Boosting the Hypnosis Performance with Improved Tonality

September 28, 2009  

The art of hypnosis is a continuously improving skill. Perfecting your skills is vital for this type of work. Try to analyze yourself and understand what you are good at and what you are doing wrong and constantly improve. Learning the elements of hypnotic language is a very important thing. These elements have one big important thing in common and that is the tonality. This will help you unlock the hypnosis powers.

Try to spend time and see what words you are supposed to say. Learn all the techniques and improve. You can also see the study created by Mr. Birdwhistell where he showed the meaning of words when they were broken down by tonality, between other words and also body language.

Choosing your words carefully is very important even if words transmit only 7% of what we are giving away and the rest is non verbal. Studies also show that tonality is actually responsible for 38% of one word’s meaning. Plus, another big 55% comes from body language you use, the nonverbal communications. So, if you focus only on what words to say, you will not be a great hypnotist. You must also be focused on the tonality and body language as well.

Hypnosis is not something you are doing by yourself and it depends only on you. It is something you do with another person. You must be able to know what to do and where to start. Using a different tonality in your speech can alter completely the meaning of your statements. Learn how to play with tonality and with the meaning of the words. Let’s take the word “no” as an example. Try to play with the word no in many ways, or with the word “yes”.

Try to see when “no” implies “yes” and vice versa. And now that we have agreed on the importance of words and tonality we can learn principles of performance. The first principle is “go first” and it means to submerge yourself into the reality you are suggesting to your patient. He will do that after you do it. Try to get them to feel what they should be agreeing on, before doing it. You can do that by story telling. Also, BMIR is important. This is the short name for Behavioral Manifestation of an Internal Representation.

This is what happens when you are thinking of something and your body language responds to that and the breathing and tonality too. Imagine yourself submersed into that situation and try to picture it the best you can. Squeezing the meaning is the second principle we are going to talk about. This means to get the best out of words, to squeeze everything out of the language. This means you will have to use your tone of voice, feelings and ideas as much as you can.

You have to be able to bring life into words in front of your subject. Rhythm is also very important and in time it will come naturally to you.

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