Personal Magnetism
Personal Magnetism
Personal Magnetism
IN
Personal Magnetism
SELF-CONTROL
AND THE
DEVELOPMENT OF CHARACTER
PUBLISHED BY
copyright and
NOTICE.-This work Is protected bythe U. S. A the
simultaneous initial publication in other leading
i .
INDEX.
Lesson I. —Recognition
of a Force —The Storage Battery —The Pres-
ence of Mental Currents 7
Lesson — Characteristics of the Magnetic Individual —A Sense of
II.
Rest —A Peculiar Gaze—Always Polite—The Weak Grow Weaker
and the Strong, Stronger— The Magnetic Man Preserves Knowl-
edge Not Eager—Works According to Fixed Laws—You Like
Him —He Uses Your Force y . . 8
Lesson — Characteristics of the Non-magnetic Individual—He Is a
III.
Grumbler—He Depresses— The Reason—Admits Failure 12
—
Lesson XIII. The Conscious Development of Will-Power The Basis —
—
of Will-Power Development The Most Effective Method of Ap-
plication 43
Lesson XIV. —Methods of Active Projection—Lack of Necessity for
Same—Relation Between Mental and Material —A Process of In-
duction — Projecting Force Through Affirmation — Some Prepara-
tion Absolutely Necessary 44
Lesson XV. — Conclusion 48
Wellcome Library
far the History
and Understanding
iof Medicine
t3T
INTRODUCTION.
want Facts only to the great general public who are looking for
;
™ first
attributes.
woman. . w™nori
Women
We all know the type of the magnetic man oronly as examples
if I use here men
are as magnetic as men, and
for the
it is merely to avoid
confusion in grammar it is sufficient ;
intent, boring
nose. His glance seems to go through you with an
gaze", hut there is nothing offensive in it.
You feel that he is
not, 'and could not be, impertinent.
Notice also that he does not
look at you so when you are speaking;
he waits as it were to
receive your message, and then sends his to
you. When he speaks
kindly. But
he looks at you in that intent, masterful way, yet
he is not self-assertive ; he is not argumentative.
* * *
beneath
always, but you get the impression of an inflexible will
that calm exterior you sense power in him. He is a man to
be
;
portance, though you seem to feel that it is, while you listen.
* * *
Not Eager. —Now
remember this adjective. He is
again,
not eager. He rather makes you feel that if he chose to do so
he could say much. So he piques your curiosity a little. But
he does not impress you as purposely mystifying you. Not at all.
His eye is too frank for that, and if you know him for ten years
you will find that he never lays conversational traps for you, to
admiration. As a fact, his plane of
thought
seek to extort your
In his early days, when he was learning,
is above admiration.
This is a stage
are going too fast.
You Like Him.—But we
beyond our Lesson. What impression has this magnetic man
left with you? Just this, that you
wish to see more of him because
in some mys-
you feel that he is in sympathetic touch with you
terious waywhich you cannot define. You have "taken" to him,
rid of his influ-
as nurses say of their babies, and you do not get
ence even after you have parted.
* * *
conversation you will find, though you did not notice it at the time,
that you were the one who told what you knew you were ;
the
one who sought to please you were the one who gave. Yes, that's
;
ant' impression upon you; he did so, because he knew his power,
and taking a little magnetism from you, he left, as the bee takes
hone, from the flower and goes his way.
LESSON III.
he is something of a
he deepens your gloom; if you are happy,
called upon to lift him. He
drag Yes, he is a weight you are ;
which the magnetic man has over his fellows. When I say
"mental current" I speak literally. I am not merely using a
figure
Sr-tS*
gratify vanity in some obscure form.
that SSd*-* seeking to
* * *
procedure now,
The Method of Operation. The plan of
to hold it within you-
then is upon feeling a desire current,
this conscious effort of
By your will you
o ref Ze I gratify ft.
important enterprises.
* * *
fancy for a
Mean Dullness.—Never
Restraint Does Not
bring about
moment that this habit of repressing impulse will
*
in which desire will be obliterated.
