T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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847.1 | look into my eyes.... | USAT05::KASPER | You'll see it when you believe it. | Wed Sep 07 1988 17:06 | 14 |
| re: .1 (Cindy)
My understanding of the difference between the two is:
- Under hypnosis your conscious self 'goes away'
as in dreaming. In meditation, you are still
'there'.
- Under hypnosis someone else does the 'guiding'
(unless self-hypnosis). In meditation you do.
I'm sure there's much more to it but I hope this helps.
Terry
|
847.2 | Does _intention_ make the difference? | BSS::VANFLEET | 6 Impossible Things Before Breakfast | Wed Sep 07 1988 17:36 | 25 |
| Cindy,
Interesting question. My first thought was that hypnotism is
related more to exploring the physical-psychological and
meditation to exploring the spiritual. This has more to do
with intention than anything else.
Then I got to thinking about how work with a hypnotist can lead
to an ability to hypnotize yourself which is sort of a form of
meditation. After all, both "states" generally lead to an
altered state of conciousness. There are the same results as
far as brain-waves are concerned (achieving an alpha-state).
Again this led me back to intention. If one is hypnotized
in order to achieve spiritual enlightenment then couldn't
that also be termed meditation? Does the meditative state
_have_ to be self-induced. In biofeedback the subject is
taught to achieve a relaxed state through audio-tapes. I
have reached alpha-states through this technique.
I guess what I'm doing is presenting more questions than
answers. This seems to me like a stream-of-conciousness
kind of reply but I guess that's appropriate for the topic.
(:*)
Nanci
|
847.3 | You are about to get very sleepy... | ATLAST::LACKEY | Wisdom is knowledge in action. | Thu Sep 08 1988 11:28 | 45 |
| re: .0 (Cindy)
> Where is the line drawn and just what exactly are the differences?
re: .2 (Nancy)
> If one is hypnotized in order to achieve spiritual enlightenment
> then couldn't that also be termed meditation? Does the meditative
> state _have_ to be self-induced?
The line which is drawn is really quite simple and distinct. There's
this house, you see, and it happens to be two stories. The lower level
is lower mind and the upper level is higher mind. On the lower level,
way in the back, there is a storage room full of "stuff". This room is
the sub-conscious.
The purpose of hypnosis is to side step the conscious mind (lower mind,
1st story) and get to the storage room. As owners of the house we don't
normally like people to see our messy storage room; and usually we don't
like to see it ourselves. As a result, we play games in the lower mind
to prevent access to the storage room. Hypnosis is the process of going
around the house to the back and going into the storage room from the
outside entrance.
Hypnosis is generally only useful as a clinical tool or a hilarious form
of entertainment. Hypnosis cannot achieve enlightenment as it cannot
provide access to the upper level (there is no outside entrance to the
second story).
Meditation, over time, provides access to the second story. The process
of meditation is the process of climbing the stairs. Once we discover
the second story, it is always accessible. The view from the second
story is much much better and we get a more clear, global picture of our
environment than is available on the ground floor.
Meditation *must* be self-induced. Only we can make the decision to go
upstairs. Nobody can force us to go; they can only tell us that the
second floor exists and that there are stairs to get there, and they can
provide us with instruction on climbing stairs. There is one exception
to this, however, and that is your mother. If she tells you to go
upstairs and go to your room, you better go.
The analogy is simplistic, but you get the idea... :->
Jeff >(:-)-->--<
|
847.4 | More questions... | BSS::VANFLEET | 6 Impossible Things Before Breakfast | Thu Sep 08 1988 11:58 | 6 |
| Jeff,
What's the difference between self-hypnosis and meditation??
I'm still confused.
Nanci
|
847.5 | | FSLENG::JOLLIMORE | For the greatest good... | Thu Sep 08 1988 14:37 | 5 |
| .0 Cindy
See also 514.0 Self-Hypnosis/Meditation
Jay
|
847.6 | Now you will get even sleepier... | ATLAST::LACKEY | Wisdom is knowledge in action. | Thu Sep 08 1988 16:17 | 52 |
| Nancy,
Self-hypnosis is still hypnosis, and the same principles still apply.
The goal is the same; to get around the conscious mind and into the
sub-conscious where all the archives are stored. This is not simply
storage of experiences, but all of the behavior patterns which we have
developed over eons. These patterns influence the way we act and react
to different situations. With hypnosis we cannot remove these patterns,
but we can add "suggestions" which counter patterns which are already
there. For instance, if someone has a pattern of always being nervous
about speaking in front of a group of people, the suggestion can be
planted that when they think of the word "apple" (can be anything) they
will feel calm and sure. The pattern of nervousness is still there, we
just temporarily substituted it for a period of time with a fake
pattern. If the person speaks in public frequently and uses this
technique frequently, then what is happening is that they are slowly
replacing the old pattern with the new pattern of being calm.
