A skeptic's deep dive into hypnosis

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  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024

Комментарии • 787

  • @neurotransmissions
    @neurotransmissions  6 месяцев назад +85

    If you heard the voiceovers in the video and said, "Damn, those were some alluring voices. I wonder who they are?" Well have I got some RUclips channels for you:
    Medlife Crisis: www.youtube.com/@MedlifeCrisis
    WonderWhy: www.youtube.com/@WonderWhy
    Thomas Rintoul: www.youtube.com/@ThomasRintoul
    Also, There are many things that I wish I could’ve touched on in this video, but simply ran out of time before I had to stop writing and film the dang thing. One interesting area I wish I’d explored further is the unexpected overlap of people involved in hypnosis and people involved in neurolinguistic programming (NLP). I briefly touched on NLP in my EMDR video, too, but I anticipate it will be a future video topic. The short summary of NLP is that it’s a pseudoscience that claims to give people the ability to manipulate their perceptions, behaviors, and communication patterns to achieve whatever goal they want. Hypnosis was adopted as a technique used in NLP, but it makes some people in the hypnosis community very angry because they perceive it as a “bastardization”, total misunderstanding, or oversimplification of hypnosis. As such, they want nothing to do with NLP. But many others dip their toes into both. I’m not sure what other connections exist there, as I haven’t had enough time to further investigate.

    • @NecroDomoEPI
      @NecroDomoEPI 6 месяцев назад +3

      @neurotransmissions, you forgot to add the link to the Google Docs with the sources in the description

    • @reilly6187
      @reilly6187 6 месяцев назад +3

      We would never forget the voice of our favorite cardiologist.

    • @lucys5752
      @lucys5752 6 месяцев назад +2

      When you were talking about people being "influencable" it got me thinking about the DID video & the cases there where it's (supposedly) also caused by the therapist's influence - is there any connection there?

    • @seadawg93
      @seadawg93 6 месяцев назад +3

      I would never say that NLP is hypnosis “Not Learned Properly,” but …oh, I guess I just said it. 😂

    • @HeyLetsTalkAboutIt
      @HeyLetsTalkAboutIt 6 месяцев назад +1

      As someone who is training to be a hypnotherapist currently, I can tell you that we can use NLP during hypnotherapy. They work in conjunction. It’s interesting.

  • @minoyd
    @minoyd 6 месяцев назад +273

    Hysteria went away as an official diagnosis, but very much remained an idea in the culture. Would love to see it unpacked

    • @Nagarath16
      @Nagarath16 6 месяцев назад +26

      This. Even now, you have to at least try to avoid certain mental health diagnosis to be taken seriously if you need emergency help as a woman. Because if they see any or certain mental health marks as old diagnosis - your physical pain isn't been taken seriously and you get medicated with sedatives to be silent. Or just said it's hormonal problem. (Unless you pretty much bleed out in other place than between your legs.)
      And that is nowadays the best case scenario: In many other countries it's so much worse. Or doesn't even need to be other country you live in, just a luck draw with what hospital you end up and who is at work that day.
      But it's not just women, also youngsters (not children) are deemed to be hysteric, without saying the word, and often don't get treated because those are young people so attitude is: they just make up stuff and can walk it or. Their pain isn't real.
      Youngsters don't even need mental health marks to be dismissed as hysteria.

    • @piaget3021
      @piaget3021 6 месяцев назад +11

      It just got rebranded under conversive disorders (F44.4) category

    • @EmperorPenguinXRemas
      @EmperorPenguinXRemas 6 месяцев назад +6

      We debated this topic in uni. Very interesting. Conversion disorders, or FND, seems to have most overlap with it today, although it was more culturally sexist biased in the past.

    • @AdamBlack
      @AdamBlack 6 месяцев назад +1

      they just changed the name to FND

    • @stylis666
      @stylis666 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@AdamBlack That's not a name though. Those are three letters that don't make a word.

  • @MedlifeCrisis
    @MedlifeCrisis 6 месяцев назад +196

    Just had to pause to comment on the hilarity of the Jesuit priest being called Hell

    • @tempestive1
      @tempestive1 6 месяцев назад +18

      Old Norse "Hel" (from Proto-Germanic *halija "one who covers up or hides something")
      Seems appropriate :p

    • @cblse
      @cblse 6 месяцев назад +1

      I immediately though of Maxmilian Schell.

    • @tubebrocoli
      @tubebrocoli 6 месяцев назад +8

      hell means bright / fair / pale / light / clear in german, but yeah XD

    • @Xcalator35
      @Xcalator35 6 месяцев назад +1

      Also noticed it! BTW, I'm a fan of yours!!

    • @michan8093
      @michan8093 6 месяцев назад

      How do you have time to be doctor, father and RUclipsr and still fucking comment on every video?? Give me the time sauce pls

  • @kristinwright6632
    @kristinwright6632 6 месяцев назад +137

    "Just" a placebo effect. Has anyone ever considered how powerful that is? That it is being convinced that a therapy works so therefore it does? How powerful is that? Seems to me that our brains can come up with healing for our body. We just need to figure out how to make that work more reliably.

    • @neurotransmissions
      @neurotransmissions  6 месяцев назад +30

      That was our last video! Alie says a lot of the same things that you’re saying, and more. Check it out if you haven’t yet!

    • @thecolorjune
      @thecolorjune 6 месяцев назад +7

      I agree! Unlike with more tangible medical issues, with therapy, if it works via placebo effect, then it may actually just plain work since it may really cure the issue.

    • @readjordan2257
      @readjordan2257 6 месяцев назад +5

      Thats the irony of hypnosis and placebo effect in the same sentence...its like dividing by zero in an integrable domain, its nonsense. I mean, its the one and only context where the effect of placebo and the effect of hypnosis are the same thing/in all ways indistinguishable. If someone is hypnotized or something like that and another asks: it could have just been placebo, is a self contradiction. Its the same phenomenon.
      Note: im not saying the terms are the same thing/phenomenon, im saying the effects are no different from each other, and are the same thing as effects/forces/vectors.

    • @rdizzy1
      @rdizzy1 6 месяцев назад +11

      That isn't really how placebo works though, it isn't actually "working", it is tricking your brain into thinking it is working, there is a functional difference there. Hence why legitimate studies compare the treatment to placebo to see if it has a real measurable effect. Feeling like you are better and objectively being better are 2 different things.

    • @thecolorjune
      @thecolorjune 6 месяцев назад +12

      @@rdizzy1 but if you’re treating is depression or PTSD for example, if you begin feeling better and your symptoms reduce and go away then it IS working. It’s not like a medical condition where placebo might make you feel better but your kidneys are still failing.

  • @nextworld9176
    @nextworld9176 6 месяцев назад +243

    A Navy training incident in 1975 gave me nightmares and intrusive thoughts during the day. It affected my work and home. Finally, a therapist trained in hypnotism gave me EMDR therapy, which is kind of like a hypnotic thing. In 6 weeks, 40 years of nightmares was GONE. Random intrusive angry thoughts: gone. The last eight years have been much, much better.

    • @neurotransmissions
      @neurotransmissions  6 месяцев назад +72

      I did a video on EMDR, too! You may have seen it. Hypnosis and EMDR supposedly have nothing to do with one another, but there might be a back-door connection. I don't want to give anything away, but the founder of EMDR was involved in another field that has a lot of overlap with hypnosis today.

    • @thecolorjune
      @thecolorjune 6 месяцев назад +8

      Ooh I love EMDR! I’ve only used RUclips to engage in EMDR therapy, but it has still helped me with intrusive memories.

    • @HeyLetsTalkAboutIt
      @HeyLetsTalkAboutIt 6 месяцев назад +11

      I recently did EMDR for my PTSD. It is really amazing! 20 years with PTSD and I’m in a much better place now!

    • @tenabarnes3269
      @tenabarnes3269 6 месяцев назад +9

      Fun Fact: you have to willingly let yourself be hypnotized, if you don’t believe in it or have an aversion to it, the hypnosis will not work.

    • @joshuaphillips755
      @joshuaphillips755 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@tenabarnes3269 that's a bummer, sounds like CBT for hippies

  • @croozerdog
    @croozerdog 6 месяцев назад +85

    it's always good to remember that placebo is one hell of a drug

    • @mikehawkslong5529
      @mikehawkslong5529 6 месяцев назад +8

      Drugs are one hell of a placebo

    • @Zeon01
      @Zeon01 6 месяцев назад

      @@mikehawkslong5529 Nope

    • @GUILLOTINE_GANG
      @GUILLOTINE_GANG 6 месяцев назад +8

      The placebos in hell are drugs

    • @Lughnerson
      @Lughnerson 4 месяца назад +1

      What is yours? Why does it work? How does it make you feel?

