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History
of Hypnosis
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Hypnosis has existed in the plant and animal kingdom in one
form or another since time began. In hibernating, animals
'turn inwards' and are able to exist for long periods of
time without sustenance...
To learn more about Mesmer and the history
of hypnosis, we recommend you click on
From Mesmer to Freud, (the title is self explanatory) -
for a very informative read!
Egyptians
No-one knows for certain when the practice
of hypnosis originated but it is known that ancient
Egyptians used a form of it in their dream temples.
Some ancient Egyptian paintings depict an
apparently sleeping person with others who seem to be making
hypnotic passes over them.
Perhaps the best source of reference to
hypnosis in early Egypt comes from the famous 3rd century CE
Demotic Magical Papyrus which was discovered in the 19th
century in Thebes. Column 16 of this papyrus gives
instructions for preparation of a lamp which is to be used
in a ritual: It states:
You take a boy and sit him upon another new brick, his face
being turned to the lamp and you close his eyes and recite
these things which are written above down into the boy's
head, seven times. You make him open his eyes. You say to
him: 'Do you see the light?' When he says to you, 'I see
the light in the flame of the lamp', you cry at that moment,
saying 'Heoue' nine times. You ask him concerning
everything that you wish.
Source: Hidden
Depths - The story of hypnosis by Robin Waterfield.
Mesmer
In the eighteen century an Austrian doctor named Franz Anton
Mesmer found he could cure people of different diseases
without medicine or surgery, and he believed he had a
magnetic force which could regulate the flow of magnetic
fluids in people to produce cure. In many cases his cures
were successful and this method of healing came to be known
as Mesmerism.
Mesmer treated very rich and very poor people. For the less
well-off he ‘magnetised’ a tree from which hung ribbons or
cords for his followers to hold and receive his magnetic
therapy.
Another method he used was to fill a large tub with water,
containing bottles of iron filings. Protruding out of the
tub were iron rods which the common-folk held onto. Many of
the patients had violent seizures or fell into deep sleeps
which could cure many different kinds of ailments.
Mesmer became very famous in Paris at that time and the
French government, at the suggestion of Marie Antoinette,
offered him a life pension and enough money to set up a
clinic. Because Mesmer refused to allow the government
representatives to supervise the clinic a huge controversy
raged and in 1784 the King of France appointed a Commission
to investigate mesmerism.
The report concluded that animal magnetism and the magnetic
field were figments of the imagination and Mesmer’s
practices and theories were regarded as worthless. The fact
that many people had been cured of their ailments seemed of
no consequence.
In the middle of the 19th century a Scottish doctor named
James Braid published a book called Neurhypnology or the
Study of Nervous Sleep. He invented the word neurhypnosis
from which the word hypnosis originated.
Facts about
Freud
Mason
In 1951, a young doctor named Albert Mason
called upon to help a 16 year old boy who was suffering with
an extremely bad case of ichthyosis. This is usually a
hereditary condition in which the patient has fewer sweat
and sebaceous glands than usual, which causes the skin to
become dry and scaly.
The boy's body was almost covered in a
thick, smelly, black layer of hard, dried skin which often
oozed with a bloody serum. He had suffered this condition
since birth and conventional medicine had failed to help
him. On two occasions he had been given skin graft
operations but each time the new skin flared up like the
rest of his body.
It is thought that Dr Mason perhaps did not
realize that hypnosis was not intended to be used to heal
congenital diseases when he offered to help the boy.
At a hospital in East Grinstead in Sussex,
in front of a dozen skeptical doctors, he hypnotized the boy
and gave him suggestions that his left arm would become
clear.
Five days later the blackened skin became
crumbly and fell off to reveal underneath, reddened but
otherwise normal skin. Ten days later the boy's arm was
clear. Dr Mason proceeded to use hypnosis on the other
parts of the boy's body, achieving remarkable results and
the case was reported in the British Medical Journal for
1952. Three years later Dr Mason wrote a follow up article
reporting that the results appeared to be permanent.
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