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THE
DANGERS OF STAGE HYPNOSIS
1.)
PHYSICAL CASUALTIES
Physical casualties are one of the dangers of stage hypnosis.
On many occasions people will sustain minor injuries. These
can occur from falling off their chair to the more dangerous
accidents like falling off the stage.
There was an episode during the early 1990s that was
reported in the press about a girl who walked off the edge
of the stage at Glasgow Pavilion. She asked the hypnotist
if she could go to the toilet, to which he said, "Yes
of course, take the nearest exit." His comment was given
harmlessly, yet the girl walked straight off the edge of the
stage and injured herself by breaking her ankle. Approximately
five years later it was Glasgow Pavilion that was sued for
damages, not the hypnotist.
At a Christmas show for Plymouth University I had a girl slip
over on a wet dance floor. She badly dislocated her arm. The
accident was caused by the wet dance floor, with the responsibility
falling onto the owners of the venue where I was performing.
Physical accidents do happen, but fortunately the human body
heals quickly - it is the psychological accidents that can
be so very dangerous, and is one of the most common dangers
of hypnosis.
2)
DEPRESSION FROM REJECTION AND DAMAGE TO THE PSYCHE
When
a hypnotist asks for volunteers quite often a large number
of people, maybe 20 or 30, will put themselves forward. Very
quickly the hypnotist will reduce this number of people down
to 15 or 20, take them all into trance as he continues with
the start of his
show. His eventual goal is to have 10 or 12 subjects all of
whom are in deep somnambulism. Quite shortly it becomes obvious
to the stage hypnotist (and to the audience) that 2,3 4,5
or 6 or more of the volunteers are not in very deep trance,
and not responding to his suggestions like some of the other
volunteers are, so the hypnotist sends them back into the
audience. He really only wants to work with subjects that
are in true somnambulism, so he can produce these wild hallucinations
and other bizarre post-hypnotic suggestions.
Now the volunteers he has sent back into the audience because
their depth of trance wasn’t deep enough, even though
they were in a level of trance, for some, not all of them,
but may be just one of them, they could well feel, “I
wasn’t good enough.” This rejection, and the feeling
that comes with it may only last a minute or so, or may be
for the evening , or may be even the next few days, or may
be stuck in the subconscious mind permanently. There is no
rule of thumb with hypnosis. “The I am not good enough”
could be a direct cause for severe depression, and the subject
not even aware of the original trigger that created it.
It is this rejection feeling of, 'I'm not good enough', which
can happen so very easily, and then be trapped in the subconscious
mind. Again it depends upon the individuals’ own personal
psychological and neurological make up. No one can tell what
that is until the damage has been done, and then it can't
be proven that this person's personality change was caused
through the medium of hypnosis. This is what I mean by depression
from rejection and damage to the psyche.
3.)
MISINTERPRETATION OF SUGGESTIONS
When giving a suggestion to someone under hypnosis it is very
easy for them to misinterpret what you have said. The story
of the girl at Glasgow Pavilion is an example of this.
Sometimes when you
the
suggestion given. Occasionally this will be a member of the
audience. As previously mentioned true stage hypnosis is mass
hypnosis. Without the hypnotist realising this, how is he
to know that the suggestion has been removed not only from
the individual involved on stage, but also from everyone's
subconscious mind in the audience, which leads us onto.
4)
RE-STIMULATION OF A POST-HYPNOTIC SUGGESTION
Going
back to serious accidents happening in hypnotic shows reminds
me of another story. It was during my early days as a stage
hypnotist. A young lady had been involved in a hypnotic show
that a colleague of mine, by the name of Ian, had performed.
Ian was the very same person I had talked to in Malta about
stage hypnosis. Four days later, having been in Ian's hypnotic
show, this young lady was in a supermarket carrying out some
shopping. Music started to play in the background. It was
the very same music that she had heard during a suggestion
she was given while in his hypnotic show. Suddenly she stopped
shopping and started to prance around
the supermarket as though she was a famous model. She was
with some friends fortunately; they realized exactly what
was happening. They took her to see three or four different
hypnotherapists who couldn't help this young lady. Her friends
then contacted the venue where the show had been performed.
