Changeworking Podcast Por James Tripp & Ruckus Skye arte de portada

Changeworking

Changeworking

De: James Tripp & Ruckus Skye
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Changeworking is a show for practitioners and coaches who help their clients create change. Host Ruckus Skye engages in conversations with internationally renowned hypnosis and changework expert and trainer James Tripp. Discussions include tools & techniques, concepts and insights, and changework philosophy for the working practitioner.© 2026 2025 Economía Gestión y Liderazgo Higiene y Vida Saludable Liderazgo Psicología Psicología y Salud Mental
Episodios
  • Creating the Space for Miracles - Stacking the Odds in Your Sessions
    Apr 15 2026

    🔴 FREE LIVE EVENT THIS SATURDAY — Creating the Space for Miracles. 👉 Register here: https://www.clientshiftsacademy.com/miracles-live Join James Tripp for a one-time live Zoom event exploring what actually makes profound, unexpected change possible in a client session. 📅 Saturday, April 18th 2026 · 10am PDT / 1pm EDT / 6pm BST 🎟️ Free. Live only. No replay. ------------------------------------- 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. The conversation also leads into a free live session on April 18th where James will play the full demo, break it down, and answer questions. This one is for practitioners who want to hold both realities at once — doing the nuts-and-bolts work of stacking the odds, while leaving the space open for something unexpected to come through. In this episode: - What James means by "miraculous" change, and why it's different from hype - The dyslexia demo: how a session resolved something neither practitioner nor client had named - Stacking the odds vs. controlling outcomes in hypnotic changework - Steve Bierman's ER work — telling bleeding patients to stop bleeding - Why rigid processes can subordinate the client's own creative intelligence - What clean language, David Grove, and interactive trance flow have in common Timestamps: [00:00] Intro & the April 18 free live session on creating the space for miracles [01:30] What does "creating the space for miracles" actually mean? [02:45] Why James pushes back on the "hypnosis = instant cure" promise [04:30] Holding both: strategic work and openness to the miraculous [05:30] Warts, HPV, and why hypnosis beats freezing them off [07:30] You can't rely on miracles, but you also shouldn't shut them out [08:15] Stacking the odds — Erickson's "curious to see what's possible" [09:30] The demo backstory: the UK Hypnosis Conference, clean language, and Amy [12:30] Seven minutes of work with no idea what they were working on [13:15] Amy's message five days later — the dyslexia had lifted [15:15] "Sometimes people can just do things they don't know they can do" [16:00] Steve Bierman's ER work and telling patients to stop bleeding [19:30] Miraculous hypnosis as "asking the unconscious" — and personalized rituals [21:15] Co-creation: the demo was not something James "did to" Amy [22:45] Heraclitus, ephemeral moments, and why techniques don't just repeat [24:30] What happened months later — a whole generative wave, not a fix [26:15] Stacking the odds as the real aim of changework [27:15] Is this conversational hypnosis or deep trance? Neither, exactly [28:30] A PTSD client, "the deepest I've been in trance without being in trance" [32:30] Watching the demo back: natural eye-closes and the pull of psychoactive moments [36:45] Interactive trance flow and why co-creativity matters [39:15] Ruckus: watching it, it didn't look "special" — that's kind of the point [40:30] Andy's smoking cessation session: the one he was going to refund [41:30] Closing — good work is stacking the odds, not controlling outcomes [42:15] Outro & invitation to join the free April 18 live session Books mentioned — browse James's library: https://bookshop.org/lists/james-tripp-s-library - "Healing Beyond Pills and Potions" by Dr. Steve Bierman Connect: Email: changeworkingpod@gmail.com Produced by Ruckus Skye www.clientshifts.com

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    43 m
  • The Ego: Maps of Self & Who You Think You Are
    Jan 14 2026

    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
    Ruckus introduces the episode and frames ego as stories of self rather than something to destroy.

    01:00 – Why Ego Is So Hard to Define
    James explains why starting with definitions often creates confusion rather than clarity.

    02:00 – Starting With the Word vs. Starting With the World
    A distinction between conceptual definitions and observed phenomena.

    03:45 – Ego as Stories About Ourselves
    James offers his working definition of ego and why it’s useful.

    05:00 – Thought Forms, Egregores, and Emergent Identity
    How collections of ideas can appear to take on a life of their own.

    06:30 – The Problem With “Ego Death”
    Why eliminating ego may not lead to functional or meaningful living.

    07:15 – Damasio’s Three Selves
    Core self, autobiographical self, and what happens when ego goes offline.

    09:30 – Why We Need a Map of Self
    How ego supports decision-making, direction, and long-term planning.

    11:00 – Ego as a Map, Not the Territory
    Korzybski’s insight applied to identity and self-concept.

    12:30 – Self-Concept as Destiny
    How our map of self interacts with our map of the world.

    14:00 – Social Fear as Egoic Threat
    Why embarrassment and judgment feel physically dangerous.

    15:45 – Healthy Ego vs. Inflated Ego
    Why overcompensation and narcissistic strategies miss the point.

    17:00 – Seeing Ideas as Ideas
    The relief that comes from recognizing self-stories as provisional.

