Goddess hypnotic spirals

hypnotic goddess spiral
Hypnosis spirals are something I've always found to be quite facinating. The way they spin and hold your attention, they become very interesting to watch. There is of course the basic black and white spiral but it doesn't end there. Many different colors can be applied to produce a beautiful blending of colors within a spiral.

A goddess is a female deity. Many cultures have goddesses. Most often these goddesses are part of a polytheistic system that includes several deities. Pantheons in various cultures can include both goddesses and gods, and in some cases also intersex deities.

In both ancient and modern cultures, the symbolism of gendered deities is open to a wide variety of interpretations. The primacy of a monotheistic or near-monotheistic goddess is advocated by some modern matriarchists and pantheists[who?] as a female version of, or analogue to, the Abrahamic god. In some feminist circles the Abrahamic god is perceived as being rooted in the patriarchal concept of dominance — to the exclusion of feminine concepts.

Goddess hypnotic spirals
Goddess hypnotic spirals

Goddess hypnotic spirals

Goddess hypnotic spirals
Goddess hypnotic spirals

Hypnotic eyes

Hypnotic eyes - hypnotic worldThe Mind's Eye. The Inner Eye. If you've heard these two phrases before then most likely you've heard of the Third Eye. It is believed that everyone has three eyes: two are physical (they're plain as the eyes can see); the third eye is spiritual; and when opened either through meditation or third eye hypnosis, you unlock the door to numerous possibilities of looking in to the future.

Chances are you've had a few intuitive moments before in your past: you've thought of a friend you haven't talked with in awhile, and the next day she called. You've thought of an episode from one of your favorite television shows and the following night it was on TV. This is more than a mere coincidence. This is you glimpsing at your psychic self. When you open your third eye, you open yourself up to even more psychic abilities because the eye is the site where we receive psychic impressions.

The Third Eye is associated with the pineal gland in the brain. The pineal gland is dormant in most people. French philosopher Rene Descartes believed the pineal gland to be "the seat of the soul" where mind and body intersect. In most, the pineal gland is dormant. When you meditate or use third eye hypnosis to open the eye, you bring that gland to life. You literally open your eye up to a whole other spiritual world.

Once you've opened your third eye, you may develop certain new abilities: telepathy, telekinesis, clairvoyance. You may see auras, chakras, or spirit beings. You may also experience precognition, which is the ability to see into the future. There's a whole new spiritual world at your fingertips.

So see what the world holds for you (and others); open your third eye through meditation or third eye hypnosis.

Hypnotic eyes - hypnotic world
Hypnotic eyes

Hypnotic eyes - hypnotic world

Hypnotic eyes - hypnotic world

Hypnotic eyes - hypnotic world

Hypnotic eyes - hypnotic worldHypnotic eyes

Christian hypnotic

Christian hypnotic worldHypnosis for Christians: Good or bad?

Hypnosis itself is neither good nor bad. Used wisely, it can help Christians as much as non-Christians to break bad habits and improve themselves. There are many accounts in the Bible of saints of God entering trance-like states that parallel self-hypnosis.

Christians, like non-Christians, can benefit from hypnosis. In itself, hypnosis is neither good nor bad. Neither right nor wrong.

You can use a knife to cut your food, or to kill someone. Similarly, you can use hypnosis to build self-confidence, lose weight, and have a tooth out without anaesthetic and without pain. Or you can use it in voodoo rituals to scare people and make them susceptible to occult practices.

But you also may be taking medication that you may not know is derived from plants that jungle shamans and medicine men have used for centuries in non-Christian spiritual healings. Many of the largest pharmaceutical companies have worked side by side with shamans to find ingredients that the shamans have used in healing. Do we refuse to take life-saving drugs because their roots are in sorcery? Of course not.

Informed Christians rarely take a stand against hypnosis these days (except against its use in stage shows, the occult, or voodoo-style practices), because the benefits are so well documented. A Harvard study showed that hypnosis helped broken bones heal faster and also that women who had breast surgery recovered much more quickly after hypnosis.

Those who strongly oppose it have failed to document examples to prove their case. Some opponents even use bad logic by saying that because we can't explain how hypnosis works then it must be bad. Can they explain how their thought processes work? How planes fly? How bees make honey? Perhaps they should ban thought, air travel, honey products, and everything else they don't understand.

