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The History Of Hypnosis
Group Hypnosis began with ancient civilizations.
Many group rituals, such as mass chanting and
meditation to a steady drum beat were parts of
religious ceremonies. There was healing of the
mind before any medical practice.
The term Hypnosis comes from the Greek 'ypnos'
which means sleep because of the Trance State.
However Hypnosis is not sleep because the
subject stays alert, can talk and move, and the
brain waves differ.
The first type of hypnosis to be accepted and
experimented with was animal hypnosis. In the
1600's, people calmed chickens hypnotically by
various means, such as balancing wood shavings
on their beaks or tying their heads to the
ground and drawing a line with chalk in front of
their beaks. In France, farmers learned to
hypnotize hens to sit on eggs not their own. In
the mid 1800's in Germany, traveling shows went
from town to town with birds, rabbits, frogs,
salamanders and others. In Manchester, a famed
event was LaFountaine hypnotizing a lion. In the
late 1800's, Hungarian hypnotist, Volgyesi
hypnotized all the animals at the Budapest zoo.
Scientists and biologists such as Preyer,
Verworn and Emile Mesmet studied animal reflexes
(like paralysis from fear) that might cause such
phenomena.
B. Danilewsky (from the famed Salpetriere)
experimented with animal hypnosis and studied
its physiological workings in animals. In 1904,
after winning the Nobel Peace Prize, Ivan
Petrovitch Pavlov, a Russian physiologist, found
that dogs, if given a signal before food, would,
after a time, salivate when given the signal
without food. This was related to the
conditioning of human behavior. Because much
experience pertained to conditioning and
reconditioning reflexes and patterns of
behavior, Pavlov became interested in hypnosis,
which he thought induced states similar to his
experiments.
Dr. Franz Anton Mesmer started the concept of
magnetism, a theory of a universal fluid present
in everything with uniform characteristic at all
levels of creation with m magnetic vibrations.
He cured a young girl of convulsions by placing
magnets on her thighs and stomach. Then began
relying on the laying on of his hands to use his
own fluid in healing. He turned his home in
Vienna into a clinic. His reputation increased;
the fashionable set of Swabia and Switzerland
consulted him. After curing the director of the
Munich Academy of Sciences, he was unanimously
elected a member of the Bavarian Academy.
He restored the sight of a young famous, female
musician, Mille Paradies, who had gone blind at
age 4 when she heard a noise at her bedroom
door. When her parents came to take her home,
she didn't want to leave. Her mother slapped
her, Mesmer intervened, so her father drew a
sword. Mesmer did likewise and forced him back.
The mother fainted and the girl (who had gone
blind again) remained with Mesmer. This caused a
tremendous scandal.
So in 1778 he went to Paris. The king arranged
for French Academy of Sciences members to
witness Mesmer's experiments. They said cures
were due to imagination and therefore not valid.
They said medicine already had many cures for
the diseases magnetism cured.
Mesmer would treat 30 patients in a vat filled
with two or three layers of bottles of
magnetized water at the bottom. The neck of each
bottle pointed to the center and bent iron rods
were inserted into perforations in the lid
covering the entire container so that they could
be applied to the affected body par. A rope was
used for this also. Patients were placed face to
face whenever possible, as close as possible to
each other touching thighs, knees and feet as
much as possible so that the magnetic fluid
could continually circulate. Singing and
harmonicas accompanied this. Often patients
would cough, spit, feel heat or pain, or be
rocked by convulsions lasting five hours (these
were carried into adjoining room padded on all
sides). Mesmer wore a lilac silk coat and
carried a long iron wand with which he would
touch the patient's bodies. He also magnetized
then with his eyes, the laying on of his hands,
or putting his fingers into a pyramid shape
passing his hands, lightly all over patient's
body beginning with the head. He would continue
this until the patient was saturated with
healing fluid and swooned from pain or pleasure.
Mesmer published a treatise in 1779 trying to
impress the Academy doctors. He became such a
success with his patients he had to take on
assistant magnetizers. He opened a clinic at
Creteil, then bought Hotel Bullion to set up
four tubs. He also magnetized a tree at the end
of the street rue Bondy. Thousands attached
themselves to it with a rope attempting cures.
Mesmer cured many learned people who published
accounts of their cures. He became wealthy and
lived elegantly. He demands a castle and got it.
However he never got the sanction of the medical
body. The Faculty of Medicine ordered Dr.
Charles Desion to renounce magnetism or be
struck from the roll of doctors. Deslon asked
the king to appoint a commission to rule on the
effectiveness of magnetism. Two commissions
concluded an unqualified condemnation of
magnetism.
