It is all too common to slip into self-critical phrases in the mind, when facing various stressful situations. It is now widely recognised that our inner language and self-talk ultimately define the parameters of our efficiency. Yet before an exam, interview or demanding day, the quiet reflection of our internal dialogue is often overlooked in conventional settings. Recognising negative self-talk has still not become normalised. Thoughts such as “How will I do this” or “How can I get through this?” often pass unnoticed, even though they act as subtle neurocognitive inhibitors.
At VHE, one of our core mottos is to establish a beautiful relationship, first and foremost, with oneself. Embedding this understanding forms the foundation for the idea that the capacity to love others can only arise from having love to give – and that begins with self-love. A simple fortune of consequence. At VHE, we cultivate this fortunate mindset as part of our health-building literacy. Exploring our neurocognitive regulators is both fascinating and deeply rewarding – it can also be a playful and compassionate way of reframing our emotions, attitudes and behaviours. In this article, we will explore how the field of hypnosis can be applied to everyday neuro-wiring and habitual processes, viewed through the lens of a self-regulatory tool that can be taught to youth during their formative years of development.
The Classics
‘Autohypnosis’ simply refers to self-directed, focused attention – guiding your sensory network, or nervous system, into harmony and balance through suggestion and imagery. Hypnosis itself is a focused state of consciousness characterised by several key stages. The first, being ‘selective attention’ – the narrowing of awareness to a single stimulus or idea. This focused concentration of the eyes and mind on one point or concept sets the stage for the hypnotic state to develop.
The term hypnosis was coined in the 19th century by James Braid, derived from the Greek hypnos, meaning “sleep.” Braid’s use of the term built upon earlier work from the 17th century physician Franz Anton Mesmer, who proposed that focused attention and suggestion were part of a natural energetic process he called animal magnetism. Interestingly, it is from Mesmer’s name that the verb to mesmerise originates – an homage to his fascination with inducing states of hypnotic attraction and trance-like awareness in people.
The phase of induction – directing attention inward through verbal cues or fixation on a visual point, sound or sensation – can be replicated and adapted to one’s own heart’s content. Breathing, counting, rhythm, linguistical or geometric patterns, objects, and viewpoints such as horizons; can all serve as gateways through which consciousness can be gently drawn inward. The possibilities are endless, and the process itself can become a playful exploration.
In conventional hypnosis, the secondary ‘receptivity stage’ – a suspension of analytical resistance – is dependent on initial trust-building in preparatory phases of a session between practitioner and participant. When hypnosis is self-induced, however, this secondary phase becomes far easier and more efficient to deal with. The cultivation of trust, and therefore total receptivity, resides within the same mind that is guiding the process.
When entering autohypnosis, one is both guide and subject, transforming the ethical framework entirely. In this state, there can be no external manipulation, since the individual engages their own subconscious through conscious consent. The conscious mind becomes the author of its own narrative, fostering autonomy over one’s thoughts, emotions and ensuing choices.
Once we can adequately train young minds to gently suspend their critical faculties – when those faculties no longer serve them – without abandoning discernment – but momentarily quieting self-doubt, they gain access to re-patterning their own subconscious processes. This opens doors to self-directed therapeutic insight and behavioural change. In doing so, they begin to internalise autonomy as a lived, physiological experience, an embodied understanding of balance between thought, emotion and self-guided healing.
Modern Re-framing in the Teaching Sphere
Teaching simple mantras or focus exercises to children can introduce them to the creative use of sensory and mental cues, helping them learn how to shape their own neurocognitive habits in constructive and empowering ways. This not only supports self-regulation in teenagers but also fosters a curiosity about how their inner world can be guided through intentional awareness.
In educational and developmental contexts, these principles echo the Ericksonian method – named after psychiatrist Milton Erickson, which emphasises indirect suggestion, storytelling and rapport to awaken the learner’s own inner resources. When adapted for pedagogy, this approach transforms teaching into a subtle art of guidance rather than instruction: instead of imposing knowledge, the teacher invites discovery.
Just like electricity or medicine, hypnosis is neither inherently good nor bad – it is simply a mechanism whose moral and functional value depends on why and how it is used. Every hypnotic interaction involves influence, which can be distilled into three ethical components: consent, alignment and transparency. If any of these are compromised, the process shifts from suggestion to subversion, from empowerment to manipulation.
For educators, this means that tone, metaphor, rhythm and intention become vital tools for shaping how information is received and integrated. In this sense autohypnosis and self-talk form the bridge between traditional teaching and self-directed learning – encouraging young minds to engage their imagination, regulate focus and strengthen positive cognitive patterns that build lifelong health and resilience.
Returning to Braid, his pioneering work in classical hypnosis defined the phenomenon as “a focused, absorbed state of consciousness with reduced peripheral awareness and increased suggestibility.” Later thinkers built upon Braid’s observations, re-framing hypnosis as “a state of focused attention and imaginative absorption.” From these reinterpretations emerged modern definitions of hypnosis. At its core, it is commonly known as a state of concentrated consciousness, characterised by selective attention and imaginative engagement. Using this premise can serve a valuable means of self-induction into positive attitudes; a self-regulatory tool that reinforces internal balance, resilience, and constructive self-talk.
The evolutionary, or rather humanising, principles of the Ericksonian approach offer several key insights:
- Everyday states of focused attention, such as daydreaming, play, or imagination; are inherently hypnotic and can therefore be therapeutic.
- The trance state is a learning state; a natural, self-organising function of the mind-body interaction.
- Expanding awareness from within allows access to an internal language of learning, enabling the use of hypnosis through its modern, integrative lens.
Applied Focus and Self-Regulation
At VHE, we give students a platform to learn how to self-regulate their cognition, physiology and socio-emotional frameworks; always first beginning with awareness and insight, and progressing through imagination into active, or ‘applied’, engagement.
The mind can learn to focus selectively, choosing beneficial parameters and more positive outcomes. Through creative play, joy, and experimentation, students can rewire habitual patterns and establish new pathways within their neurocognitive framework – a process of imaginative absorption in action.
These principles, while mirroring the Ericksonian philosophy of gentle, self-directed learning, also draw from integrative, bioregulatory and educational psychology frameworks. Our educational approach translates these broad, holistic concepts into practical classroom and wellbeing practices that are accessible, ethical, and age-appropriate. For example:
• Utilising natural trance-like states: to encourage students to recognise moments of deep focus – whether through play, art, music, or reflection – as opportunities for learning and inner alignment that they can harness at will.
• Engaging natural inducers: Using sound, imagery, movement, and sensory experience as gateways to attention and calm.
• Reframing suggestion: Transforming the suggestive elements of hypnosis into a modus for encouraging self-efficacy and autonomy, rather than compliance or control.
Through these practices, VHE fosters a playful and respectful relationship between conscious and subconscious awareness, helping young minds understand how attention can be guided with intention rather than reaction.
Conclusion
At VHE, we are committed to teaching youth how focused attention can shape both body and mind. By learning to engage deeply through breath, words, or imagery – they can access their own transformational, trance-like states.
This form of autohypnosis, as we frame it at VHE, arises from within as a form of inner direction: a skill of conscious self-regulation that cultivates healthier habits, attitudes, and responses. It is through this inner education that we prepare the next generation not merely to cope, but to create their wellbeing from within.
If you’re passionate about helping young people thrive, let’s connect. We welcome collaborations with teachers, educational leaders, youth organisations, researchers, and health advocates who share this vision.
in Health,
#VHEdu ❤️