With self-hypnosis the only real difference is that the individual is
making his/her own suggestions. To hypnotize oneself without making
suggestions (working in the storage room) serves no purpose other than
perhaps as a substitute for a nap. A hypnotist will associate a word
with a pattern (like the above example) so that the person can use it at
will. Self-hypnosis is generally used for an immediate need, therefore
there is no need for any association with words. An example of this
which I have seen is to use it while being treated by a dentist as a
replacement for anesthetics.
The benefit of meditation is that it modifies, in a positive way, the
current patterns which are being stored day by day. It also begins
adding an increasing measure of mental control over the effects of the
sub-conscious patterns, meaning we can develop the ability to more
easily replace old unwanted patterns with new ones. When this is
learned, it is a far more powerful tool than hypnosis.
Meditation isn't, however, very useful as entertainment or a replacement
for anesthesia.
Many people use the word meditation in many different contexts...
sometimes it is really meditation and sometimes it isn't. The word has
become kind of a catch-all for mental practices which are considered
somewhat metaphysical. The important thing to recognize, in answer to
your question, is the difference in what is actually occuring rather
than the words which are used to describe it.
I am not at all sure that I have answered your question satisfactorily,
but I will stop here for the sake of brevity just in case it has been
answered. More detailed mechanics of how each process works would take
a lot more time/space.
Jeff
|
847.7 | A thumbs-up for hypnosis | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Thu Sep 08 1988 17:57 | 39 |
| I am one who couldn't even begin to meditate until I first learned
to hypnotize myself. So I don't agree with the undercurrent suggestion
that hypnosis has no value in pursuit of spiritual enlightenment.
Because, you see, in my "storage room" turned out to be the lumber
with which to build the stairs. But had I not learned first how
to access the storage room I would never have found the lumber,
and would have remained forever on the first floor jumping for the
floor I couldn't reach.
I also don't agree that hypnosis is not useful except as a thought
pattern substituter (referencing the example given about the person
afraid of public speaking) In accessing my storage room, I found
a lot of patterns that needed "cleaning", for want of a better word
-- profound patterns from the past, terribly tarnished, twisted,
broken. I've symbolically "cleaned" a lot of them with great results.
So I have used hypnosis as a tool for reworking (not just substituting)
the past fairly completely.
In addition, hypnosis works best for me if, while in trance, I allow
the subconscious part of my mind to guide me; She is unbelievably
wise. I never over-structure a session. If I want to work on a
pattern, I go into the storage room (so to speak) and ask to
be shown a symbol of the pattern. Then I ask to be shown how to
fix it. Sometimes the answer comes in a burst of insight, or I
suddenly spy a "tool" in a corner, or I hear a voice instructing
me what to do next. I always do what is offered to me, and the
results have always been satisfactory.
Since studying hypnosis I have also become keenly aware of my
mind-heart-soul-body connection. I used to express all my negative
energies through my bodily illnesses and never knew it; they were
also very delayed reactions (like getting sick three weeks after
a major trauma). That kind of garbage backed up in the system
leaves one in no condition to climb stairs. Now that enough of
that is beginning to clear, I find I just may have the strength
to do it (after I get the staircase built) :-).
Marcia
|
847.8 | Re: .0 | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Thu Sep 08 1988 18:07 | 12 |
| This is a personal reply to you, Cindy. No, hypnosis is not giving
away your personal power. The hypnotist does not "control" you
at any time during the teaching sessions; what (s)he is teaching
you to do is to lower your ego control so that you can begin to
"hear" and "see" the marvelous imagery of the rest of your mind.
In this state you do become more suggestible, but as Topher has
pointed out in other notes on hypnotism, one cannot be forced to
do anything by a hypnotist -- or by yourself, for that matter, if
the rest of your mind is dead set against whatever conscious goal
you may have set for yourself.
Marcia
|
847.9 | | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | wow | Thu Sep 08 1988 18:56 | 25 |
|
Hmmm... I see hypnosis as using suggestion to influence
the 'emotional body'. It seems to me to be a separate part
of the self, potentially under the command of the conscious mind.
If you don't have the ability to command this portion of yourself,
then perhaps others *can*. Many methods exist, through which
we can learn to communicate to the {subconscious/lower self/right brain}
...call it what you will. Topher has written (somewhere in
this file) an account of how to use a pendulum to communicate
with this part of the self. As I see it, the goal of self-hypnosis
is to clarify the communication links between the various parts
of the self.