Christian hypnotic

I used the hypnotic trigger and he was kissing my feet

I used the hypnotic trigger and he was kissing my feet
I used the hypnotic trigger and he was kissing my feet
I used the hypnotic trigger and he was kissing my feet
I used the hypnotic trigger and he was kissing my feet
I used the hypnotic trigger and he was kissing my feet

Hypnotic girl

These are some collection about Hypnotic girl pictures below :
Hypnotic girl - hypnotic world
Hypnotic girl
Hypnotic girl - hypnotic world

Hypnotic girl - hypnotic world

Hypnotic girl - hypnotic world
Hypnotic girl

Hypnotic feminization

Hypnotic feminizationFeeling Feminine - Difficult for a man, but not impossible!

Forced Feminization and Feminization Hypnosis

Anyone who has had a mammal pet such as a dog or cat will have noted that they will often play fantasy games. Perhaps you've seen a cat chasing an imaginary mouse or something; or a dog running around barking and pouncing on thin air.

People are no different in that they play fantasy games. But they are very different in the scope and imagination. People can play games that satisfy various needs that they may have, and can use toys and tools to help.

Feminization in nature and people

People certainly have different needs. For example, some people enjoy shooting games such as Paintball; some go for financial games like Monopoly; and some play sex games, of which there are all types.

Now, men and women have different needs. For example, it's hard to imagine a woman wanting to fantasize that she's a woman; after all, she already is one! But there are many men who fantasize just that: Being a woman.

In nature, certain species will change from being one sex to another, such as certain types of lizards that become female when there are too few males. Certain snails can choose male, female or hermaphrodite according to circumstances.

Humans don't have this luxury of "just choosing." A woman trapped in a man's body needs tools and ideas to help. There is the ultimate route of surgery, of course, with hormone treatment. Of course, with today's technology, a man will never become a complete woman with the ability to bear children (but I'm sure it'll happen someday). However, in other physical respects, a man can be just like a woman — breasts, less facial hair, and woman's groins.
Feminization hypnosis

There is a problem when it comes to a man's mental thoughts and overt behavior, though. You see, men's and women's brains really are different. They have different sizes; their corpus callosum (which joins the two brain halves) differ; and brain scans have shown that men and women process thoughts, language, ideas and solutions differently.

So, how can a man learn to behave and think like a woman, and appear to be a woman in all respects, not just physical?

For this behavior to become natural and automatic, a man needs to practice, of course. But that's not all. For the behavior has to be backed up by belief. If the man doesn't believe himself to be a "herself", the behavior will never become automatic and deeply felt.

Although a complete transformation is impossible — you can't change your brain itself — your subconscious mind is incredibly powerful and can help you enormously. If you can get your unconscious mind to hold those beliefs for you, then your new behavior will become automatic and natural — and people who see you dressed as a woman will assume that you really are a woman!

Hypnotic feminization

Hypnotic spiral

Here are some pictures of Hypnotic spiral:
Hypnotic spiral
Hypnotic spiral
Hypnotic spiral

Hypnotic spiral

Hypnotic spiral
Hypnotic spiral

Hypnotic mistress pictures

These our some collection about Hypnotic mistress pictures below :
Hypnotic mistress pictures
Hypnotic mistress
Hypnotic mistress pictures

Hypnotic mistress pictures

Hypnotic mistress pictures
Hypnotic mistress pictures

Hypnotic, therapeuticuse of hypnosis

Hypnotic, therapeuticuse of hypnosisThe therapeutics of suggestion are based on the fact that a number of diseases can be relieved or cured merely by making the patient believe he will get better, and strongly impressing this belief in his mind. Every capable physician uses this technique to some extent even though he may do so unconsciously. The patient's faith in the doctor and his belief in the efficacy of whatever treatment may be given, is an important factor in all therapy. This use of suggestive therapy is as old as the practice of medicine itself. What hypnotism does is to multiply many times over the force of the suggestion through the greater susceptibility of the patient under hypnosis.

If suggestion is to be successful, the patient must believe he will get well! It is not always possible for the physician to implant this faith and expectancy in the patient's mind. Hypnotism is a means to this end. With the conscious mind in abeyance, the subconscious readily accepts the healing suggestions. No patient under complete hypnosis can resist the influence of the suggestions given by the operator.

