HYPNOTISM WITHIN THE ADVENTIST CHURCH: Above all-Keeping thy
heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues PART
THREE OF TEN What
does the hypnotic operator consider to be your needs; what does he think
should be your beliefs, goals, and way of reaching them? What does he
believe should be the things you avoid and enjoy? It is not you that
makes these decisions fraught with eternal destiny; it is the operator.
. "This
certification training will present the fundamentals of Ericksonian
Hypnosis in a carefully sequenced format, giving you a set of
approaches, resources and skills that will allow you to deal much more
creatively and effectively with your client's needs. The Institute's
skilled and experienced trainers will guide you through supervised
experiential learning to acquire behavioral competence in using
Ericksonian Hypnosis." New England Institute for NLP, brochure. Below
that statement we are told that both the classical (stupor-like
trance) method of hypnotism and the Ericksonian
(unconsciously-received) technique are taught in the course.
"What you will learn from this training: . . Use of a variety of methods
for inducing and deepening trance both through formal hypnotic induction
and conversationally."NEINLP brochure. On
another brochure, NEINLP points out that, because the world is changing,
we should, in working with people, assume that they are changing also.
This is an ominous thought since hypnotists are in the business of
changing people in accordance with their own views of what that change
should be.
"The accelerating globalization of the world and its people has made the
necessity for an updated and improved model of human interaction and
relationships more necessary than ever. The traumatic changes happening
in Eastern Europe are a reflection of an emerging new model of the world
that is affecting our whole planet. Not only do these changes require a
new concept of what people, groups, and culture are, but they also call
for a new set of skills for communicating and interacting with systems
of people . . The primary goal of this seminar is to integrate systemic
thinking with NLP models and methodology." NEINLP
brochure. "A
new concept of what people, groups, and culture are" is required.
Using Ericksonian hypnosis, the operator can then adapt his subjects
to fit the new concepts. And here is how the new feelings, beliefs,
likes, dislikes, and goals are placed in the subject: "NLP
is a systematicized study of subjective experience: what we take in
through our five senses, how we encode or organize that raw sensory
experience into 'maps' or personal models of the world, and how we then
express our experience. This map-making process, and how it determines
our choice of behavior, is often out of our conscious awareness. As an
NLP practitioner, you develop increased sensory acuity for observing
human behavior, and acquire new abilities to identify the language
patterns in a person's verbal communications. Using these skills, you
discover that the previously unconscious and seemingly inaccessible
'maps of the mind' become Conscious and directly perceptible. It then
becomes within your capacity to alter these 'maps' if appropriate
transferring personal resources from one context to another,
transferring excellence from one person to another, and thus provide
both yourself and those with whom you work more options in choosing
behaviors." NEINLP
brochure. "It
then becomes within your capability to alter these maps.' Who decides
what thoughts, feelings, and beliefs will be changed? The hypnotic
operator does. He may have ever so good intentions, but he is the one
who is in the driver's seat of the other person's mind, not the person
who owns that mind, "Erickson's
legacy is a wealth of vital information for understanding and
influencing behavior, and is very useful for increasing skills in
achieving specific outcomes, whether in psychotherapy, or in other
communication contexts. NEINLP brochure. Here
are the type of skills that NLP trainees are taught: "What
you will learn from this training: Facts vs. myths and misconceptions
about hypnosis; how and when trance states occur naturally in our
everyday lives. Use of a variety of methods for inducing and deepening
trance. A number of proven procedures for utilizing trance therapeutically.
Application of hypnotic language patterns, indirect suggestions,
Ericksonian reframing and other techniques. Diagnosis and treatment;
planning; handling the 'resistant' client and utilizing resistance to
further therapeutic goals. Creating and telling metaphors to access
unconscious resources, including multiple embedded metaphor. Several
induction methods for self-hypnosis. "NEINLP brochure. Here
is another description of several aspects NEINLP teaches its
instructors: "The
Meta-program and its use for diagnosis and change in psychotherapy and
in business. Verb tense shifts, directionalized Metamodel (Metamodel
lll) and verbal patterns to produce change. Threshold patterns,
including those for restoring relationships and for breaking
compulsions. Identification and utilization of the structure of
emotional states as the basis for interventions. A wide range of
advanced submodality techniques. The structure and change of beliefs.
The identification and use of presuppositions. Advanced work with
criteria. Motivation, and creation of compelling features. . Generative
chaining model. Deliberate multilevel communication. Re-imprinting of
past formative experiences. . Personal change using the timeline.
Modeling: thorough training in eliciting and reproducing behavioral
excellence, using both conscious and unconscious methods. Advance
holistic methods, such as the 'meta-mirror' and the 'resonance pattern.'
Over 24 'sleight of mouth' patterns for reframing and belief change
" NEINLP brochure. What
classical hypnotist can do all that we find in the above paragraph?
Ericksonian hypnosis can provide the operator with: Meta-programs to
affect the subconscious. Using the way you phrase words to change the
way they think, believe, and act. Subliminal threshold patterns.
Interventions: implanting new patterns within them. How to change their
unconscious, their beliefs, and their premises. Changing criteria:
changing the norms by which they make their moral judgments. Getting
them to do what they did not previously want to do. Implanting new,
crucial reasons for their doing something they had not planned to do.
Linking one emotional reason to another. Talking to their hypothalamus
at the same time you talk to their frontal lobes. Bringing back their
earlier experiences as a reason for doing different things now. Changing
someone else's behavior to match what you think it ought to be. Reflect
their emotions as you speak with them so they will do what you suggest.
