Explorez tous les épisodes du podcast Changeworking
| Titre | Date | Durée | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Creative Changework: Making Tools Your Own | 07 Feb 2025 | 00:42:29 | |
In this debut episode of Changeworking, Ruckus and James explore how practitioners can adapt and personalize tools, frameworks, and protocols to make them more effective. Through historical examples and personal experiences, they discuss why creativity and flexibility in changework often yields better results than rigid adherence to standardized protocols.
EPISODE QUOTES
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| Helping Yourself, Helping Others, & Being Human | 14 Feb 2025 | 00:47:44 | |
In this episode, Ruckus and James discuss the paradox of being changeworkers who sometimes struggle to apply their own tools to themselves. They explore the power of being genuine with clients and how sometimes the most effective approach is simply being human.
TIMESTAMPS 00:00 Introduction and theme overview 00:50 James discusses his journey with self-hypnosis 04:30 Discussion on helping yourself vs. helping others 12:11 Exploring parts work and internal processes 20:13 Differences between self-facilitation and external facilitation 31:49 The importance of being human as a practitioner 35:46 Status dynamics in change work 47:09 Closing thoughts and contact information
CONTACT Email: changeworkingpod@gmail.com Training: www.clientshifts.com | |||
| Tools: Timeline & Memory Reconsolidation | 24 Feb 2025 | 00:46:12 | |
EPISODE SUMMARY In this episode, Ruckus and James Tripp dive into the world of timeline techniques and memory reconsolidation—tools that can create profound, lasting change for clients and practitioners alike. Ruckus shares his personal enthusiasm for timeline work, revealing how it has transformed both his client sessions and his own healing journey. The conversation explores the neurological basis of memory, debunking common misconceptions about how our minds store experiences, and offering practical insights into how practitioners can help clients reprocess painful memories without re-traumatizing them. You'll discover why changing your relationship to past events can be more powerful than trying to "get over" them, how to work with resistance as a natural protective mechanism, and why timeline techniques provide such a versatile framework for changework.
TIMESTAMPS 00:00 Opening introduction 01:52 Origins of timeline techniques and the Bandler/Grinder split 02:45 Different ways people organize time in their minds ("in time" vs "through time") 05:43 Timeline positions and viewing memories from different perspectives 07:56 How changing your relationship to memories leads to reprocessing 11:38 Depotentiating negative energies from memories 13:39 Discussion about resistance in clients and how to work with it 18:22 Content-free work with timeline techniques 21:05 The "memory wars" and Elizabeth Loftus's research on false memories 24:25 Memory reconsolidation as a general approach rather than a specific protocol 30:42 Working with clients who don't consciously recall specific memories 34:26 Other NLP tools related to memory reconsolidation (Change Personal History, Decision Destroyer) 40:17 Philosophical discussion on creating positive memories vs seeking truth 46:01 Closing
LINKS Tad James Timeline Therapy (book) Memory Reconsolidation in Psychotherapy: The Neuropsychotherapist Special Issue (book) https://www.amazon.com/dp/1506004342 Elizabeth Loftus's TED Talk on false memories
CONTACT Email: changeworkingpod@gmail.com Training: www.clientshifts.com | |||
| Curiosity in Changework | 07 Mar 2025 | 00:48:47 | |
EPISODE SUMMARY
In this episode of Changeworking, Ruckus and James discuss the transformative power of curiosity in changework sessions. They talk about how curiosity serves as an essential counterforce to fear and reactivity, creating a space where genuine exploration and change can occur and how practitioners can cultivate curiosity both within themselves and their clients to facilitate more effective sessions. TIMESTAMPS 00:39 - James explains how curiosity opposes fear and reactivity
Website: www.clientshiftsacademy.com Changeworking is produced by Ruckus Skye. | |||
| Brain Hemispheres: Beyond Left vs. Right | 14 Mar 2025 | 00:39:30 | |
EPISODE SUMMARY
