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Ideomotor Signaling

Ideomotor Signaling
💡 Clarification 🖐️ Sensation

Use finger or hand signals to communicate with non-conscious processing.

Step-by-step guide

  1. Define yes, no, and not-yet signals.
  2. Ask simple questions.
  3. Avoid leading the client.
  4. Integrate responses consciously.

When to use

  • When the client has consented to trance-oriented or imagery-based work
  • When a focused experiential intervention fits the agreed therapeutic goal
  • When the client can remain oriented and within the tolerance window

Key phrases

You can notice what happens as we work with ideomotor signaling at your own pace.

Follow-up questions

What did you notice in your body, images, or attention?
What small difference could be useful outside the session?

Alternative phrasings

There is no need to force anything; simply notice what your mind and body already know how to do.
Let us keep this practical and connect it with one real situation this week.

Warnings

  • ⚠️ Do not use hypnosis without explicit consent and psychoeducation
  • ⚠️ Avoid leading questions, especially in memory-related work
  • ⚠️ Stop or reorient if the client becomes disoriented, flooded, or dissociative

Source: Cheek, D.B. & LeCron, L.M. (1968). Clinical Hypnotherapy; Rossi, E.L. & Cheek, D.B. (1988). Mind-Body Therapy

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Materials are informational and educational and summarize publicly available scientific sources. They are not medical or psychological advice, are not intended for self-diagnosis or self-treatment, and do not replace consultation with a qualified professional.