Because of this, and a failure with Prince Henry
of Prussia Mesmer doubted whether he still had
his magnetic power. He retreated to live in the
forest by a lake. He was imprisoned in Vienna
for some political comments. In 1802, France
granted him a pension. The King of Prussia
invited him to teach animal magnetism in Berlin,
but he declined. He stayed in France, caring for
the poor, until his death in 1815. Although
magnetism was condemned by the medical body. It
continued to flourish with research, studies and
demonstration. Three brothers, disciples of
Mesmer's secret society.
The Society of Harony' (a philanthropic
organization), practiced magnetism. One of them
organized a tub and offered 600 pounds to anyone
who could prove cures were not genuine. One
patient, Victor, would fall into a trance and
speak with incredible ease and diagnostic
accuracy about the course of his own and others;
illnesses, could read thoughts and carry out
orders easily. He could not remember anything
when awakened from trance. This was defined as
(magnetic) somnambulism.
In 1825, Dr. P. Foissac invited the Academy of
Medicine to examine his somnambulists whom he
declared capable of diagnosing diseases, with
inspiration bordering on the genius of
Hypocrites. Conclusions of Academy, effects of
magnetism were due to boredom, monotony and
imagination (except for second sight), but
occasionally magnetism alone produced results.
In 1837, Dr. Bema proposed to demonstrate to the
Academy magnetized clairvoyance. His claims were
rejected and magnetism denied. The Academy
offered 3000 francs to anyone who could read in
the dark without using his eyes. No one could.
Berna proposed to an Englishman, dr. John
Elliatson, chairman of the Royal Medical and
Surgery Society, teacher at the University of
London, and one of the founders of its hospital,
studied magnetism's surgical use and its action
on the nervous system. He performed major
surgical operations with patients under hypnosis
including amputations of limbs. The University
forbade this, so he resigned. Public opinion,
his results, and many doctors were behind him,
however, and in 1846 he started a "mesmeric
Hospital." Other mesmeric hospitals were then
founded. (Many years later, he suddenly declared
the hypnotic techniques could no longer
alleviate pain.)
In 1845, a Scottish doctor, James Esdale, opened
a hospital in Calcutta and began a famous
serious of operations with no pain and almost no
deaths. His practice was made up of rajahs with
100 prominent witnesses. In India, so many had
been afraid of operations, they had lived with
tumors sometimes as large as their bodies (up to
80 pounds). By the time he left, he had
performed over 2000 operations.
In 1841, a Swiss named LaFontaine gave three
performances of magnetizing a lion at the London
zoo. James Braid, a Scottish surgeon, was
present and convinced it was all a hoax. But he
became curious why one subject couldn't open his
eyes and conducted experiments with his wife and
a servant. Decided a fixed gaze paralyzed nerve
centers and destroyed the balance of the nervous
system. Two years later, he published his
theories call 'hypnotism' for the first time in
modern conception. Hypnotism was no longer
associated with magnetism and a universal fluid.
Four years later, Braid regretted his choice of
the work, for those who slept were in minority
and those who were influenced were concentrating
their thoughts. He had excellent results and
published a book called"Neurhypnology" on his
theory called Braidism.In 1866, Ambrose-Auguste
Liebeault became a psychologist treating mainly
the poor with no diagnosis or examination.
He suggested in a monotonous but penetrating a
tone they feel better with suggestions regarding
health, digestion, circulation, coughing, etc.
He had 100's of cures. A professor from the
University of Nancy, Hippolyte Bernheim arrived
to expose him and instead was convinced.
Together, they founded what is known as the
Nancy school.
Prior to Freud, suggestion was the only known
method of psychotherapy. This was used
extensively with good results. Bernhei joined
Liebeault and they conducted a clinic together.
In 20 years, they treated over 30,000 patients
together with suggestions under hypnosis. They
had such amazing success that doctors from all
over Europe came to study under them, including
Freud.
Bernheim wrote a book on hypnosis 'De la
Suggestion,"which Freud translated trying to
find a physiological explanation of suggestion
in the nervous system.
At the Salpetriere in Paris, many doctors
originated numerous theories of hypnosis from
ischemia being the cause of hypnosis and
post-hypnotic amnesia which might cause
permanent brain lesions (Neynert) to being a
type of sleep (August Forel). In general, it was
agreed that hypnosis inhibited certain cortical
activity in the brain allowing suggestions to be
ore readily accepted. Jean-Martin Charcot, head
of the Salpetriere, believed it was an alternate
state of consciousness.
