Thursday, October 4, 2007
Hypnosis Auto-Suggestions Blog
H. F. Dunbar cites an interesting case of "grossesse nerveuse", which shows how deeply can imagination modify the bodily functions; she writes: "E. Graefen-berg (1929) was called to a delivery one morning at five o'clock, only to find a midwife who had been waiting forty eight hours and a physician who had been waiting twenty four hours for the final termination of labor. The patient, forty five years old, was lying in bed shaken by almost continuous bearing-down pains. . . This woman who had wished all her life for a child had succumbed to an idea of pregnancy." Autosuggestion could make the body simulate the symptoms of pregnancy and deceive two specialists; but it could not produce the baby. A remarkable case is related by Woodson. A patient suffered from dementia praecox (paranoid type), imagining that the upper part of his body was as solid within as concrete. The author contends that the patient died in consequence of this delusion.
Wednesday, October 3, 2007
Hypnotic Suggestion News Buletin
Here, then, is the way toward the solution of an old problem. Within the human organism, there lies a nervous system which controls and regulates the mechanical behavior of the body. Involuntary as it usually is, it is not entirely separated from consciousness. The autonomic system is connected with the central system by means of two channels, emotion and suggestion. It was the pathway of suggestion-ornamented with prejudice and superstition-that was unwittingly exploited from the olden days to the present, from the witch-doctors to the psychoanalysts. Whereas they failed to comprehend the physical mechanism of suggestion and ascribed their powers to the spirits or by whatever other names these forces were called, it is time now to abandon the antiquated attitude and to seek the explanation of phenomena of suggestion within the organism itself-that is to say, to study functions of the autonomic nervous system and structures connected with it. When we finally learn to understand this mechanism in its major details, we shall be enabled to treat human beings not at random and through guesses, but scientifically, with all that this word implies.
Tuesday, October 2, 2007
Suggestions Daily Info Blog
That human personalities are molded by suggestion, will be generally admitted. Take, for instance, the art of advertising. A business man, in offering his products on the market, will not describe their qualities, good and bad, in an objective manner; rather, he will dwell on the attractive, exclusive, important features and thus try to arouse human attention and desire. A sign or a slogan does not impose, it suggests. And people yield to it, if it is built and presented according to the rules of popular psychology. These facts are appreciated in the business world to such an extent that, despite the colossal expense of education by advertising, no firm or industry can afford to neglect it. Business men have grasped this lesson in educating the public "by suggestion." They know full well that public taste is directed by being whetted. But our high schools and colleges still continue to resort to the old-fashioned methods of dry assignment and recitation, with almost a complete disregard of psychology and common sense. As a result, class work is notoriously boring and ineffective, education being achieved, as it were, despite the educators' efforts, in extra-curricular activities rather than in the class-room. Some people would not believe the tragedy of this situation, but let them ask schoolboys and schoolgirls. If these are intelligent, observant and frank, the truth will be told.
Wednesday, September 26, 2007
Hypnotherapy Online Blog
Hypnosis can be, no doubt, successfully employed in teaching how to master the following skills:
To swim
To skate
To ride a bicycle
To ride a horse
To drive a car
To dance
etc., etc.,etc.
To swim
To skate
To ride a bicycle
To ride a horse
To drive a car
To dance
etc., etc.,etc.
Tuesday, September 25, 2007
Suggestions Daily Updates
Auto-suggestion is of considerable assistance in correcting personality faults. Though E. Coué, whose popular acclaim fifteen or twenty years ago still lingers in many minds, had little to contribute to our understanding of the nature of suggestion, practically he was on the right track in urging his followers to cultivate self-confidence as the key to a successful life. He used to say:6"Whoever starts off in life with the idea: 'I shall succeed', does succeed because he does what is necessary to bring about this result. If only one opportunity presents itself to him, and if this opportunity has, as it were, only one hair on its head, he seizes it by that one hair. Further, he often brings about unconsciously or not, propitious circumstances."He who on the contrary always doubts himself never succeeds in doing anything. He might find himself in the midst of an army of opportunities, with heads of hair like Absalom, and yet he would not see them and could not seize a single one, even if he had only to stretch out his hand in order to do so. And if he brings about circumstances, they are generally unfavorable ones. Do not then blame fate, you have only yourself to blame."
