What do your subliminals tell me
to do?
Nothing. At least, not directly. The subliminals
act as attention getters and emphasizers. They get the attention of the
subconscious and give importance to conscious messages, such as those
that compose the suggestions used in hypnosis.
Are suggestions more powerful when they are
presented subliminally?
No. Actually, in most cases, they are not as
effective as ordinary suggestions. Now, don't let this confuse you. It's
just that the subconscious mind is not
responsive to subliminal commands or complicated messages.
Only certain, very limited messages are effective, and they are effective ONLY in this way: They have the effect of saying to the subconscious, Listen up, what's being said is important.
(Please note the distinction here between regular suggestions—that is, carefully crafted, complete statements or sentences—and subliminal imbeds, which are composed of a very narrow set of one- and two-word phrases.)
Think of subliminals used in this way as signals, rather than messages. Like the flashing lights at a railroad crossing. The alternately blinking lights signal the approach of a train. In the same way, certain subliminals signal to the subconscious mind that an important message is on the way. The subliminal signals don't change the suggestion in any way, any more than the train signal changes the train.
Can subliminals make me lose weight (quit
smoking/study better/etc.)?
This is actually the same
question as the ones that precede it and the answer is the same. No. Not
directly. A subliminally embedded suggestion like, "You will never again
eat French fries" would not be nearly as effective as consciously
presenting the same suggestion to the accompaniment of proper subliminals. These "proper" subliminals have been identified through
years of painstaking laboratory and clinical research.
Are subliminals illegal?
No. A
lot of people think they are, but they are legal in every state of the
United States and, so far as I know, in every other country in the
world.
Do magazines and other media use subliminals?
Some would say so, yes. They used to appear pretty obvious in places
like full-page magazine advertising. However, I have not spotted any for
several years. If they are still being used, they are quite subtle. If
you'd like to know more about this, read Subliminal Seduction
or The Clam-Plate Orgy by Wilson Bryan Key. (Note: Both of
these books are currently out of print so you will have to find them in
libraries or in used book stores.)
Can subliminals hurt me?
No, but
they can be mildly upsetting to a very small fraction of the more
sensitive among us. In my own research involving hundreds of subjects
over the years, I found that roughly one in a hundred people would at
first be mildly upset by some of the more powerful subliminals. But they
usually quickly got over it. No one ever reported to me any serious
disturbance, nor am I aware of that happening in other research.
What are the subliminals on your CDs and
tapes?
Words that are vitally important
to the subconscious mind. They are not messages in themselves,
just words and brief two- or three-word phrases that are potent
attention getters for the subconscious mind, and that emphasize the
importance of the conscious messages being perceived. (See my comments
above about signals.)
The words are reversed (try doing that on your home tape recorder!) because it is immensely important that the hearer not consciously recognize the words. Within the very limited domain of verbal signals that work as subliminals, the more they are camouflaged (to the conscious mind), the better. They are still heard by the subconscious. And, yes, the subconscious does recognize reversed words in its native language. The words must, however, be recorded in regular pronunciation first and then the recording reversed.
(We discovered in my research that some very good hypnotic subjects can, while in a trance state, speak in reverse! However, when their reversed speech was recorded, and then the recording played backward to "un-reverse" the words, it didn't sound like ordinary speech. That's because it is not possible for the human mouth to accurately make reversed-word sounds.) Ω