Accessing Hypnosis States With Revivification
February 20, 2011
If you want to change your life for the better, you should know that using Conversational Hypnosis can help you do it by accessing certain mind states, which will trigger the needed changes. Getting into a pure and clean mind state is what you need in order to get the process started.
A big part of the process is represented by the Access State Principal. Depending on how clear your mind is, the trigger’s benefits can vary. When someone tries to access some emotions, they are actually trying to access memories, which correlate with emotions they’re trying to bring back.
When you ask someone to relax, they will usually think back, of all the times when they felt relaxed. That’s why it’s important that you access the right mind state. You should also make sure the state you reach is a pure one. If the listener isn’t relaxed enough, you will see conflicts while trying to place the triggers and suggestions.
If anxiety and relaxation are both found in the listener, the end result will be the same in the future, when you use the trigger again. This can end up negating the changes you’re trying to accomplish.
Learning to use the revivification process also means that you should change a person’s mood before you set in the emotional trigger.
Revivification basically means that it allows you to get an old experience back to life, for the individual that is having it.
The person that listens should be able to fully experience that memory if they want to get a pure mind state. A number of skills should be developed and used if you want a real experience for the subject.
The first method used to induce this state is called the revivification process. It takes place by asking revivification questions, which help the subject find the right direction.
As you practice hypnosis, you will ask questions of your subjects, questions that will take you into their world and their experiences. As you ask your subjects questions, they will experience them all over again in order to answer them. They will remember how they felt when that experience took place and they will re-live it.
There is a principle in revivification which is called going first. It should be applied if you want everything to go smoother. It means that you should tell your own story to the subject, getting yourself into a similar state of mind as the subject needs to get into. So, if the subject needs to be happy, tell them a story of something that made you happy. When you do that, your body communicates to the subject what emotion you’re feeling, though it’s done at an unconscious level, through gestures, movements and body language. The subject picks up on your emotions and is influenced to feel it as well. Once the story is told and the subject gets into the right state of mind, you ask them to tell you a story of a period when they were feeling that emotion.
The second thing you need to do when you’re doing revivification is to listen carefully to what the subject is saying when they answer your questions, after which you repeat it so they can hear it. Pay close attention to the way they said it and pronounce it the same way. The emphasis and tone should be the same.
This step is important because the subjects will use trigger words, which are important. Using the same tone when you repeat what they said helps them access experiences and memories.
As you keep doing this, you will see that you are creating some sort of feedback loop. The loop will start with the story you’re telling, then asking them to mention a story where they experience the same type of emotion, listening to the information they’re providing, repeating the answers they give back so they can hear it and finally, start the loop again.
With every completed loop, the subjects go deeper into the mind state that they are trying to access.
The revivification process helps the subjects experience their memories fully, through the stories and the language they’re using. This type of hypnosis is very powerful and the end result is a clean and pure mind state.