Monday, September 24, 2007
Suggestions Daily News
To put it more specifically, hypnosis as a curative agency should be applied only to those bodily disturbances and mental ailments which are directly or closely connected and regulated by the autonomic nervous system. Suggestion does not perform miracles, let it be understood once for all. It is completely helpless in maladies rooted in anatomical defects or in physiological troubles basically independent of the involuntary system. It is, indeed, foolish to hope that hypnosis will cure diphtheria, syphilis, or appendicitis. Fully recognizing these obvious limitations, we should not at the same time forget that there exist cases, quite numerous in fact, in which the symptom has merely the appearance of an anatomical defect, as in hysterical blindness, deafness or paralysis. The physician should remain strictly scientific in his diagnosis and know how to differentiate between these psychic ailments and similar organic maladies that require ordinary surgery or are totally incurable.
Sunday, September 23, 2007
Hypnosis Research News Blog
Scientific literature is full also of isolated instances of successful treatment of other diseases; but such cases require further observation and verification. Anyway, the above list is long enough to give us a general idea as to the possibilities of hypnotic research and practice. Not being a physician and having made, consequently, few medical observations of my own, I shall limit myself to a single illustration. Several years ago I was closely associated with a distinguished scholar, Professor F., who suffered from a grave case of asthma. The disease took finally an acute form that threatened to interrupt a fruitful career. For months he was forced to abstain from all work and tiresome exercise, and still physicians failed to help. Then one day, as I was informed, he came across a Christian Scientist. I presume Dr. F. had despaired of medical assistance and was ready to try something new. People do become prone to be converted in the days of a health crisis. What transpired between the two, I do not exactly know. What is important here is that a prestige-and-faith relationship was evidently established between them, and suggestion was sufficient to effect a cure where medicine had failed to help. I regret only that the means of effecting it was not scientific.
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discover more about hypnotherapy
Friday, September 21, 2007
Hypnosis Blog Updates
Let me cite a more detailed passage from one of my hypnosis subject's reports: "There is no other state comparable to it. It is somewhat between a waking and a sleeping state-a drowsy, comfortable inertia envelops one. Regardless of the position taken, whether sitting, slouching, or reclining, during the state I feel utterly at ease. I have never had the desire to awaken nor to fall asleep-merely to continue in that state. There is no consciousness of the body, of the chair, of the room, of anything, except the voice, speaking, speaking, speaking. Under this state I am conscious of nothing, yet acutely aware of everything. The tick of the clock, the dropping of a pin, the window shade moving, the opening of the door, the mere change in pitch in Dr. Winn's voice-no change in the environment escapes me."
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discover more about self hypnotism
Thursday, September 20, 2007
Hypnosis Suggestions Daily Helpful Hints
We are justified in concluding, therefore, that the resistance of a person in a trance to improper suggestions is strong only as long as he is asked directly to violate his economic, moral, religious, or aesthetic convictions and interests. But he can be influenced to go against these convictions and interests, if his senses are deceived, if he acts under false assumptions, or if he is unaware of the implications of his conduct. His mistake-that is what it amounts to-may be disastrous, though natural, under special circumstances. The plain truth of the whole problem is, in the words of C. Baudouin, that any subject will follow a suggestion if he "imagines it to be possible." But he will resist or disobey a suggestion to do anything that he would not do ordinarily, if the act is presented as such.
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to read more hypnotherapy
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Hypnotic Experiments Info Blog
An interesting passage is found in one of Munthe's books, who wrote: "Most of the accusations against hypnotism are greatly exaggerated. So far I know of no well authenticated proof of a criminal act committed by a subject under hypnotic suggestion. I have never seen a suggestion made under hypnosis carried out by the subject which he or she would refuse to carry out if made during normal waking state. I affirm that if a blackguard should suggest to a woman under profound hypnosis that she should surrender herself to him and she should carry out this suggestion, it would mean that she would as readily have done so had the suggestion been made to her in a normal condition of waking life. There is no such thing as blind obedience. The subject knows quite well what is going on the whole time and what he is willing or unwilling to do. Camille, Professor Liégeois' famous somnambulist in Nancy, who would remain impassive and indifferent when a pin was stuck full length through her arm or a piece of burning charcoal put in her hand, would blush scarlet when the Professor pretended to make a gesture as if to disarrange her clothes, and wake up instantaneously. This is only one of the many baffling contradictions familiar to students of hypnotic phenomena and most difficult for the outsiders to understand. The fact that the person cannot be hypnotized without his or her will, must not be overlooked by the alarmists. Of course all talk about an unwilling and unaware person being hypnotized at a distance is sheer nonsense."
Tuesday, September 18, 2007
Hypnotic State Blog Update
Clinical literature is full of examples of such hypnotic conditioning. The subject is asked, for instance, to wake up on the following morning precisely at three o'clock, to take a book and read for fifteen minutes. In order to make the experiment conclusive and convincing, he may be instructed to forget about the order, but to execute it as it were spontaneously. True enough, the subject wakes up at the indicated time and does everything exactly as instructed. Afterwards, if asked why he did it, he will, in all probability, retort that there was really nothing extraordinary about his actions. He simply woke up and, feeling that he would not be able to go back to sleep immediately, decided to take a book and to read for a while. The human power of rationalization is truly amazing, and men tend to explain away anything that does not suit their purposes or evades their comprehension.