    • @108kubas
      @108kubas 2 месяца назад +1

      @@GUILLOTINE_GANGthat kinda makes sense

  • @fanofentropy2280
    @fanofentropy2280 6 месяцев назад +77

    From the context of the Victorian era, I've always been under the impression that hysteria was just polite Victorian word for horny.

    • @neurotransmissions
      @neurotransmissions  6 месяцев назад +47

      It’s not NOT a polite Victorian word for horny 😂

    • @JamilaJibril-e8h
      @JamilaJibril-e8h 6 месяцев назад +5

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @thecolorjune
      @thecolorjune 6 месяцев назад

      No haha, unfortunately it was more of a word for “woman with emotions and needs that we find inconvenient”. Horny would have been more fun

    • @FosukeLordOfError
      @FosukeLordOfError 6 месяцев назад

      I though one treatment was a hand job from a doctor

    • @therabbithat
      @therabbithat 6 месяцев назад +8

      That's what Freud said

  • @binglemarie42
    @binglemarie42 6 месяцев назад +140

    Yes to a video on hysteria! As a woman disabled by invisible ailments, I'm very interested in how I would have been viewed historically.

    • @gmw3083
      @gmw3083 6 месяцев назад +6

      Maybe try going carnivore

    • @kaglafuture
      @kaglafuture 6 месяцев назад +21

      @@gmw3083 thats a bit silly

    • @tempestive1
      @tempestive1 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@gmw3083 you gullible fool 😂😂😂

    • @notahumanbeing6892
      @notahumanbeing6892 6 месяцев назад

      @@gmw3083stop suggesting simple fixes for complex issues that you don’t understand

    • @crunchybee
      @crunchybee 6 месяцев назад +7

      How are you viewed now? Because I was poisoned by fluoroquinolones + steroids. Couldn't walk for 5 months and have been in constant pain since 4 years later and am viewed as an addict or crazy because I tell Drs I'm in pain. A Dr. told an antibiotic can't hurt me and walked out so I wheeled myself out crying. I've been wondering if hypnosis could help with the pain because the only thing that works is to drink my face off now and nobody cares about that so here I am watching this. I've been nothing but hurt worse than I was by the med industry.

  • @timkempuk
    @timkempuk 6 месяцев назад +27

    I went for hypnotherapy and did not have a clue if it helped or not until my friends told me how much my confidence had improved. So it seems it did work. 😊

  • @amyg4549
    @amyg4549 6 месяцев назад +41

    My mother urged me to see a hypnotherapist in my twenties, she was very concerned about my crippling anxiety and depression. I had no life outside my house, I had horrible self esteem. I hated myself and hated my brain, I felt defective. I saw the hypnotherapist and was instructed to move a finger for yes or no. Apparently I talked during the session too. I have zero recollection of the entire 2 hour hypnosis session. Afterwards, the hypnotherapist stated that he had asked me my earliest memory about my fear. He said I responded “it was dark, I could hear my mom. She was scared about a smell and worried I would be damaged”. I asked my mom about it and she broke down crying. She said she was anxious throughout her whole pregnancy. She inhaled the vapours from moth balls and thought she had damaged my brain. She obsessed about it for months.

    • @markstubbles
      @markstubbles 6 месяцев назад +5

      Did it help with your anxiety and depression?

    • @honkhonk5181
      @honkhonk5181 Месяц назад

      It’s impossible to have any memories from inside the womb

  • @chasehughesofficial
    @chasehughesofficial 5 месяцев назад +8

    As an expert, I've not seen a video more honest and direct about hypnosis. Great job, man.

  • @LilFeralGangrel
    @LilFeralGangrel 6 месяцев назад +41

    My own perception of hypnosis as a non-psychologist, hypnotic trance and all trance are just different forms of dissociation/depersonalization. I came to this conclusion with my own experience in the BDSM community and reading research on "subspace" and it made me immediately think of my experience with "hypnotic trance". That article described subspace as a form of dissociation.
    This also explains why some people just don't go under trance. They A) don't believe in it but also B) don't consent to it and will likely have little rapport with the hypnotist. Dissociation is a highly vulnerable state. That's also why "subs" in BDSM can only go in subspace while in a scene with a "dom" they trust.
    This also further reflects in how the hypno community talks about steps towards hypnosis, Rapport, Rapport Rapport. Hypnosis without consent is impossible.

    • @Misslayer99
      @Misslayer99 6 месяцев назад +10

      I'm a neurobiology student...and also into BDSM lol. This is an interesting concept, any way that you could send me in the direction of that article? RUclips usually deletes outside links, but I can probably find it if you could remember any details.

    • @ringsystemmusic
      @ringsystemmusic 6 месяцев назад +5

      This is a comment I expected to get eaten by the censor bots. Goodonya, matches my limited findings as well in (mostly) different verticals

    • @dreadwolfrising
      @dreadwolfrising 6 месяцев назад +4

      This is actually a really interesting take on this! Ditto on what the first commenter said, I'd be curious to look up those papers too

    • @michaelchoruss7544
      @michaelchoruss7544 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@dreadwolfrisingagreed!

    • @mjinba07
      @mjinba07 6 месяцев назад

      @@dreadwolfrising Every time I've posted info on a publicly available paper or another resource, not just a link but any name, YT has deleted it from the thread. Apparently YT prefers to dissuade viewers from fact checking sources and connecting with each other in a mutually supportive way. We're free, of course, to post the most ridiculous bs in our comments.

  • @winonadavies9201
    @winonadavies9201 6 месяцев назад +144

    I'm a therapist who uses hypnotherapy in some (fairly limited context) cases. Particularly with clients who have a high level of symbolic thinking and often with highly artistic or creative minds. I like using for myself on occasion to help with specific behaviors. I like your take, and your research. It is useful, and yes, it's not the "magic bullet" that some of my clients want it to be. Thanks.

    • @danieliler886
      @danieliler886 6 месяцев назад +13

      Most people think all medicine is a magic bullet too. Oh I'm gonna go the doctor and he's gonna make me better! No he will just say you need to rest and call me if a rash appears because that's something bad.
      Nothing just makes you all better mentally or physically

    • @mjj7983
      @mjj7983 6 месяцев назад +9

      ​@danieliler886 well, no, sometimes you can just take a pill and your illness goes away. People just overextend the perceived simplicity of that to too much other stuff

    • @piaget3021
      @piaget3021 6 месяцев назад +1

      Every thinking is inherently symbolic, it’s not a trait that some do or do not have. Also, what are the “creative minds”? Your whole presentation reeks of pseudo science, and I would not find it surprising that you also cultivate some other questionable “therapies”.

    • @dreadwolfrising
      @dreadwolfrising 6 месяцев назад +5

      ​@piaget3021 not to be "that guy" but i can't tell if you're roleplaying as piaget or are just passionate about psych. I do like the thought of how he would react to yt comment sections though

    • @piaget3021
      @piaget3021 6 месяцев назад +5

      @@dreadwolfrising I’m passionate and educated in psychology. I resent the many pseudo-science crap that infiltrated the field, or stayed in it after it has been debunked.

  • @alexiscc5950
    @alexiscc5950 6 месяцев назад +15

    I took part in a study on hypnosis and pain not so long ago! Suuper fascinating stuff! Conducted in a cognitive neuroscience research center in my city. The core of the study was a day in their lab, in a jacket sitting in a comfy armchair with electrodes on my head and a little elsewhere. I especially had an electrode on my leg that sent me painful electric shocks. While I was under hypnosis, they would send cycles of shocks of varying intensity (from imperceptible to almost unbearable) accompanied by different suggestion techniques to see I would feel the intensity shocks differently throughout my body and how the effect of hypnosis varied under different amount of pain.
    At the end, the hypnotherapist told me to get up and sit on a chair further back in the room at the snap of his fingers. But I stayed sitting in my chair because I did'nt feel like moving and it felt a bit awkward to just watch her snap her fingers and then stare at me as I just stayed silent in my big armchair. But after I'd put my clothes back on, as a researcher was escorting me out, she told me with a smile that the electric shocks were constant, that they'd never changed during the session.
    I was stunned. I went in there because I found the idea of being hypnotized fun, and I certainly felt a very pleasant state of flow while I was there. But I was still thinking reflexively I felt in control. I thought hypnosis had slightly changed my perception of pain, but I never expected that simply with a woman talking reassuringly to me, unbearable pain could become as subtle as a mosquito bite.
    Yes, it all happened in my head and I imagined it all because I wanted to please the researchers and because I wanted it to be real. But the effect on pain perception was wild and as real as a sensation can be. And I guess that's the point.

