I’ve been hypnotized before and it just feels like a deep state of relaxation and comfort where the only thing you focus is the hypnotists voice. You feel obligated and compelled to do the suggestions he asks. Pretty cool actually
Eric D Idk, that sounds short term. if you could hypnotize yourself to enjoy studying, ultimately you might study more for longer because you're enjoying it. So the time wasted trying to hypnotize yourself pays off.
Wouldn't it be amazing if you could feel as confident, enthusiastic and as motivated about studying as you do with something else in you're life that you "love" doing??.. imagine being able to take all the fun, confidence, assurance, reward etc and apply it to everything that you do, how amazing would you be? its all about visualisation and imagination! Thats self hypnosis! See a winner= be a winner!(whatever winning is to you) Ask conor mcgregor he has it sussed 👍
Hypnosis is the yin to the EMDR yang. I went through therapy for PTSD after my military service and EMDR was the method they used. its essentially bilateral stimulation of the brain. Its definitely intriguing, but a little unsettling to go through. they can "replace" whole memories with implanted altered memories via coaching and memory repetition with slight changes to the traumatic event.
EMDR has been a God send for me! I also have PTSD (not related to military service) and the ability to work through my trauma in a non triggering was has been absolutely wonderful
@@twiztidyournutz My therapist used EMDR to help me process past traumas, and I was blown away by how effective - and quick! - it was. It's very difficult to explain, but I'll try. Just forgive me if it like quackery. I promise you it works. Let's see... You probably know that the two halves of the brain are responsible for different types of processing. There's some overlap; but when it comes to processing really important events, including traumatic ones, both sides of the brain need to work together. If both sides don't finish processing the event, PTSD could result. Note: I'm sure PTSD is a lot more complicated than that, but I'm no therapist. All I know about is the part that EMDR works with. I've just told you the *theory* behind EMDR. Now I'll tell you how a session works. A trained therapist guides you in remembering a painful event. As you think about it, you watch a dot on a screen moving from left to right and back or, alternately, you tap one hand and then the other. The bilateral eye or hand movements engage both sides of your brain as you reprocess the event, allowing you to work past the place where you've been "stuck." For me, EMDR didn't involve any sort of memory replacement, just a fresh, more balanced take on the events that had traumatized me. I still remember them as clearly as ever, but I'm not hung up on them any more. I've been able to move past the pain. And like I said above, I was blown away by how effective such a simple practice could be.
@@Karin_Allen i want to know if it will work for sexual abuse trauma but I've heard hypnotherapy is not good for this by some hypnotherapist on youtube.
Michael's voice is just so soothing to me. I thoroughly enjoy listening to everything he's always teaching us. :D Also, SO excited for SciShow Psychology!!!
I have first-hand experience with hypnosis in a clinical setting as a patient. For me, the sessions were very much about "playing along". As such, I did not perceive these sessions as much help in my situation and consequently stopped having them after about three months. I did however get to experience a completely new state of bodily awareness and relaxation that I had never experienced before. After "snapping out of it", if that's what you'd like to call it, I felt almost as if I had just gotten out of bed, with all of the physical tranquility that entails. At the same time, the other ill-effects of getting out of bed were basically non existant, I wasn't drowsy, I didn't have lessened coordination for a few minutes and I didn't feel tired. I've tried recreating this state of relaxation via meditation and have only few times managed to actually emulate this. The more often and more consistently I meditate, the more often I succeed, so I would recommend you try meditation too!
There is this one trained hypnotist that taught me lots about persuasion, politics, framing, and totally changed how I view the world. Funny enough, it was the creator of the Dilbert comic. :)
I'm pretty sure I was hypnotized while listening to the audiobook for The Gollem and the Jini. Not exactly sure how or why, but the story and the narrator always left me in a new and refreshed state of mind when I was done listening.
I’m highly hypnotizable. It’s honestly pretty great - I can use hypnosis videos to change my behavior somewhat and I’m fairly good at meditation, which feels similar. I’ve always considered writing a story with hypnosis, since so many stories get it kind of wrong.
@mcarol3434 I know I'm not the one you asked, but I recommend Ultra Hypnosis and Nimja Hypnosis, though I've been leaning more toward Nimja lately. They offer a variety of experiences, including some more...interesting ones, but I stick to the more sfw experiences for relaxation.
Full disclosure, I'm a hypnotherapist. I concede full bias on how effective it can be. I'm pretty much on board with everything said in this video, minus the idea that certain individuals are more "hypnotizable" than others. In my experience, we are all naturally very good at hypnosis. Getting the "10 mile stare", or daydreaming, becoming so engrossed in an activity that hours feel like minutes, and driving somewhere, arriving at your destination and not remembering many parts of the trip, are all examples of our incredible ability to focus within ourselves and heal. Great video.
For some reason, I’m obsessed with everything hypnosis. Like I just love the thought of it. I just can’t explain it. And that’s why I watched this video. I’ve been obsessed ever since I was little.
This is so weird. I just got done studying hypnosis and meditation for my psychology major. This video is great by the way. It simplifies what I learned a lot and visualises most of the crucial information. Also went into perception (studied that last week) and connected both topics, which is awesome. And thanks for linking that article on posthypnotic amnesia. Love finding stuff like this :)
All i can say is from "day dreaming" to Hypnosis to meditation. Its been a great friend of mine for all of my life. And many thanks to the Lady who taught me to "mentally relax". She was a keeper.
I smoked for 30 years...walked into get hypnotized...felt like I was there about 45 minutes to an hour....I had sat in that chair for nearly 4 hours...haven't smoked a cigarette since.
Similar situation though I'm not scared of it the very idea of anyone else controlling me even partially just weirds me out but it is super interesting and I love learning how it affects the mind and its limits
This explains so much! I am not subject to hypnosis at all, but that is because my ability to focus and use self-suggestion is a naturally learned talen that help me solve many pronlems, deal with pain, etc. Now I understand I have been able to "hypnotize" my own brain all this time!
0:44 - _"... and might cause some real changes in your brain"_ Everything we do causes real changes in out brain; even when we are doing nothing at all ^^
I was hypnotized at a show during my Freshman year and my personal experience feel far more into the non-state theory. I felt like I was acting but wasn't in full control of it.
For me, hypnosis feels like it could be an altered state of consciousness. I mostly use it to relax, to help my brain slow down at night to sleep, and it feels like a state of deep relaxation and vague awareness that I can't achieve otherwise. There is an element of playing along, as any instructions that don't sit right will pull you out of it. As with anything else, if it's something you're interested in, it's something that's easier to do the longer you do it.
Hi guys, i have been a sub for a year now and watched like a fourth of your vids over time and I have to say: this one is my absolut favourite. Not because of the topic, but because for the first time your presentation seemed really extensive (hopefully thats the right word to describe what I mean, english is my 2nd language...) and I love the amount of different backround researches you included. Up to this point there hasnt been a video that felt way too short and basuc to me, but I still liked your style and strictly sciency approach, so I kept coming back, hoping for more details to the "topic of the day" and/or information I did not yet know. This finally felt exactly like that. :) I know ppls attention spans for vids is assumed to be pretty short and thus short three mins like vids make sense, but I believe a channel like yours (from my understanding of your intentions channemwise) would benefit from more content per video than buzzfeed ;) I dont know... I just always felt a weird connection to the ppl behind this channel (maybe because I love all kinds of science shit and think ppl should be exposed to it more... In some diffrent way than school... Cuz school does kill your enthusiasm so often...))...and hope u will make more vids like this one. Thank you sooooo much for all your hard work :-)
So it's basically just will power enhanced through relaxation. And it can't do impossible things nor be done without the concious permission of the hypnotized subject.
It is pleasant and effective from personal experience. :) No matter the exact explanation. It is a tool for healing for certain people and illnesses and should be treated as such. It did with me in hours what I´ve never been able to do in years
If you believe you can change your state of consciousness then you can, because your brain is a system built to edit itself and hypnosis is just allowing someone to actively guide that process.
y2ksw1 Not really. It's said clearly on the video. Hypnosis has to be voluntary and you have to be openned to the idea that it works, like a placebo. If you don't want to be hypnotized and offer concious resistence then it won't work.
Andrew S Volunteering has nothing in common with believe. I can volunteer for a job, even if I don't believe in it or its essence. I can volunteer as a fireman and never have seen or touched real fire or danger. Volunteering is the mode of the personal disposal towards a goal, while believe is acknowledging a fact which is eventually not true.
"Focus your eyes on this swinging watch. You're getting sleepy, very sleepy" Okay okay, Scishow, it's not my fault your channel is so damn fun that I'm watching your videos even at 04:37 AM...
My grandfather is a hypnotist 😂 when we were little we would want him to try to hypnotize us- but we couldnt quit giggling. But he would help people around town with test anxiety and such before their exams ❤
I have been hypnotized before. I was in a lot of pain. I was having strange migraine head aches that would not go away and they were there 24/7. I was willing to try anything so I asked my dad about trying hypnosis and we went to see a doctor who had a doctoret’s degree in hypnosis and she was really nice and she hypnotized me and the pain went away😁
WOW! THATS FULL ON HEY!? WONDER WHAT UR MRI /EEG SCAN WOULD HAVE SAID... IF WE HAVE THE ABILITY TO DO THAT , THEN WHAT DO WE NEED DRUGS OR MEDICINES FOR?
@Lisa Jordan I don't know about hypnosis but maybe self induced psychosis.. Or mere mass level stupidity. . neanderthal brain , of wanting to fit in really and be a part of a group... Because I've never understood how anyone can believe in UNPROVABLE with complete contradiction
It is our very square, very bouncy sounding studio. We finally got our sound foam in and hung it after this video was filmed. Better sound coming soon!
I took a class some years back with a Calvin D. Banyon, at his facilities in Texas. During the training he diagrammed the mind showing the conscious, subconscious, and unconscious areas. The subconscious is where we "store" all the "data" we see, hear, or experience in our lives. From this data we derive our habits, beliefs, and emotions. The unconscious mind "believes" these emotions, and turns them into "feelings." While reading many of these comments, one can count the number of times people "wish" change their feelings, habits, and emotional reactions "changed" through hypnosis..!! Hoping to help with "happier" lives for all..!!