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discover more about meditation and relaxation
Monday, September 17, 2007
The Hypnotic State Helpful Hints
When the practician loses his confidence, for example-that it is difficult to arouse the subject from the trance. The situation may be quite disconcerting and, if the sitting is performed in public, highly embarrassing. Nevertheless, there is no ground for worry. The trance normally passes into natural sleep, out of which the subject emerges spontaneously or can be easily awakened after a while. The few cases on record of an exceptionally prolonged sleep (lasting for hours or even days) represent rare exceptions and have really nothing to do with hypnosis: they must be considered as due to hysteria.
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for more news hypnotherapy
Saturday, September 15, 2007
Hypnosis Suggestions Daily News
Unless you give these or similar pre-hypnotic suggestions, the subject might develop uneasiness and manifest unpleasant sensations from which the practician ought to protect him. There is no reason why the hypnotic state should not be effective as well as pleasant. I remember my first attempt at hypnotizing, when I knew very little of what to expect. The subject, a young man of twenty, entered the state surprisingly easily but immediately afterward began to groan and to move about. Naturally, I became somewhat frightened and decided immediately to awake-him. But for a minute or so, neither could he get out of the trance nor could I arouse him. Nothing more serious happened, of course; nevertheless, I promised myself to take, henceforth, every precaution against similar accidents.
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discover more about hypnosis
Thursday, September 13, 2007
Hypnotic Experiments News Blog
Nevertheless, comparatively simple experimentation shows that, in many instances of light hypnosis, it is hardly noticeable at all. The subject, on being aroused from the state, will commonly report on what has been said by other persons during the experiment. He might even spontaneously react to their remarks. We must conclude, therefore, that, whereas the prestige-and-faith relationship is absolutely necessary for successful hypnotizing, rapport is merely a common concomitant. As a matter of fact, such was essentially the view of Braid who pointed out long ago that rapport is not a necessary condition of hypnosis, but is created by suggestion. This position was recently confirmed by P. C. Young and others. As E. S. Conklin briefly puts it, "rapport is but a form of partial anesthesia, the subject being limited in his sensory responses to those aroused by the hypnotizer."By combining both aspects of hypnosis, physiological and psychological, we arrive at the following definition of the hypnotic state: it is a prestige-and-faith relationship in which the practician uses his advantageous position to influence by suggestion the subject's autonomic nervous system, in order to effect desired bodily inhibitions and excitations and to condition his mind accordingly.
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Hypnotical Experiments Info Blog
"I place five new postage stamps upon a white card and ask (a hypnotized Hindu subject) to count them, which he does correctly pointing his finger to each in turn. I then point to two of the stamps and tell him they will be no longer there when he again looks at the card. I then ask him to count the three stamps again, and he points to and counts the three stamps and denies that the others are there. I then shuffle the stamps, while hidden from his vision, and ask him to count again. In spite of the changes of position of the stamps. still neglects and denies the two tabooed stamps. This illustrates two points: first, that the two stamps are really in some sense perceived; secondly, that they are perceived and finely discriminated from the other three; for, if they were not thus perceived and discriminated, they could not be singled out for neglect. But nevertheless, the two stamps are, in some sense, really invisible to the subject."The paradox that the stamps are seen and yet not seen by the patient," concludes Professor McDougall, "can only be resolved by the hypothesis that he at the same time is a divided personality, one part of which sees the two stamps and prevents the other from seeing them." This supposition, so appealing to the mystic or the animist and so convenient for hasty interpretations, is devoid of scientific meaning, as it cannot be, or at least has never been, translated into physiological terminology. In absence of any alternative hypothesis, scientists may be forced to resort to it.
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explorer more about guided relaxation
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Hypnotherapy Online Blog
Much and varied evidence is available in support of the belief that the bodily mechanism underlying hypnosis is identical with that involved in ordinary waking suggestion. It is hardly necessary to embark upon a detailed theoretical discussion of the problem, or even to study countless medical records. It will be sufficient to consider the following simple facts, to recognize this identity.A number of years ago, I entered a grocery store to buy a few tomatoes, my favorite vegetable. As I was selecting them, I happened to turn over one large tomato, right in time to see a large, fat worm crawl out of it. It was silly, of course, to allow myself to be influenced by this sight-I did not buy that tomato, after all-but the fact remains that I could not eat any tomatoes that day and for the subsequent year. The mere sight of tomatoes would invariably bring back the recollection . . . and disgust. Even today I have not completely regained my former predilection for the vegetable. As a psychologist, I should have known how to combat the unpleasant association created by my experience in the grocery store. But psychologists, I presume, are as helpless in fighting some mental weaknesses as physicians are in overcoming some bodily ailments. Anyway, the auto-suggestive influences generated by the memorable tomato were powerful enough to modify my taste for a long time, if not for ever.
