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An ancient method of bringing a person (works with animals as well) in a state in which all somatic senses are eliminated.
Only a part of human brain stays awake - the part in charge of understanding the hypnotist’s speech. Maybe not precisely understanding, but recieving vocal orders directed to subconsciesness, which pass by the control of reason (that is why some people, for example, bark if the hypnotist tells them to).
Hypnosis has several stages…the depth of the hypnosis determines which
orders will a hypnotized person comply and how influence will they
have. In the initial stages the patient will not as easily bark (he’ll
probably wake up). In a deeper stage he’ll bark repeatedly, but still,
if he is suggested to, for example, kill, he will not do it (unless we
are talking about a criminal with no moral what so ever).
Hypnotizing a person is much easier than what is considered to be. We
often hypnotise ourselves without even realizing it (for example, if we
stare at something and have no idea what we’re thinking about). When we
want to hypnotize someone, we usually do it by exhausting his senses,
physically (we tell him to stare at a moving object) or by suggestions
(“you are very tired, your eyes are closing, you are now asleep…”).
That way the patient slowly starts listening to a hypnotist’s voice
only, paying attention to nothing else. The depth or the hypnosis is
determined by duration of those suggestions, by how convincing the
hypnotist is and by the nature of the patient himself.
Now i’ll describe one of many methods of hypnotizing a person more thoroughly:
- In the beginning, the most important thing is an entering
conversation with the patient, in which the hypnotist thoroughly
describes the entire process.
It is very important to detail explain all the phases to eliminate the
patient’s fear - the greatest obstacle to a successful hypnosis.
Here I have to mention a very important fact that nobody can be
hypnotized without a consent (hypnosis during which the patient is
asleep is a special case, because the patient doesn’t know what is
happening). Consent is not enough - it is necessary that the patient
really wants to be hypnotized and has a total trust in the hypnotist.
In case non of these terms are not fulfilled, the hypnosis is not
possible. There are people who don’t comply with suggestions, or simply
don’t have enough trust in the hypnotist to allow a free access to
their minds. Those people are very difficult or even impossible to
hypnotise. However, in most cases, hypnosis is possible - by simplest
methods.
- The goal of the next phase is to exhaust the patient’s mind and slowly start putting him asleep by physical methods.
There is a huge amount of those methods, and almost every hypnotist
evolves his own. Among all of them, the most known (but not the most
efficient one) is moving a finger, a watch or some other object in
front of the patient’s eyes.
In my opinion, the most efficient one is when the hypnotist takes
the patient for his shoulders and starts moving him backwards around,
for example, a table, during which the patient has his eyes closed. It
makes a person sleepy surprisingly fast, and everything is ready for
the next phase.
- In the next phase the hypnotist puts a patient in a
comfortable position and then suggests how tired he is, how all his
body parts are very heavy, how he feels the need to sleep…
This lasts for about 10 minutes, or until it’s noticable that all of
the patient’s muscles are relaxed and that he is slowly starting to
sleep, complitely allowing the hypnotists voice to guide him.
In that moment the hypnotist mention's that the patient’s sleep
slowly becomes hypnosis, and that he hears nothing but his voice which
guides him. The patient is now in the state of hypnosis. How deep that
state is depends on the strength of suggestions, and the expressiveness
of the previous phases.
Hypnosis can be deepened simply suggesting that the patient is going deeper and deeper in the hypnotic state.
- During hypnosis the hypnotist gives certain suggestions to the patient (to guit smoking for example).
- The last phase is waking up the patient.
Before that it is very important to suggest that the patient is
rested and that he feels great and energetic. After that the hypnotist
suggests that, for example, after counting to 10, the patient will wake
up relaxed and (if wanted) he will not remember the entire process. If
that, for any reason, doesn’t work, it’s useful to apply some other
methods, like clapping hands or snapping fingers - that will surely
work.
Soon you’ll be able to read a thorough description of a real hypnosis,
which will more clearly present all phases and allow you to, after reading
this text only, hypnotise someone and (the best thing) succeed. If you
don’t like the idea of someone “talking” to your sub
consciousness (in spite of me convincing you of it’s harmlessness),
but you want to use many options of the hypnosis, there is always a
possibility of self hypnosis induction.
During that process you must “exhaust” yourself using any method. To
achieve a real hypnotic state and wanted effect (therapeutically or any
other), you have to make an audio tape or the entire process: relaxing,
suggestions and waking up. After that, all you have to do is put
yourself in a comfortable position and play the tape.
Electropsychology has many useful uses of hypnosis, of which the
most important is possibility of conducting experiments with direct
approach to subconsciesness.
It is to expectthat during the hypnosis all para psychological
phenomenon will be more easily achieved than in “normal” state (for
example, testing telepathy, astral journeys, prophesy…).
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