Meditation can be many different things, including some
which might be 'hypnotic' in nature. I think that meditation
covers a wider variety of altered states than does hypnosis.
In it's higher forms, meditation goes way beyond hypnosis.
I like the analagy of the house with two floors. (but I think
three floors would be better... ;^) I see consciousness as
the ground floor, with a subconscious basement and superconscious
(higher self) upper floor. The ultimate goal of meditation
is to unite the entire being... to gain conscious access to
all the powers of the mind.
Alan.
|
847.10 | No clear lines. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Thu Sep 08 1988 19:24 | 116 |
| Both "hypnosis" and "meditation" (and "contemplation" and "guided
imagery" and ...) are names of ways of getting somewhere rather
than where you get to.
Neither describe a single path but rather both actually describe a
wide range of quite different paths -- some of which are very, very
different from others.
Of the two hypnosis seems to be the more narrowly defined. That is
when two knowledgeable people talk about hypnosis they are likely to
be talking about more similar things than when two knowledgeable people
talk about meditation.
Zazen is not equal to yogic meditation is not equal to TM is not
equal to tantric meditation is not equal to .... Many of these
seem to be more similar to hypnosis than they are to each other.
Many meditation procedures are indistinguishable from hypnotic
procedures.
Whether or not the methods used to reach them are essentially the same,
I rather suspect that frequently the place reached is the same. That
you got there by tricycle and I got there by pogo-stick doesn't mean
that we are not both in Kalamazoo Michigan.
I do not mean to imply, however, that I think that all hypnotic states
(states of consciousness reached by methods we label "hypnosis") are
the same as meditative states (states of consciousness reached by
methods we label "meditation"). Pogo-sticks may not be allowed
in Death Valley, and neither tricycles nor pogo-sticks are very
much use in getting to Antarctica.
Charles Tart, one of the leading experts (and I mean that in a positive
way) in states of consciousness, believes that all methods of achieving
altered states are really equivalent. All (according to Tart) involve
two essential ingredients: 1) Disruption of the assumptions and mental
feedbacks which maintain our consciousness at the consensus reality
state and 2) Covert or overt "programming" of the destination state
by means of a process of setting of expectations. He believes
that the details used to accomplish the first are irrelevant to the
state reached except as they come with culturally determined
expectations as to their effect. I think their is some truth in
this, though it seems to me to be simplistic, especially in connection
with the use of drugs to cause disruption of the consensus reality
orientation.
Dr. Tart also feels that the value of hypnosis is that the associated
expectations are deliberately broad and flexible -- hypnotic states are
therefore highly malleable, and general-purpose meditative states.
A hypnotic guide (hypnotist) is very useful because of this
non-specificity. If the expectations are narrow and inflexible then
there is no need for a guide during the altered state -- there is
nowhere to go. When there is flexibility and movement within the
state (between related states?) someone has to make the decisions
about when and how to move. They can be self-preprogrammed, which
is effective but inflexible, and therefore somewhat self-defeating.
They can be made by the experient during the experience, but this
is generally ineffective -- the requirements of making "rational"
or "semi-rational" decisions seems to conflict with the maintenance
of a pure state. Or they can be made by a trusted and knowledgeable
guide -- they hypnotist.
Hypnosis is always entirely essentially self-induced -- though
frequently with the active guidance of another during the process.
It is hard to see how the rather delicate interactive nature of
hypnotic states could be maintained for more than a second or two
without the very active aid of the experient. The closest to being
externally induced that I can think of is when the experient is
unaware that the state that they are being guided into is one that
would be called "hypnotic" (not knowing the label doesn't, however,
make it any less controlled -- the label mostly carries with it
misunderstandings rather than knowledge). Alternately "stage hypnosis"
depends heavily on social pressures to secure the experient's active
cooperation. Frequently, this results in the "subject" consciously
playing along, which, since it appears the same to the audience,
makes no difference to the entertainer. Generally, stage-hypnosis
results in rather weak, far from profound hypnotic states.
Some forms of "meditation" using drugs, physical deprivation or
pain are very much induced independent of and frequently against
the will of the experient (please, let's not get into circular
arguments where you define something as not being meditation if
it operates against the will of the individual. You are welcome
to make that distinction if you wish, but as near as I can determine
the outcome -- the spiritual or psychological transformation of the
individual -- is effected little or none by this).
When either hypnosis or meditation is being used to change the
psychological state of the experient, a quick, reliable but shallow
"fix" may effected by overlaying a new behavioral or emotional
pattern. For many desired changes this is all that is needed.
If a deeper, more fundamental change is desired, then either class
of procedures may be used, but less reliably and it takes much
more time. Its all in the expectations folks.