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discover more about hypnosis
Monday, September 10, 2007
Hypnotherapy Scoops
Scholars already begin to transcend their distrust of hypnosis and to realize the coming importance of the study of suggestion. In their natural caution, they are inclined to be conservative in estimates and expectations. Perhaps this should be so. Yet every person having relevant and up-to-date knowledge feels that the theoretical and practical discoveries awaiting us, as soon as research gains in courage and depth, are likely to transcend our best hopes. In the words of one of the few scientists now devoting their time and effort to the study of suggestion, "the first and last words which M. H. Erickson, "Possible Detrimental Effects of Experimental Hypnosis," Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 1932Blankfort, Michael, "Why We Don't Know Much About Hypnosis," Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 1932. A similar position was taken, among other psychologists, by T. Ribot, H. Muensterberg, W. McDougall, and C. Hull can be said of hypnosis is that it is the most interesting and most profound of all psychological material which has merited so little attention."Are the above claims justified? Does hypnotism, indeed, offer data of genuine scientific importance and a method of great practical value ?
Thursday, September 6, 2007
Post-Hypnotic Suggestion News Blog
The expression, "post-hypnotic suggestion," is somewhat misleading. Really it refers not to suggestions given after the trance, but to those offered during it to be executed subsequently. Bernheim described the phenomenon in his Suggestive Therapeutics as "inducing in somnambulists by means of suggestion, acts, illusions of the senses, and hallucinations which shall not be manifested during the sleeping condition, but upon waking."The first scientists who studied the phenomenon were Liébeault, Richet, Bernheim, and Delboeuf. Their principle interest was amnesia. They discovered that one of the most common results of deep hypnosis is a complete inability on the part of the patient to recall anything that transpired during the sitting. Soon they found also that an appropriate suggestion during the trance will produce the same effect, even if the state was not very deep.Amnesia was originally regarded as essential to all post-hypnotic suggestion. Even today it is usually asserted that "post-hypnotic commands are as a rule better executed if amnesia is present.
Wednesday, September 5, 2007
Hysteria and Hypnosis Blog
I concur with J. F. Babinski6 in his conviction that hysteria is a state of abnormal suggestibility. It is generally acknowledged, indeed, that people suffering from this disease react vigorously to outside influences. They are easily carried away by ideas uttered in their presence, they let imagination break the boundaries of the common sense, they are led with facility to the extremes of emotionality. If we are to understand the neurosis of hysteria, however, it is necessary to go beyond the simple assertion that hysterics are excessively suggestible. For it is not enough to grant that hysteria is closely associated with suggestibility or merely to define it as a pathological state of suggestibility. After all, what is the bodily mechanism underlying those after-effects of suggestion, which are separated, as in hysterical or hypnotized persons, from conscious regulation?Suggestion, it is true, is sometimes experienced consciously, and one is more or less distinctly aware of its workings. It has to be experienced to start with-seen or heard, sometimes even understood. On the 6 "My Conception of Hysteria and Hypnotism," Neurologist.
Monday, September 3, 2007
Hypnosis Helpful Hints
"While practising as a young doctor, he had one day been obliged to go out and had deemed it advisable to lock up a patient in his absence. Just as he was leaving the house he heard the sound as of a body suddenly falling. He hurried back into the room and found his patient in a state of catalepsy. Monsieur Burq was at that time studying , and he at once sought for the cause of this phenomenon. He noticed that the door-handle was of copper. The next day he wrapped a glove around the handle, again shut the patient in, and this time nothing occurred. He interrogated the patient, but she could give him no explanation. He then tried the effect of copper on all the subjects at the Salpetriere and the Cochin hospitals, and found that a great number were affected by it."
See more about hypnosis
See more about hypnosis
Sunday, September 2, 2007
Hypnotherapy Update
"The two leffahs, more vigorous and less docile than the buska, lay half curled up, their heads on one side, ready to dart forward, and followed with glittering eyes the movements of the dancer. * * * Hindoo charmers are still more wonderful; they juggle with a dozen different species of reptiles at the same time, making them come and go, leap, dance, and lie down at the sound of the charmer's whistle, like the gentlest of tame animals. These serpents have never been known to bite their charmers."
