Flemons, D. G., & Shulimson, J. (1997). Participating in the culture of cancer: A demilitarized approach to treatment. Contemporary Hypnosis, 14(3), 182-188.
Making Symptoms Vanish
Flemons, D. (1999, Jan./Feb.). Making symptoms vanish: Hypnosis and the mystery of the sudden cure.Family Therapy Networker, 23, 56-65.
Embodying the Mind & Minding the Body
Flemons, D. (2004). Embodying the mind and minding the body: Using hypnosis in brief therapy. In S. Madigan (Ed.), Therapeutic conversations 5: Therapy from outside in (pp. 41-53). Vancouver, Canada: Yaletown Family Therapy.
Tao of Therapy
Flemons, D. (2004, May/June) The Tao of therapy. Psychotherapy Networker, 28(3), 44-47, 68.
Finding Flow
Flemons, D. (2007, May/June). Finding flow. Psychotherapy Networker, 31(3), 67-71.
Hypnosis, Indifferentiation, and Therapeutic Change
Flemons, D. (2008, July/August). Hypnosis, indifferentiation, and therapeutic change. Family Therapy Magazine, 7(4), 14-23.
Toward a Relational Theory of Hypnosis
Flemons, D. (2020). Toward a relational theory of hypnosis. American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, 64(4), 344-363. DOI: 10.1080/00029157.2019.1666700
Hypnosis Encyclopedia Entry
Flemons, D. (2017). Hypnosis. In J. Carlson & S. Dermer (Eds.), The SAGE encyclopedia of marriage, family, and couples counseling (pp. 819-822). Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE.
Hypnosis and Family Therapy
Flemons, D. (2013). Hypnosis and family therapy. In A. Rambo, C. West, A. Schooley, & T. Boyd (Eds.), Family therapy review: Contrasting contemporary models (pp. 123-128). New York, NY: Routledge.
Using Hypnosis to Invite Relaxation
Flemons, D. (2013). Using hypnosis to invite relaxation. In G. P. Koocher, J. C. Norcross, & B. A. Greene (Eds.), Psychologists’ desk reference (3rd ed.) (pp. 271-276). New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