Ruckus and James talk about the different ways our brain hemispheres process information and experience the world. James discusses insights from Ian McGilchrist's book "The Master and His Emissary," explaining how the left hemisphere tends toward linear, control-oriented thinking while the right hemisphere offers more holistic, participatory awareness. They explore how understanding these differences can enhance changework practice and create more effective client outcomes by balancing these complementary ways of engaging with reality. TIMESTAMPS00:41 - Introduction to brain hemispheres and McGilchrist's work 03:00 - The fable of The Master and His Emissary explained 06:48 - Differences between left and right hemispheric processing 08:00 - How each hemisphere attends to the world differently 12:00 - Left hemisphere's need for control vs. right hemisphere's participatory consciousness 15:52 - Applying hemisphere knowledge in change work sessions 19:50 - When to purposefully engage a client's left hemisphere 21:56 - Techniques for shifting clients between hemispheric states 25:14 - How this understanding transformed James as a practitioner 33:31 - Jill Bolte Taylor's stroke experience and right hemisphere awareness 36:07 - James' renewed appreciation for trance work LINKSThe Master and His Emissary by Ian McGilchrist Book: Audio Book: My Stroke of Insight - Jill Bolte Taylor TED Talk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UyyjU8fzEYU CONTACTEmail: changeworkingpod@gmail.com Website: www.clientshiftsacademy.com Changeworking is produced by Ruckus Skye. | |||
| Parts Work: The Multiplicity of the Mind | 21 Apr 2025 | 01:03:17 | |
In this episode, hosts Ruckus and James Tripp explore the concept of "parts work" - the idea that our minds consist of multiple parts or subpersonalities rather than a single unified self. They discuss how recognizing and working with these different parts can be a powerful framework for personal change and therapeutic practice. Both hosts share personal experiences with parts work approaches and discuss how understanding the multiplicity of mind can improve self-awareness, emotional regulation, and interpersonal relationships. CHAPTERS: 00:00 - Introduction to parts work and the multiplicity of mind LINKS Introduction to Internal Family Systems Changeworking is produced by Ruckus Skye. #podcast #changework #hypnosis #nlp #coaching #coach
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| Beliefs, Truths, and Trances of Identity | 20 May 2025 | 00:41:26 | |
🎙️ From invisible operating systems to emotional trances masquerading as truth, this conversation unpacks the complexity of belief in changework. They touch on everything from Byron Katie’s process to Taoist ideas of truth and usefulness, all through the lens of real-world examples and client work. ⏱️ Timestamps: CONTACT Changeworking is produced by Ruckus Skye. #podcast #changework #hypnosis #nlp #coaching #coach #CoachingTools #ClientBreakthroughs | |||
| Mindshifts & Meta-Awareness | 09 May 2025 | 00:42:39 | |
🎙️ Changeworking — S1E7: Mind Shifts & Meta-Awareness What does it mean to witness your own process? In this episode, Ruckus and James explore the power of meta-awareness in changework — both for ourselves and for our clients. From recognizing when a mind shift occurs, to understanding how trance and identity are often one and the same, this conversation digs into the subtle but powerful layers of how change happens. They unpack: • The idea that “all trance is identity” • Why curiosity is one of the most powerful resources in change • How to help clients notice and integrate their own breakthroughs • What makes a moment truly transformative — and why it can’t be forced Whether you’re facilitating change or navigating it yourself, this episode is all about learning to spot the ember of transformation and gently blow on it. ⏱️ Timestamps: 00:00 – Intro: What are mind shifts and meta-awareness? 01:00 – The link between trance, identity, and “parts in the executive” 04:00 – Developing a meta-self: witnessing vs. being had by your process 07:00 – Resilience, trauma, and psychological “landscapes” 10:00 – Why client interest and curiosity matter more than technique 13:00 – Milton Erickson and unconscious meta-awareness 17:00 – Coaching the uninterested client — working with “desperation” 20:00 – Why some clients are just more fun to work with 23:00 – What actually creates a shift? The power of hypnotic explanation 27:00 – Spotting the moment of transformation — and what to do with it 30:00 – Instagram platitudes vs. lived insight 34:00 – Sydney Banks, the Three Principles, and throwaway-line epiphanies 36:30 – Complexity and emergence in changework 38:00 – A no-self moment on an airplane: James’ spontaneous shift 40:00 – Clients who know when they’ve had a shift 41:30 – Outro: How do we help clients develop meta-awareness? CONTACT Email: changeworkingpod@gmail.com Website: www.clientshifts.com Changeworking is produced by Ruckus Skye. #podcast #changework #hypnosis #nlp #coaching #coach #CoachingTools #ClientBreakthroughs | |||
