What is Hypnosis

What is Hypnosis

Brian K Proulx, CCHt

Understanding Hypnosis: A Natural State of Transformation

 What Is Hypnosis?

When you hear the word “hypnosis,” you may envision a mysterious, shadowy figure from television or movies—a stage hypnotist performing feats of influence on “willing” subjects, using a swinging watch or hand motions to induce a zombie-like trance, seemingly controlling their every action. Perhaps you recall black-and-white Dracula films with Bela Lugosi, where his hypnotic gaze paralyzes victims into submission. From quacking like a duck to brainwashing, myths and misconceptions abound.  These Hollywood and pop culture depictions are far from reality, they obscure the true nature of hypnosis.

Defining Hypnosis

Hypnosis is a natural state of awareness with numerous therapeutic benefits, such as supporting weight loss, quitting smoking, or overcoming negative behaviors. It is an altered state of consciousness where communication with the subconscious mind is enhanced, and the critical factor of the conscious mind—a filter that analyzes information—is relaxed, allowing selective thinking, or focused concentration, to predominate. This state facilitates a stronger connection between the conscious and subconscious minds, enabling transformative change.

Nature and Mechanisms of Hypnosis

Hypnosis is a universal human capacity, accessible under the right circumstances. It connects you with your subconscious mind’s problem-solving intelligence. The critical factor, part of the conscious mind, operates during waking hours, analyzing information passing between the conscious and subconscious. In hypnosis, this filter softens, enhancing responsiveness to suggestions. Selective thinking involves concentrating on a focal point, such as a hypnotist’s voice, a pendulum, or a phrase like “Look into my left eye,” initiating the shift from external reality to your inner world.

Definitions from Key Figures

Several pioneers have shaped modern hypnotherapy’s understanding of hypnosis:

  • Gil Boyne: Defined hypnosis as a natural state with distinct characteristics:
    • An extraordinary quality of relaxation.
    • An emotionalized desire to act on suggestions, provided they align with the individual’s belief system(subconscious conditioning).
    • Self-regulation, normalizing the central nervous system (subconsciously controlled).
    • Heightened sensitivity to sensory stimuli (sight, hearing, taste, touch, smell) and perceptions (hyper-acuity, time, space, body relation).
    • Softening of the critical factor, reducing psychic defenses. From Transforming Therapy: A New Approach to Hypnotherapy (Boyne, 1989) [1]. (Bold terms reflect expanded explanations.)
  • Milton H. Erickson: Described hypnosis as “a state of intensified attention and receptiveness and an increased responsiveness to an idea or to a set of ideas” [2].
  • Dave Elman: Defined it as “a state of mind in which the critical faculty of the human is bypassed, and selective thinking established” [3].
  • Encyclopedia Britannica: Calls hypnosis “a unique, complex form of unusual but normal behavior… primarily a special psychological state with certain physiological attributes, resembling sleep only superficially and marked by a functioning of the individual at a level of awareness other than the ordinary conscious state” [4].
  • Dictionary Definition: “Hypnosis: the induction of a state of consciousness in which a person apparently loses the power of voluntary action and is highly responsive to suggestion or direction… typically to recover suppressed memories or modify behavior” [5]. Derived from the Greek Hypnos (sleep), though hypnosis is not sleep but an active, focused state.

Hypnosis Occurs in Everyday Life

Hypnosis is so natural that we experience it frequently, often without awareness. Many of us slip in and out of hypnosis multiple times daily. For instance, have you ever driven on the freeway, absorbed in a favorite song? The music evokes positive memories of a person or event, causing you to “zone out” and miss your exit, possibly driving over the speed limit. Initially, you managed multiple mental inputs: monitoring speed, navigating, and staying in your lane. Then, the song captured your attention, acting as a mental anchor linked to a person or place, with the person or situation as the psychological trigger, capable of eliciting positive emotions or negative ones like anger, sadness, or fear [6]. Your conscious awareness narrowed to a single point—the song—while your subconscious mind, drawing on skills from driver’s education or repeated driving, took over. This sustained focus induced a hypnotic state.

Similarly, you enter hypnosis when engrossed in a TV show or movie, as physical reality fades and you focus on the characters or events. Daydreaming illustrates this: concentrating on a pleasant thought to escape tedious work tasks, you lose awareness of your surroundings, entering an altered state of consciousness. This can occur while reading a book, listening to music, or in the liminal moments before waking or falling asleep. These natural trance states demonstrate how focused attention induces hypnosis, a phenomenon leveraged in therapy.