In 1880 Berger conducted a series of notable experiments proving the effectiveness of hypnotic suggestion as a therapeutic agent. He reported that a hemiplegic patient easily made movements under hypnosis he was unable to make when awake. He saw locomotor ataxia cases cease to stagger under hypnosis. Other physicians experimenting with hypnosis in this period, reported induction and removal, through hypnosis, of fractures and paralysis. But to LiƩbault must go the credit of first reducing hypnotic therapy to scientific treatment. His work was carried on and extended by Bernheim, Forel and others who followed.

Thus far, functional neurosis is the chief field for hypnotherapy, i.e. nervous disorders with no organic lesion or derangement. But out of the very considerable literature available, we will indicate some of the other disorders which have yielded to this treatment.

Hypnosis has been employed to cure all types of pains having no anatomical basis, such as: chronic headaches, abdominal pain, ovarian, neuralgic and rheumatic pains, hysterical disturbances with resulting paralysis of the extremities, hysterical vomiting, polyuria, menstrual pains, loss of appetite, nausea in pregnancy, alcoholism, etc.

Brugelmann reports its successful use in cases of nervous asthma: Forel, Bernard and Schmidt in chronic constipation; Mollerup and Clutnoff in nervous ocular disturbances; Krafft-Ebing, Ladame and others in non-congenital sexual perversions; Heim and others in the prevention of sea-sickness; Barband in cases of vaginism. Successful treatment of chronic alcoholism has been reported by Forel, Wetterstrand, Carval and many others.

Hypnotic, therapeuticuse of hypnosis

Hypnotic drinking

Hypnotic drinking - hypnotic worldHypnotic drinking - hypnotic worldHypnotic drinking - hypnotic worldThe same general method can be used to break a patient of the habit of excessive drinking. The same two steps are involved in the treatment. First the negative phase: tell him that liquor will taste bad—it will turn his stomach—he will have a feeling of nausea, and will put the glass down without wanting to finish it. Then proceed to the second step and give suggestions similar to those indicated in the treatment of excessive smoking.

You must, in all cases, build up a positive expectation in the patient's mind that he is going to be helped; that the treatments will be successful; that the habit will be completely broken. Physicians, of course, know that there are two schools of thought about drinking,
one of which believes that best results can be secured through progressive reduction. They seek to get the patient to drink less and less each day or week. If he has been in the habit of taking ten
drinks a day on the average, he will decrease this first to eight; later to six; then to four; and so on. The main objection to this is that, though it appears promising, it seldom works. The patient starts out co-operatively for a time, then breaks down and abandons all restraint.

Most authorities now urge that immediate and com¬plete abstinence, with no exception and no compromise, is essential. You may wish to experiment with both of these methods on different patients, and determine for yourself which is for you and your patients the most effective. It is a question which depends largely upon the individual patient. Some patients may stop immedi¬ately and completely, leaving your future task merely to deepen and strengthen the resolve not to drink. With others, it would be impossible for them to stop at once without serious physical consequences, and the only alternative to admission of failure will be the use of the method of progressive reduction. The decision in each case is a matter for the judgment of the practitioner as to the best procedure.

In the suggestions which follow, I have followed the basic procedure of psychiatry in suggesting that the causes of the neurotic symptoms be located where-ever possible. This is in line with accepted medical standards. Through hypnosis, these causes can much more readily be brought out than through the long and tedious operation of "free association". . Facts which might require weeks or months through psychoanalytical technique are instantly revealed through hypnotic regression.

Personally I am not convinced, however, that such an investigation is always necessary. When the surgeon is called upon to operate in a case of a badly inflamed appendix, he does not pause to consider how the appendix got that way: he takes it out!

Hypnotic drinking - hypnotic world
Hypnotic drinking

Hypnotic anasthesia

Hypnotic anasthesia - hypnotic worldSome practitioners report that, even in the light stages of hypnosis, pains of headache, neuritis, etc., have been relieved. After the subject has been placed under hypnosis, gently stroke the affected part and say, "The pain is passing—it is going—now you have no pain—when you wake you will be conscious of no pain—the pain is now completely gone—now, when I count three, wake up—and remember—there will be no pain—one—two—three—wake up—now you feel better."