It is well known that some animals, like the opossum, feign death when caught. Whether this is to be compared to hypnotism is doubtful. Other animals, called hibernating, sleep for months with no other food than their fat, but this, again, can hardly be called hypnotism.
See more about hypnosis
It is well known that some animals, like the opossum, feign death when caught. Whether this is to be compared to hypnotism is doubtful. Other animals, called hibernating, sleep for months with no other food than their fat, but this, again, can hardly be called hypnotism.
See more about hypnosis
Saturday, September 1, 2007
The Hypnotic Condition Bulletin
Persons in the hypnotic condition have been able to tell what other persons were doing indistant parts of a city; could tell the pages of the books they might be reading and the numbers of all sorts of articles. While in London the writer had an opportunity of witnessing a performance of this kind.There was a young boy who seemed to have this peculiar power. A queer old desk had come into the house from Italy, and as it was a valuable piece of furniture, the owner was anxious to learn its pedigree. Without having examined the desk before hand in any way the boy, during one of his trances, said that in a certain place a secret spring would be found which would open an unknown drawer, and behind that drawer would be found the name of the maker of the desk and the date 1639. The desk was at once examined, and the name and date found exactly as described. It is clear in this case that this information could not have been in the mind of any one, unless it were some person in Italy, whence the desk had come. It is more likely that the remarkable supersensory power given enabled reading through the wood.
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for more news hypnosis training
Thursday, August 30, 2007
Hypnotherapy Training Daily News
"We have arrived at the point at which it will be plain that the condition produced in these cases, and known under a varied jargon invented either to conceal ignorance, to express hypotheses, or to mask the design of impressing the imagination and possibly prey upon the pockets of a credulous and wonder-loving public--such names as mesmeric condition, magnetic sleep, clairvoyance, electro-biology, animal magnetism, faith trance, and many other aliases--such a condition, I say, is always subjective. It is independent of passes or gestures; it has no relation to any fluid emanating from the hypnotism operator; it has no relation to his will, or to any influence which he exercises upon in animate objects;distance does not affect it, nor proximity, nor the intervention of any conductors or non-conductors, whether silk or glass or stone, or even a brick wall. We can transmit the order to sleep by telephone or by telegraph. We can practically get the same results while eliminating even the operator, if we can contrive to influence the imagination or to affect the physical condition of the subject by any one of a great number of contrivances.
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for more news hypnotherapy
Tuesday, August 28, 2007
Hypnosis News Today
"The patient was hypnotized every morning, and the first degree (that of lethargy), then the cataleptic, and finally the somnambulistic states were produced. After a certain period of somnambulism she began to move, and unconsciously took a few steps across the ward. Soon after it was suggested--the locomotor powers having recovered their physical functions--that she should walk when awake. This she was able to do, and in some weeks the cure was complete. In this case, however, we had the ingenious idea of changing her personality at the moment when we induced her to walk. The patient fancied she was somebody else, and as such, and in this round about manner, we satisfactorily attained the object proposed."
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for more news clinical hypnotherapy
Monday, August 27, 2007
Hypnotism Blog
Dr. Cocke says: "I have occasionally seen subjects who complained of headache, vertigo, nausea, and other similar symptoms after having been hypnotized, but these conditions were at a future hypnotic sitting easily remedied by suggestion." Speaking of the use of hypnotism by doctors under conditions of reasonable care, Dr. Cocke says further:"There is one contraindication greater than all the rest. It applies more to the physician than to the patient, more to the masses than to any single individual. It is not confined to hypnotism alone; it has blocked the wheels of human progress through the ages which have gone.It is undue enthusiasm. It is the danger that certain individuals will become so enamored with its charms that other equally valuable means of cure will be ignored. Mental therapeutics has come to stay. It is yet in its infancy and will grow, but, if it were possible to kill it, it would be strangled by the fanaticism and prejudice of its devotees. The whole field is fascinating and alluring. It promises so much that it is in danger of being missed by the ignorant to such an extent that great harm may result. This is true, not only of mental therapeutics and hypnotism, but of every other blessing we possess. Hypnotism has nothing to fear from the senseless skepticism and contempt of those who have no knowledge of the subject." He adds pertinently enough: "While hypnotism can be used in a greater or less degree by every one, it can only be used intelligently by those who understand, not only hypnotism itself, but disease as well."
Saturday, August 25, 2007
The Hypnotic State Update
A profound study of the hypnotic state, such as has been made by Prof.William James, of Harvard College, the great authority on psychical phenomena and president of the Psychic Research Society, leads to the conviction that in the hypnotic sleep the will is only in abeyance, as it is in natural slumber or in sleepwalking, and any unusual or especially exciting occurrence, especially anything that runs against the grain of the nature, reawakens that will, and it soon becomes as active as ever.