Whereas the Nancy school was based on psychology
and verbal suggestion using light hypnosis with
no amnesia effect the Chariot School studied
physiology, reflexes and physical means to
affect these, like deep hypnosis with amnesia,
magnets or metal plates (effects discovered in
1876 by Dr. Burcq). Transference (one patient's
ailments passing to another) was discovered.
This was perfected by a neurologist, J.F.F.
Babinski. He became head of the clinic when
Charcot died. Babinski changed his mind about
the physical effects of hypnosis and accepted
the theory of suggestibility. He tried to prove
Hysteria was the diseased manifestation of
hypnosis. Soon, hypnosis was associated with
neuroses and weakness; no one wanted to be
hypnotizable. Hypnosis sank into obscurity,
except for Dr. Pierre Janet, head of the
pathological psychology laboratory, who still
believed in hypnosis. Christian Science (a
religion that teaches that diseases can be cured
by spiritual means) and psychoanalysis swept the
U.S. and Europe, replacing hypnosis.
In 1880, the daughter (known in case histories
as Anna O) a patient of Dr. Joseph Brier (A
Viennese internist and Freud's collaborator)
developed hysterical symptoms. She would go into
spontaneous hypnosis and tell Brier childlike
stories, sleep and awake refreshed. If he did
not come one day, she would worsen until she
told him two stories the next day. After her
father's death, she began to include memories
from the early months of nursing her father
where he symptoms began. Each time she did, the
symptoms gradually disappeared until she was
cured. The emotional ordeal Breuer was put
through caused him to refer all patients of this
type to Freud. Freud continued to use this
method.
Freud's theories at this point were as follows:
People normally have doubts and misgivings,
which they succeed in controlling. The physical
exhaustion caused by nursing an ill person might
predispose on to psychic states thereby causing
loss of control. He thought the failure to react
to a trauma caused suppression, which caused
problems. When he insisted that patients
"remember", they would often do so, but he found
much resistance and came up with the theory of
defense. This was also applied to sexual
life-the effect of pushing away sexual feelings
could transfer to another object causing
obsessions hysteria, etc.
Freud and Breuer thought discharge of intense
feelings of traumatic events was a purge for the
patient. Sharing the emotional experience often
produced a speedy curative effect.
Freud found that many hysterics had had
infantile sexual traumas such as seductions,
assaults, etc. However in 1885, he started
having doubts and finally gave up this train of
ideas. He did so because he was not able to
hypnotize many people, and found much
resistance; he doubted whether his treatments
could overcome the ego's resistance and supply
the real answer or he would have had more
satisfactory conclusions. He found out that many
of the incidents people had supplied when he
insisted they remember were not accurate. He
underwent self-analysis and then went into
different areas of psychology-free association
and dream interpretation.
In the 1920's, Emil Coue, originally a
pharmacist, made a study of the psychology of
suggestion and operated a clinic in Nancy,
France. His successes helped to make
autosuggestion for self-benefit the vogue in
Europe. He made an exhaustive study of the
effects of suggestion. At first, he supplied
intensive details with he suggestions, but later
switched to generalizations in order to allow
the subconscious to work out its own best
solution and include all that the person might
be aiming at. His most famous techniques are: 1)
repeating every day again and again, "Every day,
in every way, I am getting better and better" 2)
if someone thinks that they want to do
something, but they can't the harder they try,
the less they will be able to (i.e., always
thing positive); 3) "when the imagination and
the will are in conflict, the imagination always
wins" (used as a theory of why hypnosis worked);
and 4) an idea always tends towards realization
and a stronger emotion
always counteracts a weaker one. Many others in
Europe (but not in US) worked with suggestive
techniques. Coue was an amazing success. Coue is
considered the initiator of T. H. Schultz's
autogenic training, which is derived from
hypnosis. This is a method of physical
conditioning to produce psychobiological
alteration in the subject with no psychological
techniques used. The patient obtains control
over the voluntary muscles (with which he is
most familiar), and then the circulatory system,
heart, respiration, organs and head. The
hypnotist is not needed and results can be
measured.
In the 1930's in the US, psychosomatic medicine
(concerned with the numerous diseases cured by
suggestion. These included: hemiplegia, multiple
sclerosis, cerebrospinal sclerosis, lead
poisoning, hysterical disorders, neuropath
disorders, neuroses, pares and pareses and
contractures, gastrointestinal disorders,
various pains, rheumatic diseases, neuralgia,
menstrual disorders, anemia, intermittent fever,
tuberculosis, tremors, and spasms, involuntary
quivering of eyelids, chronic torticollis,
amaurosis, mutism, constipation or dyspepsia,
Chorea, stammering, moistness of hands,
neurasthenia, obsessions, consumption,
influenza, asthma or nervous origin, mental
imbalances, phobias, obsessions, tics,
psychosexual anomalies, morbidtendencies,
functional language
Disorders, and functional language disorders,
and organic diseases.