Your conscious awareness is active when awake—while eating, working, or enjoying a shot of Captain Morgan, unless excessive alcohol renders you medically “unconscious” (anesthetized or unresponsive). In contrast, the subconscious mind is always active, like the Energizer bunny, tirelessly storing every experience and lesson, accessible 24/7, even during sleep.

All Hypnosis Is Self-Hypnosis

You enter hypnosis through your conscious intention. Even in a hypnotherapy session, by following the hypnotherapist’s guidance, you actively induce your own hypnotic state. The hypnotherapist facilitates the experience, guiding you. To enter hypnosis, you must be willing. You remain fully aware, hearing the therapist’s voice and ambient sounds, and can move any part of your body, though minor sensations, like an itch, may go unnoticed due to your focus on the therapist’s words. You can exit hypnosis at any time and leave the session if you choose.

Anyone can experience hypnosis, though experiences vary. Colleagues describe it diversely, from deep relaxation to an out-of-body experience, yet all fall under hypnosis. Hypnotherapists and stage hypnotists use tools like pendulums, hand waves, or phrases such as “Look into my left eye” to help you concentrate on a single point, initiating the shift from external reality to your inner world.

When I refer to actions or processes as “unconscious,” I am not using the medical term (anesthetized state) nor solely the psychological term (repressed memories, accessible via hypnosis) [2]. Instead, I encompass automatic reactions—like catching a glass, dodging a ball, or swerving to avoid a car, guided by subconscious defense mechanisms shaped by life experiences—and the broader subconscious mind, often synonymous with the “subconscious mind,” a reservoir of learned responses and experiences. In hypnotherapy, anchors and triggers, derived from Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP), are used to physically anchor positive emotions for therapeutic change [3].

Hypnosis enhances the subconscious mind’s responsiveness to positive suggestions, enabling you to achieve goals, quit smoking, lose weight, or transform negative beliefs and behaviors. The benefits are numerous, offering a powerful tool for personal transformation. Change your mind, change your life—this is the power of hypnosis, a power you hold, activated by your willingness to engage. It is the power of the subconscious mind. Gil Boyne, whose Transforming Therapy is taught at schools founded by his students, recognized these natural trance states, repressed memories, and the always-active subconscious as opportunities to reprogram patterns, using techniques like age regression, parts therapy, and emotional anchoring to resolve challenges such as phobias, habits, or suppressed traumas [1].

References

  1. Boyne, G. (1989). Transforming Therapy: A New Approach to Hypnotherapy. Westwood Publishing. Describes Boyne’s methods, including subconscious reprogramming.
  2. Kihlstrom, J. F. (1987). The cognitive unconscious. Science, 237(4821), 1445–1452. Discusses repressed memories and hypnosis.
  3. Bandler, R., & Grinder, J. (1975). The Structure of Magic. Science and Behavior Books. Introduces NLP anchoring (note: efficacy debated).
  4. Encyclopedia Britannica (2023). Hypnosis entry. Defines hypnosis as a psychological state.
  5. Oxford English Dictionary (2023). Hypnosis definition. Describes hypnosis as a state of heightened suggestibility.
  6. Dilts, R. (1990). Changing Belief Systems with NLP. Meta Publications. Discusses anchors and triggers in NLP, adapted in hypnotherapy.

Theory of the Mind

Theory of the Mind

The Mind

The mind is the intricate seat of consciousness, encompassing thoughts, emotions, memories, and perceptions that shape our reality. It operates through the interplay of conscious and subconscious processes, driving decision-making, creativity, and behavior. The mind adapts through learning and experience, yet remains partially mysterious, blending logic with intuition. Its capacity for self-reflection and change fuels personal growth, resilience, and the pursuit of meaning.

The Conscious Mind

The conscious mind is the active, aware part of our mental processes, responsible for rational thinking, decision-making, and immediate awareness of our surroundings. It handles tasks like problem-solving, planning, and processing sensory input in real time. Operating in the present moment, it filters information and directs attention, but its capacity is limited, relying on the subconscious for deeper patterns and habits. The conscious mind shapes our intentional actions and self-awareness.

The Subconscious Mind

The subconscious mind operates beneath conscious awareness, storing memories, habits, and beliefs that shape our automatic behaviors and emotional responses. It processes information rapidly, influencing thoughts and actions without deliberate effort, such as driving a familiar route or triggering instinctive reactions. The subconscious holds deep-seated patterns, often formed early in life, and can be reprogrammed through techniques like hypnotherapy to foster healthier behaviors. It quietly guides much of our daily experienc

The Superconscious Mind

 This is VERY Subjective!

