Tuesday, June 28, 2011

On Hypnosis (Part 3/20)



During World War I, hypnosis was used to treat victims of shell-shock. This once again brought it to the attention of the scientific community. The experimental psychologist Clark Hull finally established hypnosis as an object worthy of controlled and methodical laboratory studies. In 1933 Hull endorsed Bernheim's view that hypnosis might be the result of suggestion and suggestibility. Both World War II and the Korean War contributed to renewed interest in hypnosis. Societies for research and training in clinical and experimental hypnosis were founded. Hypnosis journals published research findings and case materials. Specialty boards licensed practitioners and disseminated information to the public.

The 1970s saw a curious development in the use of hypnosis. The spread of hypnotic "past-life regression" (which had been practiced since the 1860s, if not earlier, in Europe) sparked a new controversy in the field. Adherents of this practice (most of whom lack degrees in psychology or medicine) believe that events and problems in past lives can generate neurosis and other problems in this life. Thus, through hypnosis, one can gain access to past identities, relive past traumas, and eliminate their negative effects on one's present functioning. Although professional hypnosis organizations have condemned past-life regression, it has made its way into Ericksonian hypnotherapy, the school based on the work of Milton Erickson (1902-1980), the pre-eminent hypnotist in recent decades. Some hypnotists have even been able to induce "age progression," in which patients conjure up themselves in the future for ostensible therapeutic benefit.[1]

Today, hypnosis appears to be increasing in acceptability in the scientific community. Erickson's influence has extended beyond traditional hypnotherapy to family therapy and other clinical areas. Nonetheless, there remains no cohesive or compelling theory on the nature of hypnosis. Most agree that hypnotic phenomena are real: People are able to dissociate from pain in their bodies, regress to earlier events in their lives, relive traumatic events and forget them moments later, and experience significant alterations in perception. But what causes these changes? Is hypnosis an altered state of consciousness? Or does it merely active and channel normal processes, skills, and response preferences? This is considered the considered the state-nonstate controversy, and it leads us to the core problem of the nature of hypnosis.

The Nature of Hypnosis

Hypnotic trance: a state in which perceptions are altered either spontaneously or as the result of suggestion and in which there is a detachment from the external world.[2]

The elements of a hypnotic trance are well-known. Ernest R. Hilgard (1904-2001), long-time experimental psychologist at Stanford University and a prominent researcher on hypnotic analgesia, developed a profile of a hypnotized individual with characteristics that he felt was "sufficiently consistent" to serve as a definition. Specifically, if instructed, a hypnotized person:

*waits passively for information as to how to behave;

*pays attention only to the hypnotist;

*accepts distortions as reality;

*is highly susceptible to the hypnotist's suggestions;

*will readily adopt a role of being someone else, and

*may forget the hypnotic experience.[3]

Let's assume that these are all aspects of a hypnotic trance. Is there really something special about this state, something that distinguishes it from everyday consciousness (while one is awake or asleep)? Various researchers have given conflicting answers to this question.

[1]See, for example, Jonathan Venn, Hypnosis and the Reincarnation Hypothesis: A Critical Review and Intensive Case Study, The Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research Vol. 80, October 1986, pp. 409-425; Robert A. Baker, The Effect of Suggestion on Past-Lives Regression, American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, Volume 25, Number 1, July 1982, pp. 71-76; Peter B. Bloom, Some General Comments About Ericksonian Hypnotherapy, American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, Volume 33, Number 4, April 1991, pp. 221-224.
[2]See Heap, Michael and Dryden, Windy, Eds., Hypnotherapy: A Handbook. Philadelphia: Open University Press, 1991.
[3]See Ernest R. Hilgard, Richard Atkinson, and Rita Atkinson, Introduction to Psychology (New York: Harcourt Brace, 1971, fifth edition), p. 173.

11 comments:

  1. Hi Art,

    Yes I have a clear perception of this issue, put me right if I'm being glib:

    When we're young we havn't got all the faculties to relate with our outside experience that our potential growth is programmed to provide. We model on our parents and carers and as co-dependent (merged) entities we do this most of all whilst falling asleep and waking up because every day as little ones at those times, we need those big Gods & Godesses to regulate our inner relationship, we need them to help us be ourselves when the brain connections de-integrate, or re-integrate.

    There are conflicts between the sleep hormones and the waking hormones which are well known for producing what we call 'dream states' or 'dissociation'. Coffee helps some get out of it in the morning whilst camomile tea helps others get through it at night. That's a digression.

    That's why so many of the dreams we remember are in those 'twilight zones'. . . In this hypnotic trance we have a susceptibility to suggestion from our folks, carers etc who are either trying to get us to sleep (!) or wake us up. Snake brain, limbic and then neo-cortex. . . or reverse order.

    These conflicts of hormones produce a paralysis of brain centre into which we can fixate an idea. . . I can wake up wanting to murder the builder on site but later make him a cup of tea and resolve the issue. . .

    Art has talked about the symbolising processes and a few of us have questioned Yungs' system.

    Hypnotists are trying to operate a cheap hijack on the outer boundaries of brain connections, where mergence and re-emergence are happening.

    It's a cheap con but fun for entertainment, after all, we all love a good story at bed time but it's not ever going to offer a cure to engrained trauma, it's a bedtime distraction or a waking fantasy whilst full consciousness (connected) is kicking in (or fading into needed sleep).

    Paul G.

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  2. Art,

    I want you to put out an account number for us to deposit money into for the purpose of a legal process. I will do everything in my "power" to make it successful. What do you think the cost can land on?
    The account number should also be available on the blog's front page.
    There is nothing what so ever to lose.

