Should you use covert hypnosis to make him feel like sex with you is something he should have?

There is a set of language patterns or techniques that have only been around for a few decades. Developed by Milton Erickson, arguably the world’s greatest hypnotist, these skills were used covertly or conversationally during a therapy session.

They are usually used to help people overcome emotional pain and limitations that they have had for a long time. These skills have been learned and taught for a variety of different applications.

It’s one thing to use these covert skills to help people, after they’ve come to you hoping to help them quit smoking, lose weight, or ease the pain of the tragic loss of a loved one.

But it is ethical and moral to use them for other purposes, especially when the target of their use has no idea what is going on.

One area that these have taught is the area of ​​seduction. These powerful abilities of hypnosis have been reverse engineered and reformulated for use in creating incredibly, almost irresistible feelings of sexual desire in a woman.

Before these abilities, most men would have to approach a woman the “old way”, through normal conversation. Discuss topics of mutual interest, go on several dates, and hopefully find enough in common to slowly move into a physical relationship.

But with these abilities, all of that can be overlooked. With these abilities, it is possible to approach almost any woman and, through seemingly simple conversation, create incredible feelings of sexual desire and emotional need in her. In an hour, or even less, these abilities can be used on a complete stranger and make her feel such strong feelings of sexual desire and lust that she will do anything you ask of her. Sometimes against her better judgment. Sometimes to regret later.

Is this ethical? Does this cross the line of moral behavior? Is it okay to use these covert abilities to make a beautiful woman feel incredibly strong feelings of sexual desire for you, over and over again? Or are these skills so powerful that they should be left for the therapist’s office?

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