Articles on Primal Therapy, psychogenesis, causes of psychological traumas, brain development, psychotherapies, neuropsychology, neuropsychotherapy. Discussions about causes of anxiety, depression, psychosis, consequences of the birth trauma and life before birth.
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
On Hypnosis (Part 2/20)
What is the common factor that makes it possible for one approach to fit into such widely diversified therapies? It seems to be the idea that hypnosis somehow makes the inner person more accessible. When an individual relaxes into a "trance" state, memories, pains, and traumas as well as solutions and potentials supposedly become more available. Hypnosis is viewed as a direct route to the unconscious, where old demons can be exorcised with the least amount of discomfort to the patient. Traumas can be relived and resolved without any conscious participation; symptoms can be relieved without any knowledge of their source; compulsive behavior patterns can be broken without undue effort; defeatist self-images can be overhauled in a session or two.
In effect, hypnotism is based on the belief that the "unconscious" mind can swiftly heal the patient without the "conscious mind" ever being involved. Because of this apparent ease in effecting change, hypnosis has become one of the most popular forms of therapy. It is popular from the patient's point of view because it is like magic. Indeed, hypnotherapy expressly draws one away from the “why” – the reason for the neurotic symptoms in the first place. As a result, hypnotherapy draws patients away from a cure.
History of Hypnosis
The first attempt to explain hypnosis in naturalistic terms came in the 1700s. An Austrian physician named Franz Anton Mesmer (1713-1815) proposed that healing could occur through the transference of "animal magnetism." His procedures became known as mesmerism. People still speak of being “mesmerized.” Mesmer intended to bring hypnosis into the realm of modern science, but his techniques only contributed to its aura of mystery, magic, and charlatanism. Dressed in flowing silk robes, Mesmer would appear before his patients, who were gathered around a tub filled with water and iron filings. These would purportedly help transfer to the patients "the marvelous animal magnetism exuding from [Mesmer]." At some point the animal magnetism would trigger convulsions in the patients, which would remove whatever symptoms had been present.[1] (I suspect the convulsions represented a release of accumulated primal energy, which might well yield temporary relief of the patient’s symptoms.)
In 1784, a committee of inquiry convened by the King of France discredited Mesmer's ideas. The committee found that in fact that no such magnetism existed, and the striking recoveries were due to "mere imagination." Hypnotism was again linked to mysticism and quackery.
Nevertheless, by the 1840s it had spread to various parts of the world. Two surgeons working independently of each other – John Elliotson in London and James Esdaile in Calcutta – discovered that the mesmeric trance could be used for pain control during major surgery. Another 19th-century English physician, James Braid, agreed that Mesmer's techniques could be useful. He dismissed the concept of animal magnetism, however, and introduced the term hypnotism (from the Greek hypnos, meaning "to sleep"). This referred to a "nervous sleep" brought about by a concentration of attention. Braid believed hypnosis was a sleep state, or at least a state of consciousness existing below the level of conscious-awareness. These views divorced hypnosis from mesmerism, and tempered the medical profession’s negative attitude toward the use of hypnosis.
In subsequent decades, two scientific viewpoints on the nature of hypnosis crystallized. In the mid-1880s, Hippolyte Bernheim, a professor of medicine at Strasbourg, saw hypnosis as a normal phenomenon, resulting from a psychological response to suggestion, and not involving any special physical forces or processes. By contrast, Jean Martin Charcot, professor of neurology at the Sorbonne, considered hypnosis a pathological phenomenon which occurred only in hysterical patients and which did involve the physical influence of magnets and metals.
Sigmund Freud stepped into the controversy in the 1890s. A former student of Charcot, he became interested in the use of hypnosis as a therapeutic tool for treating neurotic disorders. Freud found hypnosis useful in helping hysterical patients recall forgotten traumatic events. He also used it as a technique to alleviate physical and emotional symptoms. In an 1893 case study, for example, he described how he used hypnosis to help a woman who was not able to breast-feed her child. After inducing a hypnotic trance, Freud "made use of suggestion to contradict all her fears and the feelings on which all the fears were based: 'Do not be afraid. You will make an excellent nurse and the baby will thrive. Your stomach is perfectly quiet, your appetite is excellent, you are looking forward to your next meal...'" Freud went on to comment about his "remarkable achievement." Hypnotism successfully alleviated the woman's physical symptoms, restored her appetite, and allowed her to nurse her child for eight months.[2]
Later, however, while compiling his book Studies in Hysteria, Freud discontinued the use of hypnosis and instead concentrated on the newly-developed techniques of psychoanalysis and free association. Later, he employed dream analysis as "the royal road to the unconscious."
