Take your time. . . . Let the other mind do it. ... Slow down. . . . There it goes. . . . You are learning now . . . really learn- ing. . . . Enjoy it. ... That's right. ... All the way up, let it ... all the way up. . . . Learn to allow your unconscious mind to make the movements and the changes . . . and allow that to continue, one mov- ing one way . . . and the other moving the other way. . . . And you can continue that until you've learned to do this perfectly."
Hi, the above text is the induction text of hypnosis. I wonder what "all the way up" means. Does it mean the hypnotist askes his client's responses all along as the way the client is responding to his induction words?
Is it an idiomatic phrase? Could you illustrate the usage at any context, if I want to say all the way up? Thanks!
Maybe the context would show that the hypnotist has asked the client to do some kind of physical movement up and down. It's not an idiomatic phrase. You could say eg Go up the stairs.
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Maybe the context would show that the hypnotist has asked the client to do some kind of physical movement up and down.
It's not an idiomatic phrase.
You could say eg Go up the stairs. Go all the way up.