The superconscious mind is a concept in spiritual and psychological traditions, referring to a higher state of consciousness that transcends the ordinary conscious and subconscious mind. It is believed to be a source of profound wisdom, intuition, and universal knowledge, connecting individuals to a greater cosmic or divine intelligence. Often associated with peak experiences, deep meditation, or mystical insights, the superconscious mind is thought to inspire creativity, spiritual awakening, and a sense of unity with all existence. Accessing it typically requires practices like mindfulness, meditation, or self-reflection to quiet the ego and tap into this elevated awareness.

Why Hypnotherapy?

Why Hypnotherapy?

We often believe that changing our external reality will shift our internal reality. It seems logical, as if that’s how things work: “When I make more money, I’ll feel stable,” or “When I finally lose the weight, I’ll feel happy and worthwhile!” The list goes on. But what if the reverse is true? (Hint: It is!) We can only achieve what we believe is possible, and we can only sustain positive changes that align with our beliefs about ourselves. Hypnotherapy is the key to designing the life you want because it provides the tools to identify limiting beliefs and replace them with new ones that support your goals and dreams.

Event → Belief → Emotion → Behavior → Result

Let’s explore the structure of the mind and how it relates to your goals. The Simmerman-Sierra Results Model illustrates how specific events in our lives shape particular beliefs, which drive emotions, fuel behavior, and ultimately produce the results we see in life. That’s the good news. The challenge is that this belief blueprint resides in the subconscious, making it not only unknown but also largely inaccessible to our conscious mind.

The subconscious is the creative intelligence that runs the body. This is necessary so we don’t have to consciously digest food, manage heartbeats and breathing, or remember to blink, not to mention keeping up with cellular repair or healing injuries. Although these bodily functions operate autonomously, whether we’re aware of them or not, we can direct our awareness to improve our physical or emotional states through methods like hypnosis.

Not having to attend to the myriad functions of the physical body frees us to choose any point of consciousness at any given time. For physical survival, the subconscious mind also sorts, labels, categorizes, and stores memories of past events and our interpretations of them. We quickly learn from early experiences what seems safe or unsafe, and we formulate beliefs to ensure continued survival. These beliefs aim to keep us within the safety zone of the familiar, even if they ultimately cause pain through outcomes like overeating or undereating.

In the hypnotherapy process, we identify and introduce a new idea into the subconscious mind—the “behind-the-scenes” driver of emotions—to foster new behaviors that support your goals.

How do we access the subconscious mind? Specific methods can bypass the gatekeeper to change or replace limiting beliefs. These include non-ordinary, altered states of consciousness, such as meditation or hypnosis, which quiet the mind. We can achieve these states through profound physical or mental relaxation. Bypassing the gatekeeper allows us to choose and adopt more useful or expansive beliefs that support our goals and dreams from deep within.

The gatekeeper is the chatterbox we hear that interrupts our ability to embrace radically new ideas. As we calm this analytical mind, you become a sponge for the ideas you choose—ideas you know will benefit you.

The conscious mind, the more familiar part, analyzes, reasons, and uses logic and willpower. You consciously choose a goal, but you may find you lack the motivation to carry out the behaviors needed to achieve it. That’s because the subconscious mind holds old, limiting beliefs—not conscious to you—that block your progress.

Together, you and I will saturate your mind with positive ideas to support the desired behaviors, enabling you to effortlessly achieve the positive outcomes of the Results Model.

The subconscious is the doer. Have you ever experienced emotions you didn’t want? Can you think or wish them away? No. Emotions are thoughts traveling through the body, rooted in the subconscious and shaped by old beliefs. We aim to saturate your mind with new ideas to generate emotional adrenaline for change, as belief drives emotion, emotion fuels behavior, and behavior determines results.

New Belief = New Emotion = New Behavior = New Results!

Hypnosis is a natural yet altered state of mind in which the critical gatekeeper is relaxed, and selective thinking is established. These focused thoughts are then accepted into the subconscious, where they influence behavior—not through willpower, but through an emotionalized desire to adopt new behaviors.

The subconscious mind is the creative, problem-solving intelligence deep within you, independent of logic or analytical thinking. During hypnosis, new thoughts or ideas often emerge, so don’t be surprised if you gain brand-new insights or strategies through the process. Plus, the experience simply feels good.

What is Hypnosis

What is Hypnosis?

What Is Hypnosis? A Natural State

When you hear “hypnosis,” you might picture a creepy movie villain waving a pocket watch, making someone act like a robot or even rob a bank. Maybe you think of old Dracula films where a spooky stare controls people. Those are just Hollywood myths! Hypnosis is nothing like that. Let’s clear up what it really is in a way that’s easy to understand.

