by Robert J Micheals

Hypnosis is defined as “a trancelike state that resembles sleep but is induced by a person whose suggestions are readily accepted by the subject.” Every kind of hypnotism involves the element of suggestibility, and this concept of controlling the behavior of another is one of those things that gives hypnosis its allure and its colorful history.

Hypnosis An Early History

Hypnosis can be traced back to prehistoric Indian and Egyptian societies. Who treated their sick by taking the patient to a sleep temple, where hypnotic incantations were used to put the patient in a sleep-like state. Between 1400 and 1700, many early hypnotic healers used suggestibility and the power of magnets to heal individuals afflicted by a variety of ailments.

Modern Medicine Pays Attention

Western doctors began paying attention to the field of hypnosis in about 1770, although it was called “mesmerism” at the time. Austrian physician Dr. Franz Mesmer conducted experiments that showed patients’ blood clotted as quickly when a magnet passed over the wound as when the patient was told that a magnet was passing over the wound but the mesmerist actually passed a stick over the wound. Of course, Mesmer’s theory relies on the perhaps flawed assumption that passing a magnet over a wound causes the blood to clot.

In the early 19th century, Indo-Portuguese priest Abbe Faria introduced a form of hypnosis that he said “generated from within the mind” by the intense expectations and suggestibility of the patient. In 1821, Recamier used hypnosis as a form of anesthesia and operated on patients under a “mesmeric coma.”

Eminent Scottish neurosurgeon Dr. James Braid devised the term hypnosis in 1842 and later developed the hypnotic procedure as we know it today. Dr. Braid also introduced the idea of a spinning watch into hypnosis culture, believing that watching a bright moving object over a prolonged period creates a physiological, trance-like response.

Modern Hypnosis

It was Russian medicine that developed the field of obstetric hypnosis, culminating in the Lamaze method of childbirth, where hypnotic suggestion is used to manage pain during childbirth. Lamaze claimed his method was more reflex-driven than hypnotic, but it remains popular with expectant parents today.

By merging psychology with hypnosis after world War 2, a more effective method was found to treat patients for post traumatic stress disorder. Another blended treatment involved Pavlov’s classical conditioning, in which Pavlov had induced pigeons into an altered psychological state. Besides easing pain in childbirth, hypnosis today is used to help patients lose weight, stop smoking, treat drug addiction, and change other destructive behavior that is subject to suggestibility during hypnosis.

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