| Psychoactive Facilitation | 30 May 2025 | 00:44:53 | |
What does it really mean when a client “goes psychoactive”? In this episode, Ruckus and James explore how deep engagement emerges — not from force, but from slowing down, dropping judgment, and leaning into possibility. From metaphors to memory reconsolidation, this conversation unpacks what makes transformation feel alive. ⏱️ Timestamps:00:00 – Intro: What is psychoactive facilitation? CONTACT Email: changeworkingpod@gmail.com Website: www.clientshifts.com
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| Identity: How shifts in self-concept can transform | 31 Jul 2025 | 00:40:43 | |
In this episode of Changeworking, Ruckus and James Tripp dive deep into one of the most fundamental aspects of human psychology: identity. They explore how who you think you are directly shapes how you behave, and why all meaningful change work requires some shift in identity. Ruckus discovers that simply changing the language from "identity" to "self-concept" produces completely different answers about himself—revealing the hidden power of words to unlock new perspectives. James shares why he believes "self-concept is destiny" and how our maps of self and world interact to create our sense of safety. Plus, Ruckus tells a surprising personal story from his own therapy sessions about a part of him that was sabotaging his progress because it feared losing its sense of who he was. Timestamps[00:00:45] What is identity and how does it affect changework? | |||
| Showmanship & Performance in Changework | 08 Sep 2025 | 00:54:24 | |
In this episode, Ruckus and James explore the idea of showmanship and performance in effective changework, drawing connections between hypnosis, shamanism, acting, and public speaking. The conversation covers practical techniques for incorporating performance elements into coaching and therapy, the distinction between information versus evocation, and how practitioners can expand their communication repertoire to create greater impact with clients. Timestamps [00:00:00] Introduction to showmanship and performance in change work [00:01:00] Why performers make better hypnotists - magic vs therapy backgrounds [00:01:45] The roots of showmanship in shamanism - "The Death and Resurrection Show" [00:02:30] Performance as suggestion beyond just words [00:03:30] Historical hypnotists and the ritual experience [00:05:00] Bandler vs Grinder - performer vs academic approaches [00:06:00] On-stage vs off-stage personas in hypnosis [00:06:15] Playing "one across" vs "one up" - Erickson as performer [00:08:45] Information versus evocation in communication [00:09:45] Performance pieces and marking significance [00:10:30] Street hypnosis and "witch doctoring" techniques [00:12:00] Head, heart, and gut - using tone for energy shifts [00:13:15] Ed Jacobs and impact therapy - standing out vs blending in [00:14:15] David Grove's quadrant model - conversational vs psychoactive [00:16:15] Steve Chandler - comedy preparation for coaching weekends [00:18:15] Martin Luther King Jr. and the power of moving people [00:19:45] The Meisner method - learning lines vs bringing them to life [00:21:00] Hypnotic language delivery examples [00:23:00] Acting and oratory training vs technique training [00:24:00] Theater, Toastmasters, and NLP trainer development [00:26:30] Teaching screenwriting with hypnotic language [00:27:30] Bandler and Grinder - "shell vs nut" in Erickson's work [00:28:45] Tai Chi teaching with Milton language patterns [00:31:15] Analog marking - feeling artificial at first [00:32:15] Clint Eastwood and Christopher Walken's performance styles [00:33:00] Anticipation hooks and pausing techniques [00:34:00] Storytelling order and performance impact [00:35:45] Pre-verbal sounds and emotional responses [00:37:00] Parking ticket story - nonverbal communication power [00:38:30] Jerry Spence and emotional communication [00:40:30] Animal sounds exercise for emotional release [00:42:00] Film pitching vs writing skills comparison [00:43:15] Willingness to perform - overcoming comfort zones [00:44:00] "Shatning" - William Shatner as performance model [00:46:15] Modeling and deep trance identification [00:47:30] Steve Chandler - "Practice makes the unnatural, natural" [00:48:15] Comedian mimicry and implicit learning [00:49:00] Comic timing as implicit vs explicit knowledge [00:50:45] Modeling Darren Brown and Richard Osterlind [00:51:30] Aesthetics vs pragmatics in hypnosis style [00:53:45] Closing thoughts on performance in change work