Wow, this is actually pretty accurate. Hopefully more people see this video, so they understand that hypnosis isn't even close to how most non-scientific media portrays it. I've been doing a lot with hypnosis over the past half year or so, and in that time I've hypnotised people and been hypnotised myself well over 300 times, and my experiences with it mostly line up to what this video says.
hi everyone ,if anyone else is searching for hypnotist weight loss try Hyper hypno blueprint (do a search on google ) ? Ive heard some great things about it and my mate got amazing success with it.
Found this really late, lol. This is a fantastic video and you do a really great job of describing some of the key points of hypnosis and its practical applications. Personally, I just like to entertain but I think of entertainment with hypnosis as a way of getting peoples attention and letting them know that the practical applications exists and are available. I should just show this video to anyone I'm going to hypnotize in the future.
Hypnosis being a state of focused relaxation. I have ADHD and I’ve played around with self hypnosis. It worked sort of. For a long period I was in this bubble of relaxation and focus, but one thought would shatter my hypnotic state. I had the hardest time going through a session without that happening and I think it’s because of the ADHD. I can’t focus. That was the problem
@@Johnsmith-jg2nt this might just be the weird way my brain interprets things, but when I hypnotized myself I would get in this state of focus that get like a bubble keeping me insulated from everything else, until I notice something and then pop the bubble is gone and it takes a lot to get back into focus mode.
To me, as the daughter of a hypnotherapist, hypnosis seems to be a heightened state of consciousness in which it is easier to bring your focus to focus one one specific thing at a time. I also have sensory processing disorder, and, I am a people greeter at Walmart. As you can imagine, it gets pretty noisy there from time to time, and, at my Walmart, there are big fans on each door that make a prominent, constant, relaxing sound. Whenever I get overloaded, I just direct my attention to the sound of the fan until I hear the sound of a cart. Works like a charm.
As he says the phrase "it's all about focus" at 2:12, you'll notice Micheal leaves focus and blurs out almost completely. This is a sign he is implanting instructions directly on your brain.
I did three sessions of hypnotherapy a couple months ago because I was going through a lot of things. It was a huge game changer for me...helped a lot. And that’s not sarcasm! Genuinely the best decision of my life.
@@faheemaasvat6840Visualization of replaying your fearful scenerios actually helps this. From personal experience i conquered a lot of fears this way. It took a lot of power away from my fears (still had to take a plunge, but with a lot less effort and wasng paralyzed by anxiety anymore) this is backed by science!
That isn't the point of the test, though. The test is measuring your ability to perform a conflicting task; if you aren't reading the words, your results would not indicate your performance on a Stroop test but rather your ability to perceive different colors.
Jess Then you are saying that the hypnosis is useless as it "deactivated the area of the brain necessary for word recognition" when in principle I used the same. I turned my "word recognition off" for the sake of the test. In turn, the hypnotized didn't do better *based on the point you've made*.
You're very bad at trying to sound smart. You're just making yourself look stupid. In case you really are ignorant, I'll explain. The study used the Stroop test as a means of measuring whether or not the hypnosis worked. Your initial comment was talking about the Stroop test in general, which is what Jess was referring to, by saying (in not so many words) that the Stroop test isn't a "game" that you just win; rather, it measures your ability to perform a conflicting task.
+Irixio Zalaniar Since you just repeated what she said then you can just read what I answered to her. Also, you interpret the Stroop test incorrectly. It is not your ability to perform a conflicting task. *You are not tasked to both read the word and describe the color at the same time*. The conflict is not the task but the processing of the information. I'll repeat it just in case. *The task is in no way conflicting*. You are tasked either *read the word* or *describe the color*. The reaction time is slowed because your brain processes incorrectly. It is also used "to measure a person’s selective attention capacity and skills, as well as their processing speed ability".
You're very bad at trying to sound smart. You're just making yourself look stupid. I was rewording Jess's comment to fit your simple mind better. It didn't work, so let's try again. The hypnotized people did better (as shown in the video), and Jess didn't say that they didn't do better. You said that the Stroop test is easy in your initial comment. The method you provided to "win" the Stroop test (which, once again, isn't a game) defeats the purpose of the test. Let me clarify the Stroop test for you, since you clearly don't understand how it works: you are asked to state the color of text the word is written in. You are never asked to read the word. The task IS conflicting: there is a conflict between what the written word is and what the color of the word is. There is a conflict between the natural tendency to read the word and the task of ignoring the word. There is a conflict between saying the correct color and saying the word itself. The Stroop test in the example presented in the video is being used as a basis for controlled measurement of the effects of the hypnosis. Without the hypnosis, the test is taken by the participants to establish the control (as in, a baseline of an experiment). When the hypnosis is applied, the test is taken again to see if the participants' scores improve. This provides the results of the experiment. Since you clearly didn't understand the first time you read Jess's comment, I'll summarize here, given the "new" (read: common sense) information you gained by reading the rest of my comment. The purpose of the test is to measure a person's ability to state the color of text when that color CONFLICTS (there's that word again) with the color word written, even though the brain wants to simply read the word. If you eliminate the written word portion of the test by "using peripheral vision", you may as well just look at squares of color and state the color. Then, there is clearly no "test" anymore, which completely defeats the purpose of the Stroop TEST. If you plan to respond to this comment, please re-watch the video and re-read the comments in this thread. I do hate ignorance.
I think putting someone under hypnosis is kinda like starting a fire using friction. It's very slow at first and it takes a lot of work but the more you progress the easier it gets and a lot of tender work is required. The amber size is like the suggestions you make, the heat of the amber is the state they're in and the fuel and air is like the focus, relaxation, disassociation and good feelings. They need to be as relaxed as possible, have something for them to focus on and start off with very small suggestions to promote more focus, relaxation, disassociation and good feelings. Then you gradually build it up until you can make them do some crazy things.
When I was a teen I got my hands on some instructions for hypnosis. They weren't worded that great and I feel like they probably could have used a lot more explanation of certain things. But, after a few attempts I got the hang of it, had a couple friends who were happily willing guinea pigs, and actually wound up being pretty good at hypnotizing people. Provided they were willing. It turned out to be a bit of art form as I got better (though I suspect it's an art form that is teachable if you know it well enough). And certainly there are individuals who are highly susceptible. Myself, I seem to be highly resistant, which I found out despite really, really wanting to experience it as those I'd had hypnotized were able to experience it. ... This was something I played with for about 3 years, tapering off as I entered high school and become too busy with school work. I would eventually learn how to hypnotize myself in what may more accurately be called meditation. I also would decide to stop outright when I found myself being tempted to manipulate people -- and it is tempting, especially at a high school age, but luckily my moral compass kicked in. But I had gotten to a point where I sort of understood ways to nudge people without fully hypnotizing them, just using certain sort of phrasing (choosing words based on connotation rather than just direct definition) visual cues, gestures, and subtle repetition to reinforce whatever simple thing I was trying to get across. The trick was to have it be subtle enough that the person didn't catch on and so wouldn't raise their guard. Before my moral compass kicked in, I was able to get a friend to walk to the wrong classroom for 4th period, another to try to high-five people for about the rest of that day, and a couple other little gags. And I suspected I could do more if I kept practicing... but when I caught myself considering more nefarious things I actually felt ashamed and did my best to cut it out of my skillset. But because of that experience, which may have heightened my resistance (which I personally think is influenced by how instinctually (mis)trusting you are or others) I am highly dubious of the fast-talking carnival-type stage hypnotists. I find it hard to believe those people they "hypnotize" aren't just playing along out of some sort of peer pressure, and that it's an entirely different thing altogether.
Now, this argument has attracted my attention more than others, since I have studied psychology out of curiosity regarding hypnosis. After the studies, I have taken a major step back, because most of the science behind it is over-complicated or over-simplified. The typical movie hypnotist shows an event which takes hours of preparation. Hypnosis can be explained easily to everybody, because there is no natural inhibition, and everybody does it all the time. For example, when you wait for the bus in a noisy city and watch your phone for information and get hooked, then you are in a state of self-hypnosis, where you are still aware of the surroundings. When the bus arrives, you will enter, but you keep watching your phone. And, you forget completely about the noise. Now, if you happen to get your ticket checked and you have it, you continue this routine, but if you can't find the ticket, you are awaking and fall into panic, because you have lost the conscious contact to the world. The scope of hypnosis is to avoid panic situations, but to guide you through your thoughts around obstacles. You may observe these objects and describe them, without getting emotionally involved. The therapist's work is to guess, when you start to worry and distract your mind just that much to continue the journey. Dream-walking is another form of hypnosis, which may be caused by illness, fever, extreme stress or simply out of a habit. Needless to say, that an artificial session of hypnosis is de facto fascinating to all.
Its more like when you watch TV or play video games(typically men and kids). Also happens when you drive and when you boss instructs you on what you will do.
The greatest form of hypnosis today is comedy. Because you raise the emotions to a certain frequency, and you start to have the waves of tension ( built up from any tense thought patterns ) released,. When it is released, the rate of suggestibility goes up, because we become in a parasympathetic state. ( Anything, that promotes the well being of your physical body regenerating in a peaceful manner will be taken into consideration ).
I have a certificate as a trainer of hypnosis. Great Video. Thanks so much. I use self hypnosis for personal pain relief by engaging the forgetter. (Remember having a pain? Do you actually feel the pain while you remember? You have forgotten the pain. The trick is insta-forget. Be aware the you could feel what you feel as pain, but instantly remember to forget because you know it is not useful. (Some pain is useful and must be experienced. The rest is easily forgotten.) )
I used self-hypnosis out of desperation with a long-term (15 years) chronic health problem that my doctor said had no cure and the next step was surgery that wasn't guaranteed. So I made up some recordings based on scripts I found in a psych hypnosis book. Within 2 weeks all pain, muscle spasms, digestive 'events', and other things (skin breakouts, nausea, heartburn) disappeared. Coincidentally, and even though it was not part of the hypnosis script, a sleep disorder (sleep paralysis) improved so much I haven't had a 'bad' event in 6 years. I suggested it to a friend who lost quite a bit of weight with her own tapes. But a relative failed to give up smoking using the same technique.
