Agents of Everything with James Tripp

Trance-Planting and Growing Change with Bill O'Hanlon


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šŸŽ™ļøEpisode 37: Bill O’Hanlon on Erickson, Strategic Changework, Creativity, Trance, and the Garden of Change šŸŽ§

In this episode of Agents of Everything, I’m welcoming Bill O’Hanlon back to AoE for a second conversation - and this one goes deep!

Bill is one of the world’s foremost interpreters of Milton H. Erickson’s work, and over the years he’s become known not only for his contributions to brief therapy, strategic changework, and hypnosis, but also for his songwriting, creativity, and deeply human way of thinking about transformation.

One of the reasons I wanted Bill back on the podcast was because there was something we never really got into the first time around: the famous ā€œgardener story.ā€

Before Bill became a major figure in the world of changework, he was a young psychology student who became fascinated by the strange and brilliant work of Milton Erickson. That fascination eventually led him to Erickson’s house… where he literally became Erickson’s gardener while trying to figure out what this legendary psychiatrist was actually doing.

And honestly, I think this conversation captures something important about Erickson that often gets missed.

A lot of people encounter Ericksonian work as technique. They encounter language patterns, hypnotic structures, strategic interventions, therapeutic tricks. But underneath all of that there’s something much deeper going on: a radically different way of understanding human beings, learning, adaptation, creativity, and change itself.

Bill articulates that beautifully here.

We talk about the difference between suggestion and evocation. About why changework is often more like gardening than reprogramming. About the role of creativity in therapy. About trance, learning, unconscious processes, desperation, flexibility, and what happens when people try to solve new life situations with outdated patterns.

There’s also a fascinating thread running through the whole conversation around creativity itself - not just therapeutic creativity, but songwriting, writing, improvisation, and how structure and flow have to work together if anything meaningful is going to emerge.

And towards the end of the episode, Bill shares and performs a song he wrote for Erickson called Trance Plants, which honestly brings the whole conversation together in a really beautiful way.

Whether you’re interested in hypnosis, psychotherapy, changework, creativity, or simply the question of how human beings evolve and adapt through life, I think there’s a lot in this conversation for you.

āŒšļø Timestamps

00:00:00 - Welcome and Guest Intro

00:01:18 - Subscribe and Support

00:01:55 - Episode Roadmap

00:02:40 - Caribbean Lifestyle Chat

00:04:37 - Intention, Luck and Change

00:05:16 - Who Was Erickson?

00:06:29 - First Meeting at Gallery

00:13:23 - Uncommon Therapy

00:15:57 - Letter and Gardener Apprenticeship

00:21:33 - Lessons from the Garden

00:24:15 - NLP Gilligan and Influences

00:27:56 - Erickson Trickster Mystery

00:33:07 - Strategic vs Hypnotic Work

00:35:52 - Old School Hypnosis Roots

00:37:16 - Simple Suggestions Big Results

00:38:04 - Erickson Evocation Revolution

00:42:08 - Learning Frame Not Healing

00:44:49 - Life Transitions And Flexibility

00:48:05 - Adaptedness Versus Adaptiveness

00:50:47 - Gift Of Desperation

00:55:41 - Writing Output And Strategies

00:58:58 - Structure Meets Creative Flow

01:05:12 - Creativity Versus Protocols

01:09:34 - Teaching Ericksonian Principles

01:11:38 - Patterns in Music and Therapy

01:12:54 - Songwriting Books and Principles

01:16:04 - Chasing Emotion in Songs

01:17:33 - Balancing Intuition and Structure

01:19:19 - Gilligan’s Trance Camp and Performance Selves

01:21:22 - Modeling Creative Tasking

01:25:17 - Writing First Fiction Novel

01:28:41 - Improv Mindset

01:30:34 - Tapping the Creative Unconscious

01:34:09 - Four Doorways into Trance

01:38:16 - Trusting the Unconscious in Life

01:39:35 - Trance Plants Song Tribute

01:42:01 - Gardening Metaphor and Farewell

šŸ” Themes

Changework as Gardening

One of the strongest threads running through this conversation is the idea that real changework isn’t mechanical.

It’s ecological.

You can’t force growth. You can’t simply ā€œinstallā€ a new behaviour and expect life to organise itself around it. You have to work with conditions, timing, context, resources, and the living intelligence already present within the person.

Evocation Rather Than Imposition

Bill describes Erickson’s great revolution as a movement away from simple suggestion and toward evocation: drawing forth abilities, learnings, capacities, and patterns that already exist within the individual.

That distinction matters deeply.

Creativity Requires Both Structure and Freedom

We also get into the relationship between creativity and structure — in therapy, in writing, in music, and in life generally.

Too much structure becomes rigid.

Too much openness dissolves into vagueness.

The art seems to live somewhere in the dance between the two.

ā‰ļøAbout Bill O’Hanlon

Bill O’Hanlon is a psychotherapist, author, speaker, songwriter, and one of the major figures in the evolution of solution-oriented and Ericksonian changework. A former student of Milton Erickson, Bill has authored more than 40 books and spent decades exploring the relationship between change, creativity, language, learning, and human possibility.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit jamestripp.substack.com
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