    Frank

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  3. Art,

    As I see it... we are in a hypnotized state all the time and when hypnosis loosens its grip we fall into pain from yesterday ... pain we can not relate to in our waking state... but well known to our history... history we are being withheld for lack of knowledge what this story really means.
    We need to "virtually" only through our "knowledge"... embrace this phenomenon in order to advance. I mean... we just need start thinking differently and this fact will become available.

    Frank

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  4. Frank: Listen better to put money into an account via our foundation so poor people can get our therapy. A legal procedure starts at $100.000. art janov

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  5. Art,

    A legal process can lead to so much more than 100,000 ever can achive in the case of be helpful to some patients. I know that the poor people should get help but there is alot of them. The primal therapeutic process can have a recognition that probably will surprise us. Art you should know what you hold in your hand.

    Frank

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  6. Excuse me Frank, I agree with your passion to promote and defend PT but from my own experience I can say the legal process is so adversarial and rancorous only really unfeeling types can cope with it.

    It would be like a peace riot, (excuse the ironic humour).

    Paul G.

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  7. Paul, next time you and your partner experience an orgasm that sends giant mind-blowing waves through your body and brain which causes everything to disappear as you surrender to the overpowering torrent of ecstasy, and then drag your limp quivering body over to the computer to write your next intellectual comment, then you and all the other blog readers can claim some kind of higher ground over the unfeeling people. until then, i would consider myself to be very unfeeling, unloving, and more than capable of doing all the things that non-primal people do. we are informed, but we are neurotic, some more than others, but who cares about exact measurements. harness your neurosis. work towards you goals while you still have all that false energy.

    Jack, avoiding or denouncing all non-feelingful things in your life will not bring you closer to your feelings. Knowing about feelings and their importance will not bring you closer to your feelings. when people criticise your ideas, don't assume those people are completely unfeelingful. don't dismiss their ideas as merely intellectual. there are many neurotic people out there who are more feelingful than you and me. they have never primalled and never will, but their opinions are smart and helpful and somewhat feelingful.

    Sieglinde, you asked "Am I a loving person" and then you answered your own question. Your brain stem is asking a question too; "Am I getting what I need?" If you don't have proper access to your brain stem, you cannot know what you are missing. But you can try to be honest with yourself as much as possible. Are you satisfied? How often do you feel satisfied? Has your life been a satisfying one? every time you expected to feel satisfied, how long did the satisfaction last? do you want to resolve the dissatisfaction?

    Richard, stop trying to push everyone into your dark world. You are alone and nothing will change that. people are fragile. don't forget that. try to be more understanding and try to listen when people are answering your questions. You are similar to the other blog readers who are trying to claim some higher ground - trying to keep their heads above water.

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  8. I understand that you do not know what primal therapy can do for you Paul,
    The scientific facts are targets for the legal process… it’s all about ... do we have the right to be healthy or not. I regret the pesemism about what the primal therapy can accomplish during a legal process.
    Obviously is the frustration about what primal therapy can achieve in a legal process… a case of ignorance. We do not know what we can accomplish in a process and that is inoff to start.
    It is criminal to engage in an activity-enforcement task that more can be compared with quackery... that is part of the right to become healthy. It is criminal to use psychotropic drugs to silent symptoms which in itself is a sign of opportunity to become healthy .. It is criminal to pursue therapies that cause even more suffering. That is for the world's practitioners of psychiatry and psychology to know

    People must have the right to get closer to primal therapy... I mean they have a right to become healthy if the possibility exists. If we don’t have that in focus I think we start at the wrong end.
    We are afraid ... cowardly and incapable of what symptoms tells about suffering… but that is part of our symtoms... so pleas let us get on with what we suppose to do.
    It's time with a legal process.

    Frank

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  9. This may sound improbable to you, but I have used hypnosis on a friend (buddy) who would drop straight from third-line stuff into semi-unconnected first-line pain (he was born by C-section, and had some "abandoned in the crib" baby stuff too.) He knew he needed to go to second-line (childhood) stuff, but seemed unable.

    So I would put him into light trance and tell him a few things: (a) he would have "expanded consciousness" (b) would not accept any suggestions if they didn't feel right, (c) remember everything afterwards, (d) be free to move if he was uncomfortable, talk back to me, etc.

    Once he was in light trance I would give him the suggestion that if there was any second-line pain (childhood) hurts involved from what he had been dealing with, and if it was the right time to remember it, and safe to do so, he would be able to remember the feelings and primal them now.

    Invariably, he started taking about the childhood component of what he had just been crying about on the third-line, would have the primal, and then "came out of it" by himself. i.e. I never told him, "You can wake up now" or anything like that. He would sit up and talk about how the third, second and first line feelings connected.

    e.g. I remember one that was "stuck in here and can't get out" on the third line (job) stuck in boarding school on the second line, and stuck in the birth canal on the first line.

    I know that is not the way hypnosis is normally used, and take your points about the way it normally is used.

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  10. Pat: The problem I have with this is that anything anyone does from the outside interferes with the natural evolutionary order of when the patient is ready to feel something. We have never found outside interference to be necessary. Why not trust evolutiion and readiness? art janov

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  11. Richard,

    Thank you, you are my guru, I havn't had my ears go so red since the builder sent me his complaints and the client snubbed me by putting my contract out to tender to some-one else.

    This morning.

    Then you made me laugh and forgive myself.

    Paul G.

    ReplyDelete

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Bailey Endowed Chair of Animal Well Being Science
Washington State University

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K.J.S. Anand, MBBS, D. Phil, FAACP, FCCM, FRCPCH, Professor of Pediatrics, Anesthesiology, Anatomy & Neurobiology, Senior Scholar, Center for Excellence in Faith and Health, Methodist Le Bonheur Healthcare System


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Editor