Agents of Everything with James Tripp

Trance-Planting and Growing Change with Bill O'Hanlon

7 snips
May 6, 2026
Bill O'Hanlon, psychotherapist, author, and songwriter who learned directly from Milton Erickson, returns to explore change as gardening. Short, vivid tales of becoming Erickson's gardener lead into discussions on evocation versus suggestion. They cover creativity in therapy, trance and everyday flow states, learning frames, desperation as a catalyst, and songwriting as a model for transformative practice.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
ANECDOTE

Becoming Erickson's Gardener

  • Bill O'Hanlon met Milton Erickson when he helped carry Erickson in a wheelchair into an art gallery and later wrote asking to be his gardener and student.
  • Erickson tested him with real gardening tasks (weeding, digging caliche) before scheduling psychotherapy sessions, shaping a literal apprenticeship.
INSIGHT

Evocation Replaced Suggestion

  • Erickson shifted hypnosis from suggestion to evocation, assuming people already hold useful resources nonconsciously.
  • O'Hanlon describes this as a benevolent view of the unconscious: evoke stored abilities and let clients apply them rather than impose fixes.
INSIGHT

Therapy As Learning For Life Transitions

  • Erickson framed therapy as learning and adaptation rather than medical 'healing', focusing on transitions and developing new responses.
  • O'Hanlon highlights life stages (school, marriage, retirement) where old patterns no longer fit and new adaptive skills must be learned.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app