Thank you for this video. During my personal and business coaching education I learned a few hypnosis tools in the hypnotherapy segment that really do work but are something completely different from show hypnosis. Unfortunately show hypnosis is THE thing stucked in people's head when they hear the term "hypnosis" and therefore it has a pretty bad reputation.
I simply call it hypnosis and the "other" thing show hypnosis. Why should I call the REAL thing something else? I simply explain my clients what it is in a calm and professional manner and show the differences between these two things. Normally, people tend to react pretty positive.
If nothing else, it's annoying that stage hypnosis seems to have leaned on the sorts of suggestions that lead to people doing embarrassing things, and cultivating this "mind control" fantasy. The possibilities are endless; you don't have to leave people afraid to see a therapist for others to get some enjoyment out of it.
Bambuzzsprosse Exactly. I was attracted by show hypnosis to the point to study psychology, and with the knowledge of the whole, I have stepped back for magnitudes. It is still fascinating, but the work behind it makes it much less attractive. I still use it however for some party tricks or just for my personal fun. The artificially induced drunkness is one of these, which are pretty easy to obtain (but still not in a few minutes). There is also a movie from Derren Brown on TH-cam, which shows this routine. Talking nonsense while somebody is concentrated at the phone, is my personal fun. After a short while, I try to interrupt the phone routine and most of the times, people talk nonsense, too, and, that is the funny part, they find out immediately and can't explain themselves. 😄
Once a hypno-therapist came to my school, and she hypnotized my friend and got him to forget 7. He could count to 7, he'd just go straight from 6 to 8, he couldn't remember for a day or two after lol
You have to be trusting and willing to make yourself vulnerable for hypnosis to work on you. Your friend was definitely a trusting type. I've had multiple hypnosis attempts done on me. Never worked. I simply do not "let go", under any circumstances. And having a woman hypnotist try on me? Even less chance LOL. I would be too self conscious to not embarrass myself in front of her...
This top-down processing he's talking about... How perceptions interact with reality. I think it works like this: it makes sense that we are highly subject to interpret reality based on our perceptions for many reasons. Depending on what we want or need, our perceptions might see reality in different ways. Like when we are protecting our children, everything can seem like a threat. But to a child, those very same things look like fun. I think it's natural too. Because when something works, especially when that something is hard to understand, we tend to keep going with that way. And we will let ourselves perceive something in such a way that supports our perception of how things work. Like if you think you are more energetic when drinking something, regardless of the reality, it might help get us to actually be energetic. So we create a causation where it might or might not be. And we tune ourselves to function as such. It can be beneficial for us to use our perceptions as a basis for the reality we are trying to interpret. That frees up the mind to do other things too. But sometimes it's not good to have pre-conceived notions when they are wrong. Our senses aren't always perfect...so building truth can sometimes be an ongoing process. Some of these points are even touched on in this other sci show video: th-cam.com/video/HHeYxzJFVKM/w-d-xo.html
So basically no matter how much I want to do the thing suggested if I don't really want to be hypnotized it won't work? That's actually kind of cool and means people (especially those already resistant) who don't want to be hypnotized can't be or are immune as long as they want to be
It's definitely real. I was failing my final year chemistry with a grade of 26% on average. Dismal. I hated chemistry, but I needed it to get into University. I went to a psychologist for help, and he used Hypnosis, and taught me how to do it myself. So following his instructions every time I studied, I used the techniques he taught me before studying. At the final year exam, I did the same thing. During the exam, all I had to do was close my eyes, and all my notes were right there before me (in my mind) to flick through and find answers to questions. I passed the exam with flying colours. It definitely works. All my grades imrpoved greatly.
NeonsStyle It is not really hypnosis, but a thought pattern which helped you to recall memories. However, since you trust yourself, it may have induced some sort of hypnosis which allowed you to remain focussed.
NeonsStyle It wasn't my intention to offend you. The reason I studied psychology was to fully understand hypnosis, and in the end you make a clear distinction between thought pattern and hypnosis. Hypnosis happens when you do not focus the object you are after, while you have been not only observing, but also interacting with your memories. The technique to reach out for memories is almost the same as hypnosis, but hypnosis avoids direct contact with the memories you want to observe. It that now better explained?
a great topic, brilliantly done. thank you! Oh, and you picked my choice of SciShow channel topic! Yay! happy fan is happy!! *slurps tea from SciShow mug in victory*
Okay, uh, whoever's reading this maybe read the last bit first and then skim the rest because it's probably too long to read. I think it's about concentration/expectations. I've watched some TH-cam hypnosis videos, and found that they worked- for example, one that made me unable to move my leg. It suggested that I should either wait for 5-10 minutes for it to work again, or leave a comment saying to please release my leg. It worked and when I came out of the trance I was unable to move my leg. It sort of shuddered when I tried to move it, but then stopped. It was similar to the sensation of deciding to move your leg and then _deciding not to_ and keeping it still. I was tensing the muscles to lift the leg but then not following through. I didn't think I was actively telling it to keep still, so I decided "there's no way it's physically possible for my leg to be unable to move, I'm simply creating a mental block against it" and after a few tries and focusing on getting rid of the mental block, I was able to move freely again. This all comes down to what you _decide to believe_. Since I believed I couldn't move my leg, I unconsciously stopped myself from moving it. There was another video I watched similar to the previous one and I decided to remove some of the suggestions as they were being spoken. I believed some of them, but each time the speaker said one I didn't want, I sort of mentally told myself the opposite. Afterwards the ones I tried to remove were gone. This shows that I was conscious and aware during the hypnosis; I was able to carry out my experiment and remember the process. Unless, of course, I was doing it wrong/just telling myself I was being hypnotized. But I'd like it if someone else tried the same experiments to confirm my results.
There are a few good examples on TH-cam. One is about making a fist and imagine to strife over a field, feeling wheat crops in your (other) hand. Then, you are told to open your other hand and you can't, or feel at least a strong tendency to keep it closed. It is curious to watch yourself how over time this tendency becomes less strong. I cannot tell if it is believe or not, but it has definitively to do with will. I can force myself to open the hand, but I prefer not to.
y2ksw1 That's interesting. You "prefer not to"? Is that actually just a preference not to open your hand, or is it more that you _can_ break the hypnosis by telling yourself it's not real/forcing your hand open but only if you exit the... I don't know, the _roleplay_ of the hypnosis, which isn't as fun? Or is it that the hypnosis has told you to not prefer to open your hand?
Kara Hill Hypnosis is a dream-like state under many aspects, which you can only fully understand once you got hypnotized. Preferring not to do a thing is much like not to bother. And of course, you can break the hypnosis at any time. It's not a physical or mental constraint, but rather a pleasant state of day-dreaming.
y2ksw1 Okay, that all makes sense and I agree, thank you for clarifying- except for the part about only understanding it once you're hypnotized. I felt as if I could understand it both in and out of the hypnotized state. But perhaps I'm mistaken?
Kara Hill It is difficult to understand how hypnosis feels without ever being hypnotized. Day-dreaming comes close, but is interrupted easily by external events, while hypnosis is interrupted easily only by yourself. External events can pass by completely without attracting your attention. For example, if you accept "not to know" the number 7, you will jump over it counting your fingers and have one left over, which you can't explain. And this fact is very funny for the world watching you, while you struggle to find out why you have missed one finger counting. Once you have been hypnotized, you will recognize certain behaviors easier than if you only have been watching hypnotized people.
I tried it for the first time 3 days ago and it totally worked. For me, it was more powerful than is even described in this video. there's no way there was a placebo affect, I'm the most skeptical person ever.
Straightforward, professional, ethical hypnosis is one thing. There are many more less innocent variants on the spectrum. A hypnotist on the amusement side often uses confusion and secret cues in a conversational style to induce a trance unbeknownst to the subject. A sneaky tist can fool the subject into thinking a dangerous action is safe and innocent. And what is it that politicians do? In some cases, at least, it's amateur, clandestine hypnosis. By repetition, the hypnotist/politician plants a suggestion deep in the party adherents' brains.
From my experiences as a student watching a live hypnosis show involving other students, either it's real, or they planted some incredible actors in the audience to be selected. Ah, fun times!
Woooooowwwwwwww!!! Brain regions were affected by hypnotic suggestions? Doesn’t that mean hypnosis works for those that are highly suggestible? Amazing.
Once when my brother and I were young, we tried hypnosis on each other after seeing it on an educational tv show. I was able to hypnotize him fairly easily, but it never worked on me.
During the mid to late '80s my psychotherapist & I used hypnosis to help me with various problems & it was not only helpful, it was very enjoyable. At that time I was practicing self-hypnosis as well, which I had begun using after reading a book on the subject. Then I asked my therapist if he could do hypnotherapy & it turned out he'd had some training in this as an adjun ict to regular therapy, so with his help I was able to go into deeper hypnotic states while under his guidance as well as on my own, although I was never able to reach the deeper states on my own. We worked on some practical problems, such as my smoking addiction, but what I really loved was the ability to enter deep states of combined relaxation & hyper-awareness. BTW, I am easily hypnotized & I realized that I had been using self-hypnosis since early childhood to induce visions. The earliest visions I can recall occurred when I was 4 or 5 yrs old, & with experience I taught myself techniques to help produce a state of awareness that could help induce more profound visions, also that allowed me to more easily enter a visionary state & to heighten the visions. I've always been very visual, have been an artist since early childhood, aided by an inherited photographic memory-- the ability to draw & paint easily is common on my maternal side, with several cousins becoming artists as adults. My visions were primarily visual, though occasionally aural. My visions have always been deeply connected with the earth, with 'Nature', have always been experiences that allowed me to see & feel the deeper connections between, for example, the sunlight & the wind & the trees & myself, these visions being quite intense. These visions have always been similar to visions I've read about as an adult involving Native spirituality, though I am certainly not claiming my visions were as intense or as important as those of people such as Black Elk. Although I learned fairly traditional native views of life & of spirituality from my relatives from early childhood on, I have never held a relationship/position to a people in any way similar to traditional "medicine men", nor would I ever claim to speak for anyone other than myself. My visions certainly helped me better understand the traditional views of native spirituality, allowed me to experience the connection & inter-relatedness of the many forms of life that make up this earth, including those which in western thought are labeled inanimate. The hypnotic states reached in therapy were very like my childhood (& later) visions in many ways, but they didn't include the intense spiritual revelations or connections between life forms. Still, the deeper states I reached with my therapist's help were incredibly beautiful & relaxing. More than relaxing. With his help, I was able to go to an ideal place (always chosen by me) where I was entirely relaxed & at peace while s till being very aware of my environment--the environment where I placed myself when in hypnotic states. This was an ideal place, though based on a place I had known all my life, deep in the woods near a spring, on the land where my father & his ancestors had lived for several generations, after the 1838 forced removal of our ancestors from what's now Cherokee County, N.C. Hypnosis was able to help me experience an incredible peacefulness, a deep relaxation, while at the same time allowing me to be very aware of the environment of my chosen ideal place. Linear time stopped when I was in this state & what seemed like an eternity was in linear time only a few minutes. With hypnosis, you can choose your own ideal place, can go there & experience a relaxation that seems outside of linear space-time. It's similar in many ways to a vision & is unbelievably pleasurable.
