MyDiaperedMind wrote:Wow Blink! You're impressive on this subject. Might I ask how much schooling you've been thru to know all that?
Thanks for your praise. I wish I could remember more detail so my answer would be more useful to you.
Pat myself on the back for you? No problem at all. :)
Most of what I know is self-taught. I do have a hypnosis certification, but that's really not such a big deal. I've got a grad school diploma plus three years working clinically. I don't use hypnosis in the course of my work, but I've had ready access to a university library and interlibrary loan, so I've been able to read to my heart's content. I'm also a bit compulsive about buying books. If you can afford to get a copy of Ormond McGill's
The New Encyclopedia of Stage Hypnotism, you really should. It's a great starting poing for all the clinical references I can give if you're interested. I've also scoured the 'net for hypnosis and related topics, and I was an active member of the Usenet discussions on hypnosis and NLP back before they became totally craptastic.
I've been interested in hypnosis, sleep learning and mind control for as long as I can remember. I've read the LIDA patents and I'm unimpressed. ;) (I'd still like to have one of the movie prop Neuralizers, though.)
I've had the opportunity to work with some very good clients, as well. I've worked with one somnambule who could do all the hypnotic phenomena all the way to the bottom of the Davis-Husband scale. She was great fun and I learned a lot. Having her do a negative hallucination for another hypnotist was a big ego boost. She also did some automatic drawing while in a deep trance that is still puzzling for its depth and complexity.
Anyone who remembers the journal that Patches kept knows that I've blended hypnosis with operant conditioning to good effect. I was sure that Patches had gotten bored with me and disappeared, but we recently got back in touch and he let me know that he'd been spooked by the depth of my control. (I've promised him no more hypnosis unless he asks for it, so don't expect any more journal entries.) Except for my bone-head mishandling of his fear, that's a ringing endorsement, I think.
I'm
still getting unpacked and settled in after a cross-town move, so many of my best references aren't available, but I'm happy to put an effort into answering any question. For this stuff, you don't need to bother asking. There are some very good references available on the 'net. You can Google "beta alpha theta delta" and turn up tons of brainwave material. I posted a link to a good page somewhere 'round here.
This link indicates that the Alpha-Theta brainwaves are only present once when falling asleep and once when waking up and not during the 90-minute cycles during the night. (The Wikipedia article on hypnosis explains more about Alpha-Theta.) There is probably better material, but this is what I could find quickly.
The technique for bringing someone up from sleep to hypnosis was described by Dave Elman, I believe. His
Hypnotherapy is one of the books that I don't have handy at the moment.
Thanks again, MDM. I hope my answer hasn't bee
too long or
too boring.
-- Blink
...and you can begin to feel yourself drifting deeper, can't you.