hemisphere focus is attained and the individual
is dissociated from the surrounding reality and engrossed in an inner
reality (Araoz, 1982), the subconscious mind is accessible. This outcropping
of the subconscious (Baudouin, 1922) becomes an alternate, though no less
cognitive, state of consciousness (Fromm, 1977). During the outcropping,
suggestibility is heightened and the subconscious may be addressed directly
and purposefully.
SELF-PERMISSION
While the conscious mind has difficulty willing away-unwanted thoughts,
it is with relative case that most people can be shown the difference
between rational and irrational ideas (Ellis and Harper, 1975). It is
the willingness to accept a new idea as desirable, not necessarily the
self-discipline to consciously practice it (though this of course is also
welcome) that is necessary in RST. If the client accepts the idea to the
point of wishing to possess it, earnest permission by the client to be
placed in a suggestible state for the expressed purpose of learning and
employing the new idea, will enable the therapy to be effective (Araoz,
1982). The degree to which permission has been granted seems to be in
direct proportion to the satisfaction of the conditions contained in Daniel
Araoz's (1982) TEAM acronym (trust, expectations, attitudes and motivation),
required for hetero-hypnosis. In this sense, there is no suggestion, only
autosuggestion, as Coue believed (Baudouin, 1922). Permission may be used
as the start of any ritual model for hypnotic induction, and is implicit
in the subtle New Hypnosis induction techniques (Araoz, 1982). TEAMwork
is sought throughout the three phases of RST.
THE LANGUAGE OF THE SUBCONSCIOUS
Using the language of the client's subconscious will help in the creation
of effective induction and suggestion. Observation of the client's idiosyncratic
communication patterns is a means for determining what language will reach
the subconscious mind. Clues are found in the nature of the images exhibited.
Araoz (1983) points out the necessity for the therapist to set aside personal
preferences for imagery and concentrate on the client's inclinations.
Words, figures of speech, analogies and other communication forms which
reveal subconscious representations belonging to the sensory apparatus
of sight, taste, smell, hearing and kinetic sensations, including skin
contact, may be observed and used by the therapist in "connecting"
with the client (Araoz, 1983). This client-centeredness is the essence
of the New Hypnosis (Araoz, 1982), which does not recognize any individual
as unhypnotizable. The New Hypnosis paradigm need not be limited to hypnotic
induction, and may serve well for wording the actual suggestion, using
terms and phrases that will connect with the individual.
THE SPONTANEOUS PHASE
Following the observation of in vivo experience, the client reports on
the results of therapy. If no change has occurred, it could mean that
the application of the suggestion is too limited and the applicable conditions
did not arise. Since nearly every day presents us with some form of adversity
or dissonance, it would seem that the troubled individual would find reason
to employ newly acquired rational ideas in a short time. This does not
mean that the suggestion had not been absorbed, it is merely a case of
suggestion a longue echeance, in which the suggestion is subconsciously
stored until the moment the suggested activating conditions are met (Bernheim,
1884). Poor results could also mean that the selected idea was not the
true cause of the symptom, or was couched in obtuse language. In any case,
the client's observations become the new presenting problem for a return
to the Theoretical Phase. If the required suggestion remains the same,
reinforcement is needed. Tapes and autosuggestion training are helpful.
CONCLUSION
Otto Rank (1936) in his challenge to the practice of psychoanalytic therapy,
addressed the psychoanalysts' fear of suggestion, an "undesirable"
they accused Rank of fostering by his utilization of the present in Will
Therapy (Rank, 1936). Rank exclaimed: "One does not escape suggestion,
however, because one refrains from consciousness of it or denies it completely.
However passive the analyst may keep himself otherwise, in the last analysis
his interpretations are suggestions, for he suggests to the patient a
definite ideology or attitude...If I could heal by means of suggestion,
I should do so without being ashamed of it" (Rank, 1936, pp. 110-111).
Richard A. Blumenthal, M.S.
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