    • @caymansharp623
      @caymansharp623 6 месяцев назад +1

      so did it make any difference then?

  • @FlameGorgoneion
    @FlameGorgoneion 5 месяцев назад +5

    I use hypnosis within a non-state, neo-braidian theoretical framework - psychosocial that is - and in conjunction with CBT, that is Cognitive Behavioural Hypnotherapy (CBH) among other things. I found your video accurate and very informative and kudos to you for this scientific divulgation effort. I wish more of this quality content could be found in the field of psychology today! You actually inspired me to go and read Braid, to whom we owe the word "hypnosis", as well as "psychophysiology", I always wanted to read his diaries and collected works, but never got around to do so. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.

  • @doktormcnasty
    @doktormcnasty 6 месяцев назад +13

    Just before that Brilliant ad dropped I was 110% sure I was gonna get Rick Rolled.

    • @honkhonk5181
      @honkhonk5181 Месяц назад

      Or that zombie face thing with a loud scream that was used as jump scare a lot in the early 2000s

  • @Time_Is_Left
    @Time_Is_Left 6 месяцев назад +29

    Yes 👍 on the hysteria vid please

    • @MedlifeCrisis
      @MedlifeCrisis 6 месяцев назад +3

      +1

    • @gretchenbaker7435
      @gretchenbaker7435 6 месяцев назад

      All I know about hysteria is it was sometimes treated woth herion and masturbation which to me lots of things should be treated by!

  • @slmille4
    @slmille4 6 месяцев назад +11

    As far as the state vs non-state debate, you missed some important research "Cerebral activation during hypnotically induced and imagined pain". They found that participants were given the suggestion that, following a cue, a painful heat stimulus would be delivered to their right hand. In one, the heat stimulus was administered, creating an actual pain experience, whereas in the second the cue was not followed by the stimulus and acted as a suggestion to experience pain. In the third condition, the participants were told that there would be no pain stimulus following the cue but that they should “imagine the pain as clearly as possible.” Pain ratings taken after each trial demonstrated that the participants experienced pain in the first two conditions (physically induced and suggestion-induced pain). In addition, they confirmed that they imagined pain clearly in the third condition. The fMRI data showed activation of pain-related areas in the first two conditions but not in the imagined condition.

  • @unaphiliated5090
    @unaphiliated5090 6 месяцев назад +8

    When I was 13, I had a problem with sleeping so deeply I would sometimes wet the bed. My mother took me to the family doctor looking for a solution, and the doctor hypnotized me, which cured me of the problem. I didn’t realize until I was much older that I had been hypnotized, but eventually I became aware of the memory of the doctors visit. I’m 65 now and I remember it clearly. I haven’t wet the bed since that day.

    • @rdallas81
      @rdallas81 6 месяцев назад +2

      Sure.
      Maybe you got tired of passing your bed- most people do when they are 12 or 13.
      I used to dream about peeing and pee the bed.
      Now I get up.
      I remember that happening every once in a while- Between ages 8 and 10.

  • @eerietheghost8925
    @eerietheghost8925 4 месяца назад +5

    The deep dive on this is INSANE. Hypnosis has such a weird affect on the brain.
    Recently, I’ve been hearing about ayahuasca, ayahuasca retreats, and how they’re really popular for some reason. Can you please talk about it in a future video?

  • @MidnightChillsYT
    @MidnightChillsYT 6 месяцев назад +49

    I remember there was a hypnotipst during my college freshman year. I volunteer just to try it out.
    The hypnosis by no means worked, but i remember thinking id feel bad for just ruining the guys gig so i just went along with it. I always wondered about any time id see people "hypnotised" on tv or whatver if theyre doing the same thing lol

    • @98Zai
      @98Zai 6 месяцев назад +5

      Yeah I think in the rare cases where the whole thing wasn't an act, It would create such a socially awkward moment that you'd just go along with it. Though I doubt anyone with a large audience or a tv-camera would allow the chance of someone not playing along or worse, going crazy and blaming everything on the hypnotist.

    • @melusine826
      @melusine826 6 месяцев назад +3

      Ditto, my mum sent me to one as a kid and I just.... made shit up

    • @michaeljames5936
      @michaeljames5936 6 месяцев назад +1

      Yes. They are.

    • @michaeljames5936
      @michaeljames5936 6 месяцев назад

      They're very careful in their selection. Usually the first trick is asking for someone to demonstrate their suggestibility, by interlocking fingers, which they 'can't' take apart, then they gradually weed out about half or more, so only 'sure things' remain onstage.@@melusine826

    • @greywolf7577
      @greywolf7577 6 месяцев назад

      From what I've been told, many hypnotists will try to hypnotize several people at once. That way if someone isn't being hypnotized, they can send them back to their seat and try focusing on the other people.@@98Zai

  • @78deathface
    @78deathface 6 месяцев назад +76

    I got hypnotized once sort of, a guy on the street did this thing to me where he touched my arm and then made me hold something and give it back in these weird motions. It started with him asking me for a cigarette and ended with me handing him $30 and standing there for a minute wondering what had just happened. He robbed me in the strangest, yet non violent or threatening way. As it was happening I consciously knew I was being robbed, but I watched my hands open my wallet and hand him the money. It felt like a dream

    • @Roshkin
      @Roshkin 6 месяцев назад +14

      Like the Derren brown video where he did that?

    • @78deathface
      @78deathface 6 месяцев назад +12

      @@Roshkin yes! Pretty much exactly like that. It was so strange

    • @Roshkin
      @Roshkin 6 месяцев назад +6

      @@78deathface I honestly thought that he made up the story as a believable lie.

    • @Roshkin
      @Roshkin 6 месяцев назад +4

      @@78deathface Is there a name for this thing?

    • @katiebarber407
      @katiebarber407 6 месяцев назад +6

      ​@@RoshkinI think it's called gullibility

  • @rdizzy1
    @rdizzy1 6 месяцев назад +2

    You could easily make a modern study with a large amount of people, where you compare "sham" or "placebo" hypnosis to "real" hypnosis (whatever this even means). But they would not do this, because there would be no significant difference between the 2. ANY treatment that is relatively expensive and is based on placebo is inherently a scam, no way around it. (Because placebo is the baseline to see if a treatment has a real, significant effect, it needs to out perform placebo, not be placebo)

  • @angelikaskoroszyn8495
    @angelikaskoroszyn8495 6 месяцев назад +5

    My greatest gripe with hypnosis is that it's so incredibly easy to abuse. Human memories are easy to manipulate when you're 100% awake and conscious about what's happening to you. Hypnosis just makes the process that easier. Remember Satanic Panic? It was brought by fake memories "recovered" by a dude who would sleep with his "patient"
    All you have to do is asking leading questions. Instead of "did something happened that day" you ask "what happened to you that day" and brain starts generating a story. You can traumatize someone by creating fake trauma

    • @ZER0--
      @ZER0-- 6 месяцев назад +1

      I don't think it's as powerful as you think. And if you can have a false memory implanted by hypnosis, then can't that memory be uncovered as false under further hypnosis?

    • @angelikaskoroszyn8495
      @angelikaskoroszyn8495 6 месяцев назад +4

      @ZER0--
      How would you know it's a fake memory? Without a suspicion in the first place it would be incredibly difficult
      Imagine - someone comes to you with a traumatic memory they can't deal with. Would you assume it was made up or try helping them with your hypnosis?
      Fake memories feel like real memories - that's the issue. It doesn't matter what the subject of those memories is. Maybe it's death of your grandma, maybe previous lives, maybe Satanic abuse, maybe alien abduction. Many people with recovered "memories" are 100% sure that their often wacky memories are true

  • @susantaylor2937
    @susantaylor2937 6 месяцев назад +9

    I lost both my engagement ring and my wedding ring. I was so desperate I went to a hypnotist to see if he could help me remember what happened to them. He did help me remember where I last had them, but not to find them. Womp womp.

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade 6 месяцев назад +3

      That's not surprising, memory is rather tricky like that. It's relatively easy to corrupt the memory accidentally, or for the information to just not be in memory at all. For example you may have really had the rings at that location, but they could have been stolen at the time, or somebody may have taken them later or the location may have been completely wrong.
      Personally, I wouldn't recommend going any further than just hypnotizing so that the brain considers it safe to remember things, going much further runs risks in terms of contaminating the memory or implanting false ones as memories can be very fragile and just remembering them can alter them.

