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Subject Skills: How to Surrender

What many of us desire from hypnosis is surrender. It is the allure of letting go -- letting go of the feeling of control over ourselves and our experience. Even when hypnosis is less about submission in an erotic sense, trance itself can feel much more real and intense when we lock into those precious moments of unconscious response and fully trust in ourselves and our partners. Let’s look at some concrete ways that this surrender is created and how we can improve it as subjects.

Ingredients of Surrender

Surrender is a complex experience with many moving parts. We also often experience conflict or variation between these parts, leading to a dynamic and changing experience. To start with, let’s look at some examples of aspects that might influence our perception of surrender:

All of these aspects are of course multifaceted in and of themselves as well as holistic parts of the full response of surrender. As we move through this article, we’ll include an exploration of each idea as well as some exercises that you can do to “stretch” these muscles.

It’s very important that even as we may be looking inward to see what we can improve, we don’t look at this in a diagnostic way. We don’t want to reflect on something and think to ourselves, “I struggle with surrender because I have trust issues.” The reality is that everyone can benefit from working on each and every part of these ideas. Beyond this, the experience of surrender is something that is so subjective and so abstract that it is completely interconnected -- dependent on all parts meshing well in any given moment. It is good to identify things to work on; it is not as helpful to assume one thing is the only reason for not making progress, or assuming that you can be fully aware of some of the more unconscious aspects of this, or self-labeling to the point that you are perpetuating or even creating an issue where there wasn’t one.

The Exercises

The exercises provided are intended to build a familiarity and “muscle memory” to the skills contained in the concepts we are talking about. They are not scripts, but they are hypnotic -- as in, they exercise hypnotic skills. They may or may not induce trance; it’s not actually important whether or not you go into trance while doing them, so you don’t need to worry about that (however, if you’re experienced with self hypnosis, you may want to explore them in different ways).

Your mind will almost certainly wander during these exercises. This is completely normal and expected, and there’s no inherent advantage of doing them without sometimes being distracted. Just come back from your wandering thoughts to the exercise when you feel ready.

Feel free to change these up, add to them, or do something completely different. They are just starting points. It’s a great practice to see if you can yourself think of different exercises that “work out” similar component skills.

Trust

Being able to trust fully is often an intense desire that’s intertwined with our interest in hypnosis in the first place. It is, understandably, not always easy to be vulnerable and open, especially with such an intimate part of ourselves. The skills involved in this kind of trust are finicky, and all of us approach hypnotic interactions with our own baggage around opening up and letting go. But we can nurture this part of ourselves that desires it while learning to trust ourselves as well so that we can feel comfortable, confident, and able to give in.

Trust in a hypnotic relationship is related to expectation -- it’s the belief that you have a reasonable expectation of having a positive and fulfilling experience. This doesn’t mean that you are always “expecting” things to go right or wrong, or that you have some level of confidence in one way or another. It can be as simple as having some annoying habits of second-guessing yourself, or you have some discomfort around sharing parts of yourself.

Ideally when you go into trance, you will feel safe (or “in danger” in a way that you trust) and comfortable being intimate both with your own thoughts and the hypnotist you are working with. From here, we can identify some skills to work on.

In hypnotic interactions, we can only have full agency over ourselves -- mistakes, miscommunications, and sometimes misguided or even malicious events can happen. Knowing how to respond to these things not only increases your actual safety, but reduces the stress that you will be caught off guard by something unwanted.

Exercise:

Another element of trust is intentional vulnerability -- we want to be vulnerable in the sense that we feel like we are being open and easy to “see.” This isn’t always easy, especially with niche sexuality. One of the ways we can work on this is by exploring that vulnerability within ourselves first. The more we understand our own desires, motivations, and behaviors, the more easily we can let others inside to see them and know us.

Exercise:

“Resistance” / Being “Stuck”

When we think of resistance, we might first think of willfully trying not to go into trance or trying not to respond. But this idea of resistance can apply to things that we do unconsciously that are making it more challenging for us.

It’s very important that we don’t imagine this kind of resistance as something like a part of us resisting due to some unseen, core reason. For example, someone might say, “I think I am subconsciously resisting going into trance, maybe because I’m afraid?” There are certainly times when it is reasonable to work through fears that are preventing you from doing things (such as self-exploration and therapy). But it is a lot of guesswork, and it can be much more productive to instead try to identify what the actual patterns or behaviors are and interrupt them. Many times, there is not some hidden reason that, once solved, will make those patterns disappear.

In this way, it can be helpful to let go of the idea of this being “resisting” as a whole, and instead do self-reflection on what is concretely happening. We might want to relabel this entire category as being “stuck” -- particularly in patterns of thought that are somehow not contributing to the trance. Here are some examples:

Exercise:

Emotional and Physical Experience

“Trust” and “resistance” are elements that can contribute to the experience of surrender -- but what is the actual experience of surrender itself? It is an abstract nominalization (something that does not have concrete meaning), and often it’s one where you “know it when you feel it.” Even then, it can be difficult to describe what you are actually feeling.

Something that will help improve any aspect of your trance that you want to intensify is spending time to sit with your perception. Learning how to identify certain feelings, what kinds of aspects they contain, how they change, what they actually make you feel -- all of these things will give you a greater awareness and thus allow you to feel them more fully. For this reason, it’s good to take time to just think about it in and outside of trance. Self-analysis is a powerful tool, and it can even help you to reframe your analysis as something that broadens your ability to notice and experience things.

Emotions and physical sensations are connected. An emotional experience is a physiological one -- chemicals are released and we have sensory perception of emotion (that is often something we need to “learn” to notice especially to manage strong emotions). For example, anxiety is not just racing thoughts; we may feel stiffness, discomfort, aches, or other things in our bodies. Similarly, “positive” feelings like happiness or excitement produce different sensations. On the other side of things, something that we may think of as a physical feeling, like arousal, can make our cognitive process change.

In the case of “surrender,” a highly subjective experience, there may be all sorts of psychological and physical feelings that key you in to the idea that you’re feeling it. Here are some examples of emotional feelings that might be associated with this:

Physical sensations that accompany emotions tend to be subtle and harder to codify. For this reason, the exercise here will be about learning to identify more about what those feelings are and where they are in your body -- plus, how to broaden and deepen them.

Exercise:

Unconscious Responses

Perhaps the actual most coveted aspect of trance (that is more than surrender but often included in it) is responding to suggestions in a way that feels like you’re completely not doing it yourself or playing along. This is where the “magic” tends to happen for us as subjects, when we really feel that we are well and truly hypnotized and controlled. Often, a feeling of surrender either comes before or after one of these unconscious responses -- surrender can trigger us to get “in the zone” hypnotically, or realizing that you’re not controlling the trance anymore can trigger a feeling of surrender.

An unconscious response is highly perceptual. It is that cognitively and consciously, you feel as though you are not driving the bus. So the thing to work on is developing skills around your perception -- not necessarily the hypnotic responses themselves, but the way that you feel and think about them. This might be an effect of dissociation, or some other psychological process where you’re able to be in a space separate from your own responses or behaviors.

Expecting fully unconscious trance responses to happen 100% of the time is unrealistic. However, it is something that can come easier with practice. The way to develop this can be very personal, and you’re encouraged to experiment, but here are two options for exercises to play around with -- one working with the ideomotor response, and another with developing internal unconscious thought.

Exercise #1:

Exercise #2:


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