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| 1st Order & 2nd Order Change | 21 Oct 2025 | 00:41:21 | |
In this episode, James Tripp introduces the powerful distinction between first-order and second-order change. First-order changes are modifications made within an existing system that ultimately change nothing—like rearranging chess pieces while still playing the same losing game. Second-order changes break the rules of the system entirely, requiring creative acts outside the current logic that keeps problems perpetuating. James explains how effective therapy and change work depends on helping clients escape their rigid frameworks and "the more, the more” patterns (the more I try to fix this, the worse it gets) through illogical, creative engagement rather than logical solutions. This concept underpins approaches from Ericksonian hypnosis to IFS, explaining why all successful therapies share this common thread. Timestamps: [00:00:00] Introduction to the episode [00:01:00] First-order vs second-order change distinction explained [00:01:15] The chess game metaphor - change that changes nothing [00:02:15] Example: Trying to write a book the same way repeatedly [00:02:45] How the logic of a system perpetuates the problem [00:03:00] Insomnia example - desperation perpetuating the problem [00:03:30] Attempted solutions becoming part of the problem pattern [00:04:15] Why Erickson used "crazy stuff" that doesn't make sense [00:04:30] Connecting to adaptive intelligence and novel solutions [00:05:00] Left hemisphere logic vs right hemisphere creativity [00:05:45] The nine-dot problem as an example [00:06:30] The origin of "thinking outside the box" [00:07:30] Unconscious rules blocking pathways to solutions [00:08:00] Relationship dynamics example - pursuing creates withdrawal [00:08:30] The "more pattern" - doing more of what doesn't work [00:09:30] Erickson's approach: "There's nothing you need to do" [00:10:00] Stop doing and start allowing - switching hemispheres [00:11:00] Context and expectations in change work [00:11:45] Hypnotherapy frame allowing for "weird and illogical" [00:12:30] All effective therapists get people outside their logic [00:13:00] IFS requires creative participation [00:14:00] There is no "correct logical process" for change [00:14:30] Staying in the framework vs stepping outside it [00:15:30] Listening for rigidity in client frameworks [00:16:00] NLP presupposition: "Do something different, anything different" [00:16:30] Being recruited by the problem [00:17:00] Clean language and the impulse to "get rid of it" [00:18:00] How IFS builds in second-order changes [00:18:45] First-order/second-order as the "golden thread" across therapies [00:19:15] How reframing works - offering different conceptual frameworks [00:20:15] Getting people to play a different game entirely [00:21:00] Patterns that perpetuate vs patterns that play through [00:21:30] Changing the rules changes the whole game [00:22:00] Chess "castling" example - rule added centuries later [00:22:15] Martial arts rules changing outcomes [00:23:30] Unconscious rule sets blocking outcomes [00:24:15] Signs you're stuck in a thinking box [00:25:15] Red flags in initial client emails [00:25:45] When clients tell you exactly what they want you to do [00:26:30] "If you think you're part of the solution, you might be part of the problem" [00:27:00] Solution-focused advertising engaging left hemisphere logic [00:28:00] The real solution will be a surprise [00:28:30] Holding an outcome like holding a baby bird [00:29:30] Working with rigidly locked-in clients [00:30:00] Pacing and leading vs getting beyond logic quickly [00:31:00] "Your best thinking got you here" [00:31:30] PTSD example - shifting from mind to body [00:33:00] Invitation to "just go with it and notice" [00:33:15] The "more pattern" signature of first-order change [00:33:30] Weight loss and eating control example [00:35:30] "Let the medicine do its work" - breaking the more pattern [00:37:00] Conversational hypnosis as reorganizing reality [00:38:00] Inviting people into different conceptual renderings [00:39:00] Difference between classical suggestion and Ericksonian approach [00:40:00] Changing rules vs giving instructions [00:40:45] When rules change, behavior changes by default [00:41:00] Closing and contact information changeworkingpod@gmail.com www.clientshifts.com | |||
| Confidence & Self-Doubt in Coaching | 29 Sep 2025 | 01:09:20 | |
First: This is incredibly human. Second: We don’t get to control complex systems. Third: You’re not the agent of change. Fourth: Let go of outcome pressure. | |||