I'm a magician and I've studied hypnosis a bit. The most interesting thing i found was N.L.P, developed by richard bandler. just wondering if you guys came across him while researching for this video?
Gonzo Bizarro Hypnosis is much more than that, and NLP is only the small brother and sister. You will have found out that fun hypnosis is much easier to realize than more serious matters. This lays in the fact that people are open to fun and allow more easily foreign input. But when it is just you to have fun on their expenses, then things become much more difficult, if not impossible. NLP has taken only a few aspects and tries to over-simplify, in order to make it accessible to everybody. But only if you know more, you can gain true goals, because you cannot betray people for long. You need their full agreement.
For example: This video uses some aspects of hpnotism to help you watch the whole video. He moves left and right constantly, out of time with his hand gestures moving left and right. Graphics constantly draw lines left or right. This back and forth movement makes watching the video slightly more difficult, which makes your brain pay more attention to focus on what he's saying. Paying more attention focuses your brain into a state of greater focus, tricking you into watching longer.
This video needs updating. I'm a certified master hypnotist, and I found quite a few poor generalizations and outright errors: The effects of hypnosis depend on the depth of trance. The deeper the trance, the more profound the effect. The state is most like what we call hypnogogic and hypnopompic states. Subjects find their ability to judge and analyze has been severely reduced, often to a point similar to their age at their first conscious memories. That makes them more suggestible, as you would experience with a 3- or 4-year-old. They won't do anything that will indirectly harm themselves, change their self-identification, nor change any of their primary relationships. There are several induction techniques beyond eye fixation -- some involve confusing the subject or surprising them. The hypnotized subject seems to like to play games and will follow the suggestions of someone they trust. Their logical skills are also diminished, so it is often possible to tie two action causally that actually have little or no causal link. Hypnotic suggestions require refreshing in all but the deepest subjects, which can be more trance work, more opportunities to experience the new thought or behavior, or some combination. Deeper subjects tend to be those with more experience responding positively to authority (for example, soldiers, dancers), those who spend a lot of time thinking creatively (artists, teachers), and people who have deeper or more frequent REM cycles when they sleep. This latter factor is how stage hypnotists check instantly for susceptibility to suggestion: by having the subject look up and noting how much of the white of the eye is exposed below the iris (their eye muscles are theoretically more developed from spending more time in REM or similar meditative states). In deeper trance, memories can be easily repressed or planted (even of one's own name), sensory experiences can be evoked on command, and profound physiological changes to the skin, nervous system, gastrointestinal system, and immune system are also possible. Yes, hypnosis sometimes incorporates psychological techniques, but it doesn't depend on them to create behavioral change, and hypnotherapists often help people quit smoking, lose weight, manage pain, overcome fears/phobias, ease skin disorders like eczema and psoriasis and warts, reduce burn trauma, increase medication adherence, and many other amazing effects among the new crop of medical hypnotherapists.
Curious! I felt the opposite. I meditate a lot and I studied neuroscience and I definitely think its an altered state. At first I felt like I was just playing along with the therapist, but then I saw a picture in my mind (a rope on a boat) that didnt exactly mean anything, but I started crying uncontrollably.
Abyssaljam When hypnosis starts, you are walking along for a very long time (usually for hours). Once you get comfortable with it, you can also change your perception. But it is always your choice and never the therapist's.
Abyssaljam I've been on both sides of hypnosis many times and I personally think both theories apply to some degree. I think it is a different state of consciousness, but there's no clear line between hypnotized and not hypnotized. It's an organic progression and when you're not in the "perfectly hypnotized" state (which I don't think anyone ever strictly is), the kind of "playing along" described in non-state theory can help to alleviate doubts and distractions that get in the way of successful hypnosis. Yet I think there is some truth to the altered state theory describing a lack of presence, when very far under. Of course, it could still just be the mind playing tricks on itself. It's very subjective.
Well, the sentence doesn't really make sense. Maybe, you could ask: _why do I get a boner hypnotising others?_ or something else that is equally childish and obscene.
A long while ago someone kept asking the question (for over half a year in every video I think.) "Why is there hair around my anus?". It somehow fits into all of SciShows videos. Why is there [parts of videos title] around my anus?
I’ve been hypnotized before and it just feels like a deep state of relaxation and comfort where the only thing you focus is the hypnotists voice. You feel obligated and compelled to do the suggestions he asks. Pretty cool actually
It's called social role enactment
Sounds spoopy
I have too i honestly liked it
Like the Imperius Curse, from Harry Potter?
@@margaretsmith7921 it's not scary it's sorta like a 2 hour powernap
Can I hypnotize myself to make me love studying?
You probably could, it would take a lot of effort though and you could just put that effort into studying instead.
Try meditation.
Eric D Idk, that sounds short term. if you could hypnotize yourself to enjoy studying, ultimately you might study more for longer because you're enjoying it. So the time wasted trying to hypnotize yourself pays off.
Wouldn't it be amazing if you could feel as confident, enthusiastic and as motivated about studying as you do with something else in you're life that you "love" doing??.. imagine being able to take all the fun, confidence, assurance, reward etc and apply it to everything that you do, how amazing would you be? its all about visualisation and imagination! Thats self hypnosis! See a winner= be a winner!(whatever winning is to you) Ask conor mcgregor he has it sussed 👍
There are hypnosis videos that help you study. It’s more about helping focus though.
"when i snap my finger you will watch this whole video" *snaps fingers* *closes video*
Haris Bilalovic this 😂
Watch this. I can make the sun rise tomorrow!
*opens it again to comment and watch the rest*
Maybe that was what they intended all along.
Reverse hypnosis.
Hypnosis is the yin to the EMDR yang. I went through therapy for PTSD after my military service and EMDR was the method they used. its essentially bilateral stimulation of the brain. Its definitely intriguing, but a little unsettling to go through. they can "replace" whole memories with implanted altered memories via coaching and memory repetition with slight changes to the traumatic event.
explain further please
@@invisibilius1978 I too would like a further explanation.
EMDR has been a God send for me! I also have PTSD (not related to military service) and the ability to work through my trauma in a non triggering was has been absolutely wonderful
@@twiztidyournutz My therapist used EMDR to help me process past traumas, and I was blown away by how effective - and quick! - it was. It's very difficult to explain, but I'll try. Just forgive me if it like quackery. I promise you it works. Let's see...
You probably know that the two halves of the brain are responsible for different types of processing. There's some overlap; but when it comes to processing really important events, including traumatic ones, both sides of the brain need to work together. If both sides don't finish processing the event, PTSD could result. Note: I'm sure PTSD is a lot more complicated than that, but I'm no therapist. All I know about is the part that EMDR works with.
I've just told you the *theory* behind EMDR. Now I'll tell you how a session works. A trained therapist guides you in remembering a painful event. As you think about it, you watch a dot on a screen moving from left to right and back or, alternately, you tap one hand and then the other. The bilateral eye or hand movements engage both sides of your brain as you reprocess the event, allowing you to work past the place where you've been "stuck." For me, EMDR didn't involve any sort of memory replacement, just a fresh, more balanced take on the events that had traumatized me. I still remember them as clearly as ever, but I'm not hung up on them any more. I've been able to move past the pain. And like I said above, I was blown away by how effective such a simple practice could be.
@@Karin_Allen i want to know if it will work for sexual abuse trauma but I've heard hypnotherapy is not good for this by some hypnotherapist on youtube.
I'm having a sciencegasm, so many of my fave science channels uploaded today
nicosmind3 Vsauce, Vsauce 2, Vsauce 3!
Joshua Osei me too in a nutshell,vsauce all three channels and now this
Joshua Osei and it is OK to be smart
Kurzgesagt too.
Sergeant Fidelis kurzesgat is in a nutshell I was just afraid of misspelling the word
Michael's voice is just so soothing to me. I thoroughly enjoy listening to everything he's always teaching us. :D Also, SO excited for SciShow Psychology!!!
But his hand gestures are distracting...
I like his voice, too!!!
Yes, his voice is hypnotic.
I have first-hand experience with hypnosis in a clinical setting as a patient. For me, the sessions were very much about "playing along". As such, I did not perceive these sessions as much help in my situation and consequently stopped having them after about three months. I did however get to experience a completely new state of bodily awareness and relaxation that I had never experienced before. After "snapping out of it", if that's what you'd like to call it, I felt almost as if I had just gotten out of bed, with all of the physical tranquility that entails. At the same time, the other ill-effects of getting out of bed were basically non existant, I wasn't drowsy, I didn't have lessened coordination for a few minutes and I didn't feel tired. I've tried recreating this state of relaxation via meditation and have only few times managed to actually emulate this. The more often and more consistently I meditate, the more often I succeed, so I would recommend you try meditation too!
It's a backdoor for brain debugging that the developer forgot to comment out before release.
jednoucelovy do not watch matrix every day
Hey hey keep quiet the scp foundation is trying to keep that on the down low
A Computer science or a nut job student spotted
Pornfilm
At least all the libraries are included.
