"This is not a 'trick', these are not actors, this is real hypnosis by a hardcore professional."
Oh hey more Darren Brown.
Actually, it is a trick, one done through Mentalism. He's messing with the subject's mental processes so that they're thrown off guard. Darren Brown's used this to take things from people more than once (even the ties around their necks), but it works because of picking people who are predisposed alongside his own tactics for how to take advantage of their state. It's Fast Talk, it messes with the mind's ability to retain what's happening by distracting them with complex stimulus and reassuring phrases alongside the whole "Foot in the door" deal from them already helping him with directions. He does the same thing to pay for things with paper.
The guy has a book too from before he had his own show, but it takes some effort to find the thing.
Prying open your mind and putting suggestions into it, that's kind of what placebo is in a sense. It's why psych experiments have control groups, since if subjects believe it will work (or even if they go as far as to believe it could work), it can alter the results.
It works on them because they're tricked into believing that it'll work on them (alongside being pre-disposed to it). Beyond that there's trickery to get them to hit targeted conclusions, like the Darren Brown video I posted above, but I wouldn't really call that hypnotism so much as fast talk.
no guy, it works because you have the mental power of a chicken.
It works on them because they're tricked into believing that it'll work on them (alongside being pre-disposed to it). Beyond that there's trickery to get them to hit targeted conclusions, like the Darren Brown video I posted above, but I wouldn't really call that hypnotism so much as fast talk.
The truth is, you'll never be the wiser if someone puts you under. I got extremely lucky that someone in the room protested against the guy rapidly inducting me and I came to at the last second. After that, I was fully aware of subsequent attempts. Well, maybe all of them, I don't know for sure.
This is not a 'trick', these are not actors, this is real hypnosis by a hardcore professional.
Tbh, I'm pretty upset that I know this shit, because I am fairly sure based on my state of mind, that someone who I see on a professional level continues to do this to me. Everything I sense and have deduced tells me they are. And yes, it's a doctor.
Oh all of sudden it's real?
nice...
you're brain is a machine, and like a machine it has limitations and dimensions which are exploitable by one who is aware of them. for example, this is how your brain works to recall and create thoughts.
This is the first step you need to take to understand that the brain is a machine.
Go up to whoever you want, preferable someone who trusts you and just have a conversation and watch. Ask the right questions. You have to be fast to catch the world go by you in slow motion.
It has been around so long that it's now officially urban legend. When someone lies, they look up and to the left, or up and to their right. not quite accurate, but yeah, it's urban legend.
And now you know why I stopped watching commercial TV and Movies in a completely idiotic dream state back around 1999.
by Turncoat"Go up to whoever you want, preferable someone who trusts you and just have a conversation and watch. Ask the right questions. You have to be fast to catch the world go by you in slow motion."
I already do, but it's still not Hypnosis.
I accept the fact that no matter what i say you will counter with some bullshit point which is entirely irrelevant.
When you watch TV, you're a fucking zombie. Go eat some subway. Be fresh. And never learn how to make a fucking half decent sandwich for yourself you idiot.
The social street robbing bit can work, but that's not hypnosis. It's closer to distracting them and prodding how they'd respond automatically to someone they've already done at least one favor for.
Edit: "This is the first step you need to take to understand that the brain is a machine."
This is true, but that supports Mentalism as a whole, not Hypnotism.
"Go up to whoever you want, preferable someone who trusts you and just have a conversation and watch. Ask the right questions. You have to be fast to catch the world go by you in slow motion."
I already do, but it's still not Hypnosis.
"It has been around so long that it's now officially urban legend. When someone lies, they look up and to the left. not quite accurate, but yeah, it's urban legend."
And that is lumped these days into Micro Expression Theory.
You ever see someone try to explain what inception is about? That alone freaks the fuck out of me.
Nolan's work explores existential, ethical and epistemological themes such as subjective experience, distortion of memory, human morality, the nature of time, and construction of personal identity.[131] "I'm fascinated by our subjective perception of reality, that we are all stuck in a very singular point of view, a singular perspective on what we all agree to be an objective reality, and movies are one of the ways in which we try to see things from the same point of view".[124][132] Film critic Tom Shone described Nolan's films as "epistemological thrillers whose protagonists, gripped by the desire for definitive answers, must negotiate mazy environments in which the truth is always beyond their reach."[133]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientology_status_bycountry
Scientology status by country describes the status of Scientology and its recognition as a religion or otherwise in different countries. The Church of Scientology pursues an extensive public relations campaign for state recognition of Scientology as a religion and cites numerous scholarly sources supporting its position.[1] The level of recognition Scientology has been able to obtain varies significantly from country to country.
The Church of Scientology has been recognized as a religious denomination in its home country, the United States,[2] and has received full recognition in various other countries such as Italy,[3][4] South Africa,[5] Australia,[6] Sweden,[7] New Zealand,[8][9] Portugal[10] and Spain;[11] it thus enjoys and regularly cites the constitutional protection afforded in these nations to religious practice. Some countries, mostly in Europe, have regarded Scientology as a potentially dangerous cult, or at least have not considered local branches of the Church of Scientology to meet the legal criteria for being considered religion-supporting organizations.[12]
<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auditing%28Scientology%29">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auditing_%28Scientology%29
Auditing is defined by the Church of Scientology as "the application of Dianetics or Scientology processes and procedures to someone by a trained auditor. One formal definition of auditing is: The action of asking a person a question (which he can understand and answer), getting an answer to that question and acknowledging him for that answer."[1]
Some auditing actions use commands, for example "Recall a time you knew you understood someone", and some auditing actions use questions, for example "What are you willing for me to talk to others about?"[2]
Ring any bells? Sounds eerily similar to what I just posted on anchoring.
by Turncoat"It has been around so long that it's now officially urban legend. When someone lies, they look up and to the left. not quite accurate, but yeah, it's urban legend."
And that is lumped these days into Micro Expression Theory.
Too late. Up and to their right. Urban legend. So watch some Nolan and may the truth be forever out of your reach.
Scientology in general made it as far as it did on the backs of it's lawyers. It got a rather interesting response out of 4chan, leading to them finding a lot of troubling data (with a lot of references to people like Lisa McPherson).
Their perspective on medicine and hospitals in general is also somewhat troubling.