| Lesser-Known Influences That Shaped James Tripp Pt 1 - Three Principles, Choice Theory, & Impact Therapy | 26 Dec 2025 | 00:44:26 | |
Lesser-Known Influences That Shaped James Tripp Pt 1 In this episode of Changeworking, Ruckus and James Tripp dig into three formative influences that don’t always get named — but quietly shaped the way James thinks about change and human agency. You’ll hear James unpack:
Along the way, James shares personal turning points, hard lessons from client work, and the moment he realized that no single paradigm — no matter how elegant — works for everyone. This episode is especially valuable if you’re a coach, therapist, or changeworker who wants deeper discernment about when to use a model, when not to, and how to stay human-first rather than technique-driven. Part 2 continues the conversation with more of James’ key influences. 📚 Resources Mentioned
Library of Books James mention: 00:00 – Welcome & Setup 00:45 – Three Principles: Beyond “The Map Is Not the Territory” 02:00 – Thought Is Not Reality 03:30 – “You Can’t Let Go of a Thought — But It Can Let Go of You” 05:00 – Mind, Thought, and Consciousness Explained 06:15 – Why Three Principles Is an Experiential Truth (Not an Idea) 07:00 – The Origin Story: Sydney Banks’ Awakening 09:00 – From Insight to Movement 10:15 – “This Sounds Like Philosophy — How Is It a Modality?” 11:00 – Three Principles as Conversational Hypnosis 12:30 – NLP, Erickson, and Three Principles Cross-Pollination 13:45 – Is There Training in Three Principles? 15:00 – Books vs. Transmission 16:45 – James’ Personal Breakthrough with Three Principles 18:00 – When Three Principles Isn’t Enough 20:00 – Trauma, Memory, and Why No One Model Fits Everyone 22:00 – How Three Principles Changed James’ Voice and Presence 23:30 – Why Three Principles Is Hard to “Explain” Online 24:30 – Recommended Entry Points 27:00 – Choice Theory: William Glasser’s Core Contribution 29:00 – Circumstances vs. Choice 30:15 – Choice Theory in Couples Work 33:00 – The Solving Circle 35:00 – Identifying With “The Eye That Chooses” 36:10 – A Client Story: Panic, Collapse, and Choice 40:00 – When Confidence Collapses Again 41:45 – Impact Therapy: What Actually Makes Sessions Work 42:45 – Eclecticism Over Dogma 43:45 – Final Takeaways & Part 2 Tease | |||
| What Clean Language Really Is — And How It Transforms Coaching, Hypnosis, and Changework | 10 Dec 2025 | 01:05:18 | |
Get YOUR Clean Language Quick-Start Guide (instant access PDF): www.cleanlanguagecourse.com In this episode, Ruckus sits down with changework expert James Tripp for a deep, revealing exploration of Clean Language — what it is, what it isn’t, and why it has quietly reshaped the worlds of coaching, therapy, hypnosis, and personal change. If you've ever wondered how practitioners help clients access deeper layers of meaning, uncover hidden metaphors, or experience transformative “aha” moments without suggestion or interpretation… this conversation will light up your brain. James breaks down: • The surprising origins of Clean Language and why it was built to work without content • How Clean Language creates vivid, immersive experiences that feel almost hypnotic • The essential difference between leading attention and leading the client • Why emergence (rather than engineered solutions) is the future of changework • How Clean Language dramatically strengthens hypnotic absorption • What the “Clean Syntax” actually is — and how it works • Why Clean Language is ultimately a capacity, not a technique You’ll also hear a live demo where Ruckus experiences a shift simply by answering a few clean questions — a perfect illustration of how quickly this modality gets under the surface. Whether you're a coach, therapist, hypnotist, IFS practitioner, NLP’er, or someone who just loves understanding the mechanics of change… this episode opens a door you’ll want to step through. 🔗 Free Resource Get the Clean Language Quick-Start Guide (instant PDF): 👉 www.cleanlanguagecourse.com 📌 TIMESTAMPS 00:00 – Welcome & Intro 01:00 – What People Get Wrong About Clean Language James explains why Clean Language is not about language patterns and how it differs from classic hypnotic language approaches. 02:00 – The Origins: David Grove & Metaphor-Based Processing Why Grove created Clean Language for trauma without content, and how metaphors became the gateway to safe transformation. 03:30 – Beyond Words: Clean Language as Experience James shares why the process is fundamentally experiential, not linguistic — and how it bridges conscious and unconscious processing. 