"You're getting very sleepy." Well maybe that's because it's half past 12 at night and I'm watching this in bed...
OR
I've experienced hypnosis first hand. It really works, and I absolutely love it when it's for positive cause.
Going for my last session now … thanks for this
There is this one trained hypnotist that taught me lots about persuasion, politics, framing, and totally changed how I view the world. Funny enough, it was the creator of the Dilbert comic. :)
Introduce me to this guy pleaseee :)
Scott adams
And he is, on the other hand, hypnotized by Trump LOL.
This has not aged well
Why?
I'm pretty sure I was hypnotized while listening to the audiobook for The Gollem and the Jini. Not exactly sure how or why, but the story and the narrator always left me in a new and refreshed state of mind when I was done listening.
It’s best if you don’t do it again
@@thatlemonmelon2714 why?
Just means it was a good book & narrator. Hypnosis is access to your subconscious, not just feel-goods after reading a book
I’m highly hypnotizable. It’s honestly pretty great - I can use hypnosis videos to change my behavior somewhat and I’m fairly good at meditation, which feels similar. I’ve always considered writing a story with hypnosis, since so many stories get it kind of wrong.
Hello!! You´d you be able to share what videos you´ve used? Thank you
@mcarol3434 I know I'm not the one you asked, but I recommend Ultra Hypnosis and Nimja Hypnosis, though I've been leaning more toward Nimja lately. They offer a variety of experiences, including some more...interesting ones, but I stick to the more sfw experiences for relaxation.
Full disclosure, I'm a hypnotherapist. I concede full bias on how effective it can be.
I'm pretty much on board with everything said in this video, minus the idea that certain individuals are more "hypnotizable" than others.
In my experience, we are all naturally very good at hypnosis. Getting the "10 mile stare", or daydreaming, becoming so engrossed in an activity that hours feel like minutes, and driving somewhere, arriving at your destination and not remembering many parts of the trip, are all examples of our incredible ability to focus within ourselves and heal.
Great video.
For some reason, I’m obsessed with everything hypnosis. Like I just love the thought of it. I just can’t explain it. And that’s why I watched this video. I’ve been obsessed ever since I was little.
wow same here so I am learning hypnotherapy =)
Why i have a feeling you gonna tie somebody and possibly force them into your hypnosis trick kinda like yakuza's mental torture
Luqz Gaming 😂😂😂😂😂 honestly though it does
so am I oops I think it's bc I used to be really scared of it which then got me curious
No... this is bad this is bad...hypnosis is evil. Don’t do it
This is so weird. I just got done studying hypnosis and meditation for my psychology major. This video is great by the way. It simplifies what I learned a lot and visualises most of the crucial information. Also went into perception (studied that last week) and connected both topics, which is awesome.
And thanks for linking that article on posthypnotic amnesia. Love finding stuff like this :)
it would be interesting to know about your research. 👍👍do you have some dedicated youtube channel??
@monti.
HAHA jokes on you. I skipped the last 3 seconds.
Kai Widman last 10 for me.
Kai Widman lmfao
If you skipped it how come you know what it was about -_- :P
LOL,💀💀😂
Looking forward to the new channel! Psychology is certainly an interesting and complex area of discussion which warrants its own "realm."
All i can say is from "day dreaming" to Hypnosis to meditation. Its been a great friend of mine for all of my life. And many thanks to the Lady who taught me to "mentally relax". She was a keeper.
I smoked for 30 years...walked into get hypnotized...felt like I was there about 45 minutes to an hour....I had sat in that chair for nearly 4 hours...haven't smoked a cigarette since.
relevant username
yeah, sure...
My mom did the same thing. Went to some anti smoking seminar where they were all hypnotized and she said she’s never smoked a cigarette since
Who's that pokemon?
"IT'S PIKACHUU"
Hypno!
"FUUUCCKK"
Thanks for avoiding the spoiler at 7:45 , Michael. It was very thoughtful for all the hypnotized fans.
Excited for SciShow Psychology!!!! My favorite subject!
I have a slight phobia of hypnosis and yet I always find it fascinating
Similar situation though I'm not scared of it the very idea of anyone else controlling me even partially just weirds me out but it is super interesting and I love learning how it affects the mind and its limits
Can someone give me post-hypnotic amnesia? I got some things I want to forget.
The internet is a big place.
That's basically a way to give yourself serious psychological disorders.
Unless you're just talking about forgetting a movie. That's a fun trick.
Random League of Legends (Thresh) games
Smoke weed everyday.
You'll forget, eventually.
Again? I already did that for you a couple of days ago.
But then you'll just have to learn that Trump is your president for the first time all over again.
This explains so much! I am not subject to hypnosis at all, but that is because my ability to focus and use self-suggestion is a naturally learned talen that help me solve many pronlems, deal with pain, etc. Now I understand I have been able to "hypnotize" my own brain all this time!
0:44 - _"... and might cause some real changes in your brain"_
Everything we do causes real changes in out brain; even when we are doing nothing at all ^^
I find it easy to listen to a voice that feels comforting.
I was hypnotized at a show during my Freshman year and my personal experience feel far more into the non-state theory. I felt like I was acting but wasn't in full control of it.
Simple advice, don’t ever do it again
@@thatlemonmelon2714 BRO YOURE STILL AT IT BAHAHAHAHA
For me, hypnosis feels like it could be an altered state of consciousness. I mostly use it to relax, to help my brain slow down at night to sleep, and it feels like a state of deep relaxation and vague awareness that I can't achieve otherwise. There is an element of playing along, as any instructions that don't sit right will pull you out of it. As with anything else, if it's something you're interested in, it's something that's easier to do the longer you do it.
Hi guys, i have been a sub for a year now and watched like a fourth of your vids over time and I have to say: this one is my absolut favourite. Not because of the topic, but because for the first time your presentation seemed really extensive (hopefully thats the right word to describe what I mean, english is my 2nd language...) and I love the amount of different backround researches you included. Up to this point there hasnt been a video that felt way too short and basuc to me, but I still liked your style and strictly sciency approach, so I kept coming back, hoping for more details to the "topic of the day" and/or information I did not yet know. This finally felt exactly like that. :) I know ppls attention spans for vids is assumed to be pretty short and thus short three mins like vids make sense, but I believe a channel like yours (from my understanding of your intentions channemwise) would benefit from more content per video than buzzfeed ;) I dont know... I just always felt a weird connection to the ppl behind this channel (maybe because I love all kinds of science shit and think ppl should be exposed to it more... In some diffrent way than school... Cuz school does kill your enthusiasm so often...))...and hope u will make more vids like this one. Thank you sooooo much for all your hard work :-)
I agreed with everything you just said
Props to this channel, i love me some good science and well-researched videos, this channel has been putting out thorough videos consistently
Until now
Wait, why is this Hypnotoad video so popu-ALL GLORY TO THE HYPNOTOAD.
seahawk124 ....sublime..... nothing more be said lol
I love Futurama :)!
My leg feels funny
@@AxiomTheory I don't feel so good
Wrong place? ok...
WHAT ARE YOU DOING?! RUN FROM THE HYPNOTOAD!!! *runs away*
I am extremely excited for SciShow Psychology, and I enjoyed this video a ridiculous amount. Keep up the good work! :)
So it's basically just will power enhanced through relaxation. And it can't do impossible things nor be done without the concious permission of the hypnotized subject.
It is pleasant and effective from personal experience. :)
No matter the exact explanation. It is a tool for healing for certain people and illnesses and should be treated as such. It did with me in hours what I´ve never been able to do in years
If you believe you can change your state of consciousness then you can, because your brain is a system built to edit itself and hypnosis is just allowing someone to actively guide that process.
Sadrien Nightshade It also works if you don't believe. Hypnosis has nothing to do with believes.
y2ksw1 Not really. It's said clearly on the video. Hypnosis has to be voluntary and you have to be openned to the idea that it works, like a placebo. If you don't want to be hypnotized and offer concious resistence then it won't work.
Andrew S
Volunteering has nothing in common with believe. I can volunteer for a job, even if I don't believe in it or its essence. I can volunteer as a fireman and never have seen or touched real fire or danger. Volunteering is the mode of the personal disposal towards a goal, while believe is acknowledging a fact which is eventually not true.
Soooooooooo happy to hear SciShow Psych was selected! I'm studying psychology and I'd love the additional content but I'm not a backer (yet). Thanks!
"Focus your eyes on this swinging watch. You're getting sleepy, very sleepy"
Okay okay, Scishow, it's not my fault your channel is so damn fun that I'm watching your videos even at 04:37 AM...
How strange that while reading your comment 4 years later, i look at the time on my phone and guess what... 4:37 A.M.
@@976eviltitans4 i think you are the main character
thats an oddly specific time karl
My grandfather is a hypnotist 😂 when we were little we would want him to try to hypnotize us- but we couldnt quit giggling. But he would help people around town with test anxiety and such before their exams ❤
I have been hypnotized before. I was in a lot of pain. I was having strange migraine head aches that would not go away and they were there 24/7. I was willing to try anything so I asked my dad about trying hypnosis and we went to see a doctor who had a doctoret’s degree in hypnosis and she was really nice and she hypnotized me and the pain went away😁
WOW! THATS FULL ON HEY!? WONDER WHAT UR MRI /EEG SCAN WOULD HAVE SAID... IF WE HAVE THE ABILITY TO DO THAT , THEN WHAT DO WE NEED DRUGS OR MEDICINES FOR?
@Lisa Jordan I don't know about hypnosis but maybe self induced psychosis..
Or mere mass level stupidity. . neanderthal brain , of wanting to fit in really and be a part of a group... Because I've never understood how anyone can believe in UNPROVABLE with complete contradiction
No such thing as a doctoret in hypnosis….
Very good information and really appreciated the quality of verbal context available , MHP....
There's something metallic and auto-tuned about the audio in this video.
It is our very square, very bouncy sounding studio. We finally got our sound foam in and hung it after this video was filmed. Better sound coming soon!
SciShow, as long as it's entertaining (like always) I don't care about the audio, it's nice but just not necessary
SciShow is it possible you might create a philosophy channel as well? Or is that too unsciency
SciShow It's amazing what a little bit of foam can do to production value :)
@HaneshJohnson check out crash course, they have a course on philosophy. I believe by the same people that make sci show and hosted by Hank Green!
