Magazine
for Hypnosis and Hypnotherapy
HYPNOTISM AND THE POWER WITHIN by Dr S.J.VAN PELT
WHY HYPNOTISM IS NOT MORE
WIDELY USED page 1
Stage Hypnotism - Danger - Popular Misconceptions
- Crime - Opposition of Christian Scientists - Faith Healers - Spiritualists
- Spirit healers - Doctors - Psychoanalysts
By now the reader may be
thinking, as indeed patients often ask when they have experienced the benefits
of hypnosis, ‘If hypnotism is so useful in medicine, how is it that doctors
do not use it more?’
To answer the question it
is necessary to consider many factors which have so far prevented hypnosis
taking its rightful place in medicine.
(A) Probably the most important
is the opinion that the average person holds concerning hypnotism. As will
be seen later, it is this attitude of mind that has been developed in the
lay public which has influenced the medical profession in its use, or rather
neglect, of hypnotism as a therapeutic measure.
If asked what they know
about hypnotism, by far the greater number of people will answer that they
do not know anything definite at all. Nevertheless, they have an idea that
the hypnotist has some mysterious ‘power’ or ‘gift’ by which he can subject
the ‘will’ of other people to his own. He puts the patient to ‘sleep’ and
makes them do anything he wishes; and when they wake up, they know nothing
about it.
Enquiry will reveal that
they have formed this opinion as the result of certain experiences or hearsay
from others.
(i)... One of the most likely
ways in which people are almost certain to gain a false idea about hypnotism
is in witnessing a stage exhibition. Consideration of a typical performance
will show how easy it is for the public to form a false opinion of hypnotism.
First of all, the hypnotist must have prestige, so the gentlemen of the
Press are called in to assist him to ‘build up’ his reputation and obtain
widespread publicity. The procedure varies according to the circumstances.
Sometimes, it merely means inviting a number of reporters - as many as
possible - to witness a demonstration, by ‘The Most Marvellous Hypnotist
in the Universe’ or the ‘World’s Most Powerful Hypnotic Genius’. These
performers are all very modest and are usually content with some simple
title such as the above. The reporters being assembled, a genuine demonstration
of hypnotism may be given.
As we have seen, approximately
one person out of four is a potential somnambulist and can go into a deep
trance very easily. Reporters are no exception to the rule; and with, say,
twenty of these gentlemen, it is highly probable that three or four will
make good subjects.
Quite frequently, however,
only one or two respond. Nevertheless, next day the newspapers will carry
a sensational story with glaring headlines such as ‘Most Miraculous Hypnotist
gives Amazing Demonstration’, usually complete with photographs. They neglect
to mention the fact that he failed to induce any sort of hypnotism in perhaps
eighteen out of twenty. The impression is given that the hypnotist can
bring about the same results in everybody, as he has managed to demonstrate
on one or two reporters.
In a way, we can hardly
blame these Press representatives. The public demands sensation and it
is well known that if a dog bites a man, it is not news. Few of them know
any more about hypnotism than they do about Chinese music.
Nevertheless, some of the
more intelligent have made an effort to present the truth to the public
after obtaining their facts from a reliable medical source. They are handicapped,
of course, in presenting such information to the public because doctors,
unlike the wonder hypnotists and quacks of all descriptions, cannot advertise.
(ii)... Another way in which
these performers ‘build up’ their reputation is by presenting the Press
with some sensational item of news. As we have seen, it is often possible
to cure a case or indeed any hysterical symptom, very easily by hypnosis.
If such a case presents
itself, the stage hypnotist will make free use of it. It is strange indeed
how a reporter always seems to be handy when one of these ‘miracles’ takes
place. Next day the papers will carry a sensational story, ‘Cripple walks
after twenty years - cured by Wonder Hypnotist with Amazing Power’.
They neglect to mention
that it was a case of hysterical paralysis, and the public is left with
the impression that all paralysis can be as easily and quickly cured by
hypnosis. Quite often there is some ‘sob stuff’ or ‘human interest’ introduced
into the story to arouse the emotions of the readers.
Sometimes the ‘Man with
the Piercing Eyes’ or ‘The World’s Greatest and Most Amazing, Not to Say
Most Powerful Hypnotist’ explains sadly in a long interview how he regrets
having to go on making money on the stage when he really wishes to use
his gifts of healing for the benefit of humanity. By these and other similar
methods, utilizing the power of the Press and all the tricks of publicity
agents, the stage performer builds up a big reputation as a hypnotist.