  • @YoungLakesMischa
    @YoungLakesMischa 6 месяцев назад +5

    I'm currently doing CBT with Hypnotherapy for personal stuff. I'm two months in, and it is working well for me. I love everything shared in this video. My therapist shared the issue with using hypnosis for smoking (not my issue).
    Totally agree that this is not for everyone, but I have tried just about everything else. My sessions are wonderful. Note that I have had meditation practices my whole life.
    To me, hypnosis is a guided state of meditation. I love it.
    Great video essay. Thank you.

  • @lisadoes
    @lisadoes 6 месяцев назад +12

    I paid good money for smoking cessation one on one hypnotherapy. It worked so well that I went back for weight loss. That didn’t work nearly as well.

    • @rdallas81
      @rdallas81 6 месяцев назад

      Because it takes EFFORT AND WORK.
      Effort and work and perseverance are real and have real long lasting results.

    • @lisadoes
      @lisadoes 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@rdallas81​​⁠ you mean like counting calories and going to the gym several times a week? Yes, I was doing those things. I was hoping hypnosis would help me to feel less hungry all the time.
      Thanks so much for your eye-opening advice.

    • @ashyasharris1
      @ashyasharris1 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@lisadoes part of the problem is that it becomes harder to lose weight once you quit smoking. 😂
      Apparently you did them in the wrong order. 😂

  • @BerryTheBnnuy
    @BerryTheBnnuy 6 месяцев назад +6

    I've dated a lot of people who fancy themselves expert hypnotists (I did not seek them out on that grounds, but I am in a subculture that a significant number of people in it are incidentally also interested in hypnosis) and played along with it. It never worked for me. The moment I gave myself permission to question whether the control was real or not it broke. Just instantly. I came to the conclusion that it's not that it only works on the weak minded like some people think, it's that it only works on people who unquestioningly believe it works.
    Now, years later, I find this video and find out about non-state theory and every conclusion I've drawn from personal experiences aligns with non-state theory of hypnosis.

    • @Stevebarker66
      @Stevebarker66 5 месяцев назад

      You're right - but not for the reasons you assume. It's effectively impossible to hypnotise someone who does not want to be hypnotised because hypnosis is a collaborative process.
      Hypnosis is no more than a state of focus & concentration where we suspend our disbelief and enter a world of believed-in imaginings.
      If you don't want to to that - or if you're too weak-minded to be able to that - then you won't be able to be hypnotised, no.
      I feel sorry for you, because life must suck without the naturally-occuring states of hypnosis that everyone else on the planet enjoys every day.

    • @BerryTheBnnuy
      @BerryTheBnnuy 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@Stevebarker66 Sounds like a load of bunk to me. Hypnosis is just roleplay, whether those involved are conscious of it or not. The moment you question it, it breaks.

    • @Stevebarker66
      @Stevebarker66 5 месяцев назад

      @@BerryTheBnnuy Of course hypnosis is roleplay - as is all therapy.
      But hypnosis requires focus, concentration, imagination & willpower to sustain, so I can see how some people would dismiss it as 'bunk'
      Whatever you do, please don't tell my thousands & thousands of clients who have changed their life through hypnosis.
      I'm sure they wouldn't want all their depression, anxiety, PTSD, phobias, linlmiting & negative beliefs, chronic pain and excess weight to come back.
      I also do a lot of work helping people overcome sexual dysfunction - just in case you're interested...😉

    • @BerryTheBnnuy
      @BerryTheBnnuy 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@Stevebarker66 When I say it's bunk, I mean the way it's described by most hypnotists is bull. It's like how "chiropractic adjustments" can have actual benefits, but that doesn't mean that "subluxations of the spine are the root cause of all illness". All evidence is that what chiropractors actually do is no better than a good massage from a licensed masseuse.
      What I'm saying is it has its uses, but that doesn't mean it's mystical, or that it can compel behavior that the subject doesn't want to be compelled, and it sure as hell isn't mind control like most "hypnotists" I run into pretend it is.

  • @camalldredge
    @camalldredge Месяц назад +3

    Excellent video! My entire career revolves around hypnosis research. I'm the "Alldredge, C. T." who wrote "Meta-analytic evidence on the efficacy of hypnosis for mental and somatic health issues: A 20-year perspective" included in your references list.
    Again, wonderful video. I'm going to keep it handy to refer to people (when meeting with new patients or conducting hypnosis trainings) because it's so well done.

    • @camalldredge
      @camalldredge Месяц назад +2

      Also, if you end up getting trained through the American Society of Clinical Hypnosis (ASCH) or the Society for Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis (SCEH), I'm sure I'll see you there!

  • @ChaoticNeutralMatt
    @ChaoticNeutralMatt 6 месяцев назад +6

    I like that we chalk things up to placebo like we have any idea what's really going on. But yeah, appreciate you sharing and diving into it

  • @ad0xa
    @ad0xa 6 месяцев назад +6

    I think hypnosis has to do with two things, how "good" we are at dreaming and how socially conscious we are. Have anyone researched if people who don't care about social standards are easier or harder to hypnotize? Simply put, I think if we care a lot about what others think we are easier to hypnotize.

  • @seadawg93
    @seadawg93 6 месяцев назад +5

    I was fully prepared to be super-irritated by this video, but this was great, very fair.
    I think non-state theory is definitely where it’s at, and that the experience of the classical “hypnotic trance” can be a byproduct of suggestion and expectation, but also not required.
    I’m glad you mentioned the ability to train receptivity to hypnosis as well, that is something really cool. In most hypnosis as I learned it, there was a conception that anyone could be hypnotized, but coming from a state-based theory it was more of the hypnotist being skillful in finding out how to do it, rather than explicitly training the client, which is so cool. I know people who have gone from almost zero hypnotizability to being highly hypnotizable.
    For an analysis of hypnosis and memory, Daniel Craig’s “Memory, Trauma, Treatment and the Law” goes VERY deep into the debate over recovered memories, how both sides of the debate generally make simplistic arguments for political reason, and looks at the science itself, and looks into both usefulness (or not) in therapy and factual reliability.
    Have to admit, I was surprised about smoking. I was definitely under the impression that it was helpful. That’s too bad.

  • @sheilalopez3983
    @sheilalopez3983 6 месяцев назад +8

    I got rid of a lot of childhood trauma with hypnotherapy. It helps, it works if you want it to, iIt is all up to you. How badly do you want it and are you really willing to give up the trauma by accepting the change. A lot of people don't want to, they fight it. You/they don't want to lose the sympathy, I have a sister like this she is the perennial victim. I didn't want sympathy or anyone's pity, i wanted the pain to stop. It depends on how much trauma you are willing to give up. The therapist only tells you what you ask her to say prior to the sessions, it is a list YOU give her/ him of what you want to change, remove or reprogram . If they give you a post hypnotic suggestion , it is in keeping with your wishes. You are in control, you don't lose your mind like they show on TV you are fully awake, but relaxed. Kind of like when you wake up and are in that "soft" phase half awake/half asleep, it's then that you yourself can reprogram your mind. Just be careful what you say, think this out during the previous day just before you go to sleep is best. What do I want to say, what do I want to change?
    You are as suggestible as you want to be.

  • @lostboytnt1
    @lostboytnt1 5 месяцев назад +3

    This reminds me of a survey result I came across once..
    When being surveyed, 100% of the participants answered 'I don't mind taking surveys', while a shocking 0% answered 'I don't like taking surveys'

  • @Our_Patterns
    @Our_Patterns 5 месяцев назад +2

    I really enjoy your content and find it quite informative. Not that you’re taking suggestions, but my only suggestion is to redo the video on psychodynamic therapy. I don’t think many contemporary psychodynamic psychotherapists consider themselves Adlerian, or associate what they do in therapy with a lot of Adlerian theory. I think, on average, psychodynamic therapy is guided by object relations theorists, such as Klein, Winnicott, and Kernberg. There are many self psychologists as well. Maybe read “That was then, This is now” by Jonathan Shedler for a view on the current state of the field.

  • @frogsinpants
    @frogsinpants 6 месяцев назад +14

    45:16 "Imagine yourself in a place of tranquility and calmness."
    Me: Imagining a walk in the forest.
    Background: Changes to fire.
    Me: ...

  • @berliozi
    @berliozi 6 месяцев назад +2

    Excellent video and solid presentation except... the music. Ugh, SO distracting. It would be interesting to see your take on cults and crowd control. Are you familiar with the book 'Psychology of Crowds' by Gustave Le Bon. It would be a good time in America's history to learn about brainwashing, how to avoid it and how to come back from it. Thank you.

