Most people have experienced some of their most profoundly meaningful experiences in the most fleeting of moments. Consider the adage to “smell the roses along the path.” Being fully present in the experiencing of each moment also implies that the meaning and purpose to be found is in the engagement itself, not in some result that “I get out of it.”
One of the primary injunctions for a therapist with an existential approach is to not have expectations, or an agenda, for the client’s experience or therapeutic goals. Such an approach could be considered awakening from the “trance of ordinary life”.
For most people, the past is alive in the present in the form of unfinished business and uncompleted developmental tasks. As one resolves and completes what was left unfinished, the person opens to the immediacy of the present moment, reducing reactivity and increasing self-esteem, which hypnotherapy is very effective in treating.
Many researchers have consistently found that relationships are the most important source of meaning for all age groups and both genders. Females identify significantly more relationship meanings than males, however, confirming the emerging understanding in the field of identity development that there is a relatively greater significance of relatedness in female development, and of self-definition in male development.
Faced with existential anxiety, one option is avoidance through neurotic defense such as addictions or depression. A second existential choice is self-rejection, to judge, attack or punish oneself for being the person he/she has become.
A third existential choice is to remain open and non-defensive in the face of our deepest anxieties. Hypnotherapy is useful in assisting an individual to recognize fears, anxieties, defenses and personal shortcomings without self-judgment.
“Openness to experience is the most frequent predictor of wisdom”.
Kramer’s research (2000) documents that people who are generally considered wise share the following attributes:
Death is a common theme in many transpersonal altered state experiences, and this is the case with existential therapies (Zimberoff & Hartman, 1999). The context of death may express the fear of existential annihilation, taking one of several forms:
Alternately, the context of death encountered in existential therapies may reflect a “death urge,” taking one of several forms:
This person, afraid of death, is actually terrified of life. A line in the popular song “The Rose” captures this approach to life:
It’s the one who won’t be takenWho cannot seem to giveAnd the soul afraid of dyingThat never learns to live. Heart-Centered Hypnotherapy addresses these aspects of a client’s life experience by directly accessing the unconscious, where these deeply embedded patterns live.References
Kramer, D. A. (2000). Wisdom as a classical source of human strength: Conceptualization and empirical inquiry. Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 19(1), 83-101.
Zimberoff, D., & Hartman, D. (1999). Personal Transformation with Heart-Centered Therapies. Journal of Heart-Centered Therapies, Vol. 2(1), 3-53.