In the deeper stages of hypnosis an advanced condition of analgesia can be induced. You may have seen one of my public demonstrations in which needles are pressed into the outstretched palm of a hypnotised subject with complete absence of pain. Hypnotism as an anaesthetic in surgery has been employed successfully by many physicians in France, Germany, Russia and U.S.A., in cases of childbirth among others. In India, Dr. Esdaile performed several hundred operations with hypnosis as the only anaesthetic. Doubtless, hypnosis would to-day be very widely used in anaesthesia were it not for the development and use of more easily administered and highly effective modern methods of anaesthesia. Because of these developments, it is doubtful if hypnotism will find any wide use in surgery; it is too much like taking a shotgun to kill a fly. It can only be used in deep hypnosis after the patient has been hypnotised a number of times, and tested with needle insertions to ensure the degree of analgesia which has been induced. Its chief application as an anaesthetic is in minor surgery and with patients who fear, or for any reason cannot take, the usual anaesthetics.

Many anaesthetists in the U.S.A., however, are trained to offer simple hypnotic suggestions with the anaesthetic, in such words as "You're going to be all right—you're going to be well", which is particularly valuable for inducing a state of well-being in the patient on waking after the operation. Just at the very moment the patient goes under is the most valuable time to reach his subconscious mind.

Hypnotic anasthesia

Drink hypnotic

Here are some pictures about Drink hypnotic below :
Drink hypnotic - hypnotic world
Drink hypnotic
Drink hypnotic - hypnotic world

Drink hypnotic - hypnotic world
Drink hypnotic - hypnotic world
Drink hypnotic

Hypnotic insomnia

Hypnotic insomnia - hypnotic worldTreatment for the relief of insomnia depends largely on post-hypnotic suggestion: "You will be very tired when you go to bed—while undressing you will become very sleepy—the moment your head touches the pillow your eyelids will be heavy—your arms and legs will be heavy—you will breathe deeply—you will immediately fall sound asleep and enjoy restful sleep throughout the night."

It should also be impressed upon the patient that sleep must be effortless. As soon as he tries to go to sleep, his efforts tend to tense him, and thus prevent the relaxation essential to sleep. This should be stressed, after the suggestive treatment, before the patient leaves your office. Explain this fact to him and then assure him, in a tone of absolute confidence, that he will go right to sleep to-night—you have given him the hypnotic suggestions which will put him to sleep immediately, when he goes to bed.

You should follow up your treatment with some hints about the technique of self-hypnosis outlined in Chapter Ten, so that the patient can learn to "do the trick" for himself night after night, when you are not there to help him.

Hypnotic insomnia

Hypnotic smoking

Hypnotic smoking - hypnotic worldMillions of people suffer from the effects of undesirable habits, such as excessive smoking, drinking, etc. Multitudes of these individuals go through life with decreased efficiency, distraught nerves, and a sense of futility and frustration. They are unable to break the compelling force of negative habit by themselves. They need help; but do not know where to find it. Many appeal to their physicians. But, unless the physician has learned to use hypnotism, there is little he can do except give good advice; and every doctor knows that good advice is of little value in cases of excessive smoking or alcoholism. The victim knows the habit is injurious; he is desperately anxious to stop; but cannot do so. Through hypnotic suggestion, he can be helped.

For example, an excessive smoker is told, while under hypnosis, that the cigar or cigarette he is smoking does not taste good. You may say, "It stinks—it is bitter—it tastes bad—throw it away—here, wash your mouth out (with a real or imaginary glass of water). Now every time you put one in your mouth it will turn your stomach—you will lose your taste for smoking—you will no longer want to smoke—you are through with smoking!"

Having thus implanted the negative idea, you will now proceed to the positive phase of the treatment, something as follows: "You have decided that you are through with smoking—you will lose the desire to smoke—you are strong—you are powerful—you have perfect command—from now on you will demonstrate that you are stronger than this habit—no force can break down your iron determination—every time you refuse to smoke, it will be easier the next time to say, 'No!'—the habit is broken!" Use a strong, commanding tone in giving these suggestions.

To test the patient you may offer him a smoke after he is awake. If he starts to put it in his mouth, stop him and say quietly, "I don't think you had better put that in your mouth—it will not taste good—forget it—you don't need to smoke now—when you start to take a smoke again stop and think how much better you will feel if you throw it away—the more often you do this, the less you will want to smoke, and you will soon be entirely cured of the habit." These suggestions will impress upon the conscious mind the suggestions already given to the subconscious, thus forming another constructive association of ideas.

Hypnotic smoking

Hypnotic sexual disorders

As every doctor knows, sexual difficulties are so many and varied that it would be impossible to go into any detail in suggesting specific treatment in the limited scope of this work. It is desirable to locate causes for every sexual disorder. The nature of the cause will largely determine the nature of the suggestions to be used.

