Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Hypnosis Info Blog

Stage-fright is a psychological attitude affecting, and embarrassing to, many people. And consequently, hypnosis can be of help to:

Actors
Singers
Musicians
Radio speakers
Orators
Lecturers
Lawyers
Students
etc., etc.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Hypnosis Hypnotherapy Updates

Personality faults present an even more fertile ground for suggestion and hypnosis. They are extremely wide spread and tenacious, and countless people can be benefitted by having them removed, as they commonly determine one's course of life and often decide whether it will be successful or not. Particularly useful it is to check their formation at an early age. Children, we may recall, can be hypnotized as easily as, if not easier than, adults.Most personality faults are grounded in frustrations due to conditions of existence. The success of treatment is not assured, of course, so long as the conditions responsible for the trouble are not removed. It is foolish, therefore, to make suggestions which are bound to be defeated by the continuation of harmful influences which had produced the fault in the first place and which cannot be removed or modified by the subject himself. Any attempt to do so is not unlike a physician's advice to his poor anaemic patient burdened with family responsibilities to "take it easy" and to go away to Florida or California for a winter's rest. Nevertheless, in many instances, a hypnotic treatment, used intelligently and discriminately, can relieve the subject from that lack of confidence in his behavior which has weakened his social relations and aggravated his case still further. Much better results should be expected, of course, whenever unfavorable conditions responsible for the subject's troubles are, or can be made, a thing of the past.

Monday, September 24, 2007

Hypnotic Suggestion Daily News

Another interesting possibility lies in the field of abortion, where the intended results should be obtainable with greater ease and safety to the patient by means of hypnosis than with the help of drugs and surgery. Nor is this really surprising. As H. F. Dunbar reports, the connection between the mental state and the resulting abortion has been known for years. Kohts commented upon it, in referring to the great number of abortions and miscarriages during the bombardment of Strassburg. Baudelocque noticed the same phenomenon, when 92 cases of abortion came to him for treatment immediately after the explosion of a powder tower. Kalichmann, Schaeffer, Mayer, S. H. Prince, and others made similar observations. Obviously, the period of pregnancy is easily affected, from beginning to end, by emotion as well as by suggestion.

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Sunday, September 23, 2007

Hypnotherapy Daily Bulletin

Just to convey a general idea as to the progress of hypnotic therapy, I wish to give at this point a representative list of ailments that have been and can be relieved or cured by suggestion, whenever diagnosis indicates a functional cause:

SCIENTIFIC HYPNOTISM

Hysteria, in all forms
Morbid fears,
obsessions and compulsions
Nervous tremors, tics and chorea
Neurasthenia Insomnia
Speech disorders, including stammering
Sexual impotence
Frigidity
Disturbance of menstruation
Sex perversions
Nocturnal incontinence

Friday, September 21, 2007

The Hypnotic State Scoops

As soon as the subject is informed, in the pre-hypnotic stage, that he is going to be aware of everything that happens to him in the trance, that he will subsequently recall distinctly his experiences in the state, and that the state will end immediately upon command, he is sincerely ready for cooperation. And such cooperation is the best thing a practician should desire or hope to attain, provided he is willing at all times to be careful as to what he says, how he puts the words, what instructions he gives. For a critical subject will not readily obey nonsensical directions. Stupid tricks and ridiculous performances are not compatible with oneirosis, perhaps for the good of all concerned.

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Thursday, September 20, 2007

Hypnosis Daily Scoops

It appears self-evident that whatever can be done in the normal waking state by means of ordinary suggestion, can also be done in the hypnotic state. Suppose you are told-in the normal waking state, mind you-by a person you have no grounds to distrust and may even respect: "Bring my pocket-book, please, do you mind ? It is in the side pocket of my coat, in the next room." Might you not go there and bring the pocket-book, even if it does not belong to the person asking you to do so (which fact is, of course, unknown to you) ? Can't you thus be made an innocent accomplice of a theft? The history of criminal law is replete with acts of larceny, burglary and fraud, in which people are mixed up as innocent victims of suggestion. If suggestion has sufficient power to lead men to unintentional crimes apart from hypnosis, don't say it cannot be done in a trance.

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Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Hypnosis Daily News

The following case illustrates this psychological tendency. "Miss G., aged 19, an uneducated girl, had been frequently hypnotized, and was a good somnam-bule. She had had sixteen teeth extracted at Leeds during hypnotic anaesthesia. At a later date, having examined her mouth and found that a fragment of one of the stumps remained, I asked her to come to my house "An Experimental Study in Hypnotic Anaesthesia," Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, to have it removed. She mentioned this to one of her neighbors, an old woman, who advised her to have no more teeth extracted, as this would cause her mouth to fall in. The following day she presented herself, and was at once hypnotized; she refused to open her mouth, or to permit me to extract the tooth. Emphatic suggestion continued for half an hour produced no result. This was the first occasion on which she had rejected a suggestion. I then awoke her, and asked why she refused to have the tooth extracted. She told me what her neighbor had said, and expressed her determination to have nothing more done. I explained the absurdity of this, and pointed out that, as she had only the fragment of one tooth remaining, its removal could not affect the appearance of her face. As she was still obstinate, I said: "Unless this fragment is removed you cannot have your artificial teeth fitted'. This argument was sufficient. She gave her consent in the waking state, was at once hypnotized, and operated on without pain."

