Society Magazine

My Year of Discovering How Weird the Mind Gets: Pt IV [Hypnosis]

By Berniegourley @berniegourley

Welcome to the fourth post on my experiences with altered states of consciousness. This past weekend, I completed the contact hours for the Level I course in Cognitive Hypnotic Coaching and Psychotherapy (CHCP) conducted by the Institute of Clinical Hypnosis & Related Sciences ( ICHARS.) Over the course of three days, I had several opportunities to be hypnotized as well as to hypnotize classmates, and while it was sometimes a fumbling learning experience for me, I did gain some insight into trance states. The course focused on teaching a few methods of hypnotic induction, how to deepen a trance state, as well as the basics of how to use hypnosis for coaching or therapy. Last year, I took a quick class on self-hypnosis, but this was my first experience with hetero-hypnosis (trance induced by a hypnotist), and - unlike last month's topic of meditation, for which I had a substantial background - this was a subject for which I was a babe in the woods.

Hypnosis is probably the most misunderstood territory I'll travel over the course of this project ( psilocybin is the only other that comes close.) Because the realm of consciousness involves subjective experiences, there's always room for misunderstanding. Plenty of people leave their first experience with meditation thinking, "That isn't at all what I expected it to be." However, hypnosis presents added layers of confusion.

First, if a person has ever witnessed hypnosis, more often than not, they've done so via stage hypnosis. Stage hypnosis conjures images of cape-wearing Mesmerists forcing subjects to cluck like a chicken, but this isn't at all a typical experience of hypnosis. [Achieving a deep trance usually takes much longer, people will only do what they are willing to, and the ease of trance and what kinds of suggestions will be honored varies radically from person to person.] In stage shows, subjects go through a twin-pronged selection process. The first part of the selection is via "convincers" (e.g. rubber band fingers, raising arm, stuck eyelids, etc.) which themselves serve a dual purpose: for one, they allow for audience participation and reduce the crowd's overall level of skepticism, and, also, they allow the hypnotist or his crew to see which audience members are most susceptible to hypnotically-induced trance. The second part selects for gregariousness, and often this can be done by merely asking for volunteers. People who are more comfortable getting up on stage will be less resistant to acting the clown for the audience's amusement. The rule of thumb is that a hypnotist can probably get a subject to do something they wouldn't ordinarily do through suggestion, but he or she won't be able to make a person do anything they don't want to do. Therefore, the stage hypnotist wants outgoing people on stage rather than shy participants because people who like to clown around are more willing to do a wide range of activities in front of complete strangers.

Second, even the experts don't agree on what hypnosis is (or even if it is - meaning some experts on the mind don't believe a trance state is a unique state of consciousness and some even believe that suggestibility is more or less "playing along" or faking. However, it's been well-documented that many surgeries - including limb amputations - have been conducted with only hypnosis as an analgesic, so if you believe a soldier in the Civil War (or a patient of Dr. Esdaile in India) could "play along," faking a calm detachment, as a bone-saw ripped through his femur, I've got some lovely beachfront property to sell you.)

At any rate, there is wide disparity in beliefs about hypnosis, even among psychologists. For example, many clinicians, particularly followers of Milton Erickson, believe that all willing subjects can be hypnotized. (They base this belief on the fact that everyone seems to move in and out of trance states, unprompted, in daily life.) However, scientific researchers in the field find that about 10 to 15% of subjects cannot be hypnotically induced into a trance. [Note: Erickson was a controversial figure, but I can't say whether that's because he one-upped his professional colleagues or because he engaged in dubious practices both with respect to patient ethics and reporting of results.] I also don't have much of a dog in the fight about whether all willing people can be induced into a trance through hypnosis. However, - in general - I favor peer-reviewed research over logical statements that seem sound, but which may not reflect the whole picture. (I'm once bitten twice shy from statements like, "You should eat what cavemen ate because that's the diet your body is evolutionarily optimized toward." [Sounds reasonable, but scientific studies show it to be wrong on several fronts.]) And all this controversy is without even getting into the claims of the hypnotic imperialist lunatic fringe, meaning this is more-or-less the mainstream disagreeing.

So what was my experience? I found it very relaxing, and, yes, when given suggestions that I wouldn't be able to open my eyes or that my arm would raise, my eyes wouldn't open and my arm would raise, respectively. And, no, I wasn't playing along, at least if playing along means my conscious mind was voluntarily directing the lack of movement or movement, as the case may be. Does that mean the hypnotist had complete control of my mind? No. I feel pretty confident that I could have snapped my mind out of the state, if I had any compelling reason to do so. And, no, I wouldn't have clucked like a chicken, though the suggestion might have resulted in uncontrolled giggling as (like one sometimes experiences in meditation) there can be feelings of euphoria in these highly relaxed states that are almost akin to intoxication. As I believed I mentioned in the post about my psilocybin mushroom experience, there's a very subtle state-switching process that goes on all the time without one's conscious awareness. If the researchers' bell curve is correct (i.e. 10-15% can't be hypnotized, 10-15% are super susceptible to trance and suggestions, and the rest are at various points on the middle ground,) I'm somewhere in that meaty middle. I haven't experienced trance amnesia, and remain aware of what happens throughout the process, even if I go pretty deep, but physical suggestions take eventually.

This is a skill I'd like to continue to develop. During the workshop, it was hard to observe the signs of depth of trance because - having not yet memorized the scripts - I had to frequently refer to the script. Mind and eyes can't be two places at once, at least not productively so. I also have a lot to learn about voice modulation, which seems to be an art unto itself, but which is also difficult to master while one is working on just getting sequences down and trying to avoid pitfalls that may snap the subject out of trance prematurely.

All in all, I feel I developed a better understanding of the mind during this course, and believe I'd like to continue to build the skill as there is much more to learn that can only be learned through practice.

Next month I'll be returning to meditation as my altered state, but with a technological twist. I'll be using an EEG headset to see whether the ability to visualize brain wave states can help me to better control my mind.


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