Magazine
for Hypnosis and Hypnotherapy
Hypnosis and R.E.T
By Maurice Kouguell
Ph.D, BCETS
Regardless of their
theoretical orientations, therapists are in agreement that certain things
have to happen as part of therapy. The client is helped to alter his
perception of himself or others or of situations and is led to evaluate
new ways of coping. This is achieved by exploring his feelings, ideation's
or experiences. All those are usually related to his current fears and
difficulties in adjustment.
In the process of releasing feelings and getting rid of anger and fears,
one may experience abreactions, catharsis or desensitizations. And this
is so for any technique used ranging from traditional approaches in
psychotherapy to NLP procedures to Time Line Therapy, etc.
Through relaxation,
pain and recurrent fears are reduced if not eliminated, thus giving
the person greater control over his own life. Thus, the goal here is
to modify the symptom in order to allow for better adjustment.
Practicing new ways of thinking and feeling and imaging, especially
under hypnosis, allows the client to apply his new learned gains in
every day situations. Albert Ellis is the founder of Rational Emotive
Therapy (RET). RET is a behaviorally oriented cognitive therapy. Practitioners
of RET, including Ellis, incorporate hypnosis as an adjunct to their
techniques.
Hypnosis attempts to modify the client's basic maladaptive thought processes
which then create maladaptive emotional responses. Behavior is presumed
to be based on the thinking process. Ellis’ position is that a well
functioning individual behaves in a rational way and is aware or the
rational reality surrounding him. He explains that people learn unrealistic
beliefs and because of certain expectations, are led to behave irrationally.
As a result we feel unnecessarily that we are worthless failures. As
an illustration, a person may think “I should be able to win everyone's
love and approval” or “I should be thoroughly adequate and competent
in everything that I do.” Of course, the aforementioned are
unrealistic expectations and self imposed demands which would inevitably
lead to self defeating and ineffective behavior in the real world. The
outcome is then an emotional response stemming from irrational thinking
and is by no means a reflection of reality. Ellis submits a list of
irrational beliefs which he feels are at the core of most psychological
maladjustment's. The following are some illustrations of irrational
beliefs:
- One should be
loved by everyone for everything one does.
- Certain acts
are awful or wicked and. people who perform them should be severely
punished.
- It is horrible
when things are not the way we would like them to be.
- Human misery
is produced by external causes or outside events rather than by the
view one takes of these conditions.
- If someone may
be dangerous or fearsome, one should be terribly upset by It.
- It is better
to avoid life problems if possible than to face them.
- One needs something
stronger or more powerful than oneself to rely on.
- One should be
thorough, competent, intelligent and achieving in all respects.
- Something once
affected one's life; it will indefinitely affect it every time.
- One must have
certain and perfect self control.
- Happiness can
be achieved by inertia and inaction.
- We have virtually
no control over our emotions and cannot help having certain feelings.
He goes on to list
and describe others.
The object of the Rational Emotive Therapy is to modify the individual
belief system and self evaluation, especially addressing oneself to the
irrational 'shoulds, oughts and musts', that are preventing a better sense
of self worth and of life fulfillment. Ellis is the creator of the word
“musturbation,” pointing out the
negative effects of all the self imposed 'musts'. The overall approach
of RET is to dispute or refute a person’s false beliefs through strong
rational confrontations. The therapist actually teaches the client to
identify and dispute the beliefs that were producing the negative emotional
consequences.
Therapists recognize that much of human suffering is unnecessary, for
frequently the suffering is based on false interpretations, interpretations
about one's own experiences which create anger, frustration, anxiety and
depression. Much of is unnecessary. It might be of use to the practitioner
interested in cognitive behavior or RET to be aware of the usual 15 styles
of distorted thinking:
- Filtering: This
is a process where a person takes the negative detail and magnifies
it while filtering out all positive aspects of a situation.For example,
“1 could have enjoyed the convert except that it started late.”
- Polarized Thinking:
Things are black or white; good or bad. You're either perfect or a
failure, there is no middle ground. For instance, stating that you
are either with me, for me, or against me.
- Over generalizations:
One arrives at a general conclusion based on a single incident or
flimsy evidence. Something has happened once, therefore it is bound
to happen again. For example, a statement such as “Every since my
car mechanic did a lousy job, I've never trusted any other car mechanic.”
- Mind Reading:
Without people telling you more than they have, you know what they
are feeling and why they behave and act the way they do and you are
able to guess how people are feeling towards you. For instance, “He
is always nice to me but I know that he does not like me.”
- Catastrophizing:
You expect a disaster to happen. You notice or anticipate a problem
and are always concerned with the “what ifs.” For instance, what if
tragedy strikes again; or.
what if it happens to me. For example: “We haven't seen each other
for two hours, what if the relationship is falling apart.”
- Personalization:
When you think that everything people do or say, is necessarily related
to you or that they react to you. You constantly compare yourself
to others and always evaluate yourself to find out how you fare. For
instance: “Quite a few people here seem smarter than I am.”
- Control Fallacies:
This is when one feels controlled by outside sources, thus feeling
helpless and a total victim of fate and circumstances. Here the fallacy
is internal control holds you responsible for the pain and unhappiness
of everybody around you. A typical statement here would be: “You can't
buy the system.”
