| Quack Like A Duck |
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Hypnosis? What if I quack like a duck?
By Isa Gucciardi, Ph.D
Hypnotherapy
is an ancient art. The Ebers Papyrus from 3000 BC describes the way it was used
as a “sleep cure” to help with a variety of ailments in ancient Egypt. In
Greece, hypnosis was used to treat soldiers returning from war who were
suffering from the effects of being exposed to the trauma of the battlefield.
More
recently, Western Europeans became exposed to the art of hypnotherapy through
their colonization of other countries with ancient healing traditions that
contained hypnosis as a treatment option. Sigmund Freud was a student of the
techniques of hypnosis. Indeed, his psychoanalytic technique of free
association grew out of his experimentation with hypnotic techniques.
In India,
which was colonized by the British, hypnosis was being commonly used
during surgical procedures when the British arrived. British army doctors
reported that the Indian doctors’ use of hypnosis as a surgical anesthetic in
the place of chemicals such as chloroform was highly effective. They
reported that hypnosis was even more effective because the healing process was
quicker. This is because it laced the side effects that most of the primitive
chemical anesthetics were used in Europe at the time.
The art of
hypnosis became a subject of interest not only to healing practitioners, but to
entertainers – as the exploration of seemingly magical capacity of one person
to affect another person’s experience through hypnosis emerged. In India, there
was also a well-developed tradition of traveling entertainers who used
hypnogenic techniques featured in such acts as snake charming. Snake
charming uses music and suggestions in the form of words to encourage the snake
to perform particular feats. It appears that the snake is acting according to
the will of the snake charmer. These entertainers also used this type of
suggestion hypnosis on people as well to submit them to the will of the
‘charmer.’
European
vaudevillians and other popular entertainers quickly learned that these hypnogenic
techniques could draw a crowd. This was especially true when hypnotists asked
for ‘volunteers’ from the audience to act as hypnosis subjects. The hypnotist
employed elaborate techniques that measured the “hypnotizability” of audience
members. These tests were actually designed to confirm how willing the subject
was to take orders while conscious. If subjects were willing to take orders
while “awake”, they were more likely to take orders in an altered
state.
Those who
were deemed most suited to hypnosis were taken through a series of suggestions
in front of the crowd to help them move into an altered state. In that altered
state, they listened to and obeyed the commands of the hypnotist – even when
the hypnotist gave them suggestions to perform an act which might make them
look foolish. One such famous act is to encourage the subject to act and quack
like a duck.
Hypnotists
using hypnosis for entertainment became much better known than healing
practitioners using hypnosis therapeutically in the west. Audiences were
fascinated by the apparent power that hypnotists had over their subjects. And
audiences were little afraid of that power.
That fear,
is actually well founded. This is because when hypnotists use the power of
suggestion to take over another person’s will, they are acting in a way, which
is out of integrity with the subject’s best interests. And subjects who allow
hypnotists to take over their will are also not acting in their own best
interests. There is no magic involved here. The hypnotist does not have greater
power than an ordinary individual. The subject is not more vulnerable than any
other person. What is at work in stage hypnosis is a simple contract.
The
hypnotist, in performing the ‘hypnotizability tests’, is actually looking for
people who are willing to turn over responsibility for their actions to another
person. There are some people who want to be released from the conventions of
socially prescribed behavior. But they prefer to give up responsibility for
their actions in stepping outside of socially agreed upon norms to someone like
a hypnotist.
There are
also many people who actually function in socially acceptable ways in a type of
“waking hypnosis.” That is, they look outside of themselves to know what kind
of behavior is “right” for them much of the time. Or, they may wait for
someone else to tell them how to make decisions in order to be sure they are in
alignment with externally approved norms. These people are very open to
external suggestion. This makes it easier for them to entering into the type of
agreement that stage hypnosis requires. If people are used to looking outside
themselves for cues, it feels natural to them to give up their power to another
person.
It could be
argued that many conventional types of social interactions are based on or
defined by this type of power dynamic. Behind many social interactions, there
is a sub-context which revolves around concepts of ‘I have power over you.” Or,
“you have power over me.” This type of interaction is simply formalized in
stage hypnosis where the hypnotist prefers the former position and a person who
is a potential subject prefers the latter.
In this
context, it is easy for the hypnotist to give suggestions to the subject
to relax. And easy to bring the subject to the point where the subject is
willing to turn his conscious mind functioning over to the hypnotist. The
audience is not aware of their contract. It looks like the hypnotist has taken
power away from the subject. But the subject has given power to the hypnotist.
This is not
to say that this is a positive state of affairs for either party. It is not in
anyone’s best interest to step out of integrity with his or her personal power.
This is true in any social situation. But in the therapeutic environment, the
effect of power imbalance can have more serious consequences. In the
therapeutic environment, it is difficult for deep and permanent healing to
occur if either the practitioner or the patient – or both – step out of
integrity with their power.
Unfortunately,
most people’s first exposure to hypnosis is in the stage hypnosis environment.
In this environment, there is a lack of integrity regarding the use of personal
power. It is an agreement that both parties enter into willingly, but it is not
an agreement that safeguards each party’s use of personal power. Because the
stage hypnotist/subject relationship is out of integrity in terms of personal
power, people translate that potential in the relationship between a
hypnotherapist and a client in the therapeutic relationship. And clients might
feel wary about entering into this kind of contract with a practitioner.
Clients
should be wary about entering into these types of relationships. Clients should
be encouraged to remain in their personal power – or to regain their personal
power in the process of healing. In healing, the most therapeutic position
practitioners can take is to align themselves with their patients’ innate
knowing about what it is that will heal them.
Most people
have lost touch with the capacity to contact the part of themselves that holds
this knowing. This is because this part of the self generally lies outside the
functions of the conscious mind. Hypnosis is a very helpful tool to help people
loosen the grip of their conscious mind. In doing so, they can step
outside the confines of the conscious mind and reconnect with this innate
knowing. This knowing holds information about the potential of healing that is
possible – and by contacting it through hypnosis, many types of imbalances can
be addressed.
In order to
take this step safely, clients must be able to trust that their power not be
taken over by the hypnotherapist. And if clients want the hypnotherapist to
take over their power (“Just put me to sleep so when I wake up I won’t want to
smoke.” Or, “Just make it go away while I am under, okay?”), a practitioner
should seek to help them come into a new relationship with their power to
change.
Rather than
take over the potential of this power, the practitioner can help clients
rediscover this power and help them wield it to heal themselves. The
practitioner can help clients understand that their will to give up the habit
is what actually helps them give up the habit. It is not the hypnotherapist’s
will over powering the client’s will that brings clients to the place of being
habit-free.
In order
for clients to remain – and want to remain – in integrity with their personal
power, some education may need to be provided. It is true that sometimes people
have a split in their desire to keep an imbalance in place and in their desire
to remove it. Healing this split is part of the healing process. Clients cannot
heal that split if they are not able to stay in integrity with their personal
power.
This is all
part of the healing. Ultimately, any habit or symptom is information about how
a person is not standing fully in what is best for optimal health. There are
many ways of understanding this information and using it as a basis for
treatment. And hypnosis – especially types of hypnosis such as Depth Hypnosis –
have processes in them which are excellent keys for unlocking that information.
When the
hypnosis practitioner’s education includes strong safeguards about the use of
personal power, these keys can be used safely and effectively. It is important
for someone considering hypnosis as a treatment option to ask the kinds of
questions that this article raises. If the answers to these questions show
clients they can best access paths to healing by remaining congruent with their
personal power, they can enter into hypnotherapeutic treatment safely.
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