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News Article: Hypnosis should be used for fun, not medical cures

Hypnosis should be used for fun, not medical cures

By Lauren Kellett


Published: Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Updated: Wednesday, December 7, 2011 21:12

On my eighth grade mystery trip in 2007, I volunteered to be hypnotized. I climbed on stage, sat down, slowly was instructed to say the ABCs backwards, think of a happy place and listen to the soothing voice of the hypnotist to ease me into semi-consciousness. I slowly found myself falling into a deep, deep … nothing. I still was alert and in control of my own body. It was at this moment I realized how ridiculous the whole concept of hypnosis really is.

Just ask Lisa Nasseff, a St. Louis woman who is suing her therapist for hypnotizing her into thinking she had a past with a satanic cult and suffered from multiple personalities, according to a Dec. 1 article on KSDK.com.  Whether or not this woman truly was hypnotized into believing this, hypnosis should not be used to cure mental or physical health problems.

If you are a little fuzzy on the details of hypnosis, it usually goes something like this: A swinging object or rotating sphere is your eye's target, and your ears are subjected to a low, soft voice rocking you to "a state of daydreaming, where you are fully conscious yet tune out all of the stimuli around you," according to science.howstuffworks.com.

In Nasseff's case, and in the case of many psychiatric patients, the hypnosis method used simply was the therapist, Mark Schwartz of the Ballwin, Mo. Castlewood Treatment Center, talking the patient into such a relaxation that they are susceptible to a higher imagination.

She was supposed to be treated for her anorexia. Instead, Schwartz persuaded Nasseff that during her hypnosis, she admitted to being raped countless times and to participating in horrific satanic acts of sacrificing a baby and passing around the flesh to be consumed by all members of the supposed cult.  At least 12 other patients came forward with similar claims against Schwartz, with variations to the story.

Only about 10 percent of people are truly susceptible to hypnosis, about 70 percent have a small susceptibility rate and 20 percent nearly are incapable of going into a complete trance, according to professional hypnotist Bob Walsh's article on selfgrowth.com.  This susceptibility is based on an individual's openness to the idea of hypnosis.

Maybe this was my problem — I thought it was crazy from the start. It is this data that makes me wonder, if hypnosis really an effective way to treat mental illnesses like anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder or, in Nasseff's case, eating disorders. If it only genuinely works for 10 percent of the population, I think the answer is no. Despite this, hypnotherapy still is used frequently at many mental health facilities throughout the nation.

Before you call me out as a skeptic, I do think there are certain situations in which hypnosis can be effective and acceptable. Sal Costa, Truman State psychology professor, uses hypnosis on his students as a demonstration for those interested. Costa "once told a student that he would see the face of Sylvester Stallone on everyone. The student went into the hallway and laughed when he saw everyone's faces, including then University President Jack Magruder," according to an Oct. 5 Index article. I am not going to argue that isn't hilarious.

When it is for the purpose of entertainment and general interest, it is fine to use hypnosis. The results just are not effective enough for it to be a legitimate treatment for serious health issues.  If you want a good laugh, or perhaps a nice, relaxing pseudo-nap, then maybe hypnosis is for you. But if you are hearing voices or feeling depressed, go to a real psychiatrist, not a pocket-watch swinging magician.

 

Lauren Kellett is a freshman

communication major

from Florissant, Mo.

Tags: cures, florissant, hypnosis, hypnotherapy, medical, stage

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I am going to post to this discussion because I am not sure what happened, but the top part of this discussion got cut off and I seem unable to edit it.

I am not in agreement with the content of this article ... I am posting it merely for others to review and post comment.  I found it on the internet and thought it was a good example of how negative news articles can quickly change people's opinions about what we do.

On one hand, I think it's ironic to see an opinion that is diametrically opposed to that of Erickson, Yapko, Rosenfeld, et al, who insist that hypnosis for entertainment should be banned, and that it should be used ONLY for medical purposes.

