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When is a hippopotamus not a hippopotamus? When it's a
hypno-potamus! This book is written for mental health professionals
working with children who have an understanding of child
development as well as previous training in hypnotherapy. Harry the
Hypno-potamus is a collection of metaphorical stories that deal
with a variety of physical and behavioural problems faced by
children. Embedded in each story is a metaphor as well as
hypnotherapeutic techniques that can be used as part of a
comprehensive approach to the diagnosis and treatment of a host of
disorders both physical and emotional. Reading the title story,
'Harry the Hypno-potamus' to a child is a wonderful way to
introduce him or her to the idea of hypnosis as well as
understanding the power of the child's imagination. The stories in
the rest of the book (thirty-two in all) are all about different
animals that live in the Ashland Zoo. Each animal is faced with a
physical or emotional problem and learns specific hypnotherapeutic
techniques and self-regulatory strategies to help master the
problem. For most children an altered state of consciousness is
familiar, comfortable and quite easy to achieve. An integral part
of child's play is imagining and pretending. Children not only
explore but experience their surroundings. They want to engage with
others and their environment, and are relentlessly curious about
the how and why of objects, people, situations and themselves.
Fantasy may be employed to change or avoid an unpleasant situation,
gratify unmet needs, remember the past or invent the future.
Children want to be happy, healthy, comfortable and successful.
When physical, mental or environmental conditions exist that
interfere with the pursuit of these goals, maladaptive behaviours
may develop consciously or unconsciously. When a therapeutic
alliance develops with a clinician who is invested in helping the
child experience success, comfort and health, hypnotherapy can be a
very powerful tool. The hypnotherapeutic work enhances and
strengthens the child's natural strivings toward exploration,
social relationships, fantasy and creativity. A clinician may wish
to read one of the stories with a child or the hypnotherapist may
find it more suitable to adapt the techniques to his own unique
style. Some of the therapeutic interventions are very problem
specific while others are more general and can be used for a
variety of conditions. Because each child develops differently, not
only the chronological age, but the developmental age of the child
must be taken into account when using these stories. The clinician
should consider the cognitive and perceptual skills of the child
and adapt the induction, language and hypnotic techniques to the
child's developmental level.
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