Hypnosis Explained

Hypnosis is a natural way your mind works, almost like daydreaming, that can help with things like losing weight, quitting smoking, or breaking bad habits. It’s a state where you’re super focused, and your everyday thinking takes a backseat. This lets your deeper mind—the part that holds your habits and memories—listen better to helpful ideas. It’s like opening a direct line to the part of you that can make big changes.

How Does Hypnosis Work?

Everyone can slip into hypnosis because it’s a natural ability. It’s like when you’re so caught up in a great song or a movie that the world around you fades away. Your mind zooms in on one thing, and your deeper mind takes over. In hypnosis, this focus helps you relax and be more open to positive suggestions, like “I can feel confident” or “I don’t need that cigarette.”

Here’s what some experts say about it:

  • Gil Boyne, a famous hypnotist, said hypnosis feels like deep relaxation where you’re open to ideas that fit with what you believe. It calms your body and sharpens your senses, letting your mind work in a special way.
  • Milton Erickson, another expert, called it a state of super-focused attention where you’re really open to new ideas.
  • Dave Elman said it’s when your usual overthinking pauses, and you focus on one thing at a time.
  • Encyclopedia Britannica describes it as a unique state, not sleep, but a different kind of awareness that’s still normal.
  • Dictionaries say hypnosis is when you’re so focused you might follow suggestions to change habits or recall forgotten memories.

Hypnosis Happens Every Day

You’ve probably been in a hypnotic state without realizing it! Ever drive down the highway, get lost in a song, and miss your exit? The song pulls you in, and your mind drifts to memories or feelings. Your deeper mind handles the driving while you’re zoned out. That’s hypnosis! It also happens when you’re glued to a TV show, lost in a book, or daydreaming at work. These moments show how your mind can focus so much that everything else fades away.

You’re Always in Control

Here’s the big thing: hypnosis is something you do. Even with a hypnotist guiding you, you’re the one choosing to relax and focus. It’s called self-hypnosis because you decide to go into that state. You’re not asleep or unaware—you can hear everything, move if you want, and stop anytime. It’s like choosing to dive into a good story and letting yourself get lost in it.

What It Feels Like

Hypnosis feels different for everyone. Some people say it’s like being super relaxed, others feel like they’re floating or super focused. A hypnotist might use tools like a calm voice, a swinging object, or a phrase like “focus here” to help you zero in. It’s all about helping your mind shift from the outside world to your inner thoughts.

Why Hypnosis Is Awesome

Hypnosis taps into your deeper mind, which is like a storage room for everything you’ve ever learned or felt. It’s always working, even when you’re asleep. By focusing in hypnosis, you can talk to that part of you and suggest positive changes, like feeling braver, eating healthier, or letting go of fears. It’s a tool to reprogram old habits or beliefs that hold you back.

For example, a hypnotist might help you “anchor” a good feeling—like confidence—to a simple action, like touching your thumb and finger together. Later, you can use that anchor to feel confident whenever you need it. It’s like a mental shortcut to your best self.

The Bottom Line

Hypnosis isn’t magic or mind control—it’s a natural state you already experience, like when you’re lost in thought or a great song. With a hypnotist’s help, you can use it to make positive changes in your life. It’s all about focusing your mind and letting your deeper self shine. Change your thoughts, change your life—that’s the power of hypnosis, and it’s a power you already have!

The Conscious Mind

The Conscious Mind

Brian K Proulx, CCHt

The Conscious Mind: A Hypnotherapist’s Perspective

The Conscious Mind

The conscious mind is aware while an individual is awake. Most people operate day-by-day in life and associate with as who you are. Your character, your personality. How the world sees us.

I once read a good analogy that the conscious mind is like the captain of a ship standing on the bridge giving orders to the crew in the engine room located in the lower deck. The crew in the engine room carries out the orders of the captain. The captain (conscious) is in charge, but it is the crew (subconscious) that guides the ship (You). The ship’s ability to operate depends on how the crew has been trained over the years. How they have been “conditioned” to function under any situation [1].

The conscious mind is conceptual, calculating, and interpreting data. It is the part of your mind that brings up the “would have, could have, should have” and the part that is questioning and second-guessing. It is the monkey mind we constantly “hear” when we try to close our eyes to go to sleep or meditate [2].

It is the Look, Listen, and Learn part of our mind! It learns how to fix a washing machine by reading a manual or watching a YouTube video.

