1982
DOI: 10.1080/00029157.1982.10404059
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Selfhypnosis as a Therapeutic Aid in the Mourning Process

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Cited by 10 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Several additional accounts of hypnotic intervention appeared in the nineteenth century literature (Vijzlaar & van der Hart, 1992). Much later, Fromm and Eisen (1982) reported the case of a female patient who was taught to use self-hypnosis to work through feelings of loss following the death of her husband. After 4 weeks of daily self-hypnosis sessions, her grief attenuated, and she was able to resume a productive and happy life.…”
Section: Review Of the Literaturementioning
confidence: 98%
“…Several additional accounts of hypnotic intervention appeared in the nineteenth century literature (Vijzlaar & van der Hart, 1992). Much later, Fromm and Eisen (1982) reported the case of a female patient who was taught to use self-hypnosis to work through feelings of loss following the death of her husband. After 4 weeks of daily self-hypnosis sessions, her grief attenuated, and she was able to resume a productive and happy life.…”
Section: Review Of the Literaturementioning
confidence: 98%
“…In addition, the patient can also be asked during this period of hypnotherapy to visualize himself in the mask of the "bad" child who sometimes may have provoked the parent's anger and thus became deprived; but who now can tear off the constraining mask of the "bad" small child, and really grow and unfold all the good potential within (Fromm & Eisen, 1982). Or the patient can be asked to visualize his/her new self, putting the bad incorporated object and self representations into a paper garbage bag (not a plastic one because that might imply non-biodegradability and thus continued existence) and dumping them somewhere so that he/she will be rid of them for good.…”
Section: The Borderline Patientmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In general, it is preferable as much as possible to let the patient's own imagery and visualizations come up and then to guide them in the therapeutic direction (Fromm & Eisen, 1982).…”
Section: The Borderline Patientmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This article discusses the use of self-hypnosis as one of those tools, used in an effort to deal with grief. Fromm & Eisen (1982) discuss the use of selfhypnosis in the mourning process. They attribute the benefit of self-hypnosis to its ability to facilitate fantasy and imagination, which in turn allows clients to change their thoughts about the death: "Hypnotic suggestion is particularly valuable in this process of rearranging and altering connections between affect and thought" (p. 7).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The primary benefit, then, of using self-hypnosis in the mourning process may not be in what occurs during trance, but in the process of the self-hypnosis. Fromm & Eisen (1982) mention in passing that self-hypnosis "can be utilized to promote a sense of mastery" (p. 11).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%