As a result, those who come
to see him are already half hypnotized, most of them believing explicitly
in his ‘power’, and even the sceptics have an uneasy feeling that there
must be something in it or he would never dare to give such a performance.
As we have seen, in the
theatre the emotional atmosphere runs high and emotion sensitizes the brain
to hypnosis. Here we have the ideal conditions for stage hypnosis. A large
audience, already convinced by publicity of the hypnotist’s amazing powers,
is emotionally roused and waits in tense expectation for the great man.
After a preliminary talk,
usually by his manager, which is carefully calculated to influence the
minds of the audience and lead them to believe the hypnotist possesses
some ‘mysterious power’, the performer himself appears and calls for volunteers.
Usually, volunteers are
limited to those between the ages of eighteen and twenty-six. As we have
seen, these young people are the most susceptible and, while old people
can be hypnotized, often making very good subjects, the professional hypnotist
is taking no chances.
Sometimes, this is where
the first hint of deception comes in. The hypnotist may make a point of
the fact that he will accept volunteers of any age - even grandparents!
Nevertheless, as will be seen later, he usually makes sure, by a process
of selection tests, that elderly people are not included in his demonstration,
unless they happen to be excellent subjects.
In response to the invitation
for volunteers, perhaps fifty or more people will go up on the stage, most
of them young people out for a bit of fun and not adverse to making an
exhibition of themselves. The hypnotist will now proceed to select the
easiest and best subject by means of the various suggestibility tests.
For instance, the volunteers may be told to lock their hands together and
hold them over their heads. After a time they are challenged to unlock
them, when the most susceptible subjects will be unable to do so.
Sometimes, tests of swaying
or falling forwards or backwards may be used. In another method, the subjects
are ordered to close their eyes tightly, told they are locked and challenged
to open them. By means of these tests, the hypnotist will select the easiest
and best subjects for his demonstration. Out of the original fifty volunteers,
perhaps ten or twelve will be chosen for the experiment.
After this, it is easy to
produce hypnosis by almost any means. An easy and very common method is
for the volunteers to be seated with their eyes closed while they listen
to the hypnotist making suggestions of ‘sleep’. In a short time, perhaps
four or five will really be ‘asleep’ in the hypnotic sense. Even those
who are not really asleep will sit there with their eyes closed and so
impress the audience as they are apparently hypnotized.
The hypnotist can easily
tell those who are really affected; and a few simple tests will enable
him to select one or two of the very best subjects in order to demonstrate
his ‘marvellous powers’.
One of the most spectacular
feats is that of inducing complete rigidity of the body. The subject is
then placed with his head and shoulders on one chair or support and his
feet on another. In this position he is able to support the full weight
of the hypnotist.
Another spectacular and
convincing demonstration is that of Anaesthesia. A needle may be passed
through the skin of the patient’s arm or hand without pain. The hypnotist
will then announce in tones of triumph that even the biggest operations
can be performed under hypnosis. In a sense this is true and a very good
subject could undergo a major operation without pain by means of hypnotism.
However, it is seldom that the performer bothers to stress the point, and
the public is left with the impression that everybody can easily be rendered
anaesthetic by hypnotism.
Again, he does not bother
to mention that there are degrees of hypnotic anaesthesia or rather analgesia,
varying from mere dulling of pain to complete absence.
There is a vast difference
between passing a needle through the skin and a major operation. Even passing
a needle through the skin, however, requires some degree of anaesthesia
if it is to be performed without pain.
At a recent demonstration
a professional hypnotist proudly announced that he had rendered the subject
so completely anaesthetic that he could undergo a severe operation. On
his passing a needle through the skin, however, the patient fainted and
the audience was entertained with the edifying spectacle of the hypnotist
staggering around the stage supporting the fainting subject. Most of the
audience did not realize what had happened and appeared to accept it as
all part of the performance!
Next on their list of favourite
tricks is a demonstration of their ‘complete power’ over the subject by
which they can make him do anything against his will. Half a dozen young
girls and boys are given a glass of water, told it is strong drink, and
that they are at a party. As a result, they give a more or less convincing
display of being under the influence of alcohol and will most likely sing
a few songs.