Monday, September 17, 2007

The Hypnotic State Scoops

Occasionally it is desirable to make the subject speak. Neurotic patients, for instance, may suffer from repressions or complexes rooted in their childhood experiences. In order to bring back these distant memories and thus to relieve an ailment or to give a clue to it, the subject is asked relevant questions and is urged to tell whatever episodes he can recall. In the terminology of Breuer and the psychoanalysts, this procedure is known as "catharsis", can be used with or without hypnosis, and is supposed to bring a "psychic trauma" back to consciousness and let it work itself off. I disagree with Freud's interpretation of the phenomenon, but the method helps, indeed, to remove old inhibitions. Whereas the subject in the trance is unable to say a word on his own initiative and appears to be, as it were, totally mute, his faculty of speech is restored almost instantaneously, as soon as the practician says, "I wish to ask you several questions. Tell me, please . . ." For several seconds the subject may have visible and audible difficulties, but soon he overcomes all the handicaps, and speech flows henceforth almost as freely as in natural conditions, though perhaps in a somewhat slower tempo; and even these remaining peculiarities can be removed by additional suggestion. If necessary, the subject can also be made to write, to walk, and to perform other actions, simple or complex, depending on what suggestion is given. And throughout the performance, he remains in the trance, keenly susceptible to the hypnotist's directions, till he is finally aroused from the state.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Hypnosis Hypnotherapy Daily Updates

As soon as the state is reached, it is time to begin with systematic suggestions. Their nature and content, of course, depend on the case and the practician's intentions. But I should like to give the following advice, in regard to form. Unless the situation calls specifically for the opposite procedure, suggestions should not be given as mere orders, for no matter how deep the trance may be, a human being resents being commanded and manifests resistance, if in disagreement. In fact, it should never be forgotten that one addresses, even in hypnosis, a being behaving according to certain psychological laws. Rather than order the subject about, the practician should offer him firm and wise leadership. Suggestions, strong, definite and clear, should be given in as natural a way as possible.

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Friday, September 14, 2007

Hypnosis Info Bulletin

The hypnosis subject must be put at ease, not only mentally but also physically. He may be placed in a comfortable arm chair, where his head rests in such a manner as to make breathing and swallowing effortless. People are in the habit of swallowing saliva at the beginning of a sitting, and their normal progress toward the hypnotic state is handicapped if their heads are in a strained position. Besides, the neck muscles relax as soon as the subject enters the state; and unless his head rests comfortably, its falling on the chest or on the back of the chair may arouse him. No strong sensation should disturb the subject. In other words, light should not shine directly into his eyes and all superfluous noises should be eliminated, if possible, while the temperature of the room should be pleasantly warm. Let me say a few words concerning the apparatus. Place a small ball, the size of an ordinary button, reflecting light toward the subject, so as to raise his eyes slightly upward to concentrate his attention. The ball so placed is conducive to fatiguing one's eyes which, incidentally, occupy approximately the same position as in ordinary sleep.

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Thursday, September 13, 2007

Hypnotism Daily Scoops

The bodily aspect of hypnosis, we see, is fairly clear: it is essentially a state of neural inhibition (occasionally combined with the excitation of particular functions), as controlled by the autonomic nervous system. The scope and intensity of manifestations vary with the case, but invariably they are limited by the distribution of autonomic fibres and by their specific activities. Such fibres, we know, do not innervate every tissue; hence, there are bodily parts which cannot be reached by suggestion, not directly at least.What makes hypnosis particularly interesting, however, is that the bodily mechanism underlying it can be directed by the conscious will of the hypnotist and, consequently, may be used for various medical, psychological and educational purposes. In this mental aspect hypnosis is a relationship between two or more persons, in which the subject or subjects, being in a state of high suggestibility, react to suggestion of the practician. This mental attitude of prestige-and-faith relationship has to be established before the trance is induced, but is maintained and further consolidated during the state and after its conclusion.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Hypnotherapy Scoops Blog

For the time being, however, mesmerism is dead. But in its place, there arose other dangerous notions which detracted scientific attention from more tenable explanations of suggestion and hypnosis. Charcot and his Salpêtrière School, assuming that the trance is nothing but a state of artificial hysteria, have created the unfortunate concept of "mental dissociation." In this view, the mind can be divided into two (or more) practically independent parts and function as such, though only one will command consciousness at a time. Today this concept of dissociation is being used in a variety of ways and under the guise of erudite language, as when it is said: "Hypnosis may best be characterized as a phenomenon entailing a splitting of consciousness in which the simultaneous and successive nexus of mental life is partially deranged." I have read many a modern book on psychology but, heaven knows, I have not yet discovered what such phrases really mean. The idea of "split" and "divided" personality was made fashionable by striking studies of Morton Prince (particularly, in connection with the famous case of Miss Beau-champ), and further popularized by the psychoanalytic theory of the Unconscious. So-called "shell-shocks" of the war-time and hysterical amnesias seemed only to confirm this interpretation.

