By Christopher Thisse
You may or may not know that magic is sometimes called a
“Mystery Art”. This is because the
origins of magic delve so far back into history that we can’t even trace them
reliably. I am fairly sure that at some
point a cave man realized that if he held a rock a certain way, the other cave
men couldn’t see it and they would revere him for being able to suddenly be
holding a rock.
![]() |
| James Braid. This Image is in the Public Domain. Copyright has expired. |
I just haven’t been able to find that cave man yet. Africa is a big place to search for one cave
man.
Another of the original mystery arts is hypnosis.
This is a subject that has piqued my interests lately. I don’t know about you, but I am a fan of
going back to the origin when learning about a subject. That means a trip back to the 1800s for this
performance artist.
I went back to find a man named Franz Mesmer. Like the word “Mesmerized”.
Franz Mesmer was the first man to really hypnotize a
person. He believed that there was a
force that existed between all people which he referred to as animal
magnetism. He and his followers believed
that they were able to basically force their animal magnetism over people and
put those people under their control.
This was usually done through a highly ritualized procedure which
included robes and glass harmonicas and other such trappings. This was called Mesmerism.
This was near the time that scientific experimentation was
really taking hold. Mesmer’s procedures
and beliefs became passé and intellectually inclined gentlefolk were wise to
avoid it if they wanted to maintain a career.
But there was a surgeon, named James Braid, who became interested in the
phenomenon when he saw one of Mesmer’s students, Charles Lafontaine, performing
feats of mesmerism on November 13th, 1841 in Manchester.
Braid did not believe that the subjects were under any form
of animal magnetism or will of the mesmerist.
However, the subjects were clearly in some kind of altered state. He noticed that one phenomenon that was
clearly true was that the subjects were unable to open their eyes during key
moments of the process. He took this
fact and decided that the eyes must have a very important role in the act of
putting people into this trance state.
He also theorized that the process need not involve a
mesmerist at all. So he went home and
developed an ‘upward and inward squint’.
Using this method he was able to put himself into a trance and thus
demolished the idea that an outside entity (such as a mesmerist) was required
for this to happen.
Braid developed the techniques further and on November 22nd,
1841 he did a performance of hypnosis (not yet named such), using a Mr. J. A.
Walker as his subject. Soon after, on
November 27th he gave a lecture on the subject at Manchester
Athenæum in which he was able to demonstrate that he could produce the effects
created by Lafontaine without the need to touch any of the subjects.
Wanting to distance himself from the concepts of mesmerists
(which was of vital importance if he wished to maintain a respected reputation)
he declared the need to separate this valid phenomenon from the claims of
mesmerists. He associated the trance
state with sleep, so he went with the name neurypnology (“nervous sleep”). After some time he renamed it to
neuro-hypnotism (Named for the Greek god of Sleep, Hypnos), then shortened it
to hypnotism.
He later realized that the state had little to nothing to do
with sleep, and attempted to popularize monoideism, but the term hypnotism had
already taken firm hold and wasn’t going anywhere.
Braid maintained that both a mental and physical fixation of
the gaze and attention was all that was required, and that this procedure only
activated a state which was hard wired into all human beings.
He successfully used hypnosis to treat a variety of ailments
and injuries, but was firm in the belief that hypnotism was not a miracle
cure-all. It was only another form of
possible treatment. He also maintained
that only medical professionals should ever use it in a clinical sense.
Braid was what was known at the time as a gentleman
scientist. He did his research with no
affiliation with any institution or government organization, which allowed him
to conduct his experiments with a fairly free hand. Due to his diligence and experimentation, the
entire field of hypnosis was legitimized.
He could validly be considered the world’s first hypnotherapist.
Hypnotism is a fascinating and largely misunderstood
thing. Braid used it to treat physical
ailments. We use it to make people think
they’re a chicken. As you do.
Further reading:
Check Out Christopher's New Blog Ectoplastic Travels!
Christopher Thisse is a time traveling psychic
magician. Not all of those things are true. He has been performing
semi-professionally for over eight years, starting in a small circus troupe in
Providence, Rhode Island. When he moved to Fresno he shifted his focus to
magic and now works for Ellusionist, one of the largest magic companies
in the world. His troupe, Of The
Fireflies, has performed for some of the largest events in the
Central Valley and Fresno area of California including Trashique, Freedom Fest,
CMAC’s Anniversary Event and many ArtHop events. When not doing
impossible things in front of awe-inspired crowds, Christopher can often be
found writing urban fantasy themed Steampunk stories, cooking, tending bar at
parties, or training his German shepherd puppy. And if all else fails, look for
him out in the Black Rock Desert, Or
on Facebook!


No comments:
Post a Comment