Howard Morgan's - Direct
Suggestions! - Issue No. 5
Why Does Hypnosis Work?
There was a time, several years ago, when most of my hypnotic
focus was on therapy. At the time I was running a center out of Los Angeles
where I was training Hypnotherapists, medical professional and law enforcement
personnel some of my unique twists on how the mind works. Thing were relatively
simple then. Now that I've gone back to doing a lot of Stage Hypnosis,
things have gotten far more complex.
Personally, I like simplicity. Give me a simple 1...2...3
instruction sheet and I'm in hog heaven. Back when we were learning our
ABC's I was tops in my class. But once we started putting the letters together,
things quickly got out of hand. I'm still struggling with my tendencies
towards obtuse obfuscations.
In my therapy practice days, I had my "therapeutic techniques"
down to an art. "Therapy" Involved meeting a client, doing a simple pretalk,
putting headphones on, playing a 30 minute induction cassette tape to "get
them ready" and then coming on with a few carefully orchestrated metaphors
to help "cure the illness". Most sessions were fairly predictable and with
the luxury of 50 minutes to work with a single person, it wasn't hard being
effective.
On stage it's a whole different ballgame. You begin by
walking up and trying to captivate a room full of skeptics. You then have
to talk a few of them into coming on stage to make 'fools' of themselves.
Then you're stuck with the near impossible task of analyzing the character
types of 12 or so volunteers with a single glance. Now you have to hypnotize
all 12 in 8 minutes or so and be able to produce dramatic convincers pretty
quickly so the show doesn't drag. From the moment you walk on stage you
only have 90 minutes to "do your thing" with 12 different subjects. It's
a nightmare where only the volunteers are allowed the luxury of sleep.
In my attempts to simplify things over the years, I've
played games with quite a few theories of hypnosis. I've read all the studies
that describe hypnosis as an "altered state" or a "subjective reality".
I've tried to simplify what's going on in a person's head while being hypnotized
into a general operating theory that would carry me through most stage
situations. I'll have to admit most of my "research" would never hold up
under laboratory conditions, but back, maybe 20 years ago, I came upon
a theory that somehow seems to consistently explain what happens during
a hypnotic session and allows for predictable results. I realize that this
method of discovery is far from traditional, but then it was precisely
this "backwards thinking" method of analysis that taught me all I needed
to know about the precise effects gravity would have on me if I walked
off the roof of my house, years before anybody tried to explain mass and
object attraction to me.
I think I experienced my moment of "enlightenment" while
listening to some lecturer speak. I don't even remember what the topic
was he was discussing, but I do remember a specific remark he made during
his talk. He casually made the statement that while a mind is thinking
at a Beta level (there's a statement that places this lecture sometime
back in the 60's), we can think about 4 times as fast as we can talk. That
haunted me. 4 times as fast as we can talk. That would mean that we are
listening with only 25% of our active thinking.
What's happening in the other 75% of our thought process?
Obviously it was in this area that we formulated the answers
we would give to what we were being told. It would also seem that it was
somewhere within this area that we would analyze what we were being told
and determine whether we felt we were being conned or lied to. All these
thoughts seemed to comfortably take place while people were talking to
us. Of course it also seemed to me that it was this area that allowed us
the "luxury" of being distracted. In fact, as I watched people engaged
in conversation I realized that even the 25% of our thinking that was theoretically
listening to what was being said might be a high estimate. It seems that
most people mentally determine how important they think a conversation
is and allocate only as much of their thinking as is merited by the topic.
Someone listening to an Amway sales person trying to sell them soap powder
may only be "sacrificing" 10% of their thinking process. Victims on the
Titanic on the other hand, probably devoted 100% of their attention to
any announcements that came over the P.A. system.
So how does all of this fit into the hypnotic "big picture"?
Think about what happens during a typical induction. A subject is told
to relax, to avoid any distractions, to focus on what the hypnotist is
saying. A pattern is established and attractive metaphors are usually blended
into the mix. My theory is that we are basically training subjects to develop
a singular focus. We are slowing their thinking process down to a point
where they can only think at the same speed as we talk and then we are
making sure they accept our voice as their singular focus. Basically, hypnosis
is the ability to think without distractions. On stage that translates
into reacting without inhibitions. It means that a person told they are
a chicken finds they no longer have the luxury of the extra "thinking space"
to consider how their friends are going to react or whether or not they
are making fools of themselves in public. I am consistently finding that
rather than aiming at a long list of theoretical goals when inducing hypnosis,
if I focus on getting a persons full attention, not allowing any area for
distraction, they will generally do well as a subject.
