Art and hypnosis

I don't know if animals are, but human beings are easily hypnotized. I guess animals are not hypnotized, they must be sober and accurate, otherwise there will be problems with survival. A cat sleeps on its leg. When you touch it, it closes its eyes happily and snores soon, as if it has been hypnotized by its owner. But as soon as anything happens, it immediately reacts and jumps down from your leg, showing the heroic nature of cats, fake tigers and leopards, while the owner complains in his heart that his pet is really unfamiliar. The same is true of dogs, but dogs have a better reputation than cats, that is, they are loyal, well-bred, well-bred, and people will blame him if he doesn't respond to the wind. I once wrote a novel that said that one day people became pets of animals, which turned out to be much more interesting than people being owners.

In the past two or three years, Taiwan experienced a period of fever in previous lives. The cause was an American, Weiss, MD from Yale University and director of psychiatry at Mount Sinai Medical Center in Miami, who wrote a book claiming that through his hypnosis, the hypnotized person could actually see who he or she was in a previous life. A publishing house in Taiwan translated Weiss's book into the Chinese version of "past Life and this Life," which caused a sensation, selling more than 400000 copies in two years, while the original version of "past Life and this Life" sold only 400000 copies in the United States in six years.

When I turned on the TV in Taipei, I happened to see the hypnotic show of Taipei's past life and this life. Show is show, which means show. Many of the people who are hypnotized are all kinds of stars. The scene was very warm.

Strictly speaking, this is the kind of problem that is neither easy to prove to be true nor to be falsified. There have been many sensational cases of past lives around the world. For example, TheSearchforBrideyMerphy, a best-selling book that swept the United States in 1956, can still be found in secondhand bookstores. It is said that the hypnotist Bernstein hypnotized Ruth Simmons deeply. As a result, the housewife spoke about her past life in Irish-accented English: born in Kirk, Ireland on December 20, 1798. His name is Brad Imofei. Simmons talked about the past life with a lot of details, and the time of death in the previous life was also very specific, at the age of 66.

Under the sensational circumstances of the Denver Post, which serialized part of the book at that time, Barker, a reporter, was sent to Ireland to prove Brad Immerfield, and the results were consistent and inconsistent. For example, Simmons mentioned that the names of two grocers and a two-penny coin were consistent, while she mentioned that Queen's University, where her husband taught in her previous life, was a college at that time. Things are becoming more and more sensational, and there are a lot of skeptics. The Chicago American, the rival of the Denver Post, is a skeptic, so it also launched an investigation. However, the Chicago American newspaper went to find Ruth Simmons. The result of the survey was that Ruth lived in Chicago and had an aunt who emigrated from Ireland who liked to talk about Ireland. Across from Ruth's house lived an Irish woman, whose surname was Murphy before marriage. The conclusion was that Ruth talked about her past life under deep hypnosis and was a summary of what she had heard every day. "looking for Brad Immerfield" immediately fell off the best-seller list.

More than a decade later, there was another sensational case of a previous life in Britain in the late 1960s, saying that a hypnotist A.B-loxham in South Wales hypnotized and recorded a housewife named Jane Evans. As a result, Jane recalled her seven previous lives, from ancient Roman housewives to present-day nuns in Iowa. So J.Iverson, the producer of the British BBC radio and television program, produced Brocksham's hypnotic tape. Iverson recorded his investigation into everything Jane said on the show. Historians of the seven previous lives mentioned by Jane all think that Jane's narration has considerable knowledge, but Jane says that her historical knowledge is only as high as primary school. Jane once described one of her previous lives, 1190, as a Jewish woman who had avoided killing in the cellar of a church in York. According to the description, Iverson thought the church should be Santamaria Church. But none of the medieval churches in York had a cellar, except York Cathedral, which Jane denied was York Cathedral.

When Santamaria Church was renovated into a museum in the spring of 1975, a room was found under the altar, which used to be a cellar! Isn't it wonderful?

However, l.Wilson questions this in his book the mind out of time (MindOutofTime). He gave an example of a Miss C who, after being hypnotized, recalled that she had been a good friend of Countess Maud in the era of Richard II. Upon verification, Miss C described the details quite accurately at that time, but Miss C declared that she had never read the relevant book, but Miss C later leaked a name EHolt. Under investigation, there was an Emily Holt (EmilyHolt) who wrote a book called Countess Maud. Miss C's description is exactly the same as that of the book.

I don't think Miss C is going to lie, she just recalled the forgotten reading under hypnosis. So when I heard that the stars in the Taipei hypnosis show were almost all foreign princesses and ladies in their previous lives during hypnosis, I guess their most moving reading material was probably Prince Charming, who was also a box office supporter of ancient Western pure love films.

After being hypnotized, one's memory is enhanced. There is a Dr. FLMarcuse in the United States who wrote a book, hypnosis: fact and Fiction (Hypnosis:Facts&Fictions), which mentions an example of a prisoner who needs to find his mother because of his inheritance, but he has left his hometown since he was a child. As a result, he can't remember where his hometown is, and he even forgets which state he is in. The doctor in the prison hypnotized him and asked him to return to his childhood state, but he still couldn't remember it, but the prisoner remembered that he had taken a train when he was a child, and the doctor told him to recall the sound of announcing the station on the loudspeaker. Under the inducement of hypnosis, the pronunciation of the name of a small station came to mind, but unfortunately there were six stations with this name in the United States. Unexpectedly, the prisoner remembered the surname of a family in his hometown town, and as a result, the station's first name and surname finally led him to find his mother.

Hypnosis can help adults recall the names of their kindergarten teachers and children. Of course, as you can guess, hypnosis can also induce victims or witnesses to recall a lot of scene details and help the police solve cases.

In early 1994, there was a case in California in which a woman named Holly sought treatment for anorexia. Doctor Isabella told Holly that 80% of the anorexia was due to sexual assault when the patient was a child. As a result, Holly later remembered that she had been harassed and raped by her father Gurley more than a dozen times when she was five to eight years old. Isabella hypnotized Holly with the help of Dr. Ross, and Holly recalled more details of being raped by her father.

The day after hypnosis, Holly began to accuse her father face to face, and the next day, Holly's mother asked for a divorce. The matter broke up, and the winery where Gurley worked fired Gurley.

Gurley, who felt puzzled, went to court, accusing Isabella and Ross of hypnotizing his daughter and putting the idea of incest into her head, and the court held a hearing. Harvard anorexia experts say childhood sexual adultery has nothing to do with the development of anorexia, while a professor of psychology at the University of Pennsylvania believes that hypnosis does not have the function of determining the truth, but patients become sensitive. As a result, the court ruled that the two doctors were harmless but negligent and compensated Mr. Gurley for $500000.