The venue contacted the agent and the agent contacted Ian
the hypnotist. He in turn contacted me and asked if I could
help (because he lived 200 miles away). Back through the chain,
and the young lady eventually turned up on my doorstep in
Nottingham. I could see immediately that she was in a very
deep trance. A click of my fingers, a glare into her eyes,
simultaneously stating, "Sleep", and she fell into
the armchair behind her. I suggested she was in the hypnotic
show in which she had participated. I had a good idea of this
other hypnotist's act and ran a super-fast scenario of it.
I then brought her out of trance slowly and gradually. She
was in a level of shock not knowing where she was, how she
got there, or what had happened over the previous week. I
spent some time talking to her ensuring that she felt re-adjusted,
and never saw or heard of her again.
5)
LOSS OF CONTROL
As
for my own show, I would adjust the show to the audience.
Family shows were always a little tamer than an adult show,
and a lot would depend upon the audience’s reactions
to how risqué I would allow the show to become. I have
never told or suggested for anyone to strip naked. Having
said that, quite often I would end my show with the Chippendales.
As soon as the men had stripped off to their boxer shorts
or 'Y' fronts I would stop the music, and the volunteers would
come back to a level of waking consciousness. One show at
Butlin's, over two years ago, I was performing in front of
a family audience of around 3,000 people. It was the end of
the show and the male volunteers thought they were the Chippendales.
The moment this man undid the belt on his trousers a drunk
member of the audience, in fact his wife, rushed up on stage
and pulled his trousers and under pants down. The man was
stark naked in front of this family audience. Fortunately
everyone seemed to see the funny side of the situation. I
didn't. I was quite upset, and took offence to the action
from this member of the audience. When situations like that
arise it means that the hypnotist has lost control of the
situation, something that surprisingly can happen quite often.
6)
ALCOHOL AND DRUGS
Talking
about loss of control reminds of a show I performed in Germany,
and another danger of hypnosis. I was under contract to perform
for the British army. Having travelled overland to Germany
I arrived at this base camp to discover that a weekend charity
event was taking place. All the soldiers were paralytically
drunk. It did not seem right to perform my show; everybody
was too drunk to start with, and I felt nobody would appreciate
it anyway due his or her drunken intoxication. My fee was
£500, plus my expenses for petrol and the ferry crossing.
I protested to the agent who was at the camp, and advised
him it was not a good idea for me to perform my show. His
only comment was, no show, no money, no expenses and his commission
would still have to be paid. That would have meant I would
have been hundreds of pounds out of pocket and at a huge loss.
This conversation between the agent and myself created bad
feelings. My hands were tied so I performed the show with
the agreement that he, as the agent, would take full responsibility
for any mishaps. The show went well. The drunken soldiers
enjoyed it, and everyone seemed impressed. Sadly one of the
members of the audience became unconsciousness. He couldn't
be aroused from his stupor. He had obviously fallen into trance
while watching the show. The combination of alcohol and the
natural mass release of endorphins in his brain led him into
a comatose state.
Incidentally, endorphins are your minds own natural opiates
but thousands of times stronger. When a subject enters trance
endorphins are released into the brain. The deeper the level
of trance the greater the release of endorphins.
An ambulance was called and he was rushed to hospital. That
young soldier spent the night in hospital attached to a heart
monitor machine. The alcohol poisoning in conjunction with
his brain's own release of endorphins could have led to death.
Usually as a professional hypnotist I would never use volunteers
who were drunk to perform in the show, although often this
is unavoidable. Also, basically you don't know how much someone
has had to drink, or if they are under the influence of drugs.