Using facial appearance to overpower their will. You
will recall that Milton Erickson's hypnotic methods were somewhat
adapted by John Grinder and Richard Bandler. We will now analyze
portions of a book Grinder and Bandler wrote. As you might expect, this
book is recommended both by LEAD and by NEINLP, which use their
restructured Ericksonian hypnosis as the basis of LEAD and NEINLP
courses. LEAD,
the counseling seminar which is instructing our leaders in Takoma Park,
recommends that the following 10 books be read in a four-level sequence,
with the most elementary books being the first four: "Listed
below are some of the finest books on NLP LEVEL ONE: Bandler and
Grinder, Frogs into Princes . . . Lewis and Pacelir, Magic Demystified.
. , Sid Jacobson, Meta-Cation. . . Gene C. Laborde, Influencing with
Integrity. . "NLP-LEVEL
2: Bandler and Grinder, Reframing. . ,Steven Langton, Practical Magic. .
"'NLP-LEVEL
3: Bandler and Grinder, Patterns of Hypnotic Techniques. . , Grinder
and Bandler, Trance-formation. . , David Gordon, Therapeutic
Metaphors. . "NLP-LEVEL
4: Robert Dilts, NLP, Volume 1 . . , Robert Dilts, Roots of NLP . . ,
Robert Dilts, Applications of NLP . . , Richard Bandler, Using Your
Brain-for a Change. "LEAD brochure. The
very titles of the above books will afford you an idea of their
contents. Magic, hypnotism, and séances are closely related. They not
only have a lot in common, they have a common source. SPECIAL
NOTE: Some readers will only want a warning to avoid Ericksonlan and
other forms of hypnotism, but there will be others who want an Insight
into how they operate. In this way they may recognize "casual
conversation hypnosis" when someone starts to use it on them or a
loved one. Therefore, we will supply a section providing you with
early-warning danger signals when conversational hypnotism is underway.
If you do not want to read this section, skip over to the next section
and continue reading. Let us now consider the type of material in the
very first, and most elementary of the books that LEAD recommends that
its students read: Frogs Into Princes. We would expect this to be one
of the first LEAD-recommended books that our leaders and church workers
have read, which have, or are taking, the LAB II course. SOMETHING
TO THINK ABOUT When
a friend recalls a story or two, it does not result in major emotional
psychological changes within you for months afterwards. Why then does
it happen when Ericksonian experts do it? It is not the story, it is
the medium. In the process of taking Ericksonian courses, men and
women sell themselves fully to the assumptions, methods, and
objectives of conversational hypnosis. They believe it is right for
one mind to decide for and change another; in their training course
they give and receive it; they regularly do it afterward. Whether they
know it or not (and most probably do not), they have- by doing this
become mediums between a supernatural power and the minds they are
seeking to influence. It
is obvious that Ericksonian premises, techniques, and goals are
continually entering new fields. Influencing the human mind has become
a high-priority objective of many aspects of sales, business, and
industry. It is also of extreme importance in the mass entertainment
industry. People must somehow to be satisfied in such a way that they
will have to keep coming back to that same entertainment source. It
is also known that New Age thinking and zeal to spread it-is rapidly
spreading into many areas of life. Outside
of a personal meeting with an Ericksonian technician, where is the
most likely place that you can come face to face-and frequently
so-with these "'casual conversation" and
"'story-telling" hypnotic methods? It
would be in your living room, while seated in front of your television
set! Where will your wife, your husband, your children most likely
encounter it? As they watch television in your living room. Most of
television consists of casual conversation (talk shows, frequently
about boring topics), and story-telling (drama, theatricals, movies).
Will Satan use it to reach your relaxed mind (that which the
professionals call the "unconscious" or the
"subconscious")? Of course, he will, for you have placed
yourself on his ground by placing yourself before these trivial and
worldly things on television. But
there is more: An earlier tract of ours discussed the dangers of
X-rays from television screens (see Television and X-rays [HE-101]).
To summarize it (1) The principle effect of those X-rays is on the
mind and eyes. The symptom of radiation poisoning to the brain is
tired eyes and a peculiar dopey quality. The mind (frontal lobes)
becomes fatigued from the radiation exposure, and begins watching
without thinking! Something akin to a trancelike condition results.
The brain seems to be partially sleeping while awake. This is a
physical effect of the X-rays emitted by the cathode-rays through
the screen as they hit your grey matter. That is a perfect setting for
hypnotic activities by Ericksonian controllers to be applied to your
mind through televised conversation, discussion, or drama! It is more
ideal than personally speaking with a conversational or story-telling
hypnotist, for, away from the television set, your mind is far more
alert! Something
to think about. Any solution? Yes, carry the devilish thing out into
the backyard and hit it a couple times with a sledge hammer. Or yank
out the cord, and carry it to the junkyard. People will ignore it,
thinking it doesn't work. By so doing, you will have gotten the hypnosis
box out of your home. Some others may not agree with you, but you know
what you are doing. Your future, and the future of your loved ones,
will be much, much better for having done it. Something
to think about. But you had better act soon, before you begin
reasoning with yourself, and the addiction you already have to it
overpowers your better judgment. Heaven is worth it. Make the
decision now-and carry it out now. The
title of the book indicates the magical aspects of its teachings. As we
scan part of it, you will note there is a more-than-human knowledge and
power evinced here. The mystical front cover portrays a frog in the process
of changing into a genie-like prince. In
pacing and mirroring, the operator (the hypnotist: the one hypnotically
fulfilling his objectives through your behavior) mirrors your
expressions, voice, and posture as much as possible, so that he can get
you to do what he wants. (page 79-81) "When
you join someone else's reality by pacing them, that gives you rapport
and (their) trust and puts you in a position to utilize their reality in
ways to change it."Frogs into Princes, P. 81. This
book consists of a written transcript of training course lectures given
by the authors. In various places in this volume will be found
situations in which the operator says, perceives, and accomplishes
things beyond what we would normally expect a human to have the grasp or
ability to do. People sense this supernatural aid, and are fascinated by
It. Ellen White tells us In Great Controversy that people will, in
spiritistic situations, sense the working of a power beyond the human.
