Healing and Hypnotherapy Volume 5, Issue -2, 1 August 2020 | Page 9

Or psychological complexity: “Rex’s emotional issues run deep.” (And therefore will require prolonged and expensive therapy!) Or profundity: “Man, that episode of Keeping Up with the Kardashians was really deep!” (Okay, pseudo-profundity!) But I’ll tell you who also likes to use the ‘deep’ metaphor. So who else likes using the metaphor ‘deep’? Hypnotherapists. I use metaphor all the time. And, whether you realise it or not, so do you! Every word we speak is a representation of some parallel reality, not the thing itself. And our use of the word ‘deep’ to refer to hypnotic depth is the perfect example. So what do hypnotherapists mean by a ‘deep trance’ or indeed ‘hypnotic deepeners’? We use the word ‘deep’ to describe a state with a greater degree of perceptual abstraction, and ‘light’ for a lesser degree of dissociation (though if we wanted to use a proper counterpoint we should probably use the word ‘shallow’.) Recently during a teleconference Q&A, someone asked me: I’m a newly qualified hypnotherapist. During our training and in my reading, there is a lot of emphasis on inductions, deepening, etc., which you don’t seem to bother with in any formal style (which I like). Any comment on this for me please. Thanks. Here’s what I replied. (I’m sorry about the Hitler reference! But as we who use hypnosis know, dramatic examples can focus the attention more energetically.) My thoughts on hypnotic deepeners Hi, and thanks for your question. Well, I could say I don’t use formal hypnotic deepeners for the same reason that Adolf Hitler didn’t when he hypnotised the masses during the Nuremberg rallies. He didn’t need to use formal hypnotic deepeners, because he knew how to do it... naturalistically. (Hypnosis can be used for ill as well as good of course.)