Would you say that the human mind is fairly easy to control then?
Well, again...people vary highly in their receptivity to suggestion, but look closely at how I've phrased that: "receptivity to suggestion."
That's very different than "susceptibility to control." Control is out of the bounds of this discussion. Nothing we've discussed will give you
control. But under the right circumstances it can be very simple to convince a human mind to eagerly cooperate with your intent.
For example...you've probably heard of the adage that it's "not possible to convince someone via hypnosis to do something they're morally
inclined to not do." And loosely speaking, that's fairly accurate. But
totally misleading. For example, if you have a woman hypnotized, and
you tell her to cheat on her loving husband and destroy her marriage by having sex with you. It's very likely she won't do it. But...if you tell her
that
you are her loving husband, that you've been happily married for years, and that you routinely have fantastic sex that gives her
mind-blowing orgasms, and by the way...how does right now sound? It's not unlikely that she might. After all...in her mind, you're her husband. You
have wonderful sex. She's been having sex with you for years. Of course she'll have sex with you. Or...let's say you plant a suggestion to
visciously murder someone they care deeply for. Again...odds are good they're not going to do it. But...plant the suggestion that someone is evil and
will become the next hitler and tell your subject that they're the only person in the whole world who can stop the next genocide...or tell a suitably
religious person that god has personally chosen them to destroy a demonic fiend masquerading in human form...and so long as these things are
compatible with their world view, they're far more likely to accept them. The trick is to simply
frame things in a manner that they're
individually and personally receptive to.
All a hypnotized person has to do is simply say no. But...all a
fully conscious person has to do is say no, and look at how many people can be
manipulated in fully conscious states with no hypnosis at all to do things that you might think they would be "morally inclined" to not do. For
example...the military. People in the military regularly travel to distant lands and murder complete strangers. No hypnosis required. Why do they do
this? Because they have beliefs and ideas in their mind that "those people are bad" or "I'm protecting my family and nation." This is
no
different, and these are
exactly the sort of pathways that can be used by hypnosis.
So is it easy to control the human mind? No. But by altering beliefs and sensory input, it's often not difficult to get the result you probably
want.
I bet there's many things that go on without our knowledge.
Allow me to share a wonderful and scary idea with you.
There is nothing "magic" about subliminals, hypnosis, NLP or anything else we've discussed. These things simply make deliberate use of mental
pathways that exist and are used in daily life anyway. For example, let's say a person belives that they are ugly and unlovable. So they go to a
hypnotist who convinces them to belive that they are beautiful and lovable. And now they believe that they are beautiful and lovable.
...
why did they believe they were ugly and unlovable in the first place?
Have you ever seen a father pick up his baby and tell her "Oh, what a beautiful little girl you are!" "How's my precious darling today?" "Is
there anything I can do for my angel?" Guess what? The baby doesn't understand the words. The father is applying a subliminal message. He's
teaching a subconscious mind to believe that it is beautiful. And while she probably won't remember the words...she'll definitely remember the
feeling.
You suggest there may be things that go on without our knowledge. But I ask...if hypnosis in ten minutes can make a person think they're a
chicken...if NLP in five seconds can make someone fall in love...if subliminals over a few weeks can make someone perceive themselves and strong, and
beautiful and lovable...what can an
entire lifetime of experience do to one's perceptions of the world around them?
How much of the way you perceive yourself, others, the world...how much of that is the result of mental filters that you learned without any awareness
that you were being taught?
Take that we have a person that subliminal messaging works on;
wouldn't the person need to have an understanding of what an image meant
before it could effectively do anything to them?
Yes, and no. It's not "understanding" of the image so much as what the image
means to them. A red rose might mean a happy valentines day to
one person, or a failed marriage to another. And even an image that a person can't consciously give a name to may evoke a response.
Rorschach images being an obvious example.
if a person is shown an image subliminaly, that they didn't understand in the first place, would they feel like they wanted a lot of something, but
didn't know what it was?
No, that's not how it works.
Let's back up and address what might happen even if they
do understand it. Seeing an image of something doesn't necessarily translate into a
feeling of "I want that." Oh, sure...it might. Or it might not. Showing someone a picture of popcorn and hoping they'll want to buy popcorn is a
longshot. If they happen to really like popcorn, and have emotionally rich memories of having movie popcorn with their family as a child and feeling
loved and happy while munching and reveling in yummy, crunchy, happy popcorn goodness...sure, they may feel the urge to have some popcorn. But without
that sort of connection, they might just loosely think "Popcorn. Ok, next." in some dark recess of their mind that never manifests in any meaningful
way. But what if instead, they got lost in a movie theater as a child, and were left in a dark corner for an hour, eating popcorn while their child
mind was terrified that they'd never see their family ever again, and that they'd live out the rest of their sad, miserable life alone and unloved
in a dark, dusty movie theater, until eventually they starved to death, with popcorn as their tragic last meal. If that's the kind of association
their mind has with popcorn, showing a popcorn subliminal is
not going to generate an "I want that" reaction.
So...in the case of a person who doesn't even understand what an image is...the odds of there being any meaningful reaction at all are fairly
slim.
From what you are saying it looks like a person with anxiety, trust issues,
closed off to suggestion, and/or awareness (depending) can make subliminal
messaging uneffective. That's also true for hypnosis too is it?
It can be. But a clever hypnotist can often work around those issues. It's just a matter of understanding how to appeal to a particular mind. Fear
and love can be powerful motivators. To give the most classic example...there are many people who insist they cannot be hypnotized because they're
convinced that they're "too smart" or "too strong willed" to be "controlled" in such a manner. So...you simply apologize to such a person up
front, and explain to them (while in a fully conscious state) that hypnosis doesn't always work, and that many people are naturally resistant to it.
You explain that hypnosis requires use of some of the higher functions of the brain, and that very many people aren't sufficiently developed to be
able to be hypnotized.
Bam!
Now things have been reframed. Now their subconscious believes that
only smart people can be hypnotized. And as someone who feels pride and joy
in being smart, they now have an opportunity to
prove that they're smart and feel that joy...while simultaneous feeling fear that if they
can't be hypnotized...clearly they must be "one of the dumb ones."
You now have cooperation because you've attached fear to failure to be hypnotized, instead of fear of being hypnotized. Identifying and fulfilling
emotional needs makes for powerful incentive.
But on the other hand...if you have a person who belives that they're very average, and that rich, powerful, smart people are the evil devils who
bring misery upon the middle class...that kind of approach is more likely to alienate them. You create a
disincentive to hypnosis, because if
they can be hypnotized, then obviously they're smart and therefore they must be evil. They don't want to be evil, so they resist hypnosis.
[edit on 4-2-2010 by LordBucket]