For example, a patient suffers from homosexual tendencies: your preliminary analysis of the patient's history convinces you that the condition is acquired, rather than congenital, and therefore subject to cure. Your suggestions will then be to the effect that the patient really is not homosexual—his tendency is merely the result of certain experiences he has had that have tended to deviate his sex desires from the normal object—that contact with his own sex is repugnant to him—he derives no real satisfaction, etc.

This is especially true in cases of frigidity. Almost all authorities are agreed now that very few women are really frigid. The causes of the apparent frigidity may be many: misguided teaching by parents or other adults resulting in the idea that everything pertaining to sex is vile, filthy and should be strictly repressed; premature sex experience with its attendant sense of guilt; the husband's lack of knowledge of how to perform the sex act so as to achieve mutual satisfaction, etc.

Once the cause has been located, the character of suggestions used to produce the desired result is obvious. For example: "You will cease to think of sex as something vile which you must repress—you are completely a normal woman, and possess natural and strong sexual desire—you will respond to your husband's love-making without any resistance or repression—you will find complete satisfaction in your marital relations— your sexual thoughts will be dominated by the idea of beauty and love—you will find the sex relation natural and beautiful."

Impotence in the male is another sexual condition for which the physician is frequently called upon to prescribe a remedy. Wilhelm Stekel in his important work Psychic Impotence claims that most cases diagnosed as impotence are in reality merely psychic impotence. The span of man's virility, according to Stekel, is from the cradle to the grave. Some single experience, or several negative influences, creates in the sufferer's mind the fear of impotence, and this fear inhibits the normal sexual development. Remove the fear, or other negative associations, and normal functioning returns. If this be so, and Stekel's claims have received wide support, hypnotism should clearly be a strongly indicated treatment for this condition. First clear up the cause, then proceed, as above, with suggestions that he will demonstrate complete virility, etc.

Hypnotic sexual disorders

Hypnotics obstetrics

Hypnotics obstetrics - hypnotic worldMany cases have been reported of painless childbirth under hypnosis.Treatments should be started as early as possible during the period of pregnancy. Nausea and other common complications can be prevented; and the general health and mental attitude of the patient improved through the use of suitable hypnotic suggestion. Start giving the suggestion that no pain will be experienced at the time of delivery and that everything will proceed normally. Just before delivery, induce deep hypnotic sleep and repeatedly suggest, "There will be no pain—You will help in every way the delivery — with no pain, etc.

I sincerely trust that the doctors and dentists which use hypnotism as indicated with their patients will meet with great success. I shall be most happy to receive reports of the successful use of this technique.

In closing, may I once more stress the absolute necessity of complete self-confidence upon the part of the operator. You must feel that you cannot fail; that the patient will certainly fall into a hypnotic sleep and accept all of your suggestions. Also, may I repeat that, as in acquiring any art, practice and perseverance are essential.Practise on non-patients until you fortify your own self-confidence by finding you can hypnotise other subjects. Then you will be ready to
use hypnosis in the treatment of your patients.

Hypnotics obstetrics

Hypnotic phobias and other neuroses

Hypnotic phobias and other neuroses - hypnotic world
This is an age of specialisation. The average medical practitioner will prefer to refer patients with serious neurotic conditions to a psychiatrist or psychoanalyst. However, many cases, in which the mental or emotional disturbance is mild or not of long standing, will readily respond to hypnotic treatment. Also, many patients in great need of help have neither the time nor money to undergo a psychoanalysis, or even a series of treatments by a psychiatrist—yet they do need help. For many such cases, hypnotism will be the answer.

In every case involving a neurotic trend, it is desirable to study the patient's history for all possible clues as to the basic cause or causes. Most of these causes will date back to childhood impressions buried deep in the subconscious. Usually, the patient himself will be of little help in locating these psychic causes of the neurotic manifestations of which he complains. The psycho analytical procedure is largely based upon the effort to bring up into the conscious these submerged associations and conflicts. When dragged into the field of conscious memory and viewed objectively, they tend to lose their dominance and the neurotic pattern is broken.

Hypnotic phobias and other neuroses - hypnotic world
Hypnotic phobias and other neuroses

Frequently, these negative, submerged impressions are quickly located while the patient is under hypnosis. Many patients will describe, in complete detail, incidents which they do not consciously remember, but which are deeply embedded in the subconscious and largely responsible for their neurotic condition. It must be remembered that the subconscious never forgets. In my public demonstrations, I have frequently had subjects give me the name of every teacher they had from the bottom form of their school up to the top. Yet on waking they would be unable to recall the name of a single teacher, or at best but one or two. This ability to call up long-forgotten facts is called regression.

