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Ethically toughing clients in hypnosis revealed. ✔ Get Cal Banyan's hypnosis certification course schedule and info on https://www.banyanhypnosiscareertrain... ✔ Get Cal's Professional Hypnosis & Hypnotherapy Certification Course Home Study. Learn more here, https://www.calbanyan.com/training-ma... ✔ Call our office: 469-969-2176 or 800-965-3390 to order, enroll or as a question. ✔ GET THE FREE HOW TO HYPNOTIZE VIDEO FROM CAL BANYAN, https://www.hypnosis.org/freehypnosis... Learn how to hypnotize in the 15 minute "Quick Start Training"! CAL'S CERTIFICATION COURSE FOR CONDUCTING HYPNOSIS SESSIONS ONLINE (MENTIONED IN THIS VIDEO) https://www.calbanyan.com/training-ma... 📍 Alright. A question just came in. What do you think about touching your clients when they're in hypnosis? Oh my, well, it depends. In this video, I wanna talk about the good, the bad, the ugly, about touching clients, when it's appropriate, when it's not, and what to do if you can, and what to do if you can't. Hmm. All right. So some of the questions we might ask are, is it worth the risk of touching a hypnotized client? Hmm. I wonder what risk there might be. Under what circumstances do I recommend that you do touch your clients? Uh, this one. How do you conduct high quality sessions if you can't even touch your clients? All right. Here we go. Alright, let's get right into it. Is it okay to touch your clients? Well, it depends. Let me give you a little bit of background. Back in the day when I was a psychotherapist and going through my psychotherapist training, we were taught there's no reason to be touching your clients. Now, of course, that's not hypnosis, that's psychotherapy. But it just wasn't required, wasn't needed. And uh, there was a lot of dangers in doing it, such as dangers of, uh, clients getting attached or misreading what you're doing or even feeling like, like you've. Taken liberties that you shouldn't. So what happened was after I got into the profession, I started watching videos of the masters taking training from some of the masters. And I noticed some of the best hypnotists at the time were touching masters like Gil Boyne and others. And they did a lot of touching and I think their, their background was in stage hypnosis where they kind of went for immediate. Dependable and maybe sometimes dramatic on stage hypnosis, but by watching them and seeing what they're doing, I really isolated that there was, you know, four kinds of touch that was probably very beneficial. And so I started doing touching with my clients as I became a hypnotherapist, and I would. Always get permission first. Always get permission first if you're going to touch a client now before I go on any farther, I'll let you know. You don't have to touch your clients, but I'm giving you a background on why I did and why I don't. Alright, so. I found that it was very useful to be able to get permission to touch their hand, their arm, their shoulder, and maybe even their forehead because there's hypno hypnotic techniques where we wanna lift their hand and drop it. We might want to signal them by pushing on their arm or on their shoulder. Or there's other techniques we're tapping on the forehead can be very useful. For example, creating a twitching response to eye lock suggestions or just getting their attention or just trying to get them to move along or to move more quickly and not be so, uh, overprocessing in what they're doing. So I started doing that. And it was awesome. I was, I got outta my psychotherapist shell and got into my full-blown hypnotherapist and hypnotist, uh, processes and it was just great. But then, you know, I realized from my psychotherapy training that whenever I touch a client, or whenever you touch a client, hmm, you're taking a risk. What they could say, well, that was inappropriate. And bring an ethic, ethics complaint against you. Or they could say that it was unnecessary or they could say that, um, well actually anything they wanted to say and, you know, some of the people we get can have. Alternative reasons for being there. They might actually come in to try to misunderstand what's going on and sue you. And so, but I decided it was worth it and I did two things before I touched any client. One I got permission. It, it, can I have your, before the hypnosis, before hypnotizing him. I said, may I have permission during the session to touch your hand, your arm, your shoulder, maybe even your forehead? And I would get yes, if I didn't get a yes, then I wouldn't do it.