Garvarn
Thinker
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2003
- Messages
- 204
tonyb said:Why do so many people, including skeptics, know so little hypnosis, hypnotherapy, and how it's used in the real world, and instead regurgitate misinformation?
I'm also curious about that, although I oppose your end statement.
posted by tonyb
I will address one particular post in the thread and try to actually state the reality of hypnosis. I will point out now that my I am actually a qualified and practicing hypnotherapist. So I think I know *something* about the subject.
What do you mean by "qualified" hypnotherapist. Have you taken a correspondence course or a weekend course? Do you have a diploma or a certificate, and what do you have to do to get one of each in your particular "school"? As you may be aware of, there are loads of "institutes" "teaching" hypnotherapy and issuing impressing documents on achievements. www.hypnotherapy-control-board.org is one of them (VERY impressing name).
I quote from Key Concepts in Hypnosis, by Campbell Perry, whos knowledge and experience in hypnosis by far exceeds both yours and mine, tonyb:
"A further difficulty in finding a properly qualified clinician who is trained in hypnotic procedures is that many of the lay hypnotists confer upon themselves and each other official sounding names, titles and letters after their names; some even designates themselves as 'Doctor', or 'Professor'. These letterings after the name and pseudo-titles imply a legitimacy that, usually, does not exist. The Bulgarian Institute of Hypnosis or the Norwegian College of Hypnotherapists, for instance, could be the name of a legitimate professional practice, but it could, as equally, be the name of a lay hypnosis organization."
http://www.fmsfonline.org/hypnosis.html
So if you state that you are a qualified hypnotherapist, that tells us nothing. If you state that you are a practicing hypnotherapist, it must be remembered that hypnosis is fairly easy to learn -- some say it can be learned in a couple of hours, so your practicing doesn't tell us that much either. Above all, it does not automatically qualify you to tell us about the "reality" of hypnosis.
posted by tonyb
If you're referring to mainstream psychiatry, psychotherapy and counselling then this is mainly true (although quite often some of these therapists are using it to a degree without realising it). It's interesting, though, that hypnotherapists often need to see patients for far fewer sessions that the other "non-hypnosis' approaches.
Could you please provide me with a study based on "reality" that backs that up?
posted by tonyb
There were a limited spate of these incidents over a few years, which represents a TINY minority of the actual work performed by hypnotherapists around the world.
It scares me a bit that someone claiming therapeutic skills belittle this atrocity, especially since it so clearly illustrates the danger of glorifying hypnosis as a therapeutic tool.
No, those are excerpts taken from studies, out of context.
posted by tonyb
It is a perfectly valid therapeutic method for those with traumatic events, and something I reguarly use hypnosis for and with highly effective results.
Yes, it can be a valid therapeutic method for those with traumatic events, but it is not to be practiced by poorly educated hypnotherapists lacking a wider psychological understanding of trauma and its effects.
posted by tonyb
What does a repressed memory amount to? All it means is something that has been consciously forgotten, often because it was uncomfortable for the person to deal with at the time. Why is this concept so difficult for some people to accept? I don't seek out repressed memories, and I certainly don't implant any, but I can assure you that they do occassionally crop up.
This is simply not true, but I understand why it is necessary for you to nurture this popular myth - it adds excitement to your profession, "the key to the soul". The problem with hypnosis is that it boosts imagination rather than expose alleged repressed memories. Fantasy takes on reality value for the hypnotized individual and becomes accepted by him as having happened in reality. Nor the hypnotized or the hypnotizer may be able to distinguish fantasy from reality. I suggest you read the excellent Believed-In Imaginings - The Narrative Construction of Reality, edited by De Rivera.
posted by tonyb
True, there were some that implanted false memories, but that isn't the norm now.
There were "some" that implanted false memories? The phenomena had epidemic proportions! And how do you know that this isn't the norm now? You still spread the myth of repressed memories.
posted by tonyb
But then you're not a trained therapist, are you?
Neither are you, you are a hypnotherapist, and that could mean a lot of things...