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Renaissance Festival

07/07/02

Permalink 12:00:00 am, by Lytspeed Email , 0 words   English (US)
Categories: General

Renaissance Festival

Today was my wife's birthday, and we celebrated by going to the Colorado Renaissance Festival. We had a great time, and saw Ded Bob and his dummy smuj for the first time in a couple of years. (Evidently Bob's not very happy with the "cheap bastards" and the "golf claps" at the Colorado Renaissance Festival. All I can say is that I contributed my $5 ...)

We also saw Rick Stratton's hypnotist show, and I was one of the subjects chosen to get on stage under hypnosis. I had mentioned to my wife before the show that I wanted to be hypnotized, and it came through. For me, the most interesting revelation about stage hypnosis was that it was old hat. I've been in that state many times; I just didn't know it was hypnosis. I've done enough meditation and visualization exercises that it was easy for me to drop into a deep relaxation; the big difference between the stage hypnosis and the visualizations I've done before is that I was not being directed to do things under the visualizations.

Here are a few observations about stage hypnosis as I experienced it.

1.) I was fully conscious of everything going on around me at all times. When I was "asleep" and limp on the stage, I was not really asleep, just relaxed enough not to care what position I was in or who I was leaning on.

2.) I was fully able to choose whether to do anything that Stratton suggested, and in fact I don't perform a couple of the actions that he suggested to us because they were against my basic nature. However, I did not feel resistance to most of the suggestions, even though they were not things I would do under normal circumstances.

3.) If I had been in the audience, I would have been rolling on the ground laughing. However, on stage, I did not laugh at the hilarious things going on around me (except when Stratton planted a suggestion about laughter.) I was definitely in a different state of consciousness in which my interpretation of humor had changed.

4.) I was very tired and a little out of it for about an hour afterward, despite Stratton's suggestion that I would feel awake and refreshed. I felt drained.

I'll add more observations as I think about them.

Later in the evening, I managed to squeeze in some time to critique the chapters for the Old Possum's Writing Group tomorrow.

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This is the Creativity Journal of Stace Johnson, writer, musician, poet, and geek. Feel free to hang around and post some comments or add me to your blog aggregator (see RSS links below.) Enjoy!

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