Landsiedel NLP Training → NLP → Milton Erickson
Milton H. Erickson was born on 1901, the second of nine children of Albert and Clara Erickson. His father was a child of Norwegian immigrants, his mother came from an old-established family from New England. At the age of five his family moved to Lowell, Wisconsin, where he attended primary school and then high school in nearby Wishfield. He suffered from dyslexia. His nickname then was "Dictionary", which was due to his lack of understanding of the dictionary. So he always read the dictionary from the beginning when he was looking for a term. For a long time he was considered "retarded". He was apparently able to overcome his dyslexia by practising seeing difficult letters in hallucination in front of him. Shortly after finishing high school, Erickson contracted polio in 1919. He fell into a coma, and at first it seemed that he would not survive the disease. Three days later he regained consciousness, completely paralysed. Later he sat in a rocking chair, unable to move. The intense desire to look out a window caused the rocking chair to move slightly. This ideomotor experience motivated him to keep on practising. Through further hallucinatory performances he managed to re-integrate his paralyzed muscles. After almost a year he had made it, was able to walk on crutches and attended the University of Wisconsin. However, against the doctor's advice to rest, he embarked on a now legendary 1,200-mile canoe trip on the Mississippi. During this trip he regained enormous physical strength. Two years later he was able to walk again without crutches, only a limp on his right side remained. In his second year at university he came into contact with hypnosis. He was fascinated by the possibilities, practiced incessantly, developed different techniques and explored the possibilities of human influence. Contrary to the prevailing doctrine at the time, Erickson developed individualised methods.
The unconsciousness to which the illness brought him later called the beginning of his interest in trance states. Erickson used the period of convalescence, during which medicine gave him little hope of complete recovery, to practice partial dissociations. It is thanks to Erickson that hypnosis has been used more in psychotherapy again, after it had been pushed into the background for a long time by Sigmund Freud's rejection. He developed a new approach. This emphasises the individuality of each client/patient and consequently the need to find the right approach and approach for everyone. This approach stood in contrast to the standardised and authoritarian methods that were prevalent until the 1950s and 1960s. Erickson also stresses the positive role of the unconscious. Unlike Freud, Erickson sees the unconscious as an inexhaustible resource for creative self-healing. The unconscious is the hoard of barely used human experiences. Erickson's approach aims to expand the ability of the unconscious, which is limited by rigid schemata and thought patterns, by allowing the hypnotist to use special verbal and non-verbal techniques to enable the unconscious to take the lead. At the same time the consciousness is enabled to accept and integrate the unconscious self-healing powers and creative resources. Erickson had an enormous impact on the entire therapeutic community and his posterity. He influenced Jay Haley, Paul Watzlawick, John Weakland and with them the entire Palo Alto Group, influenced the family therapy which was in its infancy at the time and many schools of systemic therapy, most notably the solution-focused approach of Steve de Shazer and Insoo Kim Berg, the Provocative Therapy of Frank Farrelly and the Systemic Structural Constellations of Insa Sparrer and Matthias Varga von Kibéd. The founders of NLP, Richard Bandler and John Grinder, studied and copied his technique - they described the way Erickson masterfully worked with hypnotic language in his own model, the Milton Model.
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