7)
GRIEF CHARGE
Possibly
the most common occurrence and dangers of hypnosis is what
I call a "grief charge". The volunteer in question
suddenly drops into deep trance. When a person experiences
deep hypnosis the brain waves slow down into a cycle known
as theta. The brain waves are slow, 4Hz to 7Hz cycles per
second. It is in theta that the subconscious mind really opens
up. When we experience painful and traumatic events in life
the emotions are sometimes locked away and forgotten about
in the subconscious mind. As soon as the subconscious mind
is opened up the emotional pain is released. When I wrote
about the therapy case histories in the earlier chapters,
these clients overcame their psychosomatic disorders through
the safely run re-stimulation of their past upset emotions.
Sadly for a few individuals, during a hypnotic show, their
subconscious minds open up and they will
suddenly for no apparent reason go into fits of hysterical
crying or depression. (During a situation like this in a show
it is not possible to aid the subject as you are entertaining
an audience, not practising as a therapist.)
They are in reality experiencing a re-stimulation of emotions
of a past traumatic event in their life, and may not even
know what it is. This re-stimulation of negative emotions
usually only lasts for a few minutes, or for a few hours.
However, if the psyche or ego is damaged through this uncontrolled
re-stimulation of emotions it could well lead to depression
or personality changes for life.
8)
OBSERVER BECOMING THE VICTIM
Yes,
as we have already stated in previous chapters, stage hypnosis
is mass hypnosis. In some ways this might be the biggest danger
of all. On numerous occasions I have had members of the audience
fall into trance, and even follow the suggestions given to
the participants on stage. Also I have had audience members
experience a grief charge. Any danger that could befall a
volunteer on stage could also happen to an audience member.
When a subject is on stage at least the hypnotist has a certain
amount of control over that person. But what about the audience
consisting of several thousand people, all of whom are in
an element of trance, some deeper than others. Accident possibilities
are mind-boggling.
With an audience of several hundred there are bound to be
one or
two people at least, who sometime in their life have had some
form of psychiatric problem. These people may well have gone
to the show just as an observer, but have ended up on stage
due to their own susceptibility to mass hypnosis.
When the hypnotist has made the call for volunteers an inner
compulsion has taken control over their sick and weak minds.
The hypnosis can then fire them into psychosis.
9)
HYPNOSIS CAUSING PSYCHOSIS
Once
at a Butlin's holiday camp, right at the start of a show I
dropped this man into instant trance. A few minutes later
I said, "Wakey wakey, what are you doing down there lying
on the floor?"
The young man, around the age of 30, leapt to his feet, turned
to the person next to him, and put his hands around the person's
throat in an attempt to strangle him! I quickly intervened
with the word "Sleep", and the subject fell back
to the floor in a trance. I quickly gave suggestions of inner
confidence, ego boosting,
and suggestions of peace-of-mind and well-being. I then awoke
him and he returned back to the audience. All this happened
within a few minutes, the audience didn't really know what
was happening and I had a show to perform. Unfortunately the
story doesn't end there. Immediately after I had finished
the show there were further problems with this individual.
He had turned insane, and was acting like a madman thinking
he was a soldier. He was out to kill, and not to be captured.
Due to the strong emotional content I would rather not recall
this story in detail, but will say that it was a very frightening
experience for myself and the other people involved. Luck
being on my side the situation was resolved, and the young
man concerned spent the night in a local hospital.
He had already been bordering on the verge of psychosis, and
the hypnosis had acted like a trigger. That night driving
home, I was in a state of shock. Nothing had ever happened
like this before. My main concern was for the young man, and
also how could I avoid something like this ever happening
again? The answer was, I couldn't. There is no way that you
can tell whether a volunteer is bordering on a level of psychosis
or neurosis. If a person is bordering on the level of psychosis,
then hypnosis can be the trigger that fires them into insanity.
I have hypnotized thousands of people, and fortunately have
had only a few casualties that I am aware of. Even one casualty
is one too many.
How
stage hypnosis works & its dangers |