Very often it is obvious
to the trained observer that several of the subjects are not really hypnotized
at all but are merely acting, not liking to differ from the rest. Few young
people out for an evening’s entertainment mind behaving in this fashion,
and it is obvious that only those with exhibitionist tendencies would volunteer
to go on the stage at all.
Nevertheless, the public
accepts this as a convincing test of the ‘awful power’ of the hypnotist,
and secretly makes a note of the fact that the hypnotist has been apparently
able to make an innocent young girl act as though under the influence of
alcohol. Their worst fears are confirmed when the hypnotist demonstrates
once more his ‘terrible hold’ over the subject by making her take her shoes
off. All sorts of delicious and spicy possibilities occur to spectators,
who conclude that hypnotism must be very dangerous.
They are quite unaware of
the fact that the subjects can always resist suggestions with which they
do not agree, and which conflict too strongly with their fundamental morals.
If told to take her shoes off, the girl may easily agree, as it seems nothing
more than an amusing act which will be good for a few laughs and enable
her to share some of the limelight with the hypnotist. Unless she was an
artist’s model or a strip-tease ‘artiste’ who thought nothing of such things,
she would, however, refuse point - blank to take all her clothes off, and
the audience would soon see how much ‘awful power’ the hypnotist really
had.
But the thing which convinces
the public that hypnotism is something to be afraid of, is the demonstration
of the post-hypnotic suggestion. The hypnotist announces that after the
subject has been awakened, he will do a certain thing, such as shouting
out ‘Nuts’ or ‘Rubbish’ whenever the hypnotist says or does something which
has been agreed upon as the signal.
At the end of the performance,
while making his final speech, the hypnotist introduces his keyword or
action and the subject promptly calls out ‘Nuts’ or ‘Rubbish’ or whatever
else was arranged.
This never fails to get
terrific applause and convinces the audience that there is something definitely
dangerous about hypnotism when it can make a person do anything the hypnotist
wishes at some future time or place.
The trained observer can
often see that the subject is really not obeying a post-hypnotic suggestion
at all. On many occasions he has to be prompted by the hypnotist who keeps
on repeating the keyword or action in such a fashion that nobody could
very well miss it.
Quite apart from the fact
that many people would be quite prepared to express their opinion of these
performances by shouting ‘Nuts’ or ‘Rubbish’ without any hypnotic influence,
there is a vast difference between saying these simple words and carrying
out anything, especially criminal, that the hypnotist might suggest.
Such a performance is typical
of what may be called a genuine stage demonstration of hypnotism. Unfortunately,
trickery is not debarred on the stage. Nobody, for instance, believes that
a stage magician really saws a woman in half!
One well-known stage trick
is to have one or two people who have been previously hypnotized ‘planted’
in the audience. These people have been trained to ‘go to sleep’ quickly
at a pre-arranged signal. They mix with the volunteers and set an example
to others. Naturally, they deny having seen the hypnotist before, unlike
the small boy in the story who, when asked by the conjuror, ‘Have you ever
seen me before,’ replied, ‘No, Father!’
Suspicions, which are aroused
when soldiers or sailors are seen sitting all alone in the best seats of
the theatre, are confirmed when these people rush on to the stage, pushing
other volunteers out of the way, if necessary. When they turn out to be
the very best subjects, there is always the suspicion that things are not
exactly what they seem!
Although, with any large
audience, it would be perfectly possible to select a sufficient number
of subjects to give a demonstration, most professional stage hypnotists
like to make assurance doubly sure and ‘stooges’ are not unknown.
(iii)... So far we have described
what may be termed genuine exhibitions of hypnotism, although some of them
involve a little deception and certainly they give the audience the wrong
impression. Now we must consider a ‘trick’ method which is sometimes used.
This employs a well-known Japanese ‘Jiu-Jitsu’ wrestling trick. Pressure
is applied on the carotid bodies and carotid arteries in the neck. The
blood supply to the brain is stopped and as a result, the patient goes
limp and would fall, as in a faint, if not caught. Just as he is ‘going
off’, the hypnotist shouts ‘Sleep’ in a loud voice, and if the patient
is very susceptible, he may go into a trance. In most cases, however, the
patient is merely knocked temporarily unconscious and seldom has any desire
to repeat the performance. Usually, he is so shaken that he is rendered
completely docile and willing to follow the whispered instructions of the
so-called hypnotist.
