Abstract
This article elaborates ways that using hypnosis may create special vulnerability for the clinician, not only to experiencing sexual feelings towasd patients but also to becoming confused about the meaning of these feelings and their relevanci? to treatment, as well as about the maintenance of appropriate patientclinican boundaries. Special qualities of the hypnotic experience and relationship likely to generate erotic feehgs and impulses in patients and clinicians alike are addressed. Aclinical case example illustrates many possible meanings of therapist sexual feelrngs and the impulses to avoidance or acting out they may provoke. Clinically appropriate and inappropriate ways of managing boundaries in the presence of sexual arousal and of using sexual feelings to deepen clinical understanding and direct treatment interventions are discussed.