The conscious mind can only focus attention on a few tasks. Short term memory. Research indicates that the conscious mind can be aware of five to nine pieces of information. Anymore it overloads. Now where did I put my keys? [3]

Analysis/Choice

The conscious mind mentally goes through an analysis and steps to eliminate limited alternatives based on needs, goals, or a problem, i.e. deciding to quit your current job with higher pay and no benefits vice accepting a lower paying job with benefits.

It makes choices, the option of possibilities. Making a decision when faced with two or more alternatives, for example, choosing between a red or blue car.

It accepts or rejects information; i. e. a job offer with better pay.

It judges, analyzes, and criticizes people, places or things. “That girls dress is ugly; I would not be caught in my worst nightmare in it! She must be trailer park trash!”

The ability to decide is the most important aspect of our conscious mind, freedom of choice! It is what makes us human! [4]

Inductive and deductive reasoning.

Inductive reasoning takes specific information and makes a broader generalization that is considered probable, allowing the fact that the conclusion may not be accurate. For example, “My dog is small, and his fur is brown, so all small dog’s fur is brown” [5].

Deductive reasoning is a type of reasoning, which goes from general to specific. Deductive reasoning is based on logic, and if the logic is true, then the reasoning will be valid. All dogs have two ears; my shelties are dogs, and so shelties have two ears [5].

Logic

It is the ‘Thinking” aspect of our conscious mind. Logic is correct reasoning from wrong reasoning. Analyze a problem. It is evaluating arguments and explanations from several sources of information or data to reach a conclusion based on the knowledge an individual possesses, as accurately as possible. If X > 20 and 20 > 2, then X > 2 [6].

Logic is not common sense.

Will/Volition

Volition or will is the cognitive process by which an individual decides on and commits to a particular course of action. Being able to do a thing at any given moment. When a person makes up his or her mind to do a thing. It is where our willpower stems from to accomplish a task, or run that extra mile [7].

Five Senses

It is aware of the five senses, sight, taste, smell, touch, and hearing.

It is aware of the present moment. It is aware of the current environment outside as well as thoughts that are present on the inside. It is aware of any physical activity, walking, breathing, muscle movement, etc. The touch of two connecting hands, with your wife, girlfriend, boyfriend in the park. Listening to the sounds of the birds make, feeling the breeze upon your skin. Seeing children play in the background amongst freshly cut grass. The smell of the freshly cut grass thru your nostrils, Got to love the smell of freshly cut grass [8].

The Critical Factor

The critical factor is part of the conscious mind. It is the gatekeeper and filtering mechanism of the conscious mind. The doorway to the subconscious.

It examines, interprets, and filters new ideas and information. Its function is to compare the new ideas and information to what is stored in the subconscious mind from past experiences and interpretations. If the ideas or information match it allows them into the subconscious mind, if the new ideas or information does not match or conflict with past programming, it rejects them back into the conscious mind for further review and analysis. If the idea or information, match earlier past programming, then it is accepted by the subconscious, reinforcing old ideas or information [9].

The critical factor is not present in young children. As a young child, the door is wide open to the subconscious mind. From the age of seven to 11 the critical factor begins to “solidify” and by the age of 15 the door is closed. Any belief in one’s self, idea or information that is accepted or decided to be true, positive or negative, is imprinted and programmed into the subconscious as fact. This is not permanent and can be amended or changed [10].

Note: Bypassing the critical factor is the key to real change. Hypnosis lifts the “veil” of the critical factor; so new ideas and information can be placed into the subconscious mind [11].

References

  1. Elman, D. (1964). Hypnotherapy. Westwood Publishing.
  2. Kabat-Zinn, J. (1990). Full Catastrophe Living. Delacorte Press.
  3. Miller, G. A. (1956). The magical number seven, plus or minus two. Psychological Review, 63(2), 81–97.
  4. Frankl, V. E. (1946). Man’s Search for Meaning. Beacon Press.
  5. Copi, I. M., & Cohen, C. (2005). Introduction to Logic. Pearson Education.
  6. Baron, J. (2008). Thinking and Deciding. Cambridge University Press.
  7. Baumeister, R. F., & Tierney, J. (2011). Willpower: Rediscovering the Greatest Human Strength. Penguin Books.
  8. Goldstein, E. B. (2010). Sensation and Perception. Wadsworth Cengage Learning.
  9. Elman, D. (1964). Hypnotherapy. Westwood Publishing.
  10. Piaget, J. (1970). The Child’s Conception of the World. Routledge & Kegan Paul.
  11. Boyne, G. (1989). Transforming Therapy: A New Approach to Hypnotherapy. Westwood Publishing.

To Learn about the subconscious mind <Click Here>.