It is, of course, impressive
to the members of the audience, who seldom have the ability to distinguish
between genuine and simulated hypnotism. In addition, this method is extremely
dangerous and could result in death from vagal inhibition. There was an
article recently in the British Medical Journal on deaths from vagal inhibition,
which quoted cases where sudden death had occurred following even slight
pressure on the neck.
This method of inducing hypnosis,
even when real hypnosis is achieved, is dangerous. It is bad enough in
the hands of a medical man who is capable of diagnosing heart disease or
the complaints which would make it undesirable. In the hands of a lay person,
such as a professional stage hypnotist, it is a positive menace. Few patients
would relish this method of inducing hypnosis, although not understanding
the danger, they often express a wish for it, being impressed by its quickness
and having no means of knowing how genuine were the alleged ‘hypnotic’
phenomena which followed it.
Even where the technique
is of a gentler kind, stage hypnotism can, and often does, have unfortunate
results. Consider the following case, which illustrates the danger of stage
hypnosis...
A father wrote as follows:
‘A year ago my daughter went on to the stage as a volunteer for ...‘ (mentioning
a stage hypnotist) ‘who was demonstrating hypnotism. She was picked out
by him from about a dozen volunteers, with three others, and was on the
stage throughout the performance. She says she remembers everything, and
was told that she would cry for her mother, and continue to do so on a
given signal. A week later she began to complain of depression and “something
in her mind”, and has had fits of crying and depression ever since.’
During the past year she
had seen several doctors and tried various treatments without success.
Her family doctor said that he considered her to be a ‘serious case of
nerve trouble’ and that there was nothing wrong organically. She had always
been perfectly healthy, both mentally and physically, before this occurrence.
When seen, she proved to
be an attractive and intelligent young woman who was very depressed at
her apparently unaccountable outbursts of emotional crying and lack of
interest in anything. This, she explained, was completely foreign to her
real nature.
Investigation revealed that
she had carried out the hypnotist’s instructions to ‘cry for her mother’
very realistically. The audience naturally roared with applause, and, thus
encouraged, the hypnotist proceeded to demonstrate still further his ‘amazing
powers’. In the rush of the performance he had evidently forgotten to remove
the original suggestion. As a result, the girl began to have (to her) unaccountable
fits of deep depression and crying. This worried her, as she thought she
must be going mad, and she promptly developed the unpleasant symptoms of
anxiety. These frightened her still further, and when nobody could help
her by orthodox means she became convinced that her mind had been seriously
affected. As her mind was fully occupied with her own fears, naturally
she was unable to take an interest in anything else.
Thus we see that a foolish
suggestion, implanted by a stage hypnotist to gratify his own vanity, and
‘amuse and instruct’ the audience, set in motion a chain of thoughts which
led to near insanity in the innocent victim. Incidentally, this case illustrates
my theory, outlined more fully later on, that nervous disorders, and even
insanity, can be explained by hypnosis, often accidentally self-induced.
Naturally the girl had a
great fear of hypnosis, and many sessions were necessary before she lost
her anxiety, and her father was able to write: ‘There is a striking difference
in her outlook on everything, and there can be no question that she is
restored to normality.’
This is by no means an isolated
case, and the British Society of Medical Hypnotists has records of many
patients who have suffered severe mental and bodily harm as the result
of stage and amateur hypnosis.
Unfortunately it is not
only those who volunteer to go on the stage who can be affected. Even members
of the audience watching exhibitions of stage hypnotism can be influenced.
One mother wrote concerning her daughter’s nervous trouble: ‘Her illness
began about two weeks after attending a demonstration of hypnotism by...
during which she was hypnotized for short spells while in the audience.
Thus we see that stage hypnotism,
besides giving the public an entirely misleading idea of the subject, for
stage hypnotism is exactly the wrong type for medical purposes, can be
definitely dangerous. Hypnotism is really no more a fit subject for the
stage than any other branch of medicine or surgery. If stage hypnotists
confined themselves solely to exhibiting the phenomena of hypnosis it would
be bad enough, but most of them, in their desire for personal publicity,
dabble in medicine without the slightest knowledge of the subject.
Occasionally, when they meet
a case of hysterical paralysis, for instance, they may be able to remove
the presenting symptom and so claim a ‘miracle cure’. The newspapers do
the rest and the impression is given that the stage hypnotist is far greater
than any doctor and can cure anything.
Such ‘cures' are seldom,
if ever, permanent because these people lack the necessary medical knowledge
to make them so.