This is ten times more true in the matter of post-hypnotic suggestion, which is very much weaker than suggestion that takes effect during the actual hypnotic sleep. We shall see, furthermore, that while acting under a delusion at the suggestion of the operator, the patient is really conscious all the time of the real facts in the case--indeed, much more keenly so, often times, than the operator himself. For instance, if a line is drawn on a sheet of paper and the subject is told there is no line, he will maintain there is no line; but he has to see it in order to ignore it.
This is ten times more true in the matter of post-hypnotic suggestion, which is very much weaker than suggestion that takes effect during the actual hypnotic sleep. We shall see, furthermore, that while acting under a delusion at the suggestion of the operator, the patient is really conscious all the time of the real facts in the case--indeed, much more keenly so, often times, than the operator himself. For instance, if a line is drawn on a sheet of paper and the subject is told there is no line, he will maintain there is no line; but he has to see it in order to ignore it.
Thursday, August 23, 2007
Real Hypnotic Condition Update
There is, however, another possible explanation, namely, telepathy, in a real hypnotic condition. Even if Dr. Luys's experiments were genuine this would be the rational explanation. They were a case of suggestion of some sort, without doubt.
Nearly every book on hypnotism gives various rules for detecting simulation of the hypnotic state. One of the commonest tests is that of anaesthesia. A pin or pen-knife is stuck into a subject to see if he is insensible to pain; but as we shall see in a latter chapter, this insensibility also may be simulated, for by long training some persons learn to control their facial expressions perfectly. We have already seen that the pulse and respiration tests are not sufficient. Hypnotic persons often flush slightly in the face; but it is true that there are persons who can flush on any part of the body at will.
Nearly every book on hypnotism gives various rules for detecting simulation of the hypnotic state. One of the commonest tests is that of anaesthesia. A pin or pen-knife is stuck into a subject to see if he is insensible to pain; but as we shall see in a latter chapter, this insensibility also may be simulated, for by long training some persons learn to control their facial expressions perfectly. We have already seen that the pulse and respiration tests are not sufficient. Hypnotic persons often flush slightly in the face; but it is true that there are persons who can flush on any part of the body at will.
Wednesday, August 22, 2007
The Hypnotic Condition News Blog
The causes which Dr. Cocke thinks produced the hypnotic condition in his case, namely, belief, desire to be hypnotized, and strained attention,united with a vivid imagination, are causes which are often found in conjunction and produce effects which we may reasonably explain on the theory of self-hypnotization.
For instance, the effects of an exciting religious revival are very like those produced by Mesmer's operations in Paris. The subjects become hysterical, and are ready to believe anything or do anything. By prolonging the operation, a whole community becomes more or less hypnotized. In all such cases, however, unusual excitement is commonly followed by unusual lethargy. It is much like a wild spree of intoxication--in fact, it is a sort of intoxication.
For instance, the effects of an exciting religious revival are very like those produced by Mesmer's operations in Paris. The subjects become hysterical, and are ready to believe anything or do anything. By prolonging the operation, a whole community becomes more or less hypnotized. In all such cases, however, unusual excitement is commonly followed by unusual lethargy. It is much like a wild spree of intoxication--in fact, it is a sort of intoxication.
Monday, August 20, 2007
Hypnotherapy Training Helpful Hints
The sensations produced during a state of hypnosis are very interesting . As may be supposed, they differ greatly in different persons.
One of the most interesting accounts ever given is that of Dr. James R. Cocke, a hypnotist himself, who submitted to being operated upon by a professional magnetizer. He was at that time a firm believer in the theory of personal magnetism (a delusion from which he afterward escaped).
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One of the most interesting accounts ever given is that of Dr. James R. Cocke, a hypnotist himself, who submitted to being operated upon by a professional magnetizer. He was at that time a firm believer in the theory of personal magnetism (a delusion from which he afterward escaped).
to read more hypnotherapy online
Sunday, August 19, 2007
Audio Relaxation Info
Heidenhain was able to take possession of the hypnotized subject's gaze and control him by sight, through producing mimicry . He looks fixedly at the patient till the patient is unable to take his eyes away. Then the patient will copy every movement he makes. If he rises and goes backward the patientwill follow, and with his right hand he will imitate the movements of the operator's left, as if he were a mirror. The attitudes of prayer,melancholy, pain, disdain, anger or fear, may be produced in this manner.