I took a class some years back with a Calvin D. Banyon, at his facilities in Texas. During the training he diagrammed the mind showing the conscious, subconscious, and unconscious areas. The subconscious is where we "store" all the "data" we see, hear, or experience in our lives. From this data we derive our habits, beliefs, and emotions. The unconscious mind "believes" these emotions, and turns them into "feelings." While reading many of these comments, one can count the number of times people "wish" change their feelings, habits, and emotional reactions "changed" through hypnosis..!! Hoping to help with "happier" lives for all..!!
Wow, this is actually pretty accurate. Hopefully more people see this video, so they understand that hypnosis isn't even close to how most non-scientific media portrays it. I've been doing a lot with hypnosis over the past half year or so, and in that time I've hypnotised people and been hypnotised myself well over 300 times, and my experiences with it mostly line up to what this video says.
For sure my favorite SciShow video. Cheers for the team!
“When I snap my fingers, you will watch this whole video.”
Haha...
*No.*
hi everyone ,if anyone else is searching for hypnotist weight loss try Hyper hypno blueprint (do a search on google ) ? Ive heard some great things about it and my mate got amazing success with it.
thats illegal
Wow.. great video! So much information! I was hypnotized yesterday! What a fabulous experience!
I would totally wanna forget all of Harry Potter. I would LOVE to read that again for the first time!
Definitely! There's a lot of things I'd live to do again for the "first time" and reading Harry Potter would certainly be a good one.
Same👍😊💞
Me too!
There’s a website called unspoil me
Having Michael Aranda host this video was a wise choice. There's just something about his voice that's incredibly relaxing and pleasing to the ears...
0:14 Jokes on you, I'm always sleepy
Found this really late, lol. This is a fantastic video and you do a really great job of describing some of the key points of hypnosis and its practical applications. Personally, I just like to entertain but I think of entertainment with hypnosis as a way of getting peoples attention and letting them know that the practical applications exists and are available. I should just show this video to anyone I'm going to hypnotize in the future.
Hypnosis being a state of focused relaxation. I have ADHD and I’ve played around with self hypnosis. It worked sort of. For a long period I was in this bubble of relaxation and focus, but one thought would shatter my hypnotic state. I had the hardest time going through a session without that happening and I think it’s because of the ADHD. I can’t focus. That was the problem
@@Johnsmith-jg2nt this might just be the weird way my brain interprets things, but when I hypnotized myself I would get in this state of focus that get like a bubble keeping me insulated from everything else, until I notice something and then pop the bubble is gone and it takes a lot to get back into focus mode.
To me, as the daughter of a hypnotherapist, hypnosis seems to be a heightened state of consciousness in which it is easier to bring your focus to focus one one specific thing at a time. I also have sensory processing disorder, and, I am a people greeter at Walmart. As you can imagine, it gets pretty noisy there from time to time, and, at my Walmart, there are big fans on each door that make a prominent, constant, relaxing sound. Whenever I get overloaded, I just direct my attention to the sound of the fan until I hear the sound of a cart. Works like a charm.
Thank you for making this. Too many misconceptions about this.
As he says the phrase "it's all about focus" at 2:12, you'll notice Micheal leaves focus and blurs out almost completely. This is a sign he is implanting instructions directly on your brain.
My sister thought she was so hip and cool. I said to her... "Hip? No, Sis."
nice pun
+Master Therion
Just explain to her it's all in the way she dresses. If you wanna be hip, no ties.
Bruce Dunn Genius:D
Bruce Dunn Good one ^_^
She also needs professional help. "You think being crazy is hip? No therapy."
+Master Therion
On my watch, I'd have her watch a watch. She won't get over it until she's put under overtly.
I did three sessions of hypnotherapy a couple months ago because I was going through a lot of things. It was a huge game changer for me...helped a lot. And that’s not sarcasm! Genuinely the best decision of my life.
Hey does it help with unknown fear with anxiety
@@faheemaasvat6840Visualization of replaying your fearful scenerios actually helps this. From personal experience i conquered a lot of fears this way. It took a lot of power away from my fears (still had to take a plunge, but with a lot less effort and wasng paralyzed by anxiety anymore) this is backed by science!
The stroop test is easy. Just don't "look" at the letters eg. use peripheral vision or something. You can still see color but not see the letters.
That isn't the point of the test, though. The test is measuring your ability to perform a conflicting task; if you aren't reading the words, your results would not indicate your performance on a Stroop test but rather your ability to perceive different colors.
Jess Then you are saying that the hypnosis is useless as it "deactivated the area of the brain necessary for word recognition" when in principle I used the same. I turned my "word recognition off" for the sake of the test.
In turn, the hypnotized didn't do better *based on the point you've made*.
You're very bad at trying to sound smart. You're just making yourself look stupid. In case you really are ignorant, I'll explain. The study used the Stroop test as a means of measuring whether or not the hypnosis worked. Your initial comment was talking about the Stroop test in general, which is what Jess was referring to, by saying (in not so many words) that the Stroop test isn't a "game" that you just win; rather, it measures your ability to perform a conflicting task.
+Irixio Zalaniar Since you just repeated what she said then you can just read what I answered to her.
Also, you interpret the Stroop test incorrectly. It is not your ability to perform a conflicting task. *You are not tasked to both read the word and describe the color at the same time*. The conflict is not the task but the processing of the information.
I'll repeat it just in case. *The task is in no way conflicting*. You are tasked either *read the word* or *describe the color*. The reaction time is slowed because your brain processes incorrectly.
It is also used "to measure a person’s selective attention capacity and skills, as well as their processing speed ability".
You're very bad at trying to sound smart. You're just making yourself look stupid. I was rewording Jess's comment to fit your simple mind better. It didn't work, so let's try again. The hypnotized people did better (as shown in the video), and Jess didn't say that they didn't do better. You said that the Stroop test is easy in your initial comment. The method you provided to "win" the Stroop test (which, once again, isn't a game) defeats the purpose of the test.
Let me clarify the Stroop test for you, since you clearly don't understand how it works: you are asked to state the color of text the word is written in. You are never asked to read the word.
The task IS conflicting: there is a conflict between what the written word is and what the color of the word is. There is a conflict between the natural tendency to read the word and the task of ignoring the word. There is a conflict between saying the correct color and saying the word itself.
The Stroop test in the example presented in the video is being used as a basis for controlled measurement of the effects of the hypnosis. Without the hypnosis, the test is taken by the participants to establish the control (as in, a baseline of an experiment). When the hypnosis is applied, the test is taken again to see if the participants' scores improve. This provides the results of the experiment.
Since you clearly didn't understand the first time you read Jess's comment, I'll summarize here, given the "new" (read: common sense) information you gained by reading the rest of my comment. The purpose of the test is to measure a person's ability to state the color of text when that color CONFLICTS (there's that word again) with the color word written, even though the brain wants to simply read the word. If you eliminate the written word portion of the test by "using peripheral vision", you may as well just look at squares of color and state the color. Then, there is clearly no "test" anymore, which completely defeats the purpose of the Stroop TEST.
If you plan to respond to this comment, please re-watch the video and re-read the comments in this thread. I do hate ignorance.
I think putting someone under hypnosis is kinda like starting a fire using friction. It's very slow at first and it takes a lot of work but the more you progress the easier it gets and a lot of tender work is required. The amber size is like the suggestions you make, the heat of the amber is the state they're in and the fuel and air is like the focus, relaxation, disassociation and good feelings.
They need to be as relaxed as possible, have something for them to focus on and start off with very small suggestions to promote more focus, relaxation, disassociation and good feelings. Then you gradually build it up until you can make them do some crazy things.
"Hypnosis can make you forget things"
Me planning on forgetting i ever played the Witcher 3 wild hunt just to have that experience again.
I really like Michael's presenting skills. He has become really good.
When I was a teen I got my hands on some instructions for hypnosis. They weren't worded that great and I feel like they probably could have used a lot more explanation of certain things. But, after a few attempts I got the hang of it, had a couple friends who were happily willing guinea pigs, and actually wound up being pretty good at hypnotizing people. Provided they were willing. It turned out to be a bit of art form as I got better (though I suspect it's an art form that is teachable if you know it well enough). And certainly there are individuals who are highly susceptible. Myself, I seem to be highly resistant, which I found out despite really, really wanting to experience it as those I'd had hypnotized were able to experience it. ... This was something I played with for about 3 years, tapering off as I entered high school and become too busy with school work. I would eventually learn how to hypnotize myself in what may more accurately be called meditation.
I also would decide to stop outright when I found myself being tempted to manipulate people -- and it is tempting, especially at a high school age, but luckily my moral compass kicked in. But I had gotten to a point where I sort of understood ways to nudge people without fully hypnotizing them, just using certain sort of phrasing (choosing words based on connotation rather than just direct definition) visual cues, gestures, and subtle repetition to reinforce whatever simple thing I was trying to get across. The trick was to have it be subtle enough that the person didn't catch on and so wouldn't raise their guard. Before my moral compass kicked in, I was able to get a friend to walk to the wrong classroom for 4th period, another to try to high-five people for about the rest of that day, and a couple other little gags. And I suspected I could do more if I kept practicing... but when I caught myself considering more nefarious things I actually felt ashamed and did my best to cut it out of my skillset.
But because of that experience, which may have heightened my resistance (which I personally think is influenced by how instinctually (mis)trusting you are or others) I am highly dubious of the fast-talking carnival-type stage hypnotists. I find it hard to believe those people they "hypnotize" aren't just playing along out of some sort of peer pressure, and that it's an entirely different thing altogether.
Shawn Wesley I think what you did has a lot more to do with Psychology than with hypnosis.🤔
So, you learned hypnosis to make girls think they were using a gearshift and you somehow got a concise and felt bad, we get it…. 😂
Now, this argument has attracted my attention more than others, since I have studied psychology out of curiosity regarding hypnosis. After the studies, I have taken a major step back, because most of the science behind it is over-complicated or over-simplified. The typical movie hypnotist shows an event which takes hours of preparation.