  • @daintycaked
    @daintycaked 6 месяцев назад +8

    I learned that some therapists conflate the term hypnosis with guided meditation. It's kind of weird but.... some of them really do mean guided meditation. A therapist did it with me and I had the same thoughts as you. But again, it was just me sitting there counting the breaths with my eyes closed. So yeah, it depends on the context.

    • @tearsintherain6311
      @tearsintherain6311 6 месяцев назад +2

      All the methods described in this video are methods for meditation in yogic and Buddhist practices, even the staring at a candle or at a fixed point above the forehead, etc
      I found that interesting

    • @tearsintherain6311
      @tearsintherain6311 6 месяцев назад +2

      In Buddhism especially there’s devotional meditation, when you meditate to a Buddha statue it’s not about the statue or Buddha being magical it’s about concentrating deeply in the Buddha to acheive a specific state of consciousness, usually someone who respects the Buddha a lot can find it easy to focus on him rather than on another random unimportant object

    • @amazinggrapes3045
      @amazinggrapes3045 6 месяцев назад

      Well, what's the difference,? 🤷

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade 6 месяцев назад

      @@amazinggrapes3045 Usually the post hypnotic suggestions and having some sort of specific purpose to it. Typical meditation is for a more general mental wellbeing, whereas hypnosis is usually something that folks use for a more specific goal. Also, hypnosis can be done in ways that are decidedly not relaxing. For example, making a loud noise can put somebody in an appropriate frame of mind for hypnosis, albeit usually a very brief one.

  • @Mrch33ky
    @Mrch33ky 6 месяцев назад +10

    People, you go in and out of trance all day long: watching tv? you're in a trance, playing computer games? you're in a trance, driving your car? you're in a trance, staring into space disassociated? you're in a trance, concentrating on anything? you're in a trance. So trance states are normal and nothing to be afraid of. Hypnosis is ONE means to entering a trance state for a specific purpose. And if you don't want other people putting you into a materialist propaganda trance and programming you to desperately want things you don't need - TURN OFF THE TV.

  • @TravisCotter
    @TravisCotter 6 месяцев назад +2

    Hypnosis can be a dangerous thing. It can happen on a mass scale. If done right however it can be very helpful. The Xman

  • @steveclark2205
    @steveclark2205 6 месяцев назад +4

    A really good hypnotist will be able to tell by several cues given off by the subject whether they are highly prone to suggestions, symptoms that a person trying to fake being hypnotised will have no knowledge of, and therefore cannot fool them into ever being able to have the wool pulled over the hypnotists eyes, Null experiment, relies heavily on the skill set of the hypnotist and the high suggest ability of the subjects

  • @Tyler.O
    @Tyler.O 6 месяцев назад +3

    4:44 ...What kind of name is "Max Hell" for a PRIEST??

    • @annaa3772
      @annaa3772 Месяц назад +1

      German name meaning light/bright

  • @counterpoiseag6068
    @counterpoiseag6068 6 месяцев назад +4

    First video I’ve seen by NT and I must say it had me relaxed like an ASMR video. Like I was in a trance or something…

  • @gmw3083
    @gmw3083 6 месяцев назад +6

    Hysteria was one of the biggest pop metal albums of all time.

  • @apm77
    @apm77 6 месяцев назад +3

    44m "There is some research showing hypnotisability is associated with absorption, like someone's ability to become really engrossed in activities"
    This is key. A problem I have with the video is that it seems to define the phrase "altered state of consciousness" so narrowly as to disconnect it from what people generally mean by that phrase. I think it's a mistake to require an altered state of consciousness to be distinct and sharply delineated in order to qualify as such. We can get a better handle on the subject by examining how hypnosis relates to other states of consciousness that we experience in our everyday lives, of which absorption is an excellent example.

  • @PopescuAlexandruCristian
    @PopescuAlexandruCristian 5 месяцев назад +2

    Funny, I don't remember getting a brilliant subscription

  • @johannaverplank4858
    @johannaverplank4858 6 месяцев назад +6

    I would very much love to see a video about hysteria. It seems that historically (and to some extent today) any illness that wasn’t physically apparent or men didn’t directly experience was labeled “hysteria”.

    • @umi2751
      @umi2751 6 месяцев назад

      Men also has hysteria. It was like depression for Victorians. Sometimes some disorders become more common in populations

  • @pauline_f328
    @pauline_f328 6 месяцев назад +7

    OMG HOW DID I NOT SEE THE AD COMING YOU LITERALLY SAID BRILLIANT SEVERAL TIMES AND I DIDN'T CATCH ON JVKDJDHRKFJF
    More seriously - all this really just seems to confirm how I already felt about hypnotherapy. For context, I was sent to a hypnotherapist to fix my sleep (because it's better than actually trying to find the root issue, eh?). After the first session, she told my mom that I was very receptive to hypnosis.
    After the second session, she just looked confused.
    The first time, I had mobilized a huge amount of willpower to sit perfectly still. I had gone along with her suggestions and metaphors, and stepped outside very much intending to use the tool she had given me during the session to help me sleep.
    Next time I showed up, I hadn't used the tool once. It had completely slipped my mind - just like every. fucking. time. i did something like that - bc what she had suggested was something I had tried over and over again my whole life, and it had never worked a single time after I first established it. That second session, I sat down, and I was unable to mobilize as much effort to sit still, and couldn't concentrate one bit.
    Years later, I have realized I can use meditation to put myself in that 'state' on my own in fifteen minutes when it had taken her an hour to take me there. And turns out my sleep issues are mostly bedtime procrastination, and the fix so far seems to be to do more during the day so I don't feel like I've missed out on life when bedtime comes around. Wow. I felt very helped lol
    Also, meditation is deceptively easy for me. And trying to guide me through visualization just breaks me out of pretty much anything because it'll get me thinking stuff like _aw, why are we going into the cabin, I wanted to sit in the pine needles...why are we lying in a hammock when i'm used to a bed...why did you just describe the sea, when you said we were in nature i was picturing a forest..._ because I'm so used to visualizing things on my own for fun that unless you're one of my favorite writers, it feels like you're holding forcing me to walk with crutches when I walk fine on my own...
    Yeah, no. If it helps some people, that's good - but it's not for me. Also, I always reexamine everything after the fact - so expect anything you do to try to help me to be heavily scrutinized until I put it into the "does not ring true" box (or, if you're lucky, the "i'm not sure whether this rings true" box). I may go along with it in the moment, but you can be sure my skepticism will trigger after the fact and destroy anything you've built if the foundation isn't solid enough 😬
    Edit: I do want to reiterate that if it works for a person, that's good. I just. I think I'm mostly just salty that I had to figure out all the solutions with only the internet and myself as resources because nobody seemed to be able to understand what the problem was. The solutions that I was offered were so off that I can't help but be reticent to get a therapist now - because by the time I learned about CBT, I was basically already doing it, and by the time I was shown talk therapy, I already journaled, and by the time I'll be diagnosed with OCD, I'll already have found ways to stop my repetitive behaviours from physically wounding me, and by the time I'll be diagnosed with autism, I'll have already made friends, and by the time I'll be diagnosed with ADHD, who knows, I might even no longer be late to places. I hate that I had to figure out my path on my own for all this time. I hate that everything got just got blamed on giftedness or had people just shrugging and trying different methods like shots in the dark. It was exhausting. And turns out, after all this time, most of the problems have fixed themselves - but not by any internal change of mine, but by me changing my environment, and my environment changing on its own.
    Thanks for the help, guys. Much appreciated. Amd no thank you to hypnotherapy from now on, I can do this shit on my own, thanks.
    (Don't mind me I'm just salty)

    • @milaberdenisvanberlekom4615
      @milaberdenisvanberlekom4615 6 месяцев назад +2

      Very AUDHD/OCD coded

    • @pauline_f328
      @pauline_f328 6 месяцев назад

      @@milaberdenisvanberlekom4615 Nvjfkdlnvfjk I mean there's a reason I think I have those lol. Gonna go see a therapist soon (gonna try to find one that's specialized in this stuff), but I'm still reeling from finally finding a therapist that I vibed with only for her to get bad health issues and have to stop (hopefully she's okay...)

  • @Jablicek
    @Jablicek 6 месяцев назад +4

    I realised it was an ad read fairly early on, but the first 15 seconds were actually quite good! Excellent mini-relaxation, and for that it was worth watching.