This will lure them on and on, to their destruction. Our leaders should
not be taking these courses. In
one sequence, Linda, one of these In attendance, comes up for a
demonstration (pages 82-87). The operator (one of the two men who gave
the seminar and authored the book) then tells her to pick an
unpleasant topic he will then, almost magically, change her view of.
After she has selected such a topic, he says: "Linda,
what do you recall that gives you the unpleasant feeling? Is it a set
of images or a voice? Okay. She already answered the Question
nonverbally. If you were watching her eyes, you saw them move up to her
left and then down to her right. So she makes an eidetic visual image
and then has a feeling about it." Frogs into Princes, page 82 Then
the operator tells her to close her eyes and intently look at that
unpleasant experience In her past, which he says he will call
"Y," Several
months ago we received an audiotape of an Adventist church member that
underwent a difficult experience in which his small girt died. A
friend suggested that he visit a professional Adventist counselor in a
certain location in Texas. He drove down there and the counselor
told him to do the same thing, which the above operator requested. He
said to shut his eyes and imagine the experience at which his child
died. He sensed that he should not do this in front of this man. but
having driven hundreds of miles, he did so. With his eyes shut, he was
taken into a vision and saw the child return and talk with him! At
this, he left the counselor's office and returned home. Beware
of counselors who have received their training from worldly sources;
you do not know what type of training programs they have taken. If
you need counseling help, go see a firm, deep Christian; either a
pastor or a layman. (The Spirit of Prophecy says that the best way is
for men to counsel with men, and women with women.) Then
the operator touches Linda's right shoulder, although she may not have
noticed that he did this. He then tells her to again shut her eyes and
this time think of something pleasant, to be referred to as
"X." While her eyes are closed, he reaches out and touches her
left shoulder. After this, he speaks with her and to the audience for a
time, and then he again touches her right shoulder, and she
immediately drops into an emotional depression and tension. "Did
those of you watching notice some changes [in her demeanor as she
thought of the two different things]? Let's call the response she gets
from the picture Y, and the new resource that she needed back there,
we'll call X. Now, let's demonstrate. Which of those two responses is
this? (He touches her right shoulder.) Now, you should be able to see
the color changes, lip size changes, breathing changes, actual trembling
In her body, that we have called Y. "Now,
which response is this? (He touches her left shoulder.)"-Op. sit.
page 83 I
here suggest that that is not humanly possible. It would require a
definite thought or action to bring on such extreme and sudden mood
changes. Yet all the operator did was to touch her shoulder. In my
opinion, more than human power is at work here. Then, very
significantly, the following conversation occurs: Now,
why does response Y occur when I touch her right shoulder? Have you
noticed that that occurs? Has anyone in here noticed that? What is going
on here? It's really spook time! Linda, do you believe in free will?
"' Linda,
Yeah. "(He
touches her right shoulder.) Now, who tightened the muscles around your
mouth? Whose free will do you believe in? Free will is a funny [thing].
It's also a nominalization [Just a name for something else] . . Someone
is making those pictures and It isn't you. . Now, what's going on here?
Did anybody make sense out of that? Woman
[in audience speaks up]: When you were asking her to go deep Inside of
her and see that Image, you put your hand on her right shoulder as she
was feeling the bad feelings, so she had an association with the touch. "Do
you mean to tell me that now every time I touch her on the shoulder like
that, she will have that response? (He touches her right shoulder
again, and response Y occurs.) "Man:
It sure looks that way. I agree with you. "How
could something that powerful be overlooked by modern psychology? Here
you are, adult human beings. Most of you have been to college, and most
of you are professional communicators. You've learned about human
beings and how human beings work. How do you make sense of this? "Does
the name Pavlov ring a bell? This is straight stimulus-response
conditioning . . That touch is now associated with the entire experience
that she recalled. "When
a person is in a certain state of consciousness such as the experience Y
for Linda, you can introduce a new dimension in any sensory system, such
as a touch. We call this an anchor,' in this case, a kinesthetic
anchor. As long as I repeat that touch with the same pressure at the
same point on Lindas body, and she has no stronger competing states
of consciousness when I begin, it will always re-access that
experience. It's straight conditioning. It constitutes, in my opinion,
one of the most powerful covert tools that you can use as a therapist or
as a communicator. It will get you almost everything." Frogs into
Princes. pages 82-85. This
is NOT conditioning! Ivan Pavlov and B.F. Skinner pioneered
"behavioral conditioning. " Their concept was based on the
evolutionist theory that people are only animals and can be trained like
animals. "Conditioning" is a modem pseudo-science that
Christians should have nothing to do with. Yet you should be aware of
the fact that when Pavlov trained his dogs and mice, and Skinner his
pigeons, -it took days, and sometimes weeks, of repetitive work to
condition their animals to salivate when a bell rang, or peck a certain
way in response to a signal for food. What
the above author did is NOT normal conditioning, but a supernatural
instantaneous conditioning. And that would not be conditioning
." A hypnotic trance occurred, without Linda realizing it A single,
hardly noticeable touch cemented in a powerful response. The anchoring
can be done so stealthfully (covertly) that it cannot be noticed by the
one being anchored, and yet, he assured his audience, it would remain
strong from that time forward. My conclusion is that only a supernatural
power was enabling the operator to do what he did. "Man
[in audience asks a question]: do you have to anchor as obviously as
you have been demonstrating? "We
are being very obvious and exaggerated in our movements as we are
anchoring here because we want you to observe the process and learn as
the changes occur. If we had brought Linda up here and anchored her
auditorily, with voice tonalities, you'd have no idea what we did. The
more covert (secretive) you are, the better off you will be in your
private practice. You can be very covert in the way you touch. You can
use tones of voice. You can use words like 'parent', 'child', and
'adult', or postures, gestures, expressions. You can't not anchor.