Hypnosis can be explained easily to everybody, because there is no natural inhibition, and everybody does it all the time. For example, when you wait for the bus in a noisy city and watch your phone for information and get hooked, then you are in a state of self-hypnosis, where you are still aware of the surroundings. When the bus arrives, you will enter, but you keep watching your phone. And, you forget completely about the noise. Now, if you happen to get your ticket checked and you have it, you continue this routine, but if you can't find the ticket, you are awaking and fall into panic, because you have lost the conscious contact to the world.
The scope of hypnosis is to avoid panic situations, but to guide you through your thoughts around obstacles. You may observe these objects and describe them, without getting emotionally involved. The therapist's work is to guess, when you start to worry and distract your mind just that much to continue the journey.
Dream-walking is another form of hypnosis, which may be caused by illness, fever, extreme stress or simply out of a habit.
Needless to say, that an artificial session of hypnosis is de facto fascinating to all.
So, hypnosis sound a lot like when we "doze off" or "get stuck" looking at something.
Yes that is hypnosis
Yup.... zoning out. It’s not that serious. Hey it’s part of the process of falling asleep. You go through it literally every time you sleep
Its more like when you watch TV or play video games(typically men and kids). Also happens when you drive and when you boss instructs you on what you will do.
@@calebmatthews2026 yeah... that’s not actual hypnosis.
The greatest form of hypnosis today is comedy. Because you raise the emotions to a certain frequency, and you start to have the waves of tension ( built up from any tense thought patterns ) released,. When it is released, the rate of suggestibility goes up, because we become in a parasympathetic state. ( Anything, that promotes the well being of your physical body regenerating in a peaceful manner will be taken into consideration ).
I'm waaay late to this party, but thanks for shedding light on this powerful tool.
Excited for PsyShow 😀
I have a certificate as a trainer of hypnosis. Great Video. Thanks so much.
I use self hypnosis for personal pain relief by engaging the forgetter. (Remember having a pain? Do you actually feel the pain while you remember? You have forgotten the pain. The trick is insta-forget. Be aware the you could feel what you feel as pain, but instantly remember to forget because you know it is not useful. (Some pain is useful and must be experienced. The rest is easily forgotten.) )
I used self-hypnosis out of desperation with a long-term (15 years) chronic health problem that my doctor said had no cure and the next step was surgery that wasn't guaranteed. So I made up some recordings based on scripts I found in a psych hypnosis book. Within 2 weeks all pain, muscle spasms, digestive 'events', and other things (skin breakouts, nausea, heartburn) disappeared. Coincidentally, and even though it was not part of the hypnosis script, a sleep disorder (sleep paralysis) improved so much I haven't had a 'bad' event in 6 years. I suggested it to a friend who lost quite a bit of weight with her own tapes. But a relative failed to give up smoking using the same technique.
Thank you for this video. During my personal and business coaching education I learned a few hypnosis tools in the hypnotherapy segment that really do work but are something completely different from show hypnosis. Unfortunately show hypnosis is THE thing stucked in people's head when they hear the term "hypnosis" and therefore it has a pretty bad reputation.
That's why ya call it other things. IE: Meditation
I simply call it hypnosis and the "other" thing show hypnosis. Why should I call the REAL thing something else? I simply explain my clients what it is in a calm and professional manner and show the differences between these two things. Normally, people tend to react pretty positive.
If nothing else, it's annoying that stage hypnosis seems to have leaned on the sorts of suggestions that lead to people doing embarrassing things, and cultivating this "mind control" fantasy. The possibilities are endless; you don't have to leave people afraid to see a therapist for others to get some enjoyment out of it.
Bambuzzsprosse Exactly. I was attracted by show hypnosis to the point to study psychology, and with the knowledge of the whole, I have stepped back for magnitudes. It is still fascinating, but the work behind it makes it much less attractive.
I still use it however for some party tricks or just for my personal fun.
The artificially induced drunkness is one of these, which are pretty easy to obtain (but still not in a few minutes). There is also a movie from Derren Brown on TH-cam, which shows this routine.
Talking nonsense while somebody is concentrated at the phone, is my personal fun. After a short while, I try to interrupt the phone routine and most of the times, people talk nonsense, too, and, that is the funny part, they find out immediately and can't explain themselves. 😄
I just did my first hypnotherapy and wow, memories from childhood came up what I have never thought it would, l like it 🤩
So miss can hypnotherapy be used to delete memories
Once a hypno-therapist came to my school, and she hypnotized my friend and got him to forget 7. He could count to 7, he'd just go straight from 6 to 8, he couldn't remember for a day or two after lol
You have to be trusting and willing to make yourself vulnerable for hypnosis to work on you. Your friend was definitely a trusting type. I've had multiple hypnosis attempts done on me. Never worked. I simply do not "let go", under any circumstances. And having a woman hypnotist try on me? Even less chance LOL. I would be too self conscious to not embarrass myself in front of her...
This top-down processing he's talking about... How perceptions interact with reality. I think it works like this: it makes sense that we are highly subject to interpret reality based on our perceptions for many reasons. Depending on what we want or need, our perceptions might see reality in different ways. Like when we are protecting our children, everything can seem like a threat. But to a child, those very same things look like fun.
I think it's natural too. Because when something works, especially when that something is hard to understand, we tend to keep going with that way. And we will let ourselves perceive something in such a way that supports our perception of how things work. Like if you think you are more energetic when drinking something, regardless of the reality, it might help get us to actually be energetic. So we create a causation where it might or might not be. And we tune ourselves to function as such.
It can be beneficial for us to use our perceptions as a basis for the reality we are trying to interpret. That frees up the mind to do other things too. But sometimes it's not good to have pre-conceived notions when they are wrong. Our senses aren't always perfect...so building truth can sometimes be an ongoing process.
Some of these points are even touched on in this other sci show video: th-cam.com/video/HHeYxzJFVKM/w-d-xo.html
Well, this is anecdotic experience, but, as someone that was hipnosed 20min ago, I can guarantee you that this is an alternate state of conscience.
You mean consciousness??
So basically no matter how much I want to do the thing suggested if I don't really want to be hypnotized it won't work? That's actually kind of cool and means people (especially those already resistant) who don't want to be hypnotized can't be or are immune as long as they want to be
It's definitely real. I was failing my final year chemistry with a grade of 26% on average. Dismal. I hated chemistry, but I needed it to get into University. I went to a psychologist for help, and he used Hypnosis, and taught me how to do it myself. So following his instructions every time I studied, I used the techniques he taught me before studying. At the final year exam, I did the same thing. During the exam, all I had to do was close my eyes, and all my notes were right there before me (in my mind) to flick through and find answers to questions. I passed the exam with flying colours. It definitely works. All my grades imrpoved greatly.
NeonsStyle It is not really hypnosis, but a thought pattern which helped you to recall memories. However, since you trust yourself, it may have induced some sort of hypnosis which allowed you to remain focussed.
y2ksw1 I was there pal, you weren't
* swings pocket watch * you want to buy me expensive things
y2ksw1 I agree.
NeonsStyle
It wasn't my intention to offend you. The reason I studied psychology was to fully understand hypnosis, and in the end you make a clear distinction between thought pattern and hypnosis.
Hypnosis happens when you do not focus the object you are after, while you have been not only observing, but also interacting with your memories. The technique to reach out for memories is almost the same as hypnosis, but hypnosis avoids direct contact with the memories you want to observe.
It that now better explained?
a great topic, brilliantly done. thank you! Oh, and you picked my choice of SciShow channel topic! Yay! happy fan is happy!!
*slurps tea from SciShow mug in victory*
Okay, uh, whoever's reading this maybe read the last bit first and then skim the rest because it's probably too long to read.
I think it's about concentration/expectations. I've watched some TH-cam hypnosis videos, and found that they worked- for example, one that made me unable to move my leg. It suggested that I should either wait for 5-10 minutes for it to work again, or leave a comment saying to please release my leg. It worked and when I came out of the trance I was unable to move my leg. It sort of shuddered when I tried to move it, but then stopped. It was similar to the sensation of deciding to move your leg and then _deciding not to_ and keeping it still. I was tensing the muscles to lift the leg but then not following through. I didn't think I was actively telling it to keep still, so I decided "there's no way it's physically possible for my leg to be unable to move, I'm simply creating a mental block against it" and after a few tries and focusing on getting rid of the mental block, I was able to move freely again.
This all comes down to what you _decide to believe_. Since I believed I couldn't move my leg, I unconsciously stopped myself from moving it. There was another video I watched similar to the previous one and I decided to remove some of the suggestions as they were being spoken. I believed some of them, but each time the speaker said one I didn't want, I sort of mentally told myself the opposite. Afterwards the ones I tried to remove were gone. This shows that I was conscious and aware during the hypnosis; I was able to carry out my experiment and remember the process.
Unless, of course, I was doing it wrong/just telling myself I was being hypnotized. But I'd like it if someone else tried the same experiments to confirm my results.
There are a few good examples on TH-cam. One is about making a fist and imagine to strife over a field, feeling wheat crops in your (other) hand. Then, you are told to open your other hand and you can't, or feel at least a strong tendency to keep it closed. It is curious to watch yourself how over time this tendency becomes less strong.
I cannot tell if it is believe or not, but it has definitively to do with will. I can force myself to open the hand, but I prefer not to.
y2ksw1
That's interesting. You "prefer not to"? Is that actually just a preference not to open your hand, or is it more that you _can_ break the hypnosis by telling yourself it's not real/forcing your hand open but only if you exit the... I don't know, the _roleplay_ of the hypnosis, which isn't as fun? Or is it that the hypnosis has told you to not prefer to open your hand?
Kara Hill
Hypnosis is a dream-like state under many aspects, which you can only fully understand once you got hypnotized. Preferring not to do a thing is much like not to bother. And of course, you can break the hypnosis at any time. It's not a physical or mental constraint, but rather a pleasant state of day-dreaming.
y2ksw1
Okay, that all makes sense and I agree, thank you for clarifying- except for the part about only understanding it once you're hypnotized. I felt as if I could understand it both in and out of the hypnotized state. But perhaps I'm mistaken?