Doctors who use hypnosis
are constantly bringing about cures which are every bit as striking; but,
as they are unable to employ publicity agents, such results cannot be blazoned
abroad, in the sensational manner so beloved of newspapers. Hence the public
is left with the idea that hypnotism is some mysterious power possessed
by a few gifted men who are so clever that they can cure any disease of
body or mind without having even bothered to study medicine.
People who would never dream
of letting a plumber tinker with the engine of their motorcar, see nothing
wrong with letting a medically unqualified hypnotist experiment with their
mind and body.
(B) In addition to stage
exhibitions, sensational stories of the Svengali -Trllby type give the
public an entirely wrong idea of the subject. Films which show hypnosis
being used, mostly for criminal purposes, add their quota of misinformation.
Not to be outdone, the radio presents hair-raising serials in which the
master criminal works his evil will by means of hypnosis. In view of all
this, there is little wonder that the public has an exceedingly distorted
view of the subject.
By considering the sort of
questions patients often ask, it is hoped that the truth will dispel misconceptions
which are so prevalent at present. Many of these points have been mentioned
in previous chapters; but it is so important that people should know the
real truth about hypnotism, that no apology is made for emphasizing them.
One of the commonest questions
asked is: ‘Do you have to be weak - willed to be hypnotized?’ The answer
is that the will has nothing to do with hypnotism. The force we use is
the imagination, which is far stronger than the will. The more intelligent
and imaginative the person is, the better hypnotic subject he will make.
It is impossible to hypnotize an idiot, and scatter-brained people are
notoriously difficult.
Linked up with this is the
question, ‘Can a person be hypnotized against his will?’ In view of the
fact that we deal with the imagination, it is possible to hypnotize a person
against his will, given the right circumstances. Deliberate resistance,
of course, makes the hypnotist’s task much harder. Often the sceptic secretly
believes or imagines that hypnosis is possible, although he may loudly
deny it. In such a case, it is very likely he can be hypnotized against
his will.
‘Can everyone be hypnotized?’
is often asked and the answer is that fully 90 - 95 % of ordinary people
can be hypnotized to one degree or another. This does not necessarily mean
that results are obtained at the first session. Some patients who are poor
subjects at first, perhaps owing to excessive nervousness or anxiety, can
be trained by a few sessions to become quite good.
Only about one person out
of four or five is likely to enter a deep trance as seen upon the stage,
especially at the first attempt.
Another question which is
frequently put to the hypnotist is: ‘For curative purposes, is it necessary
to go into a very deep trance?’ The answer is that the depth of trance
has little bearing on the therapeutic result. Some patients will obey suggestions
after even the lightest trance, while others may refuse to do so after
the very deepest hypnosis. Because amnesia (loss of memory) for the events
of the trance is common in deep hypnosis, the patient feels that ‘something
has happened’. This may influence him favourably if he is of the type that
expects a magical and powerful experience.
‘Does the subject know what
he is doing in the trance?’ is sometimes asked. The answer is that he does,
and is able to exercise a degree of judgment. In the light and medium stages,
the patient will probably remember all the details of the trance, and may
even deny he was hypnotized because he can ‘remember everything’ and heard
all that the hypnotist said. Even in the deep trance, the patient hears
everything and knows what is going on. However, as amnesia is common after
a deep
trance, he often forgets
about it, especially if commanded to do so by the hypnotist. Therefore
he imagines he heard nothing.
For some reason the general
public is obsessed with the idea of the possibilities of crime and sexual
seduction under hypnosis, and often ask if this is possible.
The general consensus of
opinion is that nobody will do anything under hypnosis that is fundamentally
against their deep-rooted moral principles. They do not mind pretending
to commit crime because they know very well that it is only an experiment.
The subject is not an automaton
and can always break the trance if the suggestions are repellent enough
to arouse his deep moral feelings. An ordinary, modest girl would not disrobe
completely on the stage, although she might remove her shoes in a spirit
of fun.
The subject has several defences
against any suggestion with which she disagrees and may refuse to carry
out the order, go into ordinary sleep, or simply wake up. Thus the patient
is not nearly so much at the mercy of the operator as a person under the
influence of an anaesthetic.
The less intelligent section
of the public loves to dwell on the possibilities of sexual seduction under
the influence of hypnosis. The plain fact is that nobody could be seduced
under hypnosis unless willing. The real answer to all this anxiety about
the possibilities of crime under hypnosis is that people should submit
to hypnosis only by reputable medical men who conform to the ethics of
their profession.
