I think this is where I’m headed. Your example of the sky being a *little* green might work better, (it isn’t even remotely so, here, today, but I do get your point!) as focusing on something that’s just a tiny bit true according to my beliefs, would enable me to go “yes, I see that” – then it’s not too far for me to:
Heh. So, there’s two points to that example. The surface point is “this is how you go about helping people perceive differently”. You focus on what *is*, and point at it not what they “should see”. I don’t necessarily see the sky as “a little green” in any real sense, but since there is always noise in our perceptions, you can find a little bit of green experience in there anyway if you look hard enough. It’s a weird one to be focusing on perhaps just the noise, since normally I wouldn’t actually be telling anyone that the sky is green unless the sky actually is green and they don’t get it yet — but that’s how you go about getting people to see green skies regardless.
The second part is that it highlights well the option of “no it’s not, you dork”. That’s generally what I feel the right option is whenever hypnotic suggestions just flat out don’t fit reality. Other than for the fun of seeing that you can, I don’t see much point in hallucinations. Perceiving more accurately, sure. Changing reality, sure. Focusing differently, sure. But adding on top of that the actual belief that something is real? If that has a use, find the use without the lie.
OK, sure. I’m not trained and will take your word for it. But I know I feel tangibly, physically different in a light state than a very deep state. How do you then interpret the catatonia in Esdaile, that you see in many YouTube demonstrations?
Nah, don’t take my word for it. I’m not even “trained”, I’ve just been thinking about and playing with this stuff for a while. Call me out. I’ll explain

A lot of the stuff in hypnosis is simply the result of suggestion. If you look at the scientific literature on hypnotic amnesia, it basically says “It’s all suggested. If it’s not unknowingly implied by the hypnotist, it’s from their preexisting ideas of what hypnosis is”. I think that’s actually not quite true, but the point is that you have to be really really careful about stuff like that. All of the stuff I’ve seen about deep trances and the like involve the hypnotist telling the audience what the hypnotic subject is doing and why, and then acting like it’s some inherent part of this specific state without controlling for the possibility that the person is just fulfilling expectations. For example, when you hear stuff like “They are nonresponsive in this state. The only way to get them out is to threaten that they will never be able to return to this state if they do not” is pants on head retarded.
Like amnesia though, I do think that there is a bit more to the story. There are definitely non-suggested indicators of trance that pop up even when you’re not thinking about trance yourself. It happened in the example I gave in the other thread. I had that “oh sh**, this chick is hypnotized” realization based on a “look” that she had which was not at all suggested, and this actually counts as a double blind experiment because neither she nor I were thinking about it as “hypnosis” and therefore couldn’t be sneaking in “this is how you’re supposed to act when hypnotized” suggestions.
I’m not saying that spontaneous catatonia doesn’t exist or isn’t meaningful, but that the demarcation still isn’t super sharp, there isn’t any overwhelming difference between what can be done in these states and what can be done otherwise, and when you are explicitly suggesting that people show signs of trance, the
distinctions mean even less other than as a convincer.
The example I mentioned somewhere above here, where I could pinpoint the (spiritually oriented) suggestion, after you pointed out the change and asked what had changed: it wasn’t conscious at that point, but since our conversation, and with the self hypnosis repetition of it, I do think it out consciously sometimes. And then I do something to make it happen, which feels perfectly natural and unforced, because I accept the premise and it’s congruent with how I see myself. Is this what you mean when you say “pass the milk”??
Yes, that does sound like an example of what I’m talking about. It also applies to “hypnotic phenomena” though.
For example, one morning my wife woke me up with blood pouring out of her hand because broken glass had fallen on it and it had cut a vein lengthwise. When I was directing her to constrict her blood vessels to stop the bleeding, it was delivered very hypnotically — focusing my own attention first, directing her what to look at, what to remember and imagine and what to do with the presupposition that it was to be taken on unconsciously and never giving her mind a chance to wander. Now though, when she says something about her hands being cold while her core is warm, I just say “so send more blood to them?” and she says “I did, and it’s better now” — you know, just like any normal donkey thing that anyone can do.
As another kind of example, one of my friends is a total control freak. She would make a terrible hypnotic subject, and wouldn’t want to try. Over the years of knowing me and watching “crazy” things I say turn out to be true and to “work” over and over, she sorta lost the whole “impossible!” thing that hypnosis is designed to bypass. So when I told her about how I seemed to have somehow stumbled on the ability to just “decide” that my injuries aren’t going to swell she did the normal skepticism thing, and then when she broke her thumb she thought “shrug, might as well try it” and then her thumb didn’t swell either. That never would have worked for her when I first met her, and it only worked because she has now learned to see the world in a way that is compatible with weird sh** like that happening.
I do think, though, that the fact the suggestion was first presented subconsciously (i.e. in trance) made the difference, enabled it to sneak in the back door and blend in on the couch in front of the TV. I watch very little TV, so by the time my conscious noticed, it’d been there a while and seemed like part of the furniture. [...]
Well sure. That’s one way in. Though as I said in the other thread, I think it’s worth noting that you’re the one that decided to let that suggestion sneak in without flipping your sh** at it.