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What's the Difference Between Hypnosis and Meditation?
Meditation and hypnosis can feel remarkably similar—both can create deep calm, stillness, and altered states of awareness. But beneath the surface, they serve very different purposes.
In this episode of the Soul Fusion Podcast, Penny Chiasson answers one of the most frequently asked questions from her community: "Aren't meditation and hypnosis the same thing?" Whether you're a practitioner, a curious mind, or someone exploring personal transformation, this episode will change how you understand the mind-body connection.
Meditation: A Practice of Observation
Penny starts with the common definition: meditation is mental training designed to build awareness, presence, and emotional regulation. The goal is to observe thoughts without judgment—not to change them. You may focus on a flame, mantra, sound, or visualization. It's passive, non-directive, and observational.
Hypnosis: A State for Change
Hypnosis, on the other hand, is a state of focused attention with intention—specifically to bypass the analytical mind and introduce selective suggestions that align with what the person wants to change.
It's not about turning off the mind; it's about guiding the subconscious toward new patterns, beliefs, and behaviors.
In Penny's words:
"The key difference between meditation and hypnosis is the intention. Hypnosis is goal-directed—you're choosing a new belief, behavior, or future. Meditation isn't."
The Joe Dispenza Effect: When Meditation Becomes Hypnosis
Penny shares how many popular 'meditations'—including those from Joe Dispenza—are actually hypnosis in disguise. These sessions use metaphor, suggestion, and visualization to shift internal identity and future projection. If change is the goal, you're not meditating—you're in hypnosis.
And that's not a bad thing. It's just important to be clear about the intention and the process.
Words Matter: Trance vs Hypnosis
Did you know? Research shows that even the words you use can impact the effectiveness of a session. Penny references studies where people responded more powerfully when they were told they were in a hypnosis session versus a meditation—even when the script was identical.
On the flip side, calling something a "trance" actually increased resistance. The takeaway? Words carry influence, especially when the subconscious is involved.
No to Covert Hypnosis & Neuro-Persuasion
Penny also calls out the misuse of hypnosis language in sales and marketing. She critiques ad campaigns that promote "hypnosis techniques" to convince people to buy—especially when those techniques aren't even hypnosis but manipulative neuro-linguistic tricks.
She clarifies:
"If you're looking to use hypnosis to get people to do things without them knowing it—you're in the wrong place. I don't teach that. I teach real, ethical transformation."
By Penny Chiasson5
4949 ratings
What's the Difference Between Hypnosis and Meditation?
Meditation and hypnosis can feel remarkably similar—both can create deep calm, stillness, and altered states of awareness. But beneath the surface, they serve very different purposes.
In this episode of the Soul Fusion Podcast, Penny Chiasson answers one of the most frequently asked questions from her community: "Aren't meditation and hypnosis the same thing?" Whether you're a practitioner, a curious mind, or someone exploring personal transformation, this episode will change how you understand the mind-body connection.
Meditation: A Practice of Observation
Penny starts with the common definition: meditation is mental training designed to build awareness, presence, and emotional regulation. The goal is to observe thoughts without judgment—not to change them. You may focus on a flame, mantra, sound, or visualization. It's passive, non-directive, and observational.
Hypnosis: A State for Change
Hypnosis, on the other hand, is a state of focused attention with intention—specifically to bypass the analytical mind and introduce selective suggestions that align with what the person wants to change.
It's not about turning off the mind; it's about guiding the subconscious toward new patterns, beliefs, and behaviors.
In Penny's words:
"The key difference between meditation and hypnosis is the intention. Hypnosis is goal-directed—you're choosing a new belief, behavior, or future. Meditation isn't."
The Joe Dispenza Effect: When Meditation Becomes Hypnosis
Penny shares how many popular 'meditations'—including those from Joe Dispenza—are actually hypnosis in disguise. These sessions use metaphor, suggestion, and visualization to shift internal identity and future projection. If change is the goal, you're not meditating—you're in hypnosis.
And that's not a bad thing. It's just important to be clear about the intention and the process.
Words Matter: Trance vs Hypnosis
Did you know? Research shows that even the words you use can impact the effectiveness of a session. Penny references studies where people responded more powerfully when they were told they were in a hypnosis session versus a meditation—even when the script was identical.
On the flip side, calling something a "trance" actually increased resistance. The takeaway? Words carry influence, especially when the subconscious is involved.
No to Covert Hypnosis & Neuro-Persuasion
Penny also calls out the misuse of hypnosis language in sales and marketing. She critiques ad campaigns that promote "hypnosis techniques" to convince people to buy—especially when those techniques aren't even hypnosis but manipulative neuro-linguistic tricks.
She clarifies:
"If you're looking to use hypnosis to get people to do things without them knowing it—you're in the wrong place. I don't teach that. I teach real, ethical transformation."

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