  • @solarnaut
    @solarnaut 6 месяцев назад +2

    " ALL HYPNOSIS IS SELF HYPNOSIS " it has been claimed. The human brain continues to be the most complex thing of which we are conscious in the entire universe. That our pale blue dot should give rise to the opportunity for you and me to experience our nanoseconds of consciousness is mind-blowing.

  • @aisle_of_view
    @aisle_of_view 6 месяцев назад +2

    Read up on Dr Milton Erickson.

  • @facepalmjesus1608
    @facepalmjesus1608 3 месяца назад +1

    as a former professional mentalist back in 2010 i ve practised hypnosis a bit. I was sceptical too. Once i ve practised and performed some hypnosis routines i realised that there are two schools of hypnosis.
    The pseudo hypnosis which gives the illusion of a real hypnosis and the medical hypnosis which is nothing more than a relaxed state of mind similar to meditation which is legit.
    The pseudo hypnosis is nothing more οf self suggestion. A play between the hypnotist and the participant. The hypnotist gives the rules of the game and the participant folows the rules giving the illusion to the participant and the audience that everyone is experiencing an effect of hypnosis.

  • @Ruprict2001
    @Ruprict2001 6 месяцев назад +1

    Although this video is super interesting, you talk so slowly I can't tell if you're about to fall asleep or keep talking. 😂 It's hard to follow cause you're speaking so incredibly slow 🐌 I get the need to speak clearly and not too fast, but c'mon! I put it on 1.5 speed when listening to your videos. Are you TRYING to hypnotize us??

  • @stauffap
    @stauffap 6 месяцев назад +1

    Sounds pretty underwhelming. Like when you learn more about placebo effects and the sloppy research that has been done there.
    Great video though! I always wondered about the scientific legitimacy of Hypnosis - especially stage hypnosis seemed odd to me. But apparently that's not possible with people, who really don't want to be hypnotised. So basically they just take people, who want to be hypnotised in order to not have people, who won't play along, i assume.

  • @LVNIVK3V
    @LVNIVK3V 6 месяцев назад +1

    let's make it clear: i believe in hypnosis
    but i would never get hypnotized because i am VERY easily influenced even when fully awake, sober and feeling good, and i have no trust in people who made controlling people their jobs. i mean i think that might just be because of my tourettes and my very high impulsivity lmao
    ps: idgaf if it's not an actual altered state of mind, if it works it works and if it can help people it should be used

  • @aracnadei13
    @aracnadei13 5 месяцев назад +1

    The part you mention where a person is told they're deaf, then asked if they can hear and they reply 'no' reminds me very much of callosal syndrome. It's fascinating to think how we can hold differing and sometimes conflicting realities within different parts of our brain simultaneously.

  • @hadeseye2297
    @hadeseye2297 6 месяцев назад +1

    The lack of magnesium is good if you want to feel blue. ;)
    PS. Today I have learned that patient is plural, so I should use THEY for a single person.

  • @daviationsss
    @daviationsss 5 месяцев назад +1

    I'd suggest looking further into memory loss, romcoa, disordered dissociation, trauma.
    I'll be honest, your video sounds biased as it stands.

  • @AsIfInteractive
    @AsIfInteractive 6 месяцев назад +1

    Enjoyable presentation. But you haven't completed a study of hypnosis until you've dived into Milton Erickson. :-)

  • @louisalinton
    @louisalinton 6 месяцев назад +1

    Nice llittle entry level video into this subject, you did well, and a healthy dose of skeptisim (critical thinking) is always "de rigueur" I totally agree. However, the more you delve into the mysteries of the mind/body equation, the more there is still to discover it seems. Shoud you decide to do a part two, may I suggest you talk about Milton H. Erickson. I followed his example in my early days as a therapist before moving on to another ancient technique called Directed Waking Dreams. Robert Dessoille and Henri Corbin are names to look up in that field.

  • @steveclark2205
    @steveclark2205 6 месяцев назад +1

    You did semi decent research for the RUclips video, but don't Dunning Kruger yourself into believing your expert in hypnosis 😅

  • @dandan1812
    @dandan1812 6 месяцев назад +1

    What is that music you used for the hypnotic part of the video? I find it very relaxing and much better than other stuff I found online for sleep.

  • @joshuaphillips755
    @joshuaphillips755 6 месяцев назад +1

    So can animals be hypnotized? If not, that makes us humans kind of dumb. Just throwing that out there.

  • @MsAnneThrope
    @MsAnneThrope 6 месяцев назад +3

    Yes, “hysteria” would make a good topic for a deep dive. It was definitely a diagnosis, and it is the root of the hysterectomy. As the good ole uterus, and plain ole sexism, was often blamed for many of women’s health issues.

  • @Saphia_
    @Saphia_ 6 месяцев назад +3

    It might've been deceptive but I really needed to visualize myself in that situation today. I'm taking your deception as a sign of something good to come my way.

  • @glalza
    @glalza 6 месяцев назад +1

    I find it strange that you would bother to do a video on something that you have never personally experienced.

  • @peterorthmann5612
    @peterorthmann5612 6 месяцев назад +1

    I am NOT hypontizable. If nothing else I don't have a great deal of trust in people.

  • @jackkelly1286
    @jackkelly1286 6 месяцев назад +1

    All that just to promote your training channel and to direct it at highly suggestible victims.

  • @poughkeepsieblue
    @poughkeepsieblue 6 месяцев назад +1

    Flashing pictures on my screen, shown too quickly to be seen, doesnt register in the conscious mind, propaganda of another kind.

  • @brianjones3191
    @brianjones3191 6 месяцев назад +1

    I hypnotised myself four times-from infancy through to late adolescence. The first time I decided to fail in everything so as not to be a threat to my father (after seeing his fear of me on his face). The second catastrophe was when I feared mum was going to bash me when I felt intense jealousy of my brother, but instead of being honest, I hid it and became outwardly the good older brother.
    I became a robot, but aware that I would awaken in ten or so years hence. Unfortunately, I didn’t, because dad left mum, which set me off on my next disastrous self-hypnotic state.
    I have been trapped ever since.
    I won’t bore you all with further details.
    The mind is both incredibly powerful and pathetically weak.
    Parenting is too important to be allowed to be practiced by immature people.
    I am not unique-millions, perhaps billions of us are destroyed because of ill-prepared, emotionally immature parents.

  • @Aogami20
    @Aogami20 6 месяцев назад +3

    Mesmer's story sounds suspiciously similar to the founder of Christian Science Mary Baker Eddy, and L. Ron Hubbard's claims about Scientology. How they all had the same idea and kept rebranding it over and over until it took. And it was all centered around a magical undefined force that they alone seemed able to wield.

    • @burgercide
      @burgercide 6 месяцев назад

      Mesmer made use of and popularized hypnotic techniques. He was completely wrong about how and why they worked. it's very similar to humanities changing understanding of the nature of fire. We could use it and control it long before science discovered that it was a chemical reaction and not a supernatural spirit or an element in and of itself.

  • @tobiramatime
    @tobiramatime 6 месяцев назад +4

    This was so interesting! I would also love a video on hysteria. Listening to you is so relaxing, you could talk about anything and you would have my full attention. Great pacing of the video, love the "soft" but effective editing style too

  • @ionvancleave9116
    @ionvancleave9116 6 месяцев назад +1

    A patient was allowed to relax and felt better suddenly, huh... weird

  • @sewmicah
    @sewmicah 6 месяцев назад +3

    This is the first video I’ve ever seen from you/this channel, and when you said “until next time, I’m Micah-“ I went: “what!? No! I’m Micah! What kind of hypnosis did you do on me to get my name!?”😂
    In all seriousness though, this was so well put together! I’m definitely going to have to subscribe if all your videos are this well done!!!💛

  • @ZayneAngellic
    @ZayneAngellic 6 месяцев назад +1

    A hysteria video would be hysterical!😅😂🤣😂😅

  • @lesh4357
    @lesh4357 6 месяцев назад +1

    I became interested in this many years ago after meeting someone who was about to have root canal treatment on one side and a tooth extraction on the other. He had problems with anaesthetics so could not use them.
    So is hypnosis real, well if you can have that done and still comunicate with the dentist during the procedures then YES.
    State or non-state - I think state. I used hypnosis a lot decades ago and my experiences felt like a different state.
    You talked about non-state being perhaps some sort of performance with the hypnotist. Maybe wanting to please, seem normal within the context of what was happening, even subconsciously. At least a conversation / interaction between two people.
    What you didn't seem to cover was AUTO (self) HYPNOSIS. How does that fit in with everything you covered (perhaps another video).
    This is what I used to do (can't do it now, shame) and is why I think it is a different state. I used to feel everything disappear. It is the most relaxed anyone will ever be, more so than sleep for instance. As I became good at it, I would start, and then feel my body "disappear" from my feet to my head. Then all my surroundings. What people refer to as the third eye is where my mind (existance in fact) seemed to be.
    (People can experience the third eye thing - location wise in an awake state just by closing their eyes concentrating on inches in front and about an inch or so above the spot between their eyes).
    Once I was in that state, I would use it for my exam revisions etc. My educational perfomance improved dramatically after I started using hypnosis.
    I think the 'state' is a more extreme version of what everyone has experienced at some time.
    Highly focused mental concentration, becoming less aware of your surroundings.
    Have you every been so engrossed in a book that you did not hear a phone ring, or someone shouting you for instance.
    A problem with state / non-state is how do you define state in the first place ?