Let's not get hung up with misleading terms like "*sub*conscious"
inherited from outdated theories invented by a clever egomaniac
roughly a century ago. The subconscious as generally used today
refers to the entire human mind except that part of it which we
are directly aware of (the conscious). It is immensely more complex
than the conscious mind is (to the extent that the conscious mind
is something real) and its various components may be placed on
various scales of lower-to-higher. Such scaling, however, says
almost nothing about the subconscious, though frequently it says
a lot about the person doing the scaling (e.g., Freud's hangups
about sex and excretory functions). Hypnosis allows us to interact
with some of what is *behind* the facade we call the conscious --
some of which represents what most people would identify as the
best of what we could be and some of which represents the worst
(though generally the former is much more easily connected to with
hypnosis -- I have glimpsed the still very distant potential for
sainthood in hypnotic experients, but have seen nothing worse than
pettiness and anger on the negative side).
Topher
|
847.11 | The Power of Hypnosis | DWOVAX::STARK | Use your imagination | Wed Mar 11 1992 14:42 | 99 |
| This summary of a current article about the nature of hypnosis
was also posted in QUOKKA::PSYCHOLOGY as note 245.0.
There are some interesting articles in the March/April 1992
_Psychology_Today_. One in particular was
"The trouble with HYPNOSIS. Whose power is it, anyway ?"
by Keith Harary, PhD..
The article summarizes much of the current research in hypnosis
and introduces a few of the main players in the various
debates about the nature of hypnosis. I'll include some highlights
here for the benefit of anyone interested. The parts I found
most revealing were the studies showing that hypnosis may not
be a distinct state, that 'hypnotizability' may just be
willingness to cooperate with the therapeutic relationship,
and that there is no good evidence that recall under hypnosis
procedures is any more accurate than other recall, and that it is
particularly liable to being confused with suggestion and fantasy.
To cut to the chase, in the end, the power is in your own hands.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Several respected foundations and technical journals have been
established for this subject which for a long time lacked scientific
credibility.
In practice, viewed widely among the therapists who use hypnosis,
there is no identifiable distinct 'hypnotic induction,'
virtually any therapeutic exchange could be equally considered
hypnosis. Even the late Milton Erickson's approach of considering
hypnosis to be the therapeutic strategy of directing the patient
toward solving the problem themself rather than stopping to
analyze its causes is not unique enough to use as a definition
of hypnosis.
There is no reliable evidence indicating that hypnosis is
a special altered state of consciousness, or that any of the
phenomena of hypnosis are beyond the ability of individuals in
other 'non-hypnosis' situations. The notion of trace is considered
unneccessary by many or most of the leading theorists.
Famed altered-states researcher Charles Tart is quoted as criticizing
approaches which lump a vast variety of different phenomena into
'hypnotic' as if it were a single identified state, and as if all people
who undergo something called a hypnotic induction were undergoing the same
experience.
Some research suggests that while 'suggestibility' is apparently
a stable trait, it is not hypnotizibility per se that is
measured, but the willingness of the patient to work within the
that particular therapeutic authority relationship.
T.X. Barber, called 'an elder stateman' of hypnosis,
says that he's "known from the beginning" that people
can bring out their own inner capabilities by direct requests to
think, feel, and experience in a suggested way, without any need
for hypnotic induction. He says that the secret of hypnosis
involves the ability to fantasize in a hallucinatory way
and provide the drama and excitement. Also the way in which
suggestions are given, language which gives firm but
metaphorical suggestions.
D. Corydon Hammond calls hypnosis :
"the art of securing a patient's attention and then effectively
communicating ideas that boost motivation and change perceptions."
Phobias , by their nature, seem particularly responsive to suggestion,
whether called hypnosis or not.
Pain control 'under hypnosis' has been demonstrated without hypnotic
induction as well.
Hypnosis has been used to facilitate the elimination of warts.
However, direct suggestion, without hypnotic induction, has been shown to
have the same effect, assumed through the influence of suggestion on
the immune system since warts are virally related.
There's very good evidence that hypnosis does NOT increase accurate
recollection of the past, as has often been claimed. That the main
effect is increasing the level of detail that is imagined, whether it
is accurate or not. The memory in effect is reconstructed from both
actual remembrances and current imagination and suggestions. Suggestions
integral to the usual hypnotic induction process lead people to
fantasize freely and to confuse suggested and/or fantasized scenarios
with remembered ones. This is of particular importance where
testimony based on hypnotic recall is relied upon, and therapy
where hypnosis is used to attempt to recall or reconstruct
alleged abuse as a child.
Hypnosis, according to the summary in the article, is a 'power
transaction' between the hypnotist and the subject much more than it
is any paranormal state of consciousness.