A few examples should suffice. The general pattern will be the same, though the specific suggestions will, of course, be adapted to the particular condition you are seeking to relieve. For a patient suffering from claustro¬phobia, you may find that the patient's unreasoning fear of closed places dates back to the time when, as a small child, he was locked in a dark cupboard by his parent as a punishment. Location of this consciously forgotten experience, and bringing it into the conscious, will tend to break the repressed association. Then again place the patient into a hypnotic state and give suggestions something as follows: "Your fear of closed places has now been destroyed—henceforth, you will experience not fear or distress when in closed places—think how nice it is to be in such a comfortable room—you will feel protected, safe and secure under all such conditions, etc."

In helping a patient to overcome the inferiority complex, after locating as many contributing causes as possible, and helping the patient to face these objectively and resolve to rise above their negative influence, put him to sleep and give suggestions something as follows: "You are developing perfect self-confidence— you believe in yourself and your ability to achieve a worth-while place in life—you will be strong, courageous, self-reliant—you will enjoy meeting people and will converse and work with them with a sense of absolute equality."

Hypnotic phobias and other neuroses - hypnotic world

Hypnotic phobias and other neuroses

Hypnotic the ralph slater method

Hypnotic the ralph slater method - hypnotic worldIn my work over many years I have naturally experimented with many methods. Personally, I have come more and more to discard the mechanical methods, not because they did not work, but because it seemed sensible to use the quickest and easiest technique, when results are shown to be just as effective, and even more so than with the more studied and labored methods. While I still use a variety of techniques, I have found the following to be most effective for use on the ordinary private patient.

I begin by having the subject stand with his back to me, and his feet together. I stand directly behind him, and with my hand I tilt his head back as far as possible, and tell him to close his eyes. I then tell him to relax his body completely. I put my hands on his shoulders, one hand on each shoulder, and say that in a moment I am going to withdraw my hands, that I want him to think he is falling backwards, and as I withdraw my hands from his shoulders, I say, "You are falling back— Do not be afraid—I am going to catch you." As the subject falls back, I catch him and turn him round with his feet together, and his eyes looking into mine. I put the tips of my fingers on his temples, and instruct him to gaze into my eyes, and tell him that when I remove my fingers, he will fall forward. I remove my fingers slowly from the temples, and then I repeat several times, "You are falling forward—you are falling forward", and, as he does, I catch him.

Once I have reached this stage of the falling backward and forward tests, I stand in front of the subject and instruct him to clasp his hands and interlock his fingers, and to keep his eyes fixed on mine. I then instruct him to think to himself that his fingers are locked together tightly, that he cannot take them apart. I tell him to place them together, tighter, tighter, and when I see them pressed together tightly, with my eyes fixed on his eyes, I say, "You cannot take your hands apart— You cannot take your hands apart." Never allow your gaze to wander away from the eyes of the subject during this time. As he tries unsuccessfully to take his hands apart, I snap my fingers and say briskly, "Now you can take your hands apart", and he does so. After these preliminaries, in most cases the subject is completely ready for hypnosis. I instruct him to sit on a chair, close his eyes, and then I begin with the sleep suggestions. "You are getting sleepy—your arms and legs are numb, etc." After the above preliminaries, it is usually only a matter of seconds before the subject is in a hypnotic state. As soon as the subject is hypnotized, I lift up his right arm and tell him it is rigid, he cannot bend it, and when he unsuccessfully tries to do so, I snap my fingers and tell him he can bend his arm, and that he will fall into a deeper sleep.

I then place my hands on the subject's shoulder, and tell him he is stuck to the chair, that he cannot get up. When he tries unsuccessfully to do so, I say, "Never mind—Stop trying—Sleep." By this time, the subject is in a state of hypnosis, and ready to carry out the orders of the hypnotist. The operator then gives the instruction, according to the purpose of the hypnosis. If, for example, the purpose is entertainment, any suggestions similar to those we are about to mention can be given. If the purpose is therapeutic, it is necessary to give post-hypnotic suggestions, which are explained in a later chapter. If, at any time during the tests mentioned at the beginning of this method, falling backward and forward, etc., the subject should fail to respond, relax him and try again; do not be discouraged. The beginner may well find it easier to use one of the other methods I mentioned earlier, in his first attempts at hypnosis; there is no reason why he shouldn't, if he feels more confident that way. Remember, hypnotism is an art like playing a violin, and only with practice and perseverance can one become an expert. You may however be quite sure that there is no mumbo-jumbo about hypnotism. If anyone tells you it is necessary to darken the room completely, or to play soothing music, or to beat drums softly, to assist the business of hypnotism, you may be sure he doesn't know what he is talking about. It is like saying that in order to drive a car you must wear a yellow tie or put your hat at a certain angle.