[1]Ernest R. Hilgard and Josephine R. Hilgard, Hypnosis in the Relief of Pain. Los Altos, CA: William Kaufmann, 1975, p. 2.
[2]Freud, S. (1893). A case of successful treatment of hypnotism. In J. Strachey (Ed. and Trans.), Sigmund Freud: Collected Papers (Vol. 5, pp. 33-46). New York: Basic Books, 1959, p. 36.
Dr. Janov,
ReplyDeleteyou write: "Until recently, it has been shrouded in mystery, magic, and the supernatural, associated with everything from Druidic healers and high priests in ancient Greece to shamans, gods, witches, devils, and quacks."
A person went to court to get his money back, because the therapy he selected did not help.
"Crystal ball, tea leaves or imagination:
Who Humbug booked, must pay for the Humbug says a German court".
We can add to this every therapy in the business of:
coaching, past life experience, hypnotherapy, etc - all those who are not seeking the source, causing the pain.
Bottom line, it is the one in mental pain who decides if they want to heal.
Most will choose catharsis and pay for catharsis, because they have not hit the concrete yet - some never will.
Meanwhile, they repeat the pattern of abuse, while others make money off the repressed by selling humbugs.
All you can do, Dr. Janov, is offer your knowledge, your inside, your empathy, have your arms open for the one who detoured for years, when they finally hit the concrete and know all the humbugs they paid for were nothing but catharsis.
Sieglinde
A link:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.lef.org/news/LefDailyNews.htm?NewsID=11275&Section=Disease&source=DHB_110615&key=Body+ContinueReading&utm_source=DHB_110615&utm_medium=email&utm_term=Disease&utm_content=Body+ContinueReading&utm_campaign=DailyHealthBulletin
Hypnosis And Surgery: Study In Belgium Finds It Shortens Recovery Time
William Weir, The Hartford Courant, Conn.
The Hartford Courant, Connecticut
06-14-11
June 14--Hypnosis, according to a new study, can help patients undergoing surgery.
Art, how would you explain the results?
Genovés 2011-06-22
ReplyDeleteDuring 1995, when I was the mgn. dir. of a European sales- and distribution center in St. Avold in France I went through 2 weeks of intensive classes in French in a language clinic in Metz. Before every session, one in the morning and one in the afternoon, I was put into a hypnotic state which lasted 2-3 hours. Ackording to the school I was doing very well and improved in short time my French. However, I was only able to speak French when I was in a hypnotic state. Unfortunately, not being under hypnosis, I could not remember much. So somewhere in the language center of my brain I have a sleeping French department.
By the way, during decades I used to hypnotise myself when I went to the dentist. I could not take anesthesia, because it triggered, those days, my epilepsy when the anesthetic effect let, which did not happen when I put myself into a hypnotic state.
So, yes, hypnosis can short term be very effective...
Jan Johnsson
Apollo: It puts you unconscious so you do not feel pain. Wonderful. That is what it is for. But you cannot get well unconsciously. You need to feel pain. art
ReplyDeleteFor those who have access to a copy of "Primal Man", there`s also a good interesting 10 pages on hypnosis in that book by Dr Janov.
ReplyDeleteBtw, in case some of you are interested in a rebuttal I made to Apollo`s well-intentionned but false comments about Wilhelm Reich, see my second post on the Janov blog "So you think the government will solve addiction?", a few days ago.
Marco
when you are in a trance, you are getting closer to death. i don't want that kind of pain relief. a nearly-dead person can never feel satisfied.
ReplyDeletePeople within your family usually don’t work with hypnosis because they live with you and are used to you, so try it with a friend it might work.
ReplyDeleteHey Aer , my only encounter with a hypnotherapist
ReplyDeleteseveral years ago was in retrospection a ridiculous event1 I remember "the helping hand " of this gentleman because his post hypnotic suggesstion did not work..h e raised my arm...1
By the way the German psychiatrist Hans Lungwitz
did write "that only neurotics are to be hypnotized.. Ahat is it the e x a c t state where this ominous state of mind "is in one`s mind"
Yours emanuel
Hi,
ReplyDeleteYes indeed Richard and as I approach my death I would like to be able to do so with my eyes wide open, my heart full of love and my head clear with the perception of what is.
There is a belief that when we die like that we live on forever, at least in the memory of those beloved we leave behind. They inherit the will to live life to the full and to love others as themselves.
Truly a Christian Message if there ever was.
First of all Christian had to find the gate and the gate keeper. Eventually he had to leave his baggage behind, then at last he was able to climb the steep hill and surmount his troubles.
A lot of hassles along the way.
Paul G.
Hot hypnosis: And that means...
ReplyDelete