    18:30 – “Whatever You Say It Is, You’re Wrong”
    Why no description of self can ever be the thing itself.

    20:30 – Meta-Position and Psychological Freedom
    Being “up above it” versus trapped inside the story.

    23:00 – Identity vs. Ego
    Are they meaningfully different, or just different lenses?

    25:00 – Choosing Language With Clients
    Why James avoids certain terms depending on context and cultural baggage.

    27:00 – Identity Traps and Professional Roles
    Ruckus shares a personal example of identity constriction.

    29:00 – Multiple Identities and Flexibility
    Why being many things may be healthier than being one thing.

    31:00 – James’s Burnout and the “Magician” Identity
    A personal story about identity, overextension, and recovery.

    35:00 – Capital-S Self and Spiritual Traditions
    Why “Self” points to something real but ungraspable.

    38:00 – The Third Mountain
    Beyond naïve realism and pure relativism.

    41:00 – Radical Pragmatism
    When usefulness replaces truth — and where that breaks down.

    45:00 – Aesthetics, Meaning, and Enrichment
    Why change isn’t only about what works, but how it feels.

    49:00 – Letting Go Without Falling
    Why people need something to hold onto when releasing certainty.

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    53 m
  • Lesser-Known Influences That Shaped James Tripp Pt 2 - Byron Katie, General Semantics, REBT, & Solution-Focused Brief Therapy
    Jan 4 2026
    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: Byron Katie’s Work — dismantling arguments with reality through inquiry, turnarounds, and lived insight General Semantics — why “the map is not the territory,” how language distorts perception, and learning to witness our own sense-making REBT (Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy) — freeing ourselves from self-rating, “musts,” and catastrophic thinking Solution-Focused Brief Therapy — shifting attention from problems to resources, outcomes, and forward movement 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 Loving What Is — Byron Katie Science and Sanity — Alfred Korzybski Language, Thought and Action — S. I. Hayakawa Drive Yourself Sane — Susan & Bruce Kodish Quantum Psychology — Robert Anton Wilson Solution-Focused Brief Therapy: 100 Key Points and Techniques — Harvey Ratner, Evan George, Chris Iveson The Solution Focused Diamond — (various authors) Library of Books James mention: https://bookshop.org/shop/clientshifts 📌 TIMESTAMPS 00:00 – Welcome & SetupRuckus introduces Part 2 and previews the additional influences covered in this episode. 00:50 – Byron Katie and “Black Path” ApproachesJames introduces the idea of deconstructive paths that dissolve illusion rather than build strategies. 02:30 – Loving What IsWhy suffering comes from arguing with reality — and why reality always wins. 03:45 – The Work: Four Questions and TurnaroundsHow Byron Katie’s inquiry process loosens rigid beliefs and creates flexibility. 06:15 – Feeling the Truth of a TurnaroundWhy this work can’t be done intellectually — and where the real shift happens. 08:45 – Byron Katie as a PractitionerJames reflects on her elegance, presence, and effectiveness in live sessions. 11:40 – General Semantics: The Map Is Not the TerritoryHow Alfred Korzybski’s ideas shaped modern thinking about perception and meaning. 14:00 – Essentialism vs. Operational ThinkingWhy language quietly turns opinions into “facts” — and how to undo that. 17:15 – Cascades of InferenceHow people leap from perception to certainty without realizing it. 19:45 – Sanity, Language, and WorldviewsKorzybski’s vision for reducing human conflict through better thinking. 22:20 – Where to Start With General SemanticsRecommended entry points beyond Science and Sanity. 23:15 – REBT: Albert Ellis and Stoic RootsHow Ellis blended philosophy, general semantics, and therapy. 26:00 – Ending Self-RatingWhy your value doesn’t change — even when you mess up. 27:15 – “Masturbation” and the Tyranny of ShouldsEllis’s blunt language for dismantling toxic inner rules. 29:00 – The ABC ModelActivating events, beliefs, and consequences — and where intervention happens. 31:15 – Assuming the WorstWhy Ellis preferred facing worst-case scenarios over reassurance. 33:20 – REBT’s Personal Impact on JamesHow these ideas reshaped his inner life and responses. 33:45 – Solution-Focused Brief Therapy OriginsTracing the lineage back to Milton Erickson and Palo Alto. 36:00 – From Problem-Focused to Outcome-FocusedWhy solution-focused conversations free stuck systems. 38:15 – The Miracle QuestionHow imagining life beyond the problem reactivates creativity. 40:00 – When to Shift GearsWhy resource-focused work can succeed where deep memory work stalls. 41:30 – Learning Solution-Focused Brief TherapyRecommended books and why every changeworker should study it. 42:05 – Closing ReflectionsRuckus wraps up and invites listeners to share questions and insights.
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    43 m
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James and his sidekick are well versed in the how to and the know how of all things hypnosis. I’ve learned a great deal from them. My only critique is that the sidekick sounds as if he was a poor choice for the voice over actor for the Frankenstein monster in Young Frankenstein with all the humming, and noises he makes

Very, very informative podcast

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