    • @toby9999
      @toby9999 6 месяцев назад

      I'm sceptical, but hypnosis has been recommended for me by a professional health provider (and a very good one at that) for stress reduction during dental procedures. I don't believe it will work and I don't want to spend the money... but if it would work, that could save my teeth. It's a dilemma.

  • @Berend-ov8of
    @Berend-ov8of 6 месяцев назад +1

    You lost me with the light. A state of mind being pretty much like dark matter, I don't think it really matters if hypnosis alters it or not. I learned to control my blood circulation through hypnosis, but as a way to stop smoking it was just a waste of money and time (he said as he lit another one). Here's what I think. Nothing scientific, just my own thoughts.
    I don't just think the human brain is like a quantum computer, I think it actually is one. The reason for that being the vast volume of information it can hold on to, in relation to the relatively low 'pixel' rate of the molecules in it, meaning remembering must happen on a smaller i.e. submolecular level, which is the realm of quantum mechanics. Memory isn't as much stored in the brain as it is dynamically maintained as a variety of quantum probabilities, meaning nothing we know has a perceived status of absolute truth. Not even the fact that we can wonder if we do know anything.
    Hypnosis either does or does not influence the probability of these states. What matters is not individual susceptability, but simply whether or not a person is 'plugged in' to it, since stricktly speaking every form of experience is a process quite similar to hypnosis. The experiences I personally have with hypnosis like influences that blew me away started when I learned how to directly influence my own blood flow. Up until then I had no idea that was even possible and most people I know now still can't do it. It impresses nurses when they want my blood, which is fun.
    On another occasion my eyesight improved so massively I could see detail in a way I haven't seen before or unfortunately since. This made me understand that the flaws I normally have in eyesight, have nothing to do with any physical eye damage. The most devastating thing I ever encountered was dynamic absorbtion of someone elses opinion. Having a second opinion about literally everything you think as you think it, continuously running in your head besides your own thoughts is,... very hard to come to peace with. To the level that I was literally banging my head in the wall to try to get rid of it. It lasted for roughly a week.
    Other experiences were self inflicted, which can be equally weird. One episode that lasted nine days had me spontaneously talking at the base tone of my vocal cords, which felt like talking out of my stomach. It sounded a bit like Morgan Freeman, but then one level crisper and deeper. I am a bass as it is, so that was funny. That episode also confronted me with the difference between watching, looking at something, seeing something and noticing something. Watching while primarily noticing any similarities within view and the numbers in which they are presented reveals an entirely different reality, but without changing the picture. Seeing things like the flow of people in a city, or the dance of the locus of control in a conversation with multiple people. These are things you don't notice when your attention is flying all over the place as it usually is. It left me with some very helpfull abilities.

  • @Didgeridoovibes
    @Didgeridoovibes 6 месяцев назад +1

    Fun, never thought about where the term "mesmerized" might come from - Thanks for enabling me to learn another interesting tidbit among a lot of other useful and entertaining information :)

  • @phantomkate6
    @phantomkate6 6 месяцев назад +3

    I was curious about hypnosis a couple of years ago and found a local "accredited" practitioner. He wanted $600 up front for three sessions and I would have had to commit to the whole package before the first meeting.
    Having watched this, I'm rethinking whether hypnosis is quackery. I still think that guy was a quack, though.

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade 6 месяцев назад

      I'm a fairly skilled, and certified, hypnotist and that is a large part of why I'm not a practicing hypnotist. The money aspect of it is really hard to get right because you don't always know how much of an impact you're going to have. It can be rather hard at times to even know conclusively if it worked at all.
      I've been able to do a lot of really interesting stuff on myself, but I've got issues with how payments are charged just because of how unpredictable the outcomes can be. Some folks, despite seemingly being excellent candidates, might not see any tangible results, or the results may come much later on.
      The really crazy thing is that I can write my own script while putting myself in a hypnotic trance. For a lot of people, you'd likely be better off just paying to learn how to hypnotize yourself. It's far easier to justify paying for that than for being hypnotized to for some effect that might not actually pan out.

  • @DavidKutzler
    @DavidKutzler 6 месяцев назад +9

    I once "accidentally" hypnotized a patient. I'm a retired certified nurse-midwife and have delivered somewhere north of 3,600 babies. I studied hypnosis as a possible adjunct to "natural" childbirth techniques. I didn't formally induce hypnosis in labor, but I did incorporate many of the techniques of hypnosis as I coached laboring women to help them to remain calm and relax.
    Some years ago, I was seeing a woman for a new OB history and examination. She had never had a Pap Smear before and was very fearful since her sisters, "told me how much it would hurt." While I was preparing my equipment for the examination, I began talking to her in a soothing, sing-song voice, suggesting a deep sense of calm and relaxation. When I looked at her again, I noted that her eyes were half-closed and she was exhibiting blepharospasm, a twitching of the eyelids that is a sign of entering a hypnotic state. I realized that she was one of those 10-15% of people who are highly hypnotizable. I deepened her trance and proceeded with the examination. The exam went smoothly, and when finished, I brought her out of the trance while suggesting that she would feel rested and relaxed. She seemed a little confused and asked, "Did you do a Pap Smear?" I assured her that I had. She said, "I'm going to have a talk with my sisters."
    On leaving the exam room, my nurse caught my arm and said, "What did you do to her?" I said, "You were there, I just talked to her."

    • @bricecook1680
      @bricecook1680 4 месяца назад +1

      Yes what did you do to her.... fear of the unknown... people have many different thoughts of hypnosis... it's a tool no different than a hammer is a can be used for good to build or destroy....
      I have 40 years experience as a hypnotist still learning new uses for it as the imagination is the only limitation....

  • @amypedcal4147
    @amypedcal4147 6 месяцев назад +2

    Heck yeah, I'd love to see a video on hysteria! Old beliefs about it were wild. "Can't have those wombs wandering around, making the ladies go crazy!"

  • @rodriguezelfeliz4623
    @rodriguezelfeliz4623 6 месяцев назад +18

    Damn, you got me with the sponsorship

    • @ramzikawa734
      @ramzikawa734 6 месяцев назад +3

      I was like listening to the vid in the background while and heard he was doing a hypnosis thing so went back and started that section from the beginning. Was very much trying to play along and go with it and picture all the ideas he was talking about and letting myself go. Then he drops the brilliant line and it’s like 🙄 but also 🤣

  • @lectrikdog
    @lectrikdog 6 месяцев назад +1

    all hypnosis is self-hypnosis. may sound odd, but true.

  • @fakkelplemp
    @fakkelplemp 6 месяцев назад +1

    yes a video about hysteria would be interesting

  • @louisesumrell6331
    @louisesumrell6331 6 месяцев назад +1

    Merely meditation, as in Zen Buddhism.

  • @capnmnemo
    @capnmnemo 6 месяцев назад +1

    I recommend the excellent book
    "A Skeptic's Guide to Hypnosis" by Brad Default.

  • @Kempy13
    @Kempy13 6 месяцев назад +2

    okay this is going to be a longer comment, sorry in advance. i tried to find a RUclips video of this, but no luck. when i was younger, before RUclips was really big, somebody offered to hypnotize me at a party. yeah sure, why not? so they disappeared for a moment and came back with a dinner plate and set it down in front of me. okay, that's kind of weird, i thought, but whatever. they told me to close my eyes and listen to the sound of their voice. they tell me to feel the shape and texture of the plate. feel every surface of the plate. okay that makes a little sense now, i guess. now feel the shape and texture of your face. okay, so it's shape and texture hypnotism, of course. then i hear some chuckling and so i open my eyes. they had taken a candle and held it to the bottom of the dinner plate so it was covered with soot, which i then touched and subsequently transferred onto my face. i think it is a great prank. nobody can get hurt, and it's easy enough to clean off. but it did make one girl cry when i "hypnotized" her, so , use your best judgement.

