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Hypnosis: A Comprehensive Guide
by Ted James, Lorraine Flores, Jack Schober
This book makes three radically different and important types of hypnosis easy to use in daily hypnosis work, as it examines in detail the techniques of Erickson, Estabrooks and Elman. Hypnosis explores methods that employ Direct Authoritarian and Indirect Permissive approaches, incorporates scripts and inductions for producing deep-trance phenomena. |
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Solution-Oriented Hypnosis:An Ericksonian Approach
by William Hudson O'Hanlon
A fascinating journey as O'Hanlon takes readers through the experience of one of his two-day workshops on Ericksonian hypnosis. Written with humor and understanding in the informal style of a seminar in a manner that anyone could learn from. |
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Conversations with Milton Erickson, Vol 1: Changing Individuals
by Jay Haley, Milton Erickson
If one could ask Milton Erickson anything one wishes about how to change people, the result would be these conversations. The lively discussions are about the basic issues in the clinical field and are essential to the education of any therapist today. These conversations took place over a period of 17 years and were recorded as part of Gregory Bateson's project on communication and therapy. Bateson is involved in these conversations, which were primarily conducted by Jay Haley and John Weakland who were specializing in the study of Erickson's way of changing human beings. |
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Conversations with Milton Erickson, Vol 2: Changing Couples
by Jay Haley, Milton Erickson
This series of conversations sets the stage for strategic family therapy. Erickson is in classic form here, the wit, the insight, and the process of change are all laid out quite well here. What these series do is lay out the way Erickson worked, and the guiding principles that he used in therapy. |
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Conversations with Milton H. Erickson, Vol 3: Changing Children and Families
by Jay Haley, Milton Erickson
In this volume, these conversations describe Erickson's lively ways of doing therapy with children and presents his basic ideas about children and families. |
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The February Man : Evolving Consciousness and Identity in Hypnotherapy
by Milton Erickson, Ernest Lawrence Rossi
Transcripts and commentaries connected with a hypnotherapeutic case from a phase in Erickson's career when his ideas were being developed. The report documents the use of multiple levels of consciousness and meaning to access and reframe traumatic memories that were the source of a young woman's severe phobias and depression. |
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101 Healing Metaphors:Using Metaphors in Therapy
by George W. Burns
Dr. Burns has created a treasure trove of charming and thought provoking metaphors .The book contains 101 stories grouped by desired therapeutic outcome and highlighting each story's applicability to a variety of presenting problems. Offers talking points for therapists such as specific insights, outcomes, or skills illustrated in the stories. |
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Therapeutic Metaphors for Children and the Child Within
by Joyce C. Mills, Richard J. Crowley, Margaret O'Ryan
The book presents a method of applying Erikson's metaphoric interpersonal technique for child therapy. Incorporates theory, technique, and examples to give the reader a full sense of the 'second generation' Eriksonian method of therapy with children of all ages.
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Symbol, Story and Ceremony:Using Metaphor in Individual and Family Therapy
by Gene Combs, Jill Freedman
Inspired by the work of Milton H. Erickson and Gregory Bateson, Combs and Freedman, both practicing therapists, acquaint therapists with the various uses of metaphor in psychotherapy, provide instruction in how to construct metaphors, and give examples of a wide variety of metaphors. |
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Hypnotic Language
by John Burton, Bobby Bodenhamer
We each shape our own reality. Perceptions and cognitive processes unique to each of us determine our individual perspective on the world, and we present to ourselves what we are programmed to see. But what if we could change our perceptions and cognitive processes and consequently our reality?This remarkable book examines the structures of the hypnotic sentence, and the very cognitive dimensions that allow hypnotic language to be effective in changing our minds. |