Although it is considered
that it is impossible to make an ordinary moral person commit a real criminal
act under the influence of hypnosis, people who are anxious on this score
can make assurance doubly sure by taking the above course of action.
After all, it would be only
too easy for a surgeon, anaesthetist or dentist to commit a criminal act
against his patient if he were so inclined. The ethics of his profession,
however, demand the highest possible standard of conduct, which safeguards
the patient, and the same applies to the fully qualified medical hypnotist.
Another question frequently
asked is: ‘Can hypnotism be dangerous?’ The answer is that it can under
certain circumstances but not in the way that the public usually imagines.
Used properly as a therapeutic
measure by a fully qualified medical man who is experienced in the subject,
the dangers of hypnosis are non-existent. However, in the hands of medically
ignorant laymen and stage professionals who dabble in medicine, it can
have unfortunate results.
Enthusiastic amateurs and
stage professionals often induce hallucinations and make suggestions which
they may forget to remove in the rush of a stage performance. As the only
subjects they deal with are those who ‘sleep deeply’, they may easily suffer
considerable mental harm.
Further, by dabbling in
medicine and removing symptoms without knowing the real nature of the disease,
they may lull the patient into a sense of false security and so allow the
disease to progress unchecked.
Patients are often concerned
with the question: ‘Is there any danger of not waking up from hypnosis?’
The answer to this is that there is not the slightest danger as the patient,
if left to himself, will go into ordinary sleep and wake up in his own
good time. An experienced operator seldom has any difficulty in waking
the patient, although amateurs sometimes run into this trouble.
This leads to the question:
‘Can anybody learn to hypnotize?’ The answer is that anybody can learn
to hypnotize, just as they can learn anything else. This does not mean
that everybody should. Some make better hypnotists than others, just as
some people make better doctors than others.
Anybody can gain a smattering
of the subject and produce a few spectacular results in easy and susceptible
cases. But to use hypnotism as it should be used, so that fully 90 % of
patients seeking its aid can benefit, demands considerable skill and an
infinite capacity for taking pains.
Easy and susceptible subjects
may be hypnotized in a matter of seconds or minutes, whereas highly apprehensive
and nervous patients may take an hour or more to achieve even a light hypnosis.
Few medical men in general
practice, especially under modern conditions, have sufficient leisure to
spare an hour or so for a nervous patient. As a result, it is better that
even medical men should not just dabble in hypnosis any more than they
would dabble in surgery or any other speciality.
If hypnotism is ever to
produce its best result in the maximum number of cases, it would be carried
out by medical men who have the time and patience to specialize in the
method.
(C) Now, having considered
the attitude of the average person to hypnotism, we must consider what
we may call special groups of the lay public. These groups or sects have
several things in common although they are, in general, bitterly opposed
to one another. They are unanimous in their disapproval of hypnotism, and,
although most of them use it in a disguised form, often with-out knowing
it, they loudly proclaim it to be the work of the Devil.
(i).. Those loudest in their
condemnation of hypnotism, or magnetism, as they call it, are the Christian
Scientists. This blasphemous sect is neither Christian nor Scientific.
It denies Christ’s teaching about sickness, sin and death, claiming that
such things do not exist. The very foundations of the Christian Religion
such as the Atonement, the death of Christ and His resturection, are denied
by this extraordinary cult which has the impertinence to call itself Christian.
Like many others of these
so-called religious, money-making cults, Christian Science originated in
America, and its founder was an extraordinary woman named Mrs. Mary Baker
Glover Patterson Eddy.
She was born at Bow, a small
township in New Hampshire, on 16 July, 1821. Her parents were simple New
England farmers and extremely religious.
Mary Baker was the youngest
child and was always having hysterical fits, during which she often suffered
from hallucinations.
Shortly after she married
her first husband, George Washington Glover, he died leaving her without
means so that she had to live with her sister. Her nervous symptoms became
worse than ever and she developed the quaint idea that she had to be rocked
to sleep like a baby in a specially constructed large cradle.
Her second marriage to a
wandering dentist and homeopath called Patterson was unhappy; so when he
was taken prisoner in the Civil War she obtained a divorce. Once more she
went to live with a sister and claimed to have spiritualistic powers, saying
that she could hear spirit rappings in the walls.