  • @louisesumrell6331
    @louisesumrell6331 6 месяцев назад +2

    The mind and body are one. They are, obviously, physically connected. Psychosomatic effects are real, physical therapy, when the patient truly believes. If the patient doesn't believe, then the physical effects don't happen.

  • @cjstone8876
    @cjstone8876 6 месяцев назад +1

    Just read Andre Weitzenhoffer's THE PRACTICE OF HYPNOTISM. Be sure to get the revised version published in 2000. It's literally 50 years after the first version (1950), and he's pretty bitter that no one has gotten any further about what hypnotism "is".
    Also, curses on Stanford for creating a reverse standard: somehow, folks who can ignore distractions and follow the hypnotic suggestions are "suggestible". Seems more like they have a lot of self-discipline.

  • @greedtheron8362
    @greedtheron8362 6 месяцев назад +2

    James Braid is great. Actually doing science when everyone else is doing some wacked out sideshow BS.

  • @samuelmiensinompe4902
    @samuelmiensinompe4902 6 месяцев назад +2

    I believe we have instinctive beliefs which can control our actions just like hypnosis. Take a small doll, for example: you may tell a person who is superstitious that by holding a doll for 7 minutes he or she will have good luck for a whole week. If that person believes in such, the brain will think of scenarios to make it a good week. However, if you take the same doll and give it to another person and tell that person that that doll will give him or her bad luck if hold for 7 seconds, their mind will think of ways to make that week a horrible week.
    The brain is a very sensitive organ, and the worst par about it, it was not meant to see reality, only the perspective of such. It was built that way by natural selection because it is the best manner in which such organ can protect the body form danger.

  • @Brendawallingbear
    @Brendawallingbear 6 месяцев назад +8

    Hypnosis was used on me and my brother when we were young children and the hypnotist did tell us to forget certain things, and it took us about 5 years to regain our memories of it and regain control of our own minds. When our parents found out, they called the hypnotist to return because they'd used the hypnotist to keep us under control and from exposing their crimes. We both refused to go under hypnosis then (we were 8 and 9 years old) so he arranged with our parents to return at 3:45am and sit me up in bed and hypnotize me while I was in a more suggestible half asleep state of mind, then he went to my brother's house and did the same. Although I have been gradually breaking that up, I still have ongoing lasting effects on my life decades later.
    I'm really angry about it because I didn't want that. It's like mind-rape or -rape. Authority had a lot to do with it, especially when we were 3 and 4 years old. We stood up to the authority when we were 8 and 9 years old and refused to be hypnotized. However, when he was telling my parents that he would come over at 3:45am, he mentioned something about rem sleep and brain waves (theta? gamma?)
    This scientific video is interesting. Something did happen to my brother and I.
    It had started out with Mom asking for hypnosis to help her quit smoking/ cussing and dealing with stress. My brother acted out the post hypnotic suggestion that was given to mom, so she had the hypnotist return to hypnotize him and undo that. Meanwhile I was also watching nearby and I may have also been accidentally hypnotized at the same time. They said that we were very suggestible.
    At the ages of 3 and 4, we were learning about life and our brains were like sponges so of course we were suggestible.

  • @maddie4w
    @maddie4w 6 месяцев назад +2

    If you made a video on Hysteria I would click on it so fast

  • @labrinth999
    @labrinth999 6 месяцев назад +3

    Oh my god... 'Mesmer 'must be where we get the word "mesmerize" lol

    • @labrinth999
      @labrinth999 6 месяцев назад +2

      Nvm you mention it later lol

    • @labrinth999
      @labrinth999 6 месяцев назад

      Nvm you mention it later lol

  • @snowrosehypnosis
    @snowrosehypnosis 6 месяцев назад +6

    This is an excellent video that does describe most of what I do as a hypnotherapist.
    But our field has advanced a LOT since the days of Freud and Mesmer.
    Today I can walk you through the origin event that caused something like a phobia and defuse it at its source. Most clients walk away wondering why they ever had such a silly reaction in the first place! The power of the mind is truly amazing, and yes, hypnosis definitely works. 🌹

    • @johannesstephanusroos4969
      @johannesstephanusroos4969 6 месяцев назад

      It's never worked on me, do you think it's because I'm afraid that false information or memories will be implanted on me? I've heard people say it happened, and some say it's not possible

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade 6 месяцев назад

      @@johannesstephanusroos4969 I'm also a certified, albeit not practicing, hypnotherapist and I wouldn't personally go back to memories. Memories, even under the best of circumstances, are rather fragile, just remembering things naturally can corrupt or change them.
      Fear definitely does make it hard to hypnotize people, that's one of the reasons why relaxation is often times a part of the induction. When I personally work on things like that on myself, I never bother to go into the past because my brain is already a mess with a great deal of very weak memories that are easily corrupted. I'd be more likely to go for a more present minded I have some reason to not fear whatever it is. Since the past is in the past, it's likely enough just to give somebody some present day self efficacy and call it good. The past is the past, if the client decides that their ability to handle it now would have applied in the past, that's a different matter.

    • @snowrosehypnosis
      @snowrosehypnosis 6 месяцев назад

      @@johannesstephanusroos4969 Yes, that would do it. The state of mind that hypnosis exploits is something everybody goes into several times a day naturally. So it's not that you "can't" be hypnotised, but that you refuse to participate with the hypnotist. That's why for hypnotherapy it's important to find someone you can feel comfortable working with. Someone you can trust.
      Your brain makes false memories all the time anyway, so why not make some that will make you feel happier and healthier? 😉

  • @picahudsoniaunflocked5426
    @picahudsoniaunflocked5426 6 месяцев назад +3

    That was the first time I heard hypnotism doesn't work for smoking cessation. My Mom's dying of COPD, from lifelong smoking addiction. She finally quit after a hospital stay forced her thru withdrawal & for the first time she didn't just re-start. But she quit long after the diagnosis + after being on oxygen. I remember her paying so much money for smoking cessation programs while I was growing up, including multiple hypnosis efforts. We didn't have a lot of money & I remember a lot of fights & tears over her smoking. She had so much shame about all the times she'd quit, secretly go back to it, get found out, be apologetic for a minute then brazenly chain smoking again, the cycle over + over.
    It's infuriating to me the tobacco companies have never been forced to deal with the human devastation (as well as other ones eg environment) despite it being legally proven over & over again they knew what they were doing & who they were doing it to. Yet individual addicts still bear the most cost, the most shame, the most harm.
    Don't even get me started on the Sacklers. The shame is so misplaced when it's on the addict & not on the profiteers of despair.

    • @jpt3640
      @jpt3640 6 месяцев назад

      Wow. Didn't know that smokers go through similar hell as drinkers. I am sorry about your family's suffering.
      I will continue searching for a "way out" for my father... to release him from his metaphoric pain

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade 6 месяцев назад

      Speaking as a recovered alcoholic, drug addiction is rarely about the actual substance. I'm only an alcoholic because that's what I had the easiest access to, in a moment of clairty a few months after I stopped drinking, I realized that anything to take the edge off would have done, I was just lucky that it wasn't something with prison time attached.
      I don't know that hypnosis won't work for smoking, but there are usually different routes you can take with hypnosis to achieve an intended goal, sometimes they all work and sometimes none of them work for a client or any client. In cases like your mother, I'd probably want to know what exactly it was that she was getting out of it, because repeatedly quitting smoking, even for a few days, does reduce the amount of smoking. It's not as good as quitting, but it's also a step towards quitting.

  • @gabbyrodriguez5895
    @gabbyrodriguez5895 6 месяцев назад +3

    That hypnotism to ad gave me whiplash 😂😂

  • @-iIIiiiiiIiiiiIIIiiIi-
    @-iIIiiiiiIiiiiIIIiiIi- 6 месяцев назад +2

    TL:DW: "Why am I missing $20 dollars from my wallet? And WHY does my ass hurt?"

  • @sifridbassoon
    @sifridbassoon 6 месяцев назад +1

    the picture at 4:17 looks like Louis XVI (pre guillotine, of course)

    • @neurotransmissions
      @neurotransmissions  6 месяцев назад +2

      You’re right, a total mistake on my end. Whoops!

  • @gabri41200
    @gabri41200 6 месяцев назад +2

    I tried to get hypnosed many times but it simply doesn't work on me

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade 6 месяцев назад

      That's certainly possible, but that's more common in people with very low intelligence, more likely, you're either fighting it, don't believe in it or they're using the wrong induction. If you ever get distracted and do stupid things, you're probably not immune to hypnosis.