by wohermiston » April 6th, 2013, 7:11 am
the red flash and the "voice going with you" are like keyword triggers. I use the same idea using urges to pee as a trigger to relax and let go. But here I am suggesting that we use a sound as a substitute for a message - while in trance. I wonder if that would be one way to introduce a strong negative that otherwise would not be effective if simply spoken repeatedly. articles on subliminal advertising say negatives work better than positives there. But they are doing visuals. and in the case of visuals, it must be kept to 1 or 2 words to be effective. In this example you are tricking the subject because in truth there are no commands buried in the sound. Hopefully the subject simply beleives your message and from that point on, as the sound repeats, the subject relates the sound to the actual command. that's why i call it a placebo effect. Comming back to your comment though, i suppose it is possible that if the subject were to hear a strong wind later on, it may have a trigger effect. I had not thought of that possibility. I had mentioned in a different group. I am going through old Pampers commercials looking for bits I can re use in scripts. and I found an interesting technique they used back in the '70s. and that is selective amplifying of certain words. you can see it when you view the waveforms in audacity. keywords are much louder than the rest of the spoken text. I guess most people do not pay alot of attention to commercials, so this is a way to embed just the key words they want you to remember.