Autosuggestion

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Hypnosis
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Marques of Puységur
James Esdaile
John Elliotson
Jean-Martin Charcot
Ambroise-Auguste Liébeault
Hippolyte Bernheim
Pierre Janet
Sigmund Freud
Émile Coué
Morton Prince
Clark L. Hull
Andrew Salter
Theodore R. Sarbin
Milton H. Erickson
Ernest Hilgard
Martin Theodore Orne
André Muller Weitzenhoffer
Nicholas Spanos

Related topics

Hypnotic susceptibility
Suggestion
Post-hypnotic suggestion
Age regression in therapy
Neuro-linguistic programming
Hypnotherapy in the UK

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Autosuggestion is a psychological technique that was developed by apothecary Émile Coué from the late 1800s to the early 1900s.[clarification needed] In 1932, German psychiatrist Johannes Schultz developed and published autogenic training, a relaxation technique influenced by the Coué method. Unlike autosuggestion, autogenic training has been proven in clinical trials and, along with other relaxation techniques, such as progressive relaxation and meditation, has replaced autosuggestion in therapy. The co-author of Schultz's multi-volume tome on autogenic training, Wolfgang Luthe, was a firm believer that autogenic training was a powerful approach that should only be offered to patients by qualified professionals.

Origins

Coué graduated with a degree in pharmacology in 1876 and worked as an apothecary at Troyes from 1882 to 1910. When he began working at Troyes, he quickly discovered what later came to be known as the placebo effect. He became known for reassuring his clients by praising each remedy's efficiency and leaving a small positive notice with each given medication. Coué noticed that in certain cases he could improve the efficiency of a given medicine by praising its effectiveness to the patient. He realized that those patients to whom he praised the medicine had a noticeable improvement when compared to patients to whom he said nothing. This began Coué’s exploration of the use of hypnosis and the power of the imagination. In 1901, he began to study under Ambroise-Auguste Liébeault and Hippolyte Bernheim, two leading exponents of hypnosis. After completing his tutelage, he began relying on hypnosis to treat patients.

The Birth of Autosuggestion

Coué discovered that subjects could not be hypnotized against their will and, more importantly, that the effects of hypnosis waned when the subjects regained consciousness.[citation needed] He thus eventually developed the Coué method, and in 1920, released his first book, "Self-Mastery Through Conscious Autosuggestion in England, with the United States release coming two years later. He described the Coué method as

... an instrument that we possess at birth, and with which we play unconsciously all our life, as a baby plays with its rattle. It is however a dangerous instrument; it can wound or even kill you if you handle it imprudently and unconsciously. It can on the contrary save your life when you know how to employ it consciously.[1]

Coué still believed in the effects of medication, but he also believed that our mental state was able to affect and even amplify the action of these medications. He observed that his patients who used his mantra-like conscious suggestion, "Every day, in every way, I'm getting better and better", (French: Tous les jours à tous points de vue je vais de mieux en mieux), replacing their "thought of illness" with a new "thought of cure," could augment their medication plan. According to Coué, repeating words or images enough times causes the "subconscious" to absorb them. In contrast to Coué's opinion, Shultz, believed autogenic training was a method for influencing one's autonomic nervous system, not the so called "subconscious." In addition, the general consensus among psychologists and psychiatrists is that the subconscious does not exist; that there is only a conscious and unconscious.

The Coué Method

The Coué method centers on a routine repetition of this particular expression according to a specified ritual, in a given physical state, and in the absence of any sort of allied mental imagery, at the beginning and at the end of each day. Unlike a common held belief that a strong conscious will constitutes the best path to success, Coué maintained that curing some of our troubles requires a change in our subconscious/unconscious thought, which can only be achieved by using our imagination. Although stressing that he was not primarily a healer but one who taught others to heal themselves, Coué claimed to have effected organic changes through autosuggestion.[2]

Underlying principles

Coué thus developed a method which relied on the belief that any idea exclusively occupying the mind turns into reality, although only to the extent that the idea is within the realms of possibility. For instance, a person without hands will not be able to make them grow back. However, if a person firmly believes that his or her asthma is disappearing, then this may actually happen, as far as the body is actually able to physically overcome or control the illness. On the other hand, thinking negatively about the illness (ex. "I am not feeling well") will encourage both mind and body to accept this thought.