Kara Hill
It is difficult to understand how hypnosis feels without ever being hypnotized. Day-dreaming comes close, but is interrupted easily by external events, while hypnosis is interrupted easily only by yourself. External events can pass by completely without attracting your attention.
For example, if you accept "not to know" the number 7, you will jump over it counting your fingers and have one left over, which you can't explain. And this fact is very funny for the world watching you, while you struggle to find out why you have missed one finger counting.
Once you have been hypnotized, you will recognize certain behaviors easier than if you only have been watching hypnotized people.
I tried it for the first time 3 days ago and it totally worked. For me, it was more powerful than is even described in this video. there's no way there was a placebo affect, I'm the most skeptical person ever.
Who did you go to? A wizard?
This should have been a SciShow Psych upload :)
I use hypnosis downloads different hypnosis sessions almost everyday. It can help you focus, have more charisma, heal the past and so many more
Holy crap! So I can get myself hypnotyzed to forget some of my favorite games and experience them again? Where do I sign up?
Straightforward, professional, ethical hypnosis is one thing. There are many more less innocent variants on the spectrum. A hypnotist on the amusement side often uses confusion and secret cues in a conversational style to induce a trance unbeknownst to the subject. A sneaky tist can fool the subject into thinking a dangerous action is safe and innocent. And what is it that politicians do? In some cases, at least, it's amateur, clandestine hypnosis. By repetition, the hypnotist/politician plants a suggestion deep in the party adherents' brains.
From my experiences as a student watching a live hypnosis show involving other students, either it's real, or they planted some incredible actors in the audience to be selected. Ah, fun times!
It’s real, and it’s, really evil
@@thatlemonmelon2714 then why is you watching this bro, go away lmfao
Wait wiat! I can relive playing my favorite video game for the first time again!? That's amazing!
Woooooowwwwwwww!!!
Brain regions were affected by hypnotic suggestions?
Doesn’t that mean hypnosis works for those that are highly suggestible?
Amazing.
I'm so pumped for scishow psychology
Once when my brother and I were young, we tried hypnosis on each other after seeing it on an educational tv show. I was able to hypnotize him fairly easily, but it never worked on me.
During the mid to late '80s my psychotherapist & I used hypnosis to help me with various problems & it was not only helpful, it was very enjoyable. At that time I was practicing self-hypnosis as well, which I had begun using after reading a book on the subject. Then I asked my therapist if he could do hypnotherapy & it turned out he'd had some training in this as an adjun ict to regular therapy, so with his help I was able to go into deeper hypnotic states while under his guidance as well as on my own, although I was never able to reach the deeper states on my own.
We worked on some practical problems, such as my smoking addiction, but what I really loved was the ability to enter deep states of combined relaxation & hyper-awareness. BTW, I am easily hypnotized & I realized that I had been using self-hypnosis since early childhood to induce visions. The earliest visions I can recall occurred when I was 4 or 5 yrs old, & with experience I taught myself techniques to help produce a state of awareness that could help induce more profound visions, also that allowed me to more easily enter a visionary state & to heighten the visions. I've always been very visual, have been an artist since early childhood, aided by an inherited photographic memory-- the ability to draw & paint easily is common on my maternal side, with several cousins becoming artists as adults. My visions were primarily visual, though occasionally aural.
My visions have always been deeply connected with the earth, with 'Nature', have always been experiences that allowed me to see & feel the deeper connections between, for example, the sunlight & the wind & the trees & myself, these visions being quite intense. These visions have always been similar to visions I've read about as an adult involving Native spirituality, though I am certainly not claiming my visions were as intense or as important as those of people such as Black Elk. Although I learned fairly traditional native views of life & of spirituality from my relatives from early childhood on, I have never held a relationship/position to a people in any way similar to traditional "medicine men", nor would I ever claim to speak for anyone other than myself. My visions certainly helped me better understand the traditional views of native spirituality, allowed me to experience the connection & inter-relatedness of the many forms of life that make up this earth, including those which in western thought are labeled inanimate.
The hypnotic states reached in therapy were very like my childhood (& later) visions in many ways, but they didn't include the intense spiritual revelations or connections between life forms. Still, the deeper states I reached with my therapist's help were incredibly beautiful & relaxing. More than relaxing. With his help, I was able to go to an ideal place (always chosen by me) where I was entirely relaxed & at peace while s till being very aware of my environment--the environment where I placed myself when in hypnotic states. This was an ideal place, though based on a place I had known all my life, deep in the woods near a spring, on the land where my father & his ancestors had lived for several generations, after the 1838 forced removal of our ancestors from what's now Cherokee County, N.C. Hypnosis was able to help me experience an incredible peacefulness, a deep relaxation, while at the same time allowing me to be very aware of the environment of my chosen ideal place. Linear time stopped when I was in this state & what seemed like an eternity was in linear time only a few minutes.
With hypnosis, you can choose your own ideal place, can go there & experience a relaxation that seems outside of linear space-time. It's similar in many ways to a vision & is unbelievably pleasurable.
I'm a magician and I've studied hypnosis a bit. The most interesting thing i found was N.L.P, developed by richard bandler. just wondering if you guys came across him while researching for this video?
Gonzo Bizarro Hypnosis is much more than that, and NLP is only the small brother and sister. You will have found out that fun hypnosis is much easier to realize than more serious matters. This lays in the fact that people are open to fun and allow more easily foreign input. But when it is just you to have fun on their expenses, then things become much more difficult, if not impossible.
NLP has taken only a few aspects and tries to over-simplify, in order to make it accessible to everybody. But only if you know more, you can gain true goals, because you cannot betray people for long. You need their full agreement.
Jeez, that pocket watch trope is freaking awesome
Post-hypnotic amnesia: the cure for accidental/unwanted sudden spoilers.
Sign me up!
For example: This video uses some aspects of hpnotism to help you watch the whole video. He moves left and right constantly, out of time with his hand gestures moving left and right. Graphics constantly draw lines left or right. This back and forth movement makes watching the video slightly more difficult, which makes your brain pay more attention to focus on what he's saying. Paying more attention focuses your brain into a state of greater focus, tricking you into watching longer.
That was a damned good hypnosis! I did watch the whole video!
This video needs updating.
I'm a certified master hypnotist, and I found quite a few poor generalizations and outright errors:
The effects of hypnosis depend on the depth of trance. The deeper the trance, the more profound the effect. The state is most like what we call hypnogogic and hypnopompic states. Subjects find their ability to judge and analyze has been severely reduced, often to a point similar to their age at their first conscious memories. That makes them more suggestible, as you would experience with a 3- or 4-year-old. They won't do anything that will indirectly harm themselves, change their self-identification, nor change any of their primary relationships. There are several induction techniques beyond eye fixation -- some involve confusing the subject or surprising them. The hypnotized subject seems to like to play games and will follow the suggestions of someone they trust. Their logical skills are also diminished, so it is often possible to tie two action causally that actually have little or no causal link. Hypnotic suggestions require refreshing in all but the deepest subjects, which can be more trance work, more opportunities to experience the new thought or behavior, or some combination. Deeper subjects tend to be those with more experience responding positively to authority (for example, soldiers, dancers), those who spend a lot of time thinking creatively (artists, teachers), and people who have deeper or more frequent REM cycles when they sleep. This latter factor is how stage hypnotists check instantly for susceptibility to suggestion: by having the subject look up and noting how much of the white of the eye is exposed below the iris (their eye muscles are theoretically more developed from spending more time in REM or similar meditative states). In deeper trance, memories can be easily repressed or planted (even of one's own name), sensory experiences can be evoked on command, and profound physiological changes to the skin, nervous system, gastrointestinal system, and immune system are also possible. Yes, hypnosis sometimes incorporates psychological techniques, but it doesn't depend on them to create behavioral change, and hypnotherapists often help people quit smoking, lose weight, manage pain, overcome fears/phobias, ease skin disorders like eczema and psoriasis and warts, reduce burn trauma, increase medication adherence, and many other amazing effects among the new crop of medical hypnotherapists.
Having been hypnotised, Non-state Theory descibes what it felt like more than Altered state theory.
altered state
Curious! I felt the opposite. I meditate a lot and I studied neuroscience and I definitely think its an altered state. At first I felt like I was just playing along with the therapist, but then I saw a picture in my mind (a rope on a boat) that didnt exactly mean anything, but I started crying uncontrollably.
Abyssaljam When hypnosis starts, you are walking along for a very long time (usually for hours). Once you get comfortable with it, you can also change your perception. But it is always your choice and never the therapist's.
Abyssaljam I've been on both sides of hypnosis many times and I personally think both theories apply to some degree. I think it is a different state of consciousness, but there's no clear line between hypnotized and not hypnotized. It's an organic progression and when you're not in the "perfectly hypnotized" state (which I don't think anyone ever strictly is), the kind of "playing along" described in non-state theory can help to alleviate doubts and distractions that get in the way of successful hypnosis. Yet I think there is some truth to the altered state theory describing a lack of presence, when very far under. Of course, it could still just be the mind playing tricks on itself. It's very subjective.
I have been hypnotized it was so weird 😵
Grat job, thanks for the video ✊✌
now if i could just hypnotize myself to actually be willing to do school work and finish all of it...
No. Not a good idea
Video: focus on this swinging watch. You will get sleepy. Very sleepy.
Me: ugh...I'm already sleepy before I even watch this...
"Why is there hypnosis around my" *slap * It's not clever or funny anymore
It never was.
Aaa hahahaha!
What exactly is that from? xD
Well, the sentence doesn't really make sense. Maybe, you could ask: _why do I get a boner hypnotising others?_ or something else that is equally childish and obscene.
A long while ago someone kept asking the question (for over half a year in every video I think.) "Why is there hair around my anus?". It somehow fits into all of SciShows videos. Why is there [parts of videos title] around my anus?
This is useful, I just got a pocket watch for my birthday yesterday
Who else intentionally didn't finish the video?
Alex Siemers me
Piotr Rywciu badass 2
I REFUSE TO BE CONTROLLED!
I just wanted to know how to do it
I fell into a deep coma after watching this for 30 seconds
Goddamnit why am i expecting that this video will fuck with my brain every second