"Packaging them [the true claims made about hypnosis] under the label
'hypnosis' conceals what is really going on. It doesn't even begin
to suggest that they are our very own powers and there might be ways
to get at them directly and entirely on our own."
todd
|
847.12 | What are the 'alternative' views ? | DWOVAX::STARK | TV, cathode ray nipple | Tue Nov 10 1992 08:49 | 17 |
| re: Note 1748.87 by ESSB::BROCKLEBANK (Dave),
(taken from 'comments to natural disaster' topic)
Dave, you suggest that you've identified what you call the scientific
view of hypnosis, and found it lacking, and that you stretch your
perspective with other views. I'm curious as to what exactly
this scientific view is, and what the alternatives are, from your
new perspective ? Could you please expand on your ideas ?
Are you talking about revisiting Mesmer's method of sitting in a bathtub
full of magentized iron filings while being treated for psychogenic
components of illness ?
kind regards,
todd
|
847.13 | Degrees of influence | ESSB::BROCKLEBANK | Looking at/for the more subtle things | Wed Nov 11 1992 05:13 | 50 |
| Todd,
By the 'view of the scientific community' of hypnosis, I was thinking
of the view that hypnosis is
1. produced by the subject rather than the hypnotist
2. the hypnotist merely provides an environment whereby the subject
enters into state
3. no matter (waves or anything else measured) passes from the hypnotist
to the subject
The above description is a bit hazy in my memory. The first factor
came about from the new field of psychology trying to seperate itself
from any ideas of witchcraft of one free will controlling another.
The second was based on the fact that certain people appear to be more
suceptible to hypnotism while others don't. It also backs up the first
premise.
The third was based on the fact that screens, electric fields etc. placed
between the subject and the hypnotist didn't prevent the hypnosis from
occuring.
I'm sure that that are many more aspects of hypnotism which are commonly
held views but I can't remember them offhand.
These were/are the views that I held to describe hypnotism. However,
after reading Juan's notes, I considered the possible explanations
which could have been presented in the last century, that
hypnotism could be produced by the hypnotist having a stronger will
than the subject. That possibly this 'will' could be used to influence
someone/something. This view is closer to a view that there are other
'worlds' that we can't see or fully understand at present. Some may
refer to this as the astral plane or some other term. Possibly on this
plane, somehow the hypnotist can reach reach the subject sufficiently
to influence them. But as science hasn't been able to measure this
world, it cannot use it as an explanation.
How one could tune their will, or possibly clear away anything which
is draining the potential strength of their will is another area which
comes under the 'new perspective'. This may be connected to reducing
the ammount of physical attachments to the material world and increasing
one's strenght in other areas by the use of imagination etc.
I hope this clarifies where I was coming from. I can't recall Mesmer's
bathtub treatment...I must look it up for my own interest.
Regards,
Dave
|
847.14 | | WARNUT::NISBETD | [email protected] | Wed Nov 11 1992 06:28 | 5 |
| What causes hypnosis? Since one can train to be a hypnotist, what are
hypnotist told to do to hypnotise? What is the secret?
Dougie
|
847.15 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Friday the 13th - Part 12a | Wed Nov 11 1992 06:44 | 27 |
| >What causes hypnosis?
The hypnotist.
>Since one can train to be a hypnotist, what are hypnotist told to do to
>hypnotise? What is the secret?
Ok what you have to do is to get your victim to believe in something
that is not true. This is commonly done by repeatedly giving them
suggestions that they are becoming tired. This can be assisted by
causing eye strain, the old swing a pocket watch before their eyes,
then adding the suggestion that their eyelids are becoming heavy.
As they drift off you keep giving them suggestions that they must
listen to your voice. Once they appear to be asleep you will find that
their minds are open to suggestion, they can be given commands that
take effect at a later time and their memory becomes much clearer.
There seems to be a limit to what you can get them to do, this varies
from person to person, but usually stops them doing something that
they, for moral reasons, would not do.
It is also possible to let them use the hysterical strength that is
usually reserved for extreme emergencies, but this is *VERY* dangerous.
Jamie.
|
847.16 | Physical, yet not mechanical materialism | DWOVAX::STARK | TV, cathode ray nipple | Wed Nov 11 1992 08:37 | 32 |
| re: .13,
Thanks very much for elaborating your ideas. I'm going to try
to do the same.
There are actually (today) a number of movements (within science) that
are *not* based entirely on a mechanistic materialism philosophy,
but I think you're entirely correct that 'early psychology'
could be viewed as strongly leaning in that direction, and that
there is still a powerful contingent of conventional theorists
that thinks that way.