The experiments of Donato, a stage hypnotizer, are thus described :"After throwing the subjects into catalepsy he causes soft music to be played, which produces a rapturous expression. If the sound is heightened or increased, the subjects seem to receive a shock and a feeling of disappointment. The artistic sense developed by hypnotism is disturbed; the faces express astonishment, stupefaction and pain. If the same soft melody be again resumed, the same expression of rapturous bliss reappears in the countenance. The faces become seraphic and celestial when the subjects are by nature handsome, and when the subjects are ordinary looking, even ugly, they are idealized as by a special kind of beauty."
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The experiments of Donato, a stage hypnotizer, are thus described :"After throwing the subjects into catalepsy he causes soft music to be played, which produces a rapturous expression. If the sound is heightened or increased, the subjects seem to receive a shock and a feeling of disappointment. The artistic sense developed by hypnotism is disturbed; the faces express astonishment, stupefaction and pain. If the same soft melody be again resumed, the same expression of rapturous bliss reappears in the countenance. The faces become seraphic and celestial when the subjects are by nature handsome, and when the subjects are ordinary looking, even ugly, they are idealized as by a special kind of beauty."
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Thursday, August 16, 2007
Learn Hypnosis News Daily
The hypnotism class was again seated in a semicircle, andMiss Flint selected one of them, and, taking him into the center of the stage, showed him a small riding whip. He looked at it indifferently enough. He was told it was a hot bar of iron, but he shook his head,still incredulous.
The hypnotic suggestion was repeated, and as the glazed look came into his eyes, the incredulous look died out. Every member of the class was following the suggestion made to the subject in hand. All of them had the same expression in their eyes. The doctor said that his daughter was hypnotizing the whole class through this one individual.
The hypnotic suggestion was repeated, and as the glazed look came into his eyes, the incredulous look died out. Every member of the class was following the suggestion made to the subject in hand. All of them had the same expression in their eyes. The doctor said that his daughter was hypnotizing the whole class through this one individual.
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
Hypnotize Someone Blog
The only danger in hypnosis is likely to be found in hysterical persons. They will,if aroused, often fall off again into a helpless state, and continue to do so for some time to come. It is dangerous to hypnotize such subjects.
Care should be taken to awaken the subject from hypnosis very thoroughly before leaving him, else headache, nausea, or the like may follow, with other unpleasant effects. In all cases subjects should be treated gently and with the utmost consideration, as if the subject and operator were the most intimate friends.
See more about hypnosis training books
Care should be taken to awaken the subject from hypnosis very thoroughly before leaving him, else headache, nausea, or the like may follow, with other unpleasant effects. In all cases subjects should be treated gently and with the utmost consideration, as if the subject and operator were the most intimate friends.
See more about hypnosis training books
Tuesday, August 14, 2007
HOW TO HYPNOTIZE
Dr. Cocke's Method--Dr. Flint's Method--The French Method at Paris--atNancy--The Hindoo Silent Method--How to Wake a Subject from Hypnotic Sleep--Frauds of Public Hypnotic Entertainers.
First let us quote what is said of hypnotism in Foster's EncyclopedicMedical Dictionary. The dictionary states the derivation of the word from the Greek word meaning sleep, and gives as synonym "Braidism". This definition follows: "An abnormal state into which some persons may be thrown, either by a voluntary act of their own, such as gazing continuously with fixed attention on some bright object held close to the eyes, or by the exercise of another person's will; characterized by suspension of the will and consequent obedience to the promptings of suggestions from without."
First let us quote what is said of hypnotism in Foster's EncyclopedicMedical Dictionary. The dictionary states the derivation of the word from the Greek word meaning sleep, and gives as synonym "Braidism". This definition follows: "An abnormal state into which some persons may be thrown, either by a voluntary act of their own, such as gazing continuously with fixed attention on some bright object held close to the eyes, or by the exercise of another person's will; characterized by suspension of the will and consequent obedience to the promptings of suggestions from without."
Monday, August 13, 2007
To Induce Hypnotism Scoops
Dr. Herbert L. Flint, a stage hypnotizer, describes his method as follows:
"To induce hypnotism, I begin by friendly conversation to place my patient in a condition of absolute calmness and quiescence. I also try to win his confidence by appealing to his own volitional effort to aid me in obtaining the desired clad. I impress upon him that hypnosis in his condition is a benign agency, and far from subjugating his mentality, it becomes intensified to so great an extent as to act as a remedial agent."
"To induce hypnotism, I begin by friendly conversation to place my patient in a condition of absolute calmness and quiescence. I also try to win his confidence by appealing to his own volitional effort to aid me in obtaining the desired clad. I impress upon him that hypnosis in his condition is a benign agency, and far from subjugating his mentality, it becomes intensified to so great an extent as to act as a remedial agent."
Saturday, August 11, 2007
Minor Stages of Hypnotism
We have just given some of the amusing experiments that may be performed with subjects in one of the minor stages of hypnotism.