- Fallacy of Fairness:
Illustrated in an example where you may feel resentful because you
may have your own standards of what is fair and yet you may not be
in agreement with others.
- Blaming: Refusing
to take responsibility and blaming others for your pain or also, blaming
yourself for every problem. For instance: “It is your fault that we
are always late.”
- Shoulds: Here
the individual has a list of rigid rules, expecting how other people
should behave, and if anyone is to break the rules, one becomes angry
and feels guilty when breaking his own rules. For instance: “You should
never ask people how much they make.”
- Emotional Reasoning:
Believing that what you feel must be true automatically. If you feel
stupid or boring, then you must be stupid or boring. For instance:
stating “I feel depressed, life must be depressing.”
- Fallacy of Change:
You expect that other people will change to suit you if you just keep
pressuring them or cajole them enough. In this case you feel a need
to change people because your hopes for happiness depend entirely
on them. For instance: if you had invested more money 20 years ago,
you would have had a much better life.
- Global Labeling:
This one generalizes one or more qualities into a negative overall
judgment. For instance: a statement such as “he was a born loser and
I could tell that from the very first day that he showed up here.”
- Being Right:
You are continuously proving that your opinions and actions are correct.
Being wrong is unthinkable and you will go to any lengths to demonstrate
that you are right. For instance: “I
don't care what you think, I am going to do it again exactly the same
again because I know I am right.”
- Heaven's Reward
Fallacy: You expect all your sacrifice and self-denial to be rewarded
as though it is essential that they should be. You feel very bitter,
angry, overly disappointed when the reward does not come. For instance:
“I worked so hard and put in so much effort and look what it got me.”
How do we recognize
distorted thinking?
There are basically two sings to alert us to a presence of distorted thinking:
- 1. The presence
of painful emotions, such as feeling nervous, angry, depressed, annoyed
at oneself, and re-experiencing those feelings over and over again.
- The constant
ongoing conflicts with people about whom you care. Becoming aware
of how the person justifies one's conflicts.
Albert Ellis stated
in his book 'Reason and Emotion in Psychotherapy', that “all hypnosis
is the result of the self talk.” Ellis, as well as other writers, such
as Artaoz, stated in his works on hypnosis and sex therapy, that “neurotic
suffering is caused by an irrational or negative type of self hypnosis.”
Maladaptive emotions and self-defeating behavior stem from uncritical
acceptance of one's negative self talk.”
Being aware of the
above and adding one's expertise in hypnosis can have huge value for
the client. For instance, when the client comes to you with his self
talk, such as: “I failed, therefore I am a nothing.” This thought can
be a clue for the hypnotherapist to replace those negative self suggestions
with positive constructive and rational suggestions. For instance: “I
can still adapt myself in spite of a failure.” The person coming for
smoke ending stating that “I am too weak to give up smoking, I’ll always
be a smoker,” is giving himself self-suggestions which are self-defeating.
Such suggestions under hypnosis could be replaced by: "I can stop smoking.
It might be hard at times, but I can do it."
Being aware of all the irrational sets of beliefs and being able to
transform those into rational and positive suggestions will be effective.
Adding to it self-hypnosis training, one can transform all the aforementioned
distorted thinking into manageable and satisfactory thoughts which can
lead to a healthy adjustment.
Application of RET
involves ABC's.
A - representing the activating event which could be either internal
or external in the client's life.
B stands for the belief system of the client which could be constructive
views of the world that could be either rigid or flexible. When these
beliefs are rigid they are referred to as irrational beliefs
and are expressed in the form of absolute shoulds, musts, have to, got
to, an so on. When the client adheres to those invalid premises, the
conclusion will be irrational.
C represents the emotional and behavioral consequences of the
client's belief about A. It follows then that C's are
the results of rigid, irrational beliefs and negative A's and
will be disturbed so are referred to as inappropriate negative consequences.
C's that follow from flexible rational beliefs about negative's
would be non-disturbed and are termed appropriate negative consequences.
The inappropriate negative emotions are inappropriate for any one or
more the following reasons:
- They could engage
the person self defeating behavior.
- They may lead
to the experience of a great deal of psychological pain and discomfort.
- They could prevent
the client from carrying out behavior necessary to reach goals.
Although RET uses logical
methods of helping people change their basic irrational beliefs, it employs
many cognitive methods of therapy.
Among them are included: relaxation methods, reading, creative writing,
as well as hypnosis.
It uses imaging techniques including positive imagery where people imagine
themselves succeeding rather than failing; and negative imagery, as in
Rational Emotive Imagery, where clients imagine some of the worst things
that could happen to them and make themselves appropriately sorry and
regretful instead of panicking.
RET is not only theory and practice of psychotherapy: it goes beyond that
into a philosophical approach which holds that human disturbances are
self-created and that people are capable of undoing their own disturbances.
What better tool to be added to that approach than hypnosis.
Maurice Kouguell
Ph.D., BCETS. (Click here for Biography)
Director: Brookside Center for Counseling and Hypnotherapy
997 Clinton Place, Baldwin New York 11510
phone/fax 516 868-2233 e-mail contact@brooksidecenter.com
Brookside Center Web Site http://www.brooksidecenter.com/
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