For those who are interested in hypnotism mainly for amusement at social gatherings, I would say that there is nothing, within reason, that you cannot impress upon your subjects, once they are under proper control As those who have heard my radio broadcasts and witnessed my personal performances may recall, I put my subjects through an almost endless routine of fun and fantasy, which convulses the audience and does the subject no harm. These stunts are too numerous to mention. Each operator can work out, with a little creative imagination, his own variations. A few which seldom fail are: Tell him he is a great pianist—he is sitting in front of a piano—(it may be just a kitchen table) then say the audience is waiting with breathless expectancy for his performance—tell him to start to play when you count three—give him the count—he will play with great concentration and enthusiasm, as though the table were actually a piano.

Sometimes I suggest that ants are creeping all over his body. He will show great aversion, attempting to brush the supposed ants off, scratch his legs and perform other antics to the delight of the audience. Then you tell him that we are at a famous fishing place—we must catch some fish—give him a piece of wood and tell him it is a fishing rod—say, "You've got one—it must be a big one—pull him in." He will work at it desperately while the audience howls. Tell him he can't say his name. Then say, "By the Way, what is your name?" He will struggle and try; but he will be unable to give his name. Tell him he is feeling hot and terribly thirsty. You can put an empty tumbler in his hand, and watch him Drain it off with every appearance of enjoyment. Carry this one stage further, if you like, by suggesting to him that what he has just drunk was a glass of neat whisky; you will find he begins to reel and stagger about the room like a drunken man.

Another convincing stunt is to tell your subject that he cannot say a certain number—let us say eight. Then get him to count from one to ten. Each time he will skip eight. These are just a few; you can work out your own variations. Development of the ability to use this lighter side of hypnotism for entertainment purposes will enable you to add greatly to the enjoyment of those attending any social gathering; and will add to your popularity and prestige.

Hypnotic the ralph slater method

Hypnotic dentistry

Hypnotic dentistry - hypnotic world What has been said concerning the use of hypnotism in surgery applies to its application in dentistry to a considerable extent. Analgesic suggestions may be effectively employed in even the lightest stages of hypnosis for general dental work, such as drilling, filling, etc. Nervous patients may be relaxed; and the fear of pain, both in adults and children, largely controlled by repeated suggestions that they will feel no pain. In the deeper stages of hypnosis, complete anaesthesia can be induced and teeth extracted without pain. Do not fail to test the degree of analgesia, however, before attempting major dental operations. When the patient is evidently hypnotised, the dentist should say, "Sleep deeply— relax completely—have no fear—you will feel no pain—anything you feel will be pleasant—there will be no pain—keep your mouth open—breathe normally— sleep deeply."
From time to time, while you are doing the indicated dental work, repeat the command to sleep deeply, as well as the assurance that there will be no pain. Before waking the patient, give him post-hypnotic suggestions that when he awakens he will feel refreshed, and will suffer only slight discomfort and little or no pain, according to the seriousness of the work performed.

Hypnotic dentistry

Hypnotic the reclining method

Hypnotic the reclining method - hypnotic worldIn this method of inducing hypnosis, the subject is told to stretch out on a couch with his eyes closed. The operator then gives the suggestions for sleep, which were explained a moment ago in the Candle method. The suggestions are given until the subject seems to be asleep. Then the operator should place his thumb between the eyes of the patient, and press downwards quite hard, saying, "You cannot open your eyes—Try— Never mind—Sleep." Should the subject succeed in opening his eyes, the sleep suggestions must be resumed. If the subject does not open his eyes, the operator then gently lifts up the right arm, also explained in the Candle method, and tells the subject that his arm is rigid, etc. The subject, after trying unsuccessfully to bend his arm, is told now that he can do so, and then the suggestions desired by the operator are given.

Hypnotic the reclining method

Hypnotic mind control


Hypnotic mind control

Hypnotic mind control