If you consider the implications of this theory, you'll
find that it wouldn't be too hard to prove. Back when I looked like a novice,
sort of trying to hypnotize people on stage, my initial induction took
a good 20 minutes. People found it harder to stay focussed, considering
that they were too busy listening for my mistakes. As I become more practiced
and commanded more attention, I found that I could get the same results
with far less "depth" of trance. Basically, people who were willing to
immediately give me 50% of their attention rather than the traditional
25% were able to demonstrate the same phenomenon in half the time. At this
point I often find that the speed of induction even amazes me. This past
fall, I remember one lady I noticed in an audience during my pretalk. She
had one of those intense gazes that told me she was totally focussed on
what I was saying. She raised her hand to volunteer without ever taking
her eyes off me. She seemed so focussed that I decided to test her on her
way up. As she approached the stage I quickly turned to her, gave her a
strong, demanding glare, and immediately demanded, "you lady, will forget
your name as soon as I touch your shoulder". Now, this was a person I had
never met before. A person that by all rights should be focussing on her
nervousness on stage and the commotion of the room as she walked up. Instead,
I "jump started" her focus by shocking her as she approached, I forced
her "over the hill". Sure enough, I immediately held the mike up to her
and asked her her name. Her face went blank and her eyes widened in shock.
She couldn't, for the life of her, remember her name. Even when I read
her nametag off to her, and asked her, "What's your name, Carol, come on,
think" she drew a blank. Considering I had her complete attention, I immediately
told her she would remember her name, but her left leg would become rigidly
locked straight as she continued towards her seat. It did, and all without
ever once asking her to "sleep".
If we theorize about what else happens in this thinking
area I've labeled (for my classes) as the "Processing Area" (for lack of
a better definition), we introduce some pretty phenomenal therapeutic possibilities.
I believe it's within this Processing Area that we store our habits or
instinctual behaviors. When we walk up to a door, we no longer have to
consider what it is and what's involved in getting past it. We went through
all of that, back at the age of one or two, and eventually settled on the
"reality" that turning the knob makes it open. It's within this Processing
Area that we store all the thinking involved in getting to work in the
morning. We remember that we walked outside, we stuck the key in the ignition
and then we were sitting in our office. The entire process of going down
the street, of avoiding pedestrians, stopping for the traffic light, coordinating
brake, clutch, gear shift, steering wheel, and radio all took place without
us ever devoting any conscious thought to the process. I believe all of
this takes place within the Processing Area. It's because we have these
preconceived "realities" floating around in the Processing Area that magicians
can fool us by sabotaging our "train of thought". The Processing Area also
seems to house all the cop outs and excuses we use to justify behaviors
we know are wrong. A smoker who is told, while at a Beta State, that they
are going to kill themselves with the cigarettes never really hears you.
Long before the argument made it to the thinking part of their brain, it
was tackled by the "Habitual" thinking process. The inner, subconscious
mind, that believes the person is a smoker, in an attempt to avoid the
guilt and shame associated with the fact that the person is obviously doing
something he knows is wrong, but, in the inner mind's opinion, happens
to be an indisputable reality, has set out blockers to keep the accusation
from ever sinking in. Basically, the instant it hears "argument #23....it
will kill you" it immediately pulls out "answer #23...I remember the guy
on the PBS special that lived to 110 and smoked a pack a day." And then
gives you 10% of their attention. This is the area where we develop most
of our neurosis. We create these twisted loops that make us behave erratically
in our attempts to fulfill misguided goals. The young lady seeking affection
decides to substitute love for sex. The man seeking security decides to
substitute temper for character. The man seeking to rid the world of the
"evils of technology" becomes the Unibomber.