Frogs into Princes, 102. "As
long as these [the Y and the X] are full experiences, and we're
guaranteeing that [they will always henceforth remain in her mind] by
anchoring [having touched each of her shoulders just one time to
anchor each one) both will serve equally well as guides for future
behavior. "Linda:
(She opens her eyes and smiles broadly.) I love it!"-Frogs into
Princes, Page 85. Is
this how you want to obtain your "guides" for future behavior?
Five pages over, the author significantly mentions that a good
pantomimist is also using anchoring techniques. It you have seen our
videos on the West Coast celebration churches, you will recall the
peculiar movements of Dan Simpson's hired actor, who goes through
various body movements and trains others to do the same for each
Sabbath morning celebration service at the Colton Church. He is using
hypnotic anchoring techniques to fascinate the audience. Here
are additional examples of hypnotic power in action: "One
thing that we have done with couples [who come to counseling because
they have been arguing with each other] is to take away their ability to
talk to each other. 'You can't talk to each other any more until I tell
you to. if I catch you talking to each other, I'll give you warts'
"Frogs into Princes. page 91. "We
don't ordinarily create new personal histories for people anymore. We
have spent three hours doing it. And we have done it fifteen minutes a
week for six weeks, and we trained somebody to do time distortion once,
and did it in about four minutes. We programmed another person to do it
each night as they dreamed. We literally installed, in a somnambulistic
trance [a sleep-like trance, but not lying down while in it], a dream
generator, that would generate the requisite personal history, and have
her recall this in the waking state the next day, each day." Frogs
into Princes, page 101. "The
same patterns that you can use to change somebody quickly and
unconsciously, can be used to hook them and keep them as patients.
That's a strange thing about therapy." Frogs into Princes, page 102 [Speaking
of an allergic person:] "However, if you put an animal in her
presence, or told her that one had been in the room recently, she had a
very strong allergic reaction. So we simply gave her a childhood of
growing up without being asthmatic (he hypnotically changed her childhood
memories). And an amazing thing happened: not only did she lose her
allergic response to animals, but also to the things she had been found
to be allergic to by the skin-patch testing."-Frogs into Princes,
page 100. After
giving a remarkable example of how a person was physically changed,
someone asked about which aspects were hypnotic. Then the following
statements were made by the authors, the first to express the fact that
all these methods are hypnotic; the second, seemingly denying the fact,
wishing to avoid the its implications, but then saying more. "Richard:
Everything is hypnosis. "John:
there's a profound disagreement between us. There is no such thing as
hypnosis. I would really prefer that you didn't use such terms, since
they refer to nothing. "We
believe that all communication is hypnosis . . "Do
we have any official [classical, sleep-like trance inducing]
hypnotists here? How many of the rest of you know that you are
unofficial hypnotists? We've got one. And the rest of you don't know it
yet. I think that it is important to study official hypnosis if you are
going to be a professional communicator. It has some of the most
interesting phenomena about people available in it. One of the most fascinating
things you will discover once you are fully competent in using the
ritualistic notions of traditional hypnosis, is that you'll never have
to do It again. A training program in hypnosis is not for your clients.
It's for you . . You will also discover that most of the techniques in
different types of psychotherapy are nothing more than hypnotic
phenomena."-Frogs into Princes, p. 100. As
we earlier saw from both LEAD and NEINLP brochures, their courses are
founded on Ericksonian casual-conversation hypnosis. According to NLP
expects, their students can learn many significant things about human
mind control by studying classical hypnotism, but they will not need to
do it, for Ericksonlan hypnosis can accomplish far more, and without the
client's realizing the means by which It was done. PART
FOUR OF TEN An
interesting point brought out was the use of storytelling in the hands
of a trained Ericksonian hypnotist. After mentioning again how
invaluable it is to use "secret therapy" (changing the
client's behavior and feelings. without their knowing how it happened),
he then goes on to say that his present preferred method is to not let
the client tell him anything about his needs or problems, but instead
just tell stories to the client! As
a result, emotional and thinking changes occur over the next several
months, in ways the operator wanted those changes to occur. Yet after
telling him stories for 15 minutes to an hour, he would not see him
again! This is not mere storytelling; this is Ericksonian hypnotism!
