to better themselves.
Coue believed that his patients had the power of healing within themselves and
that the root of that self-healing power was a strong conscious will.
He firmly
believed, however, that subconscious knowledge could be employed through
acts of imagination on the part of his patients. He thought of himself as more a
guide, than a healer, believing that auto-suggestion could actually alter the fabric
of our respective realities.
Through his explorations of hypnosis as a therapeutic tool, Coue confirmed the
growing suspicion among practitioners of the time, that no one could be
hypnotized without their consent and co-operation. Like Braid, he insisted that
hypnosis was entirely dependent on the subject and not the practitioner. He also
believed
that patients, by conscientiously replacing their negative thinking
around illness with positive thinking and repetitive auto-suggestion, were the
authors of their own healing (so long as that healing was within reason and did
not extend to limbs growing back, or other farfetched hope for outcomes).
At the root of Coue’s
assertions was the belief that, for the method of auto-
suggestion to work, the patient had to be invested in what was being suggested,
through the active application of the will. For example, a lingering belief on the
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