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Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Hypnosis Hypnotherapy Daily News Blog

Braid is known to have performed the following remarkable experiment: "He hypnotized a patient who was nursing, and suggested an increased secretion of milk in one breast. On awaking she had no recollection of what had been done, but complained of a feeling of tightness and tension in the breast. Her husband then told her that Braid had been trying to increase the secretion of milk. She was skeptical as to the result, as the child was fourteen months old and the milk had almost disappeared. Her breast, however, almost immediately became distended with milk, and a few days later she complained that her figure was deformed in consequence. Braid again hypnotized her and suc-"As reported by Bramwell, hypnotism successfully repeated the experiment with the other breast. The patient suckled her child for six months longer, the supply of milk being more abundant than it had been at any time since her confinement." The opposite kind of experiment, to stop the accumulation of milk, was performed by many hypnotists, among them by Esdaile, Mohr and Heyer. In most instances, the mother had suffered pains in the breasts, having lost the baby.

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Monday, September 10, 2007

Hypnosis News Today

In the process of suggestion, this magnetic fluid, possessing curative properties, emanates from the eyes and hands of the magnetist. To enhance the activity of this truly wondrous power, patients had to be magnetized themselves. This was done by means of a "baquet", a large tank filled with water, iron filings and ground glass. Special rods were attached to the baquet, and the patients had to be in contact with them, while Mesmer, in a magnificent robe, addressed them and walked around. Mesmer's mystic attitude toward the problem of suggestion was a great misfortune, as far as serious study of the field was concerned. Hypnotism acquired a bad reputation that persisted during many years and"Quoted from A. Binet and C. Féré, Animal Magnetism. For a full statement of Mesmer's "twenty-seven propositions" see M. Goldsmith, Franz Anton Mesmer, still is not completely dispelled.

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Thursday, September 6, 2007

In the State Daily Updates

A little experience will enable the practician to recognize easily the oncoming hypnotic state. The typical sign is the closing of the eyes, sudden or gradual. Often it is accompanied by a peculiar quivering of the lids, that usually ceases in a minute or two. Or the eyes may be closed tightly. This symptom cannot be regarded, however, as certain, sufficient, or even necessary. It is most common, because the hypnotist suggests it almost invariably from the beginning. But it is quite possible for the subject to enter the trance with his eyes half-shut or fully open, and it is easy also to make him open his eyes during the state, without disturbing him in the least. Among other symptoms that are observable, we find the upward movement of the eyeballs, the deepening of the breathing, general facial relaxation, etc.

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Wednesday, September 5, 2007

Hypnotic Influence Info

Winn's chapter on "Oneirosis," a form of light hypnotism, makes us begin to realize how we can use this great force in everyday living. Indeed, its influence for good is just beginning to dawn upon men!This influence will be exerted, says our author, in three main ways; increasingly in medicine and psychology, but. . . and here is the surprise-especially in education! This closing part of his book should give school administrators a start. We are interested in what readers think of this bold new theory, and would like to hear from them in writing, on the matter.

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Monday, September 3, 2007

Somnambulistic Stage News Blog

We thus see what a perfect automaton the human body may become under hypnosis. There appears, however, to be a sort of unconscious memory, for a familiar object will seem to suggest spontaneously its ordinary use. Thus, if a piece of soap is put into a cataleptic patient's hands; he will move it around as though he thought he were washing them, and if there is any water near he will actually wash them. The sight of an umbrella makes him shiver as if he were in a storm. Handing such a person a pen will not make him write, but if a letter is dictated to him out loud he will write in an irregular hand. The subject may also be made to sing, scream or speak different languages with which he is entirely unfamiliar. This is, however, a verging toward the somnambulistic stage, for in deep catalepsy the patient does not speak or hear. The state is produced by placing the hands on the head, the forehead, or nape of the neck.

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Sunday, September 2, 2007

Hypnotherapy Info Blog

"Here, then, it is seen that we have a mechanism in the body, known to physiologists as the ideo-motor, or sensory motor system of nerves, which can produce, without the consciousness of the individual and automatically, a series of muscular contractions. And remember that the coats of the arteries are muscular and contractile under the influence of external stimuli, acting without the help of the consciousness, or when the consciousness is in abeyance. I will give another example of this, which completes the chain of phenomena in the natural brain and the natural body I wish to bring under notice in explanation of the true as distinguished from the false, or falsely interpreted, phenomena of hypnotism, mesmerism and electro-biology.

Saturday, September 1, 2007

Hypnotism Info Blog

The most remarkable of the hypnotism experiments may be given in the doctor's own words: "I told the subject to remain perfectly still for five minutes and to relate to me at the end of this time any sensation he might experience. I passed into another room and closed the door and locked it; went into a closet in the room and closed the door after me; took down from the shelf, first a linen sheet, then a pasteboard box, then a toy engine, owned by a child in the house. I went back to my subject and asked him what experience he had had.

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