If the client told him nothing, how could he know what changes needed to
be made? Why, weeks and months later, would that person change because
of stories told him earlier by the hypnotist? We all read or hear
stories all the time, but they do not have such life-changing effects on
us. If
you place yourself before such men, your thinking may change also. We
have received a number of telephone calls in recent months about new
theology pastors who tell peculiar and sometimes
harebrained stories on Sabbath morning. Perhaps there is a deeper
reason why these odd stories are being told. Another
interesting case is the pastor of the Collegedale Church in Tennessee
who, about a year ago, wrote a short, but strange, cartoon book about
animals talking to each other. He gave this to his church members to
sell to raise money for a church project. One of the animal stories is
about the importance of attending church every Sunday. We could not
figure out that book until we read the following: PART
FIVE Of TEN "If
you ask the people who were up here for demonstration purposes, my
guess is they would assign very little responsibility to us for the
changes that occurred in them, much less than they would in traditional
content-oriented therapy. That's one of the advantages of secret
therapy. It doesn't create that kind of dependency relationship. . "In
our actual private practice, which is severely reduced now because we're
moving into other areas of modeling, we tell stories. A person will come
in and I don't want them to tell me anything. I just tell them stories.
The use of metaphor is a whole set of advanced patterns which is associated
with what we've done so far. You can learn about those in David Gordon's
excellent book, Therapeutic Metaphors. I prefer metaphor artistically.
I don't have to listen to client's woes, and I get to tell very
entertaining stories. Clients are usually bewildered or infuriated by
paying me money to listen to stories. But the changes they want occur
anyway. . You do things so covertly [stealthily) that they don't have
the faintest idea what you are doing. . "Is there anybody here who
has been to see Milton Erickson? He told you stories, right? Did you
find that six months, eight months, or a year later you were going
through changes that were somehow associated with those stories that he
was telling? "Man:
Yes. "That's
the typical report. Six months later people suddenly notice they've
changed and they don't have any idea how that happened, and then they
get a memory of Milton talking about the farm up in Wisconsin or
something. When you were with Erickson did you have the experience of
being slightly disoriented, fascinated and entranced by the man's
language? "Man:
I was bored. "Milton
uses boredom as one of his major weapons. If Milton were here, one thing
he might do is bore you to tears. So you'd all drift off into daydreams
and then he has you. . "We
have, during these days [in this seminar) together, succeeded
brilliantly in completely overwhelming your conscious resources. This
was a deliberate move on our part, understanding as we do that most
learning and change takes place at the unconscious level. . so that, in
the days and weeks and months to come, you can discover yourself doing
things that you didn't know you learned about here."-Frogs into
Princes, pp. 134-135. According
to this, training in Ericksonian hypnosis is based on being hypnotically
captured by the master trainers (who in turn, in our view, have
earlier been hypnotically captured by supernatural powers). Behind the
scenes, a super-mind is controlling all these hypnotists, who, in turn,
spend their time trying to control still others. "When
you were with Erickson did you have the experience of being slightly
disoriented, fascinated and entranced by the man's language? . . [He]
uses boredom. " The boredom opens to the operator a door, since the
mind is switched out of thinking gear. "Did
you have the experience of being slightly disoriented, fascinated and
entranced by the man's language?" That, and the boredom, may be a
key to help identify the presence of an Ericksonian story-telling situation. A
second, more advanced Ericksonian book is entitled Trance-formations:
Neuro-Linguistic Programming and the Structure of Hypnosis, and was
written by the authors of Frogs Into Princes. "Hypnosis
should not be difficult or unnatural. It should be the most natural
thing in the world."-John Grinder and Richard Bandler,
Trance-formations: Neuro-Linguistic Programming and the Structure of
Hypnosis, p. 19. If
an Ericksonian interview appears to be underway, get out of there! Do
not dally around. Do not linger because of curiosity. Do not have smug
confidence that you are safe in lingering near such a danger. Never dare
anyone to hypnotize you! The operator will then begin by keeping you
doing something, which you know you dare not stop doing. Then, because
you obeyed him, he switches subject matter, and catches you! "They
sit down and say 'Go ahead and try to hypnotize me.' And I say, 'I can't
hypnotize you.' They say, 'Well, go ahead and try.' I say, 'I can't do
it. There's nothing I can do; if I decided to force you to keep your
eyes open, that would make you keep your eyes open. I'll try. Keep your
eyes wide open! Stay totally alert! Everything you do will make you stay
right here and right now!' "Then
they resist me right into a trance! The principle I was using was simply
noticing the response of the person in front of me, and providing him
with a context that he could respond to appropriately in a way that was
natural for him."-Trance-formations, pp. 13-14. So
he begins by authoritatively commanding him to do what he is already
doing! Pray
for help. If you need to remain for a moment, meet them with the Word of
God,-but then get out! The operator's objective is to put you into a
trance, and then change your thinking and your behavior. Yet,
normally, more subtle methods are used to do it without one's realizing
it. "Natural transitions lead people into an altered [trance] state
without jarring them." - Trance-formations, p. 11. "NLP
is an explicit and powerful model of human experience and
communication. Using the principles of NLP, it is possible to describe
any human activity in a detailed way that allows you to make many deep
and lasting changes quickly and easily."-Trance-formations, pp i-ii.
The
technique is based on hooking a person while he is relaxed and not
expecting what is taking place. "We're
going to study what's called Ericksonian hypnosis, after Milton H.