Willpower

Coué observed that the main obstacle to autosuggestion was willpower. For the method to work, the patient must refrain from making any independent judgement, meaning that he must not let his will impose its own views on positive ideas. Everything must thus be done to ensure that the positive "autosuggestive" idea is consciously accepted by the patient, otherwise one may end up getting the opposite effect of what is desired.[3]

Coué noted that young children always applied his method perfectly, as they lacked the willpower that remained present among adults. When he instructed a child by saying "clasp your hands and you can't open them", the child would thus immediately follow.

Self-conflict

Coué believed a patient's problems were likely to increase if his willpower and imagination (or mental ideas) opposed each other, something Coué would refer to as "self-conflict".[citation needed] As the conflict intensifies, so does the problem i.e., the more the patient tries to sleep, the more he becomes awake. The patient must thus abandon his willpower and instead put more focus on his imaginative power in order to fully succeed with his cure.

Effectiveness

With his method, which Coué once called his "trick",[4] patients of all sorts would come to visit him. The list of ailments included kidney problems, diabetes, memory loss, stammering, weakness, atrophy and all sorts of physical and mental illnesses.[citation needed] According to one of his journal entries (1916), he apparently cured a patient of a uterus prolapse as well as "violent pains in the head" (migraine).[5]

Evidence

The only evidence supporting autosuggestion's effectiveness is anecdotal. However, the ability to fight sicknesses and infections, as well as many other things, shows that if it does work, it may be a form of a placebo. As there is no evidence that you can harness the subconscious/unconscious to affect your body, and if it is indeed a placebo, it will most likely have no effect.[6]

According to autosuggestion practitioners, it is capable of explaining the placebo phenomenon. If patients are told the placebo will have a certain effect, it does. This is the result of believing it will work, which is autosuggestion. In the early 1900s, Emile Coue used autosuggestion to cure patients; his work is evidence to support the existence of autosuggestion and the power of the human mind.[7]

Clinical trials

Although there are many studies proving autogenic training's effectiveness,[8][9] there have not been any studies of autosuggestion's effectiveness. It is possible that the popularity of autogenic training and other relaxation techniques with clinical studies proving their effectiveness, the fact that autogenic training is not an example of the placebo effect, along with the outdated idea of harnessing the subconscious/unconscious, has led to a lack of interest in doing clinical trials.

Works

  • How to Practice Suggestion and Autosuggestion (Read)
  • My Method: Including American Impressions
  • Self Mastery Through Conscious Autosuggestion (1920, 1922)

References and external links

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See also

es:Autosugestión fr:Autohypnose he:אוטוסוגסטיה lt:Savitaiga ml:സ്വയം പ്രത്യയനം nl:Autosuggestie pl:Autosugestia sr:Аутосугестија fi:Itsesuggestio sv:Självsuggestion

vi:Tự kỷ ám thị
  1. Coué, E: "Self Mastery Through Conscious Autosuggestion", page 19, 1922
  2. "Émile Coué." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2008. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 26 Dec. 2008 [1]
  3. Brooks, C.H., "The practice of autosuggestion", p62, 1922
  4. Coué, E: "How to Practice Suggestion and Autosuggestion" page 45
  5. Wallechinsky , David. "Emile Coue (1857-1926) French Healer." The People's Almanac. 2nd Ed. 1975.
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'Module:Citation/CS1/Suggestions' not found. Full article
  7. http://www.psychomaster.com/books/emile/11.php
  8. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'Module:Citation/CS1/Suggestions' not found.
  9. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'Module:Citation/CS1/Suggestions' not found.