The Dangers of Hypnosis
A lot of people are afraid of hypnosis. Is it only because of the movies which portray hypnotists as ruthless manipulators and enslavers of innocent human beings? For sure, a movie like Manchurian Candidate, can scare the living daylights out of a fearful person, who was seeking help with hypnosis. Even though, the movie industry unquestionably induced a lot of fear into the hypnotic arena, there is something else that we have to consider. People do fear entering a hypnotic trance because of their deep intuitions which tell them that there is something dangerous in the procedure. Are such intuitions unfounded? Not at all. The late, world-wide famous hypnotist, professor Maria Szulc, after years of practice quit on hypnosis. She developed her own method of communicating with the subconscious mind, which she named psycho-stimulation. Psycho-stimulation did not require the so-called hypnotic trance. In spite of throwing out of her practice altered states of consciousness, professor Szulc observed that her work became even more successful. Why would such an experienced and widely recognized hypnotist as Maria Szulc, quit on hypnosis? An essential fact is that, she did this only after long years of practice. What did she discover that drove her to change the way she worked? In her two books: The Meetings With The Unconscious and The Power of The Unconscious, professor Szulc wrote about the dangers of the so-called hypnotic trance. She discovered that hypnotized people, on some occasions refused to come out of hypnosis. Another discovery was that, hypnotic sessions seemed to attract bizarre psychic phenomena. Spirit entities of a rather shadowy character were attracted to the people in trances, disrupting the work, and making professor Szulc highly uncomfortable. In my own practice, I've also discovered the presence of undesirable psychic phenomena that seem to accompany hypnotic trances. While practicing self-hypnotic trances, on a couple of occasions, I was literally attacked by discarnate human entities, and had to fight them quite hard in order to get rid of their presence. In one instance a discarnate human entity lied by my side and grabbed me by my forearm, paralyzing my whole body. I used all my psychic power to throw that entity out of my energy field. It was a very unpleasant experience. Hypnotic trance suspends the conscious barrier of awareness and makes a person vulnerable to the spirit possession. Apparently there are a lot of spirit entities floating around, seeking a vulnerable human target. When they notice people in altered states, they are attracted to them by the power of a resonant psychic vibration. The American psychiatrist Shakuntala Modi, M.D., in her book Remarkable Healings writes about the negative spirit entities, such a discarnate humans or demons, which she found attached to the energy fields of her patients. Her whole hypnotic work is about helping people to get rid of those spirit attachments. Because of the inherent dangers of trance I neither use it, nor advocate it's usage. The so-called hypnotic trance is absolutely unnecessary to create even the most powerful changes in the human psyche, providing that the operator has sufficient power to create them. I am not comfortable rendering people "unconscious" and exposing them to the unknowns of the ever present spirit world.
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