Erickson. Ericksonian hypnosis means developing the skills of a
hypnotist so well that you can put someone into a trance in a
conversation in which the word hypnosis is never
mentioned."-Trance-formations, p. 13. It
is not the subject but the Ericksonian operator who decides the changes
to be made. (In reality, it is the super-mind controlling the operator
that makes the final decision.) "Finding
things that are universal in people's experience is the key to both
inducing hypnosis and using it for whatever you want to
accomplish." -Trance-formations, p. 11. He
begins where the other person already is, and then leads him somewhere
else. "You
can provide people with communications that match what's going on, just
like a biofeedback machine. You can then start adding other things step
by step that lead them to somewhere else, and they will be able to go
along naturally and comfortably. You can create a situation in which
all they have to do is respond, the one thing people do all the time,
and they do best." Trance-formations, p. 30. "Your
job in doing hypnosis is to notice what people respond to
naturally."-Trance-formations, p. 13. First,
he mimics you: your breathing, your posture, your tones, or your words,
in order to emotionally catch you. "One
thing I've noticed is that people are more apt to respond easily when
they're in a state that hypnotists call rapport. Rapport seems to be
built on matching behaviors. Disagreeing with people won't establish
rapport . . If you gauge the tempo of your voice to the rate of their
breathing, if you blink at the same rate that they're nodding, if you
rock at the same rate that they're rocking, and if you say things which
must in fact be the case, or things that you notice are the case, you
will build rapport. . We call this kind of matching 'pacing.'
" Trance-formations, p.14. He
then verbalizes (repeats in somewhat different words) what the other one
is saying, describing. He interprets, or explains, why those things
happened back in the past. In doing this, he is reorienting, reeducating
the person in regard to his values foundations. HEALING
THROUGH HYPNOTISM Hypnosis
can produce healing. It would appear that there are three ways in
which it can be effected: (1) A person may think he has been healed
when he has not. Later the problem comes back on him. I recall back in
the late-1950s, at a meeting when, even before he went on national
television and before his telecast had its present name, George
Vandeman was telling about his initial experiences with preparing
telecasts. He said that in a New York studio, he watched film cuts and
splices being made. (The video tape machine had not yet been
invented.) The leading faith healer of that time would place his hands
on someone on the stage, and this would be captured on film. The
person would rise from his wheel chair and walk a few feet, and then
collapse. The collapse was cut out of the film, then it was spliced
and shown on the healer's national television program. (2)
A person can be afflicted with an apparent sickness, and then during
hypnosis it may apparently be removed. The Spirit of Prophecy says
that this does occur. (3)
Some of the most basic of healing principles are stated in Ministry of
Healing, pages 126-128. On page 126:3 we are told, "In most cases
the [medicinal] drug only changes the form and location of the
disease. Often the effect of the poison seems to be overcome for a
time, but the results remain in the system, and work great harm at
some later period." Because
the identity and placement of the problem has been changed, people
think that drug medication eliminates the disease. But it only
changed its effects and location. The
same could be done by hypnotism. A person may appear to get well as
the result of hypnosis. His emotional turmoil may cease, his mental
concentration powers may appear to be better, a physical problem may
seem to be overcome. But there has only been a transferal of the problem.
Yes, one problem may appear to be eliminated, but, as a result of
submitting to hypnosis, he now has another mind, a supernatural
mind, affecting him to a degree not existing previously. One problem
may seem to be solved, but far worse problems will appear later. Remember
Eve in the Garden. She ate the fruit, and then imagined she was more
vibrant, feeling better, and entering a higher experience. There was a
sinister reason for that feeling. Beforehand, Satan was only outside
of her, but now he could reach within and whisper to her reasoning
powers and push buttons in her emotional centers. She had an
apparent "healing," but in reality she was worse. Is
hypnotic "therapy" worth it? NO, No, No! Never! Far better
to die at a younger age, secure in the arms of Jesus, than to submit
to hypnotism for help of any kind! "In
addition, we are fortunate to be hosting Finbar Nolan and John
Grinder. Details on this are found in the accompanying flyer. Finbar
is an Irish healer whose work has been well documented over the past
thirty years for a wide variety of physical ills ranging through
tumors, epilepsy, ulcerative colitis, myopia, skin disorders, etc.
Finbar places his hands in a certain way on the afflicted area, and
in about fifty to eighty-five percent the affliction disappears or is
cured in a relatively short period of time. NLP holds that skills one
person manifests can be modeled and acquired by others using the
appropriate technology. "In
1985, a number of people studied Finbar Nolan[s' methods] under John
Grinder's guidance, and some successfully acquired Rnbar Nolan's
gift, including Linda Shapiro and myself. We will be co-Ieading this
workshop, with John Grinder. We will also probably be joined by Dr.
Herbert Lustig, a protege of Dr. Milton Erickson. Herb also
independently modeled Finbar and acquired his healing gift. We are
very excited to be able to offer this rare opportunity in New
England. It is the only appearance Finbar will make east of
California. Persons can come to learn to model Finbar or to avail
themselves of Finbar's healing. "Finally, on February 10-12, we
will be hosting Robert Dilts, who will present to those with NLP
background, his latest and very exciting work on identity and on
promoting beneficial change in individuals, groups and even
corporations, by setting up contexts in which these changes can occur.