06:00 – The “Aha” Moment: Why Clients Discover What They Didn’t Know They Knew How Clean Language evokes awareness and surprise, including James’ story of the plastic water pistol metaphor. 10:30 – Emergence: Why Clean Language Helps Change Unfold Organically Why neither practitioner nor client needs to pre-engineer solutions — and how this connects to Ericksonian lineage. 14:00 – Client Factors: Curiosity vs. Reality Testing The mindset that makes change possible, and the trap clients fall into when they try to pre-evaluate everything. 16:00 – Practitioner Openness: Staying Out of the Way James explains why “It’s okay not to know” may be the most important practitioner principle Grove ever taught. 17:50 – The “New Truth” Technique How repeating a client’s emerging truth six times (Power of Six) creates felt-sense alignment and real change. 21:30 – Tracking Difference: The Engine of All Clean Facilitation How noticing subtle differences guides every intervention — and why that changed the entire way James does changework. 23:45 – Leading Attention vs. Leading the Client Why Clean Language is not directionless — and how facilitators choose what to spotlight. 27:00 – When Clients Want the Impossible Using solution-focused moves to uncover what a desired “impossible” outcome really represents. 29:30 – How Facilitators Actually Choose the Next Question Instinct, training, unconscious patterning, and years of calibration — not algorithms. 31:00 – How Clean Language Supercharges Hypnosis & NLP James describes weaving Clean Language into Ericksonian flow, NLP processes, coaching, and everyday work. 33:00 – Using Clean Language Inside Other Modalities (IFS, NLP, Standard Coaching) Why it blends seamlessly and immediately elevates any interactive approach. 35:00 – Why Clean Language Can Sound “Weird” — and Why That’s Okay Origins in hypnosis, how conversationalizing it works, and the importance of context. 37:30 – Human First: Using These Tools Ethically with Friends/Family Why processes must stay “under the radar” in casual conversations. 42:00 – A Simple Micro-Frame to Introduce Clean Language in Coaching James gives a ready-to-use phrase: “Do you mind if I coach you a little on that?” 44:30 – The #1 Thing Clean Language Changed in James’ Work The feedback-loop sensibility that became the foundation of Hypnosis Without Trance. 47:30 – Clean Language as a Capacity, Not a Technique Why the deeper sensibilities stay with you long after the formal questions fade. 51:00 – Demonstration: The Clean Syntax in Action Live unpacking of “healthy” → “mentally clear” → experiential shift. Ruckus describes how it changed the feeling in real time. 54:00 – Why Clean Language Creates Stronger Trance Than Classic Hypnosis No more “I don’t think I was under” — because the client’s own material powers the hypnotic absorption. 59:00 – Clean Language as the Simplest, Most Reliable Method for Any Session Why, if you remember nothing else, Clean Language principles alone can carry a whole session. 1:02:00 – What You Can Use in Your Very Next Session James offers a simple starting point: track key concepts (“trust,” etc.) and explore them with clean, experiential questions. 1:04:30 – Closing & Free Resource Reminder to grab the Clean Language Quick Start Guide at cleanlanguagecourse.com | |||
| Lesser-Known Influences That Shaped James Tripp Pt 2 - Byron Katie, General Semantics, REBT, & Solution-Focused Brief Therapy | 04 Jan 2026 | 00:42:41 | |
In Part 2 of this conversation, Ruckus and James continue exploring the formative influences that shaped James’s thinking as a changework practitioner — moving beyond familiar territories into frameworks that dismantle belief, clarify perception, and reorient people toward agency and possibility. This episode dives into approaches that question certainty itself: how suffering is created through thought, language, and self-evaluation — and how shifts can happen by loosening identification, challenging “shoulds,” and redirecting attention toward solutions rather than problems. You’ll hear James unpack:
Along the way, James shares personal reflections on what genuinely helped him change, how these ideas overlap with — yet feel very different from — Three Principles and NLP, and why eclecticism matters more than loyalty to any single model. This episode is especially valuable for coaches, therapists, and changeworkers who want to deepen their discernment, recognize when a model is constraining rather than freeing, and expand their flexibility in how they think about change. 📚 Resources Mentioned