There are in fact views, even within science, that delve into what
I would consider the mystical or the spiritual in the form of their
theories. There are also some basically physicalist theories, such
as within Cognitive Science, that I think of as falling somewhere
between the extremes of radical materialism and
supernaturalism-of-a-sort.
I seem to be attracted mostly to the Cognitive theories, probably
a lot of that has to do with my computer background, Cognitive
Science having strong connections with Computer Science. I don't
really consider these to be radically materialist, in the
strict mechanical sense you seem to imply in your description,
though. They leave a lot of room within the physical
(and basically non-supernatural) for complex undiscovered patterns
like some of the things we see in hypnotic phenomena.
I hope that helps clarify where I'm coming from.
kind regards,
todd
|
847.17 | yeah, but | WARNUT::NISBETD | [email protected] | Wed Nov 11 1992 10:22 | 13 |
| <<< Note 847.15 by HOO78C::ANDERSON "Friday the 13th - Part 12a" >>>
. >Since one can train to be a hypnotist, what are hypnotist told to do to
. >hypnotise? What is the secret?
.
. Ok what you have to do is to get your victim to believe in something
. that is not true. This is commonly done by repeatedly giving them
. suggestions that they are becoming tired.
But does the hypnotist do anything special with his voice? What is stopping
you sitting me down and hypnotising me, assuming I want to be hypnotised?
Dougie
|
847.18 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Friday the 13th - Part 12a | Wed Nov 11 1992 10:44 | 21 |
| >But does the hypnotist do anything special with his voice? What is
>stopping you sitting me down and hypnotising me, assuming I want to be
>hypnotised?
Basically nothing. I'm not very good at it and do know people who are
much more competent.
The state can also be reached naturally. Whilst you are in the process
of going to sleep you pass through it and will react to suggestion.
When I was a Boy Scout our Troop had a small cottage that we used for
winter camping, it was too cold for tents. There we used to play tricks
on kids who were in this state. For example one lad had an irrational
fear of ants, whispering in his ear that there were ants in his
sleeping bag usually worked. Two minutes later he would come out of his
sleeping bag like a bat out of hell, screaming that it was full of ants.
After a few minutes of shaking the sleeping bag he would return to the
world and calm down. Teenagers are cruel to each other.
Jamie.
|
847.19 | Now you know less than you did before. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed Nov 11 1992 11:11 | 4 |
| Jamie's statements about hypnosis are simplistic, misleading, cynical
and rather out of date.
Topher
|
847.20 | | WARNUT::NISBETD | [email protected] | Wed Nov 11 1992 12:07 | 13 |
| I've had seen two hypnotherapists. Hypnotism is a fascinating
experience, but sometimes being too interested in what is happening can
stop or reduce hypnotism taking place.
The very first time I saw a hypnotist, he suggested to me that one arm
was heavier than the other. (Shopping Bag). There was nothing
particularly noticable about the inflections in his voice, or the way
he spoke, but the trembling in my arm was unmistakable. Which returns
me to my question - how does it work?
Dougie
|
847.21 | More than meets the evil eye | DWOVAX::STARK | Controlled floundering | Wed Nov 11 1992 12:13 | 26 |
| re: .19 and previous,
One of the reasons why I usually suggest articles and books for
general information about hypnosis, even though I've studied it
somewhat and even have some formal training at some forms of it, is that it
really is more complicated than most of the descriptions I've seen here
so far would imply. The theories in vogue in the peak of popularity of
Watson and Skinner's brand of psychology relied on 'conditioning'
theories, and these while useful in some areas proved insufficient
for the range of phenomena demonstrated. Recent theories are
many and varied.
There are a number of complex psychological processes
going on in an induction, and inductions can be remarkably varied
in style, content, and in their behavioral and subjective effects.
I really suggest that anyone seriously interested in hypnotic
effects (from a scientific viewpoint) get a hold of some good recent
literature on the field, by T.X. Barber, or one of the others studying it.
It is far from a completely understood or simple collection of
phenomena. Some aspects revolve around the very nature and
neurological basis of human perception and consciousness.
kind regards,
todd
|
847.22 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Wed Nov 11 1992 13:22 | 6 |
| But where would one find stuff like that, Todd?
Having some modest interest in the subject myself... I was wondering
what modern concensus of thought was on the subject.
Mary
|
847.24 | Sorry for reposting this book review ... | DWOVAX::STARK | Controlled floundering | Wed Nov 11 1992 14:05 | 113 |
| > But where would one find stuff like that, Todd?
> Having some modest interest in the subject myself... I was wondering
> what modern concensus of thought was on the subject.
Most is easily available. I think a good start would
be the one I recommended before, _Theories_of_Hypnosis_, from
Guilford Press, by Steven Lynn and Judith Rhue. With apologies
for reposting this review here ... (I can't remember where else I posted it
at the moment !) ...