This involves changes at a level deeper than belief which Robert calls
the 'paradigm level' We look forward to this training with
eagerness."-Richard Clarke, Director of New England Institute of
Neuro-Linguistic Programming, NEINLP brochure. Beware! Beware! Such "gifts" as these are acquired by attending NLP seminars! Read again Early Writings, 262-266, and Great Controversy, chapters 31 to 34. She
could immediately verify that my verbalization was in fact an accurate
representation of her experience. I come to gain credibility. . I'm
feeding back things that are a part of her experience, but are normally
outside of awareness for her. So I'm building rapport, and at the same
time I'm already altering her consciousness by that
maneuver." Trance-formations, p. 15. Leading
on from one point to another, transitions are used to take the person on
into a trance. This is done by gradually, suggestively telling him what
the operator wants him to do, going from one thing to another, and then
into a trance. "In
addition to matching people's experience with your statements to get
rapport, you need to be able to do something with the rapport you'll
have. "The
key to this is being able to make transitions. You need to have a
graceful way of guiding someone from his present state into a trance
state-going from describing his present state to describing the state
you want him to go into. Using transitional words such as 'as [you do
this . . ]' or 'when [this happens, you should. .]' are words which
imply that there is some meaningful relationship between two
utterances [when actually there may be none at
all]." Trance-formations, p. 15. When
necessary, he distracts the listener's attention, and then confuses him. "When
you use the confusion technique, you do not build in meaningful
transitions. You indicate a sort of mild confusion in people, and then
you begin natural transitions [to a hypnotic state more receptive to
suggestions] from that point."-Trance-formations, p. 11. "You
can use any complicated task to occupy a person and distract his
consciousness while you disorient him."-Trance-formations, p. 82. . The
simplest way to do that is for the operator to get him to shut his eyes
and think about something elsewhere or in the past, and visualize it.
That puts him in a different frame of mind, a partially "altered
state." (He is actually in rapt thought on something else.) Then,
while he is doing it the operator overloads his mind with
suggestions and requests. That disorients him, and he slips more easily
into a trance and is susceptible to the changed behaviors suggested to
him. "If
you can interrupt somebody else's altered state, the one that they
need to perform well, then they will play poorly, and you may be able
to beat them." Trance-formations, p. 79. In
a sermon situation, you can ignore it all and read something else. But
in a direct face-to-face conversation with an Ericksonian operator, you
cannot simply try to ignore him or just think about something else.
While you are deep in thought on one topic, he can prod you with
suggestions and ideas and carry you into a trance. "Whenever
a person's conscious processing is overloaded, you can pass
information directly to the unconscious, and the person will respond
to that information. The easiest way to overload someone's attention
is by having her pay attention to a complex internal experience.
"Trance-formations. p. 81. "When
your timing and your sensory experience are refined enough that you
know when a person's attention is inwardly oriented and when it's not,
you can introduce anything you want [while it is focused inwardly].
When someone is oriented inward, she will respond appropriately to
your suggestions because you bypass her conscious mind. There's no way
for her to filter or defend against such suggestions."
Trance-formations, p. 81. "You
can use any complicated task to occupy a person and distract his
consciousness while you disorient him . . Soon he would be overwhelmed
by the complexity, and in defense, he would go into a deep trance. . I
would continue to overload, and go on to introduce additional suggestions
about the specific kinds of overt responses I
want."-Trance-formations. pp. 82. 83. "Specific
kinds of overt responses." The operator asks for certain
information, he asks for data, impressions, something to be done,
suggests a different "history" of earlier events, or predicts
events that will occur later. By placing himself in willing casual
conversation with the hypnotist, a person opens a door whereby
supernatural forces can dull his mind, and render it more susceptible
to suggestion and takeover by the operator. A
related technique occurs when the Ericksonian technician has a helper
with him. Both together work on the person until he becomes confused by
the jumble of words. "Double induction is . . where you use two
people to overload one person. It works really quickly. You get a lot of
overload; you get it quickly, and you get a very powerful response. -
Trance-formations, p. 83. Still
another way is through story-telling. A powerful technique used here is
to start a story, then have a character in that story start another
story, and then have someone in that story start yet another. By now
the listener is so confused that the Ericksonian operator catches him.
"What I've done is to embed story inside of story inside of story
until I overload your conscious capacity to keep track of which
statement refers to which thing. . If I were to go on with the story
now, and deliver induction [hidden] messages inside of the story, it
would be difficult for you to know which of the realities I was
referring to . . While your conscious mind is trying to figure that out,
your unconscious will be responding." Trance-Formations. p. 85.
The
objective is to change behavior and change beliefs. The goal is to make
him into an image of the operator in feelings and behavior (which is the
best the operator could imagine for him). "I
want to teach you to see how someone is responding so that you can
vary your behavior to provide a context in which he can respond
appropriately. If you can do that, anyone can go into an altered state
in which you can teach him whatever you want him to learn."-Trance-formations,
p. 14. "The
major positive attribute of an altered state of consciousness is that
you don't have to fight with a person's belief system. The unconscious
mind is willing to try anything, as far as I can tell, if it is
organized and instructed in an appropriate way." -
Trance-formations, p. 99. Beliefs
and normative values are dangerous to NLP. They interfere with being
reached and overcome. They keep people from submitting their minds to
NLP molding. Those learning Ericksonian hypnosis are asked to set aside
their own belief systems while they learn it; then take them up again
afterward to the extent they feel they still need them. Testing NLP will
accomplish the purpose; it will so overwhelm the trainee that he will
not have the same outlook thereafter. "You
will only be asked to suspend your beliefs long enough to test the
concepts and procedures of NLP in your own sensory
experience." Frogs into Princes, p. i. It
is clear that if you are in someone else's home and this kind of thing
begins, get out of there! If the mind-manipulators are in your home,
tell them to leave. If they are slow about doing it, you may need to
telephone the police. How
can you avoid being hypnotized? Surely, that is a question that should
be considered in a study of this type. Here are some suggestions. First,
let us consider a quotation by one of the firms, which is a master of
that, most subtle of hypnotic forms: the Ericksonian: "Everyone
has had the experience of driving in a car and having been so deep in
thought that you missed the street or exit you were looking at. "During
that time of concentration, you were actually experiencing a light
trance. Actually, anytime you start to concentrate internally or focus
inwards, you change your level of consciousness. So, very naturally you
go in and out of various levels of consciousness throughout every day.