But the enjoyment of that irony is quickly overwhelmed by my dismay at how sadly misinformed this college freshman is, and even more dismayed that the stage hypnotist and the articles she consulted have all fostered those misconceptions.

First off, who the heck wrote that article on howstuffworks? Almost no one swings a watch or has clients look at a rotating ball. (I swung a watch last week at a Victorian festival--only for historical purposes. That technique is vastly outmoded.)

Second, her stage hypnotist failed to mention that she would remain alert and able to hear his voice throughout the show. He failed to explain that hypnotic "sleep" is not the sleep she has in her bed at home. Shame on him. Hypnosis shows do NOT have to foster misconceptions.

Third, the article on selfgrowth.com spouts that same tired nonsense about susceptibility, only it misquotes even the findings of researchers. This is sad.

When I have more time, I'm going to write a nice letter to this poor young freshman. I hope others will do the same, politely.

James

It demonstrates, again, how much the public still needs to be educated about hypnosis.

This person obviously did a little research and took the few articles she read and through it out there. Too bad the first articles she seen where not factual articles because maybe it would of went a different direction. Then again you only see what your looking for..

 

Bruce Taylor

www.taylorhypnosiscenter.com

Where did this article appear?

James:  Here is the link.  Perhaps we should each write a rebuttal to her article?

Hypnosis should be used for fun, not medical cures

I hope she gets many.

 

BTW, did you notice that Alan Salmi tried to pin the St.Louis case on non-degreed hypnotists? It was a therapist who abused his clients with hypnosis. A therapist.

And Surhan Surhan's legal team now claims he had been placed into hypnotic trance and therefore has no memory of killing ...

Where would our country be without creative attorneys?
 
James Hazlerig said:

I hope she gets many.

 

BTW, did you notice that Alan Salmi tried to pin the St.Louis case on non-degreed hypnotists? It was a therapist who abused his clients with hypnosis. A therapist.

A quick search on the internet reveals that in 8th grade in the USA, children are 13 years old.

It is logical to assume that Lauren is now in the region of 18 years old.

At the tender age of 18 I assume that Lauren has neither studied hypnosis, nor psychiatry, nor medicine in any great detail. She bases her conclusions on here-say and quotes a few statistics.

Don´t get me wrong, I am not criticizing Lauren although I find her thinking disturbing. I can only imagine that her thinking is a product of the educational system she has been exposed to.

She has already drawn conclusions (very prematurely in my opinion) that hypnosis is of no real therapeutical value. This is (in my opinion) a tremendous underestimation of the real power of hypnosis and a great shame.

The use of the phrase "Pocket watch swinging magicians" leads me to think that she looks down upon hypnotists.

I´d say that this young woman has been hypnotized into thinking that it´s better to label people based on their current behaviour and then drug them, than to consider the possibilty of helping them find their own solutions with one on one attention in the abscence of chemical substances.

She makes no mention what-so-ever of any cases in which hypnosis has been used to help clients obtain their desired results - alas I can´t say that this is because she only searched for evidence to back up her idea that hypnosis is useless for therapy, or if the only information available to her was that which supported this theory.

I think it´s a shame that this young lady has closed a great many doors to herself, and hope that some day she opens them.

Freshman in college = first resources found through Google = all the research I feel like doing.

'nuff said.

Jason

I remember when I was 18. I hated it when people older than me, talked down to me ;)

Age is not necessarily an indication of maturity.

Owen, funny you would mention that because it causes me to look back on my own life.

I remember being 18 ... and I can safely say I didn't hate people older than me when they talked down to me because I remember all adults older than 18 being stupid and not knowing as much as an 18 year old who had just graduated high school ... an 18 year old who knew everything there was to know about the world :)  or not

After all, at 18 I was now an adult ... the law said so ...

Funny how we look back on our life and realize how little we actually know about life and the world we live in   
 
owen mcginty said:

I remember when I was 18. I hated it when people older than me, talked down to me ;)

Age is not necessarily an indication of maturity.

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