Finally, her conduct became
intolerable and she had to leave her sister’s house. However, she persuaded
a superstitious old lady to take her into her home, saying that the spirits
had told her to live there.
After a time the relatives
of the old lady threw Mrs. Clover, as she now called herself, into the
street. All this time, her symptoms were getting worse and worse until,
one day, she slipped on a frozen pavement. Stunned and considerably bruised,
her hysterical mind conceived the idea that she was paralysed, and so she
spent several years in bed, apparently a hopeless cripple.
In 1862, when she was about
forty years of age, she heard of Phineas Parkhurst Quimby. This remarkable
man, a watchmaker, after attending a demonstration by a French magnetizer,
decided that he could heal by this method also.
After a time he gave up
magnetism (hypnotism) as such and developed his theory of ‘Mind Cure’.
Mrs. Clover called in Quimby to treat her and in a matter of days the hysterical
paralysis was completely removed by suggestion.
She became devoted to Quimby
and endeavoured to absorb his ideas. In this, however, she was unsuccessful
and took up Spiritualism once more. She acted as a medium by calling up
the spirit of her dead brother, and even spoke in his voice. When Quimby
died suddenly, she came into possession of his manuscripts, which dealt
with religion, spiritualism, and disease, and a variety of subjects. To
these she added extracts from the Bible and queer ideas of her own, announcing
her intention of writing a book.
She became well known around
Boston, and although what she said was seldom intelligible as she was completely
uneducated, her manner was impressive enough to earn her a living. Being
a failure as a ‘healer’ herself, she set out to teach Quimby’s theories
to others, thus following out the old Chinese proverb: ‘He who fails thrice
sets up as a teacher’.
One of her pupils, Richard
Kennedy, set up a Healing Clinic, the profits of which relieved her of
financial anxiety. Becoming jealous of Kennedy, she accused him of trying
to kill her by ‘animal magnetism’ (hypnotism), saying that he was transferring
all the ills of the patients to her!
In 1872 Kennedy broke his
association with her, paying over 6000 dollars forfeit. Mrs. Glover was
nothing if not a business woman, and showed this by setting up a school
of healing instruction. The pupils had to pay a good fee of $100 and agree
to pay her a percentage of all their future earnings.
One of her pupils, Spofford
by name, rewrote Quimby’s manuscripts which she claimed as her own, and
produced the first edition of 'Science and Health'.
After marrying a friend
of Spofford, Asa Gilbert Eddy, she began to accuse Spofford of ‘malicious
magnetism’ (hypnotism). Ostensibly, this was because she thought he was
mentally transferring illness to her, but the real fact was that she was
jealous of his popularity with the patients.
It is reported that she
accused Spofford of witchcraft and endeavoured to take legal action against
him on this score. When this ridiculous action failed, it is said that
she endeavoured to have Spofford murdered by hiring a gangster to assassinate
him. This plan failed; but as a result of the scandal, Mrs. Eddy and her
husband were brought to trial and sentenced to a fine.
Shortly after this, her third
husband died, and at the age of sixty-one she set about making a fresh
start. Arriving in Boston, she started her ‘school’ in a friend’s house,
and published the Journal of Christian Science, the cost, as usual, being
borne by her pupils. The journal was full of prophecies and alleged wonderful
cures. Since she was cunning enough to have it widely distributed to simple-minded
villagers, she soon collected a huge following.
The Boston ‘School’ flourished
exceedingly with fifty students at a time paying $200 for a three weeks’
‘course of lectures’. The venture was so profitable that branches were
soon established in California, Nebraska, Colorado, New York and Chicago,
and any ignorant person could become a ‘doctor’ or ‘healer’ in a few weeks
without troubling to learn even the slightest rudiments of anatomy or medicine.
About this time Mrs. Eddy
had another happy and (needless to say) profitable idea. So-called ‘Absent
Healing’ was begun, and all the healer had to do was to send out ‘curative
thoughts’ to the patient, and pocket the fees, which often amounted to
over $100. In 1894 the foundation stone of the Mother Church of Boston
was laid and the building, which was to be the head of all other churches,
was dedicated in 1895. An entirely new building called the Annexe was dedicated
in 1906. and there were 30,000 people at the opening ceremony. After this,
Mrs. Eddy retired in seclusion, and on 4 December, 1910, she died at the
age of 89.
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