Caveat, this is not a how-to book on hypnotizing your friends for fun
and profit :-), it is a theoretical overview of the topic.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"... Henceforth, serious discussion of the nature of hypnosis
will begin here."
... says T.X. Barber reviewing the new book _Theories_of_Hypnosis_,
promoted by Guilford Press as a collection of authoritative articles
on the most current theories of hypnosis, edited by Steven Lynn
and Judith W. Rhue.
Guilford claims that this is the current state-of-the-science
in this field, covering all major theories, organized to promote
the reader's ability to compare and contrast the strengths and
weaknesses of the various empirical methods used to address
crucial theoretical questions.
Important issues covered from a number of different perspectives
include the relationship between hypnosis and altered states
of consciousness, the voluntary and involuntary nature of
hypnotic behavior, the stability and modifiability of the
hypnotizability 'trait,' and making meaningful distinctions between
hypnotic and non-hypnotic behaviors.
Here is the table of contents :
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Theories of Hypnosis, an Introduction, Lynn and Rhue
I. HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES
1. Early Theories : A clinical perspective, Hilgard
2. History and Historigraphy , Spanos and Chaves
II. SINGLE-FACTOR THEMES
A. The Neodissociation Perspective
3. A Neodissociation Interpretation of Hypnosis, Hilgard
4. An Neodisssociative Critique of Spano's Social-Psychological
Model of Hypnosis, Bowers and Davison
5. Hypontizability : Individual differences in dissociation
and the flexible control of psychological processes,
Evans
B. Hypnosis as psychological regression
6. Hypnosis as a special case of regression, Nash
C. Hypnosis as relaxation
7. Anesis, Edmonston
III. CLINICAL PERSPECTIVES
8. The Locksmith model : accessing hypnotic responsiveness,
Barber.
9. Ericksonian Hypnotherapy : A Communications approach, Zeig and
Rennick
IV. THE SOCIAL-COGNITIVE PERSPECTIVE
10. Role Theory : a dramaturgical and narrational perspetive, Coe
and Sarbin
11. Social-Cognitive approach, Spanos
12. Compliance, belief, and semantics in hypnosis : a nonstate,
social-cognitive perspective, Wagstaff
13. An integrative model of hypnosis, Lynn and Rhue
14. Social Learning Theory of hypnosis, Kirsch
15. Ecosystemic approach, Fourie
V. INTERACTIVE-PHENOMENOLOGICAL MODELS
16. Two disciplines of scientific hypnosis : a synergistic model,
Nadon, Laurence, Perry
17. Hypnosis, Context, and Committment, Sheehan
18. The construction and resolution of experience and behavior
in hypnosis, McConkey
19. Toward a Social-Psychobiological Model of Hypnosis, Banyai
VI. CONCLUSIONS
20. Hypnosis Theories : Themes, Variations, and Research
Directions, Lynn and Rhue.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
634 pp., ISBN 0-89862-343-X. Recent publication price of $45 from
the publisher.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
todd
|
847.25 | my lack of imagination | BTOVT::BEST_G | somewhat less offensive p_n | Wed Nov 11 1992 14:09 | 10 |
|
I'm also as mislead concerning hypnosis as Jamie is. And I've
hypnotized on many occasions.
I can't imagine what the big deal is, what is so amiss with this
concept of hypnosis, but I guess that explains why Jamie and I
are so hopelessly ignorant on the subject.
guy
|
847.26 | Boredom and rapt attention both | DWOVAX::STARK | Controlled floundering | Wed Nov 11 1992 14:12 | 8 |
| > what causes hypnosis?
> boredom.
That is one of the common principles used in hypnosis, as I understand
it. Paradoxically, not only boredom, but also the opposite; intensely
focused attention, can be related to various hypnotic effects.
todd
|
847.27 | Diffrunt strokes ... ? | DWOVAX::STARK | Controlled floundering | Wed Nov 11 1992 14:50 | 19 |
| Guy,
> I can't imagine what the big deal is,
It's not neccessarily a big deal, imo, mainly an interesting collection
of phenomena that appear tell us things about the mind and body that
are more difficult to pin down under other kinds of conditions.
There are correlations of hypnosis and psi or psi-like effects,
important legal implications for the reliability of testimony under
hypnosis when it's used to enhance memory of a crime, psychotherapeutic
implications, and so on, not to mention the previously mentioned
theoretical questions about consciousness.