But there are other stages which give entirely different manifestations. For a scientific classification of these we are indebted to Professor Charcot,of the Salpetriere hospital in Paris, to whom, next to Mesmer and Braid,we are indebted for the present science of hypnotism.
But there are other stages which give entirely different manifestations. For a scientific classification of these we are indebted to Professor Charcot,of the Salpetriere hospital in Paris, to whom, next to Mesmer and Braid,we are indebted for the present science of hypnotism.
Friday, August 10, 2007
hypnogenic spots
This school, however, has been considerably discredited, and Dr. Luys'conclusions are not received by scientific students of hypnotism.
It is also stated, and the present writer has seen no effective denial, that hypnotism may be produced by pressing with the fingers upon certain points in the body, known as hypnogenic spots.
It is also stated, and the present writer has seen no effective denial, that hypnotism may be produced by pressing with the fingers upon certain points in the body, known as hypnogenic spots.
Thursday, August 9, 2007
hypnosis
Also, since faith is a strong element, a person who has not perfect self-confidence could not expect to create confidence in others. While many successful hypnotizers can themselves be hypnotized, it is probable that most all who have power of this kind are themselves exempt from the exercise of it.
It is certainly true that while a person easily hypnotized is by no means weak-minded (indeed, it is probable that most geniuses would be good hypnotic subjects), still such persons have not a well balanced constitution and their nerves are high-strung if not unbalanced.
It is certainly true that while a person easily hypnotized is by no means weak-minded (indeed, it is probable that most geniuses would be good hypnotic subjects), still such persons have not a well balanced constitution and their nerves are high-strung if not unbalanced.
Tuesday, August 7, 2007
sleep hypnosis
In 1850 Braid's ideas were introduced into France, and Dr. Azam, of Bordeaux, published an account of them in the "Archives de Medicine."From this time on the subject was widely studied by scientific men in France and Germany, and it was more slowly taken up in England. It maybe stated here that the French and other Latin races are much more easily hypnotized than the northern races, Americans perhaps being least subject to the hypnotic influence, and next to them the English. On the other hand, the Orientals are influenced to a degree we can hardly comprehend.
We have seen that so far the history of hypnotism has given us two manifestations, or methods, that of passes and playing upon the imagination in various ways, used by Mesmer, and that of physical means,such as looking at a bright object, used by Braid.
See more about hypnotism
We have seen that so far the history of hypnotism has given us two manifestations, or methods, that of passes and playing upon the imagination in various ways, used by Mesmer, and that of physical means,such as looking at a bright object, used by Braid.
See more about hypnotism
Monday, August 6, 2007
hypnotize yourself
There is no doubt that Mesmer had returned to Paris for the purpose of making money, and these commissions were promoted in part by persons desirous of driving him out. "It is interesting," says a French writer,"to peruse the reports of these commissions: they read like a debate on some obscure subject of which the future has partly revealed the secret." Says another French writer (Courmelles): "They sought the fluid, not by the study of the cures affected, which was considered too complicated a task, but in the phases of hypnotic sleep.
These were considered indispensable and easily regulated by the experimentalist.When submitted to close investigation, it was, however, found that they could only be induced when the subjects knew they were being hypnotized ,and that they differed according as they were conducted in public or inprivate.
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These were considered indispensable and easily regulated by the experimentalist.When submitted to close investigation, it was, however, found that they could only be induced when the subjects knew they were being hypnotized ,and that they differed according as they were conducted in public or inprivate.
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Thursday, August 2, 2007
hypnotists
Though various scientific men spoke of magnetism and hypnotism, understood that there was a power of a peculiar kind which one man could exercise over another, it was not until Frederick Anton Mesmer (a doctorof Vienna) appeared in 1775 that the general public gave any special attention to the subject.
to read more on the year mentioned, Mesmer sent out a circular letter to various scientific societies or "Academies" as they are called in Europe, stating his belief that "animal magnetism"existed, and that through it one man could influence another. No attention was given his letter, except by the Academy of Berlin, which sent him an unfavorable reply.
to read more on the year mentioned, Mesmer sent out a circular letter to various scientific societies or "Academies" as they are called in Europe, stating his belief that "animal magnetism"existed, and that through it one man could influence another. No attention was given his letter, except by the Academy of Berlin, which sent him an unfavorable reply.
Wednesday, August 1, 2007
How the subject feels under hypnotization
CHAPTER IV--How the subject feels under hypnotization--Dr. Cocke's experience--Effect of music--Dr. Alfred Warthin's experiments
for more news on How the subject feels under hypnotization
for more news on How the subject feels under hypnotization
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