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Ladon wrote:You might be on the right track, though there are some things that run contrary to your hypothesis, WhatThe75.
1: I am a voracious reader, both online and in print. After a moment's thought, I wonder if my 'inner voice' is sort of 'translating' the text I'm reading and it ends up processing as an auditory sense?
2: I am actually in graphic design by trade, and like to *think* I'm a decent artist in various formats. Mostly, though, I like to write.
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Ladon wrote:In response to your question about visualization, neither is easy for me, but it is easier to feel "the warm soft sand" in Blink Basic than to imagine a beach.
Reboot2099 wrote:But still, I always think in words. I never think in pictures. And I do have a CONSTANT internal dialogue. Like I m making up stories, alternate stories of what happened or could have happened during the day. Yeah, I m weird :) I thought everybody was like that until a couple months ago when I heard a therapist say the opposite.
MacGyver wrote:ladon, i dont feel the sand, i see the beach, sand, water, people, even a big sand castle.
MacGyver wrote:i still think i am pretty weird. LOL :P
MacGyver wrote:blink, i can sometimes hear diffeent voices sayin things in my mind, the voice over guy all the way to a sexy feminine voice, and i sometimes hear thoughts in the voices of cartoon characters.
i still think i am pretty weird. LOL :P
"Normal" is a setting on your washing machine.Ladon wrote:Yeah, what exactly is normal anyway? Any why is it that many people who want to be 'different' all act very much the same?
I read along, but I'm selective about what I reply to. I took my turn at answering all the newbie questions and now my responses are alongside all the others in the archives.Ladon wrote:Blink! I'm rather surprised to see a post from you, as I thought you had stopped reading WMM, your last post was October. Your Basic induction encouraged me to study Dr. Erickson in more detail, and I'm currently some chapters in to his Exploratory Casebook and Time Distortion in Hypnosis books, quite enjoying both. Though the more I read them, the more I'm convinced that I have not experienced more than a very light trance, but I could be wrong. I may need to contact a real hypnotist, either online or in person, to be sure.
When you're ready to read the Erickson again, read what Mrs. Erickson wrote. She's got a published self-hypnosis method that would be useful for you. What she says about self-hypnosis is more valuable than her instructions for doing it.Ladon wrote:I suppose it doesn't matter, and I should just relax and enjoy it. Unfortunately (or perhaps fortunately) many of the things I would like to accomplish with hypnosis may be best accomplished in a deep trance. Then again, I may be wrong, but a recording won't be able to work with me and help me find the correct answer will it?
It can be handy and uplifting. You might describe it as a natural high. It's one of those things that can automatically feel right. Any questions?Ladon wrote:One example I found most interesting in "Time Distortion" was that of a woman he hypnotized, who was convinced she could not be hypnotized. He suggested at one point that her subconscious would be able to demonstrate her ability to trance, but only to the audience, she would be unaware of the signal. Her arm later began to levitate, though she was still emphatically stating she was not in trance. Somnambulism is fun, isn't it?
Mac, I remember some material on this I read, but I don't recall where. They studied the 'ear clicks' of several groups of people, ear clicks being the sound your ear generates and can be recorded. Men had a different sort of clicks than women, but gay individuals seem to fall somewhere in the middle between the two heterosexual groups. Odd, eh? Anyway, I thought it applied. Perhaps you hallucinated her reaction to your inner music? :p Now there's a new definition for RADIOHEAD! :)the human ear is supposed to work like a microphone so you can hear, not put sound out like a speaker.
There seems to be a natural progression from the more accessible NLP stuff to the less accessible NLP stuff to the source material. If you've got access to a good university library or if your local public library has a generous Interlibrary Loan program, you can save a ton of money and time. I understand that there are PDF copies of lots of the NLP books floating around. I don't know if they're legal copies, but they're there.Ladon wrote:Blink, you weren't kidding, Bandler & Grinder's Trance Formations is a fun read so far. I haven't opened anything but that and your Basic Induction in days. I am noticing many of the tools you use in that induction and what they call them, Stacking Realities, Embedded Commands, etc, and that's kinda fun too.
OK, see, I can't remember if that book has the whole thing or not. I remember reading it an a journal article, but my memory can't be trusted. Just in case you haven't got the part I was referring to along with her instructions, I'll give up my coy routine for a moment and just tell you. She said that self-hypnosis works 'cause your subconscious mind already knows what you need and how to give it to you. All you need to do is enter the right state for your subconscious to do the work. Just get into trance for a little while every so often and you'll tend toward getting where you need to be.Ladon wrote:Actually the techniques you referred to regarding Mrs. Erickson are in Trance Formations, near the end. It sounds like they would be more effective than the self-hypnosis I've tried in the past, but I haven't had a chance to try them out yet.
Blink wrote:There seems to be a natural progression from the more accessible NLP stuff to the less accessible NLP stuff to the source material. If you've got access to a good university library or if your local public library has a generous Interlibrary Loan program, you can save a ton of money and time. I understand that there are PDF copies of lots of the NLP books floating around. I don't know if they're legal copies, but they're there.
Erickson referred to the pair as Bandit and Swindler.
Erickson got very proficient in giving professional demonstrations. There are accounts of him picking out an individual in an audience and, purely by using embedded commands, having that person go into trance and come to sit in a chair onstage.Ladon wrote:Erickson might have been against using hypnosis for the sort of things we do here, but it seems to me that he used it occasionally for fun of his own. I remember reading that his colleagues became wary of shaking his hand, unless he assured them he'd not put them in trance.
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