Then, it all depends on what you think is a big deal, I guess. :-)
kind regards,
todd
|
847.28 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Wed Nov 11 1992 15:00 | 1 |
| I find it really interesting, Todd. Thank you for entering it.
|
847.29 | | BTOVT::BEST_G | somewhat less offensive p_n | Wed Nov 11 1992 15:18 | 23 |
|
Todd, et al,
Those points you mentioned, in some circumstances, can of course
be a "big deal".
My beef is that because someone writes a note that discusses
hypnosis on one level that it can be assumed they do not understand
hypnosis on any other level.
I am familiar with about 90% of the stuff you mentioned, though in
a sort of cursory way. If I were going to undertake any serious
study of hypnosis, or practice it, or teach it I would familiar-
ize myself with more relevant information.
Basically, I don't think Jamie was really misrepresenting things
in his note any more than I would if I were to tell of my exper-
iences...
guy
|
847.30 | Swinging a watch and rubbing body parts | DWOVAX::STARK | Controlled floundering | Wed Nov 11 1992 15:55 | 33 |
| re: .29, Guy,
One more try.
Ok, I suppose we're talking mostly about Topher's comments in 847.19
about Jamie's 847.15.
I guess I got into the middle of that unintentionally by responding
in general to .19. Now that I'm
obviously involved in it, I'll address it more directly.
The problem I would have with 847.15 as a description of hypnosis
to be left on its own is not so much that it is inaccurate but that it
describes one very limited view of the topic, and gives the impression that
hypnosis only takes place under conditions where a hypnotist
bores you to sleep by swinging an old pocket watch in front of
your face and repeating monotonous nonsense to you. And that
some odd but uninteresting stuff might happen under hypnosis.
To give a completely offbeat but hopefully pointed analogy, this view seems
to me a little like describing sex as two people rubbing various body parts
together and making mostly unintelligible sounds. It hardly does much
justice to the topic for those that might have been interested in persuing
it further :-D.
But it's in the end just a value judgement on my part.
I hope that's clearer. I never meant to insult anyone's
knowledge or intelligence or imagination in this thread.
kind regards,
todd
|
847.31 | | SALSA::MOELLER | ambiguity takes more bits | Wed Nov 11 1992 19:32 | 10 |
| why does it work ? because the subconscious can't discern between
objective and subjective reality. The Silva Mind Control folks have
this stuff down to a science.
A famous therapist, Milton Erickson, of Phoenix AZ, could put clients
in a trance state in moments thru words or gestures ('Mandrake gestures
hypnotically'). Other folks studied his work and came up with NLP,
NeuroLinguistic Programming.
karl
|
847.32 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Friday the 13th - Part 12a | Thu Nov 12 1992 04:33 | 3 |
| Well I thought that I explained it slightly better than Topher did.
Jamie.
|
847.33 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | Life begins at 40(Mhz) | Thu Nov 12 1992 06:55 | 7 |
| I've only ever seen two hypnotists, both professional entertainers,
both at private parties where they were introduced as fellow guests.
Both were supremely good at it, and there wasn't a watch in sight. They
were, it should be added, VERY selective in whom they chose to "play
with".
Laurie.
|
847.34 | No watches | WARNUT::NISBETD | [email protected] | Thu Nov 12 1992 07:31 | 29 |
| I've seen two entertainers (Robert Halpern & Raveen) as well as the therapists
I went to see.
The 'professional' therapist said that the best subjects for stage hypnotists
are "Intelligent Extroverts". Again I have heard that it is difficult or
impossible to get subjects to do something they genuinely don't want to do.
I was never a particularly good subject at my therapy sessions. I was always
too interested in what was going on. However, I appreciated the candour of
the hypnotherapist I spent the longest time with.
He said 'Six months from now you might be feeling a lot better. We won't know
whether it is a result of these sessions, or something that would have
happened anyway. And it doesn't matter. What matters is that you get better."
I used to mention other forms of therapy (e.g. Jungian, Riechian etc). He had
another surprising answer for me;
'A lot of people go to lots of therapists because they are "into therapy".
They are more interested in therapy than they are in getting better".
The advantage to me of seeing a professional therapist, was that they don't
worry about giving you the answer you want to here. The truth is rather boring.
Friends can unwittingly excarcabate the situation, by saying all 'the right
things'.
Got too expensive in the end!
Dougie
|
847.35 | | BTOVT::BEST_G | somewhat less offensive p_n | Thu Nov 12 1992 07:40 | 13 |
|
Todd,
Points well taken....no harm done.
(But I've never used a pocket watch, only words..;-)
guy
P.S. I'm not a good hypnotic subject.....I'm too aware of what's going
on....and sometimes the whole situation just tickles my funny
bone....
|
847.36 | | VERGA::STANLEY | what a long strange trip it's been | Thu Nov 12 1992 09:07 | 1 |
| :-)
|