During wartime, hypnosis was used to put
soldiers back into action. Hypnosis reduced the
stress and the soldier was able to overcome
environmental pressure (such as in the case of
Anna O). Although hypnosis was not an accepted
practice, there were so many soldiers with
illnesses caused by wartime trauma that many
psychiatrists used the same technique as Breuer,
a reliving of the emotional stressful war
situation, to cure the patient quickly. This
worked well, and hypnosis gained some
respectability.
Hypondotia (hypnotism in dentistry) was begun in
1948 and has become wide spread. The American
Society of Psychosomatic dentistry (an
association of ethical dentists who are trained
and certified to apply hypnotic techniques) has
been established.
Surgeons had tried everything on a 15-year-old
boy who had ichthyosis ("fish skin" disease). In
1951, after hypnotherapy with Dr. A.A. Mason,
the boy's arm was cured in ten days. In slightly
more than a month, the rest of his body was
healed. Because this was a reversal of the
natural course of a congenital disease, this
incident helped in Great Britain's official
recognition of hypnosis in 1955 as an example of
psychosomatic medicine.
Dr. Mason also wrote of a girl who, because of
chemical anesthesia for breast surgery, stayed
in the hospital for a month after surgery with
postoperative deliriums, continuous vomiting and
excessive bleeding. She needed a second
operation. As a hypnotic test, she had a tooth
extracted while in a trance with no pain) when
he accidentally got alcohol in her eye thus
enabling the nurse to wipe the alcohol out of
her eye. Dr. Mason indicated how many surgical
accidents could be avoided this way, especially
in preserving the coughing reflex, since blood,
saliva, or vomit entering the respiratory tract
causes most deaths under anesthesia.
In 1958, the American Medical Association
approved a report on the medical uses of
hypnosis. It encouraged research on hypnosis
although pointing out that some aspects of
hypnosis are unknown and controversial.
The British Medical Association expressed a
similar opinion shortly thereafter. Later, the
Italian Medical Association for the Study of
Hypnosis was founded.
Hypnosis is used in law and the FBI to aid
memory and rehabilitate criminals. The most
famous example is the Chowchilla, California
kidnapping case. Under Hypnotic induction, a
school bus driver recalled a license number that
led the police to the abductors of a school bus
full of children. Hypnosis was also used as
psychotherapy for some of the children who had
been greatly disturbed. Some police departments
have appointed their own official hypnotists.
The NYC police hypnotist has won national
acclaim in solving difficult criminal cases.
Today hospitals, psychiatric clinics, jails,
courtrooms, sports, schools, even churches and
synagogues use hypnosis.
Until his death in 1980 Milton H. Erickson,
almost single-handedly took hypnosis off the
stage and into respected medical practice.
Erickson, a noted psychiatrist, who studied with
some of the most influential hypnotists of
modern times, including Clark Hull, among
others. A contemporary of Andre Weitzenhoffer, a
partner in training with Leslie Lechron (who is
given credit for ideomotor signals).
From Erickson came two gentlemen by the names of
Richard Bandler and John Grinder who formally
modeled Ericksons genius in hypnosis on the
advice of Gregory Bateson (one of the geniuses
of the 20th century). This came to be known as
Neuro-Linguistic- Programming, NLP. The purpose
of this discipline is to model people of true
genius, from hypnosis to business to
psychotherapy and even to pistol shooting in the
military.
Since its beginning in the early 1970's it has
grown into a popular and useful addition to
our knowledge of hypnosis. One of the most
important developments from NLP is the notion
that you can use words to induce a hypnotic
trance, and even more importantly produce
change. What came to be known as the Milton
Model, Bandler and Grinder modeled Erickson's
ability to produce covert trance with just
words. These two very capable gentlemen proved
that trance didn't have to be direct, as in the
stage hypnotist approach, to be useful and
functional.
In the 1990's, hypnosis has come full circle, it
has been talked about on radio, shown on most
national TV talk shows, from Oprah to Donohue,
and been written up in major magazines, from
Cosmopolitan to Success Magazine. Most everybody
has a friend or a family member who has gone to
a hypnotist for something. Even medical doctors
are sending their patients to a hypnotist for
habit control - stop smoking, weight control,
stress reduction, as a first choice. This was
unheard of 20 years ago, as doctors only
referred to a hypnotist as a last resort. As
hypnosis becomes more and more popular, whether
or not it becomes main stream, only time will
tell.
Copyright 1995, Daniel Olson -
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