So what exactly does this mean? If hypnosis is capable
of "turning off" all the Processing Area thinking, then we suddenly open
up a floodgate of possibilities. The smoker isn't capable of blocking our
suggestions, while hypnotized (which is the basic foundation of why hypnosis
works, regardless of the operating theory). Basically, if we turn off the
Processing Area and convince the inner, thinking mind, that the person
has no reason to smoke, that they are much better than this, that they
are stronger than the need for cigarettes that used to control them. If
we create strong metaphors in their mind, images of them jogging without
loosing their breath, pictures of them feeling safe kissing their mate,
knowing their breath is clean and fresh. If we heighten their sensory perceptions
and have them experience smelling the roses and feeling the "cool, clean
air" working its way down their throat (that's a metaphor I had problems
with while working in Los Angeles), then we create a separate reality (hopefully
Casteneda will forgive me for borrowing the title to his best selling book).
A new reality that offers freedom.
At this point we find ourselves faced with a curious
phenomenon, a dynamic every hypnotherapist faces daily, and yet one we've
never been able to explain. If hypnosis really changed the way a person
thinks, why do they still have a craving? My model offers a workable explanation
that allows for solution. The smoker who leaves my office now knows at
a logical level that they don't want to smoke (which is why they paid me
to do therapy in the first place). They now believe, at a deeper level,
that they have given it up and have no reason to smoke again. But they're
still left with the blockers they had previously placed in the Processing
Area. The habits they developed based on the false assumptions the inner
mind was making. They will still find themselves "reaching for a smoke"
after their coffee. They'll still find the Processing Area expecting a
cigarette when they find themselves under pressure, while still finding
it hasn't developed an adequate alternative coping mechanisms. Behavior
scientists tell us it takes about 2 weeks to "break a habit". Basically,
if we snap the rubber band on our wrist every time we want to bite our
nails we'll "train" ourselves to not think that way within 2 weeks. The
problem they come against is that if the inner mind still believes, after
2 weeks, that the person is a nail biter, it's just a matter of time before
this behavior (or some other excessive compulsive instinct) flares back
up. Hypnosis clears the way for the habit to disappear without objection.
I tell my client to expect the "habitual tendencies" to continue to plague
them for about a month. I explain that they'll need to fight the drive
to reach for a cigarette for 2 weeks and then, during the next two weeks,
they'll have to anchor in the alternative coping methods we've created
during the hypnotic session. This "coping alternative" usually becomes
something like "you can deal with the pressure by taking a deep breath
and realizing you do have control of the situation, a control that comes
from deep within, a control you need to focus on bringing to the surface
whenever a situation has the potential of problems". I then make them mentally
experience this "magic pill" alternative to smoking in several created
situations while under hypnosis.
Does this model work? Over the years I've kept close records
on the results of the use of my therapeutic techniques. When I trained
therapists (using this working model), I required them to have all their
clients fill out a questionnaire that eventually made it to my office.
About 3 months after a smoker had gone in for therapy we would make a "courtesy
call" to see how their therapy had gone, whether the therapist had met
their needs and to ask the crucial question, "Have you had a cigarette
since the therapy ended?" Based on this survey and on my own personal records
while on the road, my model has offered an 82% success rate on smoking.
If you play a bit more with the Processing Area theory
you realize some other powerful phenomenon that's available in therapy.
NLP patterning and other rapport building techniques create a heightened
level of attention, thus allowing the therapist (without ever suggesting
sleep) to have hypnotic abilities available to them in their sessions.
Teaching people to meditate (and get rid of the "monkey chatter"), is actually
a forerunner to learning how to develop deeper focus abilities, which in
our model translates into "allows you to communicate more effectively with
your inner, controlling brain".
When I teach therapy, I don't limit myself to the effects
of the lower brainwave (traditional hypnotic) levels. We also discuss the
effects of what we call the "Higher Brainwave Levels". What exactly happens
when a person is "red with anger" or "lost in love"? Although other, survival
related drives usually enter into play in a persons perception, the intense
focus created by the "fight or flight" mechanisms allows for the same therapeutic
leverage. I remember a lady once who came in to ask why her teenage son
hated her so. I tried to explain the "demons" that seem to come with hormonal
changes, but this didn't satisfy her. She insisted that they had always
gotten along great, had always been "best of buddies" and that then, suddenly,
he had pulled away. I suggested she might look for drugs, but she seemed
fairly convinced that he was still very active with his church and his
studies had not suffered at all. At her insistence, I did a time regression
and took them back to a time when things were going good. We then worked
our way to the day her son was graduating from JR High School. This was
his "big day". It was at this time that he announced to his mother, while
at a little league practice that afternoon, that he was dating a girl his
mother didn't really approve of. They got into a fight and in her anger,
with both their tempers at an all time high, in front of his friends, she
had yelled out at him "I don't know who you think you are. I don't care
what you think or what your friends tell you, until you graduate from High
School you're still my little boy and you better start acting like it.
