The suggestive power from the hypnotist is the "light" at this time. If you let a serious person "stand on one leg" in the subway car and recite the multiplication formula loudly at the same time, he will definitely leave you with a confused face. If he is under hypnosis, he will ignore the people around him and finish it naturally like sitting there reading a newspaper.
History tells us that hypnosis has an ancient origin. Ancient papyrus documents discovered by archaeologists prove that as early as ancient Egypt, priests used hypnosis. The power of suggestion played a great role in holding religious ceremonies in early civilization. It is also used as a medical treatment. Doctors in ancient Greece used "sacred dreams" to treat diseases. Before sacred dreams are "magic songs"-spells and prayers. In Homer's Odexiu Ji, it describes the treatment process of Odexiu's injury while hunting wild boar:
"... and carefully bind Odysseus' wound; Say a spell to stop the bleeding. "
The ancient Greeks believed in the power of spoken language and thought that these words could directly act on the human body and have a therapeutic effect on him. Thousands of years later, language contributed to the accumulation of knowledge. Franz, an Austrian doctor who lived in the second half of the18th century? Anton? Mesmer turned a new page in the history of hypnosis. He put forward the theory of "animal magnetism", which seems to influence people around him and change the physical state of himself and others. He believes that what can help at this time is the "spiritual fluid of life", which can flow from doctors to patients.
British doctor Brad used the term "hypnosis" in 1843 (in memory of the ancient Greek god of sleep, Gipnos) as a common word in science. He improved hypnotherapy. In addition to adopting "language formula", he also began to exert influence on the patient's vision: the patient's eyes should stare at a luminous object for a certain period of time, then fatigue comes, and then he goes to sleep.
H. Pavlov, a Russian researcher and physiologist of higher neural activity, found that people can show incredible potential because of hypnosis. For example, a boy, an assistant of a pharmacist, can always * * * recall 5-7 kinds of drug names on the drug shelf when he is awake. When he was hypnotized, he could easily distinguish 145 drugs from all the 150 drugs in the drugstore. What surprised Pavlov and his colleagues even more was a 60-year-old mason. Under hypnosis, he can recall and describe in detail the shape of every brick on the wall of a building he built thirty or forty years ago.
Many times, human psychologists have introduced "other" age stages to their patients through hints. Patients can easily step down the steps of age and look back on their past. For example, let a 40-year-old man recall how the furniture in the house he left when he was two years old was arranged. In the state of insomnia, he can name two kinds of furniture, while in the state of hypnosis, he describes his parents' home in detail and accurately, and even describes the slightly damaged wallpaper on the wall.
Unexpectedly, I have stored all my feelings about life, but I am firmly locked in the big warehouse. Nature seems to be freeing people from the stressful burden, because it is meaningless to remember exactly what happened in life all the time. Otherwise, memory will crowd out new feelings and new information, making people unable to think and master new information well. However, sometimes we have to go back to that place, and in the words of a poet, "the years are reduced to ashes without a trace." Doctors speculate that the cause of many diseases lies in the painful experience left in the depths of the soul a long time ago. If we can review these painful experiences and rethink them, patients can recover or get rid of the habits and states that are difficult to change.