Hypnosis is the skilled and directed use of this naturally occurring
state. "The
person most responsible for advancing the field of hypnosis was Dr.
Milton H. Erickson. This extraordinary person showed us how to use
hypnosis to better meet therapeutic goals. He taught us that we can
communicate with the whole person by utilizing conscious and unconscious
levels. Dr. Erickson also taught us how to utilize and bypass client
resistance by embedding therapeutic interventions in seemingly casual
conversation. "Perhaps
most importantly he taught us that each person is an individual and
psychotherapy should be more compatible with the way each person
structures his or her own experience." NEINLP brochure. We
will not here bother with "conscious," "unconscious,"
"subconscious," "libido" (the latter two terms are
in the Freudian, rather than NLP jargon), and other psychiatric
"multiple-mind" concepts. Instead let us say that sometimes
the mind is in high gear, sometimes in a lower gear, and sometimes more
narrowly focused. When
your mind is in high gear, you are at highest alert. You
are thinking fast, observing with extreme care, and your eye movements
are rapid. You are at command center. When you are really aroused, your
judgmental centers are concerned about making wise decisions. The
thinking mind and the power of will is at the forefront of action. But
your mind can slip into lower gear, and this is good. Doing so protects
the physical functioning of the mind. To have your mind going full speed
through all your waking hours would wear out your brain prematurely.
Not to get enough rest at night would produce a similar result. The
result would be a tired mind that eventually works at a lower gear most
of the time, and has a harder time arousing itself to powerful,
quick-thinking levels. We
tend to let our minds rest at lower levels from time to time. But there
is also work to do in life, and there are times when quick, crucial
decisions must be made. But another aspect is what we might call
"focus." You can select one thing and concentrate your
attention on it, or only one aspect of it. While doing this, you may be
giving little attention to other things. In other words, you are in an
upper gear in regard to one thing, and lower on others. That is also
good. It helps rest your mind in the midst of your work. In
order to make it more socially acceptable, the NLP advocates (as
indicated in the above quotation) want to "normalize"
Ericksonian hypnosis as something that happens to people all the time.
But that is not true. When your mind slips into lower gear, it is just
in a partial resting stage; it is NOT in a trance! When you are
concentrating on one thing, and not thinking about other things, you are
also not in a trance; you are just focusing your thoughts. That is good;
it makes for better thinking. When
you recall an event of, say, many years ago, and think about some of the
ramifications of it, other things about you fade out. You are not in a
trance; you are just focusing your thoughts. Hypnotists
want us to believe that trances are normal conditions; if we buy their
idea, we have agreed that, since it is something we all do anyway, we
can be certain that they will also be able to do it to us. That is
not true! No one can hypnotize you if, in the strength of God, you refuse
to permit it to occur. Others may want to make you an open door to their
manipulations, but you can choose to make it a shut door. Trust
yourself to Christ's care, believing that as long as you remain by His
side and do not place yourself presumptuously in the wrong place, He
will guard you with His angels. Get that settled in your mind. Reject
instantly the idea of fear that you can be hypnotized. It is said that
those that fear hypnotism are the easiest ones to hypnotize. It is not
true because you say it is not true, and you know that if you hide
your life in Christ, you are in a rock of Gibraltar that will remain
unshaken to all the blasts of the enemy. Therefore you are safe. But you
must still take precautions. The
three safest places in the world to be is alone with God in prayer,
alone and reading and thinking about His Word, or alone with Him while
walking out-of-doors. The safest attitude to take is one of conscious
trust in God, reliance upon Him for everything, and thankfulness to Him.
Each of those three is powerful! Make
sure that the above two paragraphs are settled and ongoing in your life.
In addition, try to obtain adequate rest, exercise, fresh air, enough
pure water, and a good, moderate diet. Satan
can only reach you through the avenues of the soul: hearing, sight,
touch, taste. Among these, reading, talking, and listening are special.
Throughout this study, we have noted that the hypnotists work by talking
to you, conversing with you, or touching you. That can include listening
to audio- or videocassettes, or television. If,
for example, you are willing to listen to error or read it, then you are
opening a door to possible deception. That is why I urge people NOT to
investigate every new wind of doctrine that comes along! Stay away from
all the latest speculation! You are more likely to be harmed, than
helped. We have an oceanful of truth in the Bible and Spirit of prophecy
on our shelves, and we do not need to explore every little creek that
others tell us that we need to explore. If,
for the remainder of your life, you never again consider one new
theory that others advance, but only give your attention to the Bible,
Spirit of Prophecy, time alone with God, an awareness of world events,
fulfilling your daily duties, and caring for the needs of those around
you, will you be lost? No, in fact you are more likely to be saved. |