Library of Books James mention: 00:00 – Welcome & Setup 00:50 – Byron Katie and “Black Path” Approaches 02:30 – Loving What Is 03:45 – The Work: Four Questions and Turnarounds 06:15 – Feeling the Truth of a Turnaround 08:45 – Byron Katie as a Practitioner 11:40 – General Semantics: The Map Is Not the Territory 14:00 – Essentialism vs. Operational Thinking 17:15 – Cascades of Inference 19:45 – Sanity, Language, and Worldviews 22:20 – Where to Start With General Semantics 23:15 – REBT: Albert Ellis and Stoic Roots 26:00 – Ending Self-Rating 27:15 – “Masturbation” and the Tyranny of Shoulds 29:00 – The ABC Model 31:15 – Assuming the Worst 33:20 – REBT’s Personal Impact on James 33:45 – Solution-Focused Brief Therapy Origins 36:00 – From Problem-Focused to Outcome-Focused 38:15 – The Miracle Question 40:00 – When to Shift Gears 41:30 – Learning Solution-Focused Brief Therapy 42:05 – Closing Reflections | |||
| The Ego: Maps of Self & Who You Think You Are | 14 Jan 2026 | 00:53:18 | |
In this episode of Changeworking, Ruckus and James explore the concept of the ego — not as something to eliminate or transcend, but as a map of self we use to navigate the world. Rather than treating ego as a fixed entity or enemy, this conversation looks at ego as the stories we tell about ourselves: how those stories help us function, how they quietly shape fear and behavior, and how suffering often arises when we mistake the map for who we are. Along the way, James draws on neuroscience, philosophy, spirituality, and changework experience to unpack questions like: Why definitions of ego never quite hold How identity, self-concept, and ego overlap Why social fear feels existential What happens when we take our self-stories too seriously And why freedom may come less from changing the story — and more from seeing it as a story. This episode is especially relevant for practitioners, coaches, and curious humans who want a more nuanced relationship with ego, identity, and self — without turning the conversation into another spiritual or psychological battleground. 📌 TIMESTAMPS 00:00 – Introduction 01:00 – Why Ego Is So Hard to Define 02:00 – Starting With the Word vs. Starting With the World 03:45 – Ego as Stories About Ourselves 05:00 – Thought Forms, Egregores, and Emergent Identity 06:30 – The Problem With “Ego Death” 07:15 – Damasio’s Three Selves 09:30 – Why We Need a Map of Self 11:00 – Ego as a Map, Not the Territory 12:30 – Self-Concept as Destiny 14:00 – Social Fear as Egoic Threat 15:45 – Healthy Ego vs. Inflated Ego 17:00 – Seeing Ideas as Ideas 18:30 – “Whatever You Say It Is, You’re Wrong” 20:30 – Meta-Position and Psychological Freedom 23:00 – Identity vs. Ego 25:00 – Choosing Language With Clients 27:00 – Identity Traps and Professional Roles 29:00 – Multiple Identities and Flexibility 31:00 – James’s Burnout and the “Magician” Identity 35:00 – Capital-S Self and Spiritual Traditions 38:00 – The Third Mountain 41:00 – Radical Pragmatism 45:00 – Aesthetics, Meaning, and Enrichment 49:00 – Letting Go Without Falling | |||
| Creating the Space for Miracles - Stacking the Odds in Your Sessions | 15 Apr 2026 | 00:42:57 | |
In this episode of Changeworking, Ruckus and James explore what happens when change work goes beyond what any of us can explain. At the end of last year, James did a clean language demo at the UK Hypnosis Conference without knowing what the volunteer was working on. Five days later, he learned the session had resolved her lifelong dyslexia — she could suddenly read signs and license plates that had always looked like nonsense to her. James uses this story to unpack what he calls "the space for miracles": the idea that while a professional practitioner can't promise the miraculous, they also shouldn't work in a way that shuts the door on it. James and Ruckus dig into the tension between strategic, tactical change work and the kind of sudden, inexplicable shift that's hard to attribute to any single technique. They talk about Milton Erickson's influence, Steve Bierman's emergency room use of hypnotic suggestion (including his near-daily practice of telling bleeding patients to stop bleeding), David Grove's clean language, and why James believes all change ultimately comes from the creative intelligence within the client. Timestamps: | |||
| Free James Tripp Conversational Hypnosis Training | 05 Jun 2026 | 00:22:45 | |
Get your free one-hour Conversational Hypnosis training from James Tripp! https://www.clientshiftsacademy.com/convo-hypno-free-vid Join Client Shifts Membership to take part in the six-week James Tripp training: All sessions will be available as replays inside the portal. | |||