I'm sick and tired of having to baby sit you. You're nothing but a bunch
of trouble just waiting to ruin my day." Soon after she had said that,
she realized what she had said and apologized profusely. Her son told her
he understood and told her he accepted her apology. But at that point,
the damage was done. Her yelling at him, while he was completely emotionally
involved in the situation, totally focused on nothing but what she was
saying, had the same effect on his inner mind as a hypnotic session where
metaphors were created to prove his mother considered him little more than
a childish nuisance would have had. His inner mind started developing "blockers"
in the Processing Area to stop suggestions that might try to make him face
the painful, shameful reality he now believed, that his mother didn't want
him around, his mother didn't really love him at all, that he was just
a burden to her. The next month or so was spent creating adequate "protection
against pain" in the Processing Area. At this point, whenever she said
"I love you" it got stopped by his Processing Area long before the inner
mind even got a chance to hear it.
Looking for a solution here, all I could work out was
that somehow she would have to first reach his inner mind, and then would
have to spend about a month fighting the "habitual reactions" that might
flare up as a response to certain key words or phrases. I suggested that
she take him to a large amusement park in the L.A. area and really get
him going. I recommended that she leave the rest of the family, and just
make it a "fun time" for the two of them. I told her to focus on getting
his adrenaline going, but to make an excuse to hold off on the really big
ride till the end of the day. Make that the big time goal for the day.
Finally the big moment arrived. They got in line and got on the ride. Then
as they reached their emotional peak, as they were coming down the most
exciting slope, I told her to yell, at the top of her voice, so everybody
on the cart could hear her, "Mike, you're the most important, special person
in my life. I love you." That was it, pure and simple. If my model was
correct, it should anchor in in his inner mind. It was then just a matter
of putting up with the outdated blockers that would creep up for the next
2 weeks and things should look up.
We scheduled our next appointment for about a month later.
The client planned her outing for the upcoming week and was to tell me,
a month later, how it went. When she came back in, she immediately broke
out into tears. She couldn't stop thanking me. She explained how they had
gone to the park and, as expected, he was cold and indifferent towards
her. She had ignored him and focussed on having fun. It wasn't long before
"mob psychology" took over and the two were mutually focussed on the goal
at hand. She told me how foolish she had felt at the prospect of yelling
her innermost thoughts in front of strangers, but I had told her that it
was precisely the fact that she was willing to be vulnerable in public
for him that should tilt the scales in her favor. She did her yelling and
then tried to hide her embarrassment as they got off the ride. Her son
didn't say a word. They got home and the evening seemed relatively normal.
Her son ignored her and did his arrogant "don't mess with me" act. On my
instructions she was to treat him as if all was okay now. Assume she was
merely facing instinctual, unintentional behavior. This went on for about
a week, and then one day she found him sitting in their back yard, deep
in thought. She walked over, sat down next to him and asked innocently,
"do you want to talk about it?". She said he turned, looked at her and
asked, "did you really mean it when you said I was important to you?" At
that point, she knew it was just a matter of time. She humbled herself
as much as she could and started apologizing for anything she might have
done that might have led him to believe anything else. "Mike, there's nothing
in the world that's more important to me than you kids" she explained as
tears welled up in his eyes. And he believed her. After than, it was just
a matter of sorting out behaviors before years of agony were left in the
past.
Was I some incredible sage, or "master therapist"? Not
by any means. I merely based my therapy on the concept of the Processing
Area and the effects, both negative and positive, that total focus has
on the mind. At that point it all came back to my "simple working model".
It's been close to 20 years since I started using this model both on and
off stage, and it's never failed to have the predicted results. It explains
hypnosis, effective therapy, mob psychology, religious fervor, athletic
prowess and most other mental phenomenon. At least in my humble settings,
it seems to adequately meet all my therapeutic needs, so I toss it out
as one possible, maybe even simplistic, model of how the mind works.

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