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HYPNOSIS
OR DEATH AND
PSYCHOSIS?
THE
DEATH OF
SHARRON TABARN and the dangers of hypnosis
Towards the end
of 1994 the tabloids in Great Britain were full of the story
of the death of Sharron Tabarn who died several hours after
participating in a hypnotic show presented by a young hypnotist
by the name of Andrew Vincent.
Sharron, a 24-year-old mother of two daughters had felt that
inner compulsion to put herself forward into the hands of
Vincent when the call was made asking for volunteers.
Sharron was obviously one of the main stars of the show as
Vincent took her
through a Madonna routine and other bizarre post-hypnotic
suggestions. As the show came to a close he told her, "I'm
going to count from one to three and clap my hands. And as
I clap my hands you will feel 10,000 volts of electricity
shoot through your chair, and it will hurt!" The next
morning Sharron was found dead in her bed.
Of course there was an inquest and pathologist Edmund Tapp
said the cause of death was from fluid in the lungs and inhaled
vomit. It was also stated that Sharron’s blood contained
extremely high levels of a hormone called Prolactin. It was
thought that due to the Prolactin and a low level of alcohol
in her blood that she had experienced a fit while in her sleep.
However, the coroner recorded a verdict of death by natural
causes.
According to Sharron’s mother, Margaret Harper, Sharron
had had a great fear of electricity ever since she received
a bad electric shock as a child.
It is my own personal opinion that due to Sharron’s
fear or phobia about electricity, the fact that she was a
deep-trance subject, and the crazy, mean and nasty suggestion
of experiencing a 10,000-volt electric shock which would really
hurt, this was the cause of the release of the hormone Prolactin,
which in turn prevented her from awakening when she vomited
in her sleep. Possibly the concoction of alcohol, endorphins
and Prolactin could be classed as a way of death through natural
causes, even though, in my opinion, hypnosis was the trigger
which caused this tragic accident.
As a point of interest, Prolactin is a hormone released from
the pituitary gland. The pituitary gland is situated behind
and above the bridge of the nose. The location of the mystical
"Third Eye". It is my own personal opinion that
it is this area that is stunned during a hypnotic state, although
there is no scientific evidence to support this, or around
the potential dangers of hypnosis.
The fact of the matter is, in my mind, and I trust that now
also in the reader's mind, stage hypnosis is extremely dangerous.
Not only are there the dangers of hypnosis, but it is morally
degrading for the participants involved, many of whom will
have no memory recall, but it can, and has, led to the death
of a young mother, and also has been the trigger for possibly
dozens or even hundreds of people entering into emotional
and mental imbalance, leading eventually to the mental hospital.
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CHRIS GATES
NOW DIAGNOSED AS SCHIZOPHRENIC
Chris Gates was one such person who
began behaving like child days after having been hypnotized
by former BBC Radio One disc jockey turned hypnotist, Paul
McKenna.
Chris
Gates unsuccessfully tried to sue Paul McKenna for damages.
According to the BBC news report Mr McKenna told the court
he would never subject stage volunteers to a "traumatic,
frightening and humiliating ordeal".
Yet the show I saw by Paul McKenna, he suggested to people
they were in a straight jacket and a ferret was inside that
jacket. I feel that is a traumatic, frightening and a humiliating
experience - don’t you? Also, by suggesting you are
in a straight jacket, in my mind suggests that you are a mental
patient?
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Following the above-mentioned casualties, in 1996 the Home
Office published a ten-page report after an eleven-month investigation
into the dangers of stage hypnotism.
The report declared that many other popular activities or
pursuits "clearly carry far greater risks",
and that stage hypnosis "posed no serious risk to
the public and that all indications are that there is not
a significant problem directly associated with stage hypnotism".
The Health and Safety Executive also carried out their own
study into the claims of alleged dangers. Their report states,
"it should be made clear to all authorities that
[the] HSE has no evidence to suggest that stage hypnotism
poses a general risk to the public if it is carried out according
to the Home Office guidelines".
A closer look at the recent 1996 Home Office report, it clearly
states the following. “The review of medical evidence
and available research literature was carried out by a panel
of experts who were nominated by the British Psychological
Society and Royal College of Psychiatrists. The panel members
were not experts in hypnosis…”
My comment to that is if they
were not experts in hypnosis, then how could they correctly
evaluate the evidence. Further
into the Home Office report under “Prohibited actions”,
it clearly reads, “any suggestion involving age
regression of a subject (ie, asking the subject to revert
to an earlier age in their life; this does not prohibit the
hypnotist from asking subjects to act as if they were a child
etc).”
The Collins definition of regression is:
"Psychol. The adoption by an
adult of behaviour more appropriate to a child"(my
emphasis).
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In
the show I saw of Paul McKenna’s his suggestion to members
of the audience on stage partaking in his show, was something
on the lines of, "In a moment, when you open your eyes
you are all going to be 5-year-old schoolchildren, and you’re
going to muck around, play around, and be so naughty, naughty,
naughty, and I am your teacher and you don’t like me
because I am very strict, but as soon as my back is turned
you're going to play around, muck around because you are so
naughty, naughty, naughty."
Disclaimer.
In the court cases both Andrew Vincent and Paul McKenna were
found innocent of any form of negligence based around the
dangers of hypnosis. Hypnosis was found not the cause of death
for Sharron Tabarn , and also not the cause of Chris Gates
schizophrenia.
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