The
a' condition of dullness
become of tenfold strengtn
effect is the reverse; the desires,
pressure upon the
and as a dammed-up river increases its
force,
are ready to use the
when you power it amounts
banks—and then,
to something. It has become a Force indeed.
* * *
ruKSof
not un n efested,
upon you. You must show him
but he learns from your
you are
that
receptKm of the news
mental balance han he.
Sat you are less easily thrown off your
it before. What is the result? He
Perhaps he had not noticed
character which he had not given you
fecocSze in you a poise of
Ah, you are beginning to gain
creditTor! ftmakes him
curious.
SiaS
^a^L stt
e6
uT^at
e
S^jSdg-cntLl tact in all
pecially at the start,
your experiments It would
^
succ£ss
^ ^
and ho d
Do
if
£^ «™£
not PP
either active
^rmata which w ould satisfy
cunosity. I suppose it is neemess
Never openly seek to arouse
about his studies, aims and
de-
To tellany student never to talk on his
your listener ever
sh in tni hne for that would put
yourself you are violating the first
A ard g thus of
In talking
conserving
personal magnetism-that of
fufes of the study of
gratifying vanity.
Personal information and
P The attractive or mag-
Seek Always to Avoid Flattery. more
result is that he is
netic man never talks of himself. The
approved than if he devoted a 1 his
Talked about, admired and
conversational coups intended to
cleverness to arranging little
flat h an
?L stJd e "This does not apply to me. I never
n?may say:
people
are the one in a thousand. All
seek flattery." Then you
to a greater or less degree. Those
seek approbation in some form,
they do not
who most eagerly get the least, because
seek it
force which attracts that form of men-
retain and conserve the
tal current.
LESSON V.
Against
The Tremendous Force of Desire for Approbation— Guard
Change.
This Leakage—You Will Soon Notice a Great
* *
—You
for Your Own Bene-
How to Use Antagonistic Forces
it is shown that
impu se or de-
FIT._In the foregoing lessons
to exert in
sire is a force the very kind
of force you would like
save a tremendous
though subtle torce.
agamst h.mself.
strength of yonr opponent
Jo" canuse the
* * *
BEC FoRCE
4 „. TTiWP _You have learned to
RECOGNIZING THE AVAIL
recognize the magne
FOKC
U value o ecrecy
•
^ ^
suppression of
&
vanity.
ex
_
blessing
netism will
Now
^ ^V^J^ ^
m
learned that to "bottle
to add
I wan
disguise.
to
^^t^f'^nton force
his menta1 magnetic
to
sto
^P^ J
The mteuiBF
/"
^J™'*
tudcnt of Persona l
w ithin
'
tQ
himself
sonal
Mag-
he has
M^
idd to temp .
is
^&^pa k ,? as it were ,
tation, to satisfy
^^^Z
the desire,
^^^^^ —
neutralizes the attractive is knowledge, the
- se
The
* * *
*" -^°"» — 22 —
tted , y a dire or ten,,
— 23 —
annoy you, to say the
some kind. Ordinarily it would
tation of much
and welcome it, as just so
kast? But now you recognize
your mind on this desire—get the benefit of its full force and
— 24 —
ex-
then begin very slowly to inhale a long full breath to the
treme capacity of your lungs. This should occupy about eight
RESULTS^-Some stu-
The Time Required foe Appreciable .
foregoing tessons an
dent may say that the
wants something more mysterious
say "Follow instructions and see
and complex T
for yourself. You
B
°^ ££
can learn
be unreasonable indeed
who would
n no other way." He would ^ougbt^bou ,m-
his character to be
xpe°ct a radical change in
herein. These lessons
mediatelv on practicing any exercise given
subject and thus give you
the
show you "he law governing this
Give the sunlight a chance
ha«e to grow without hindrance. not jump a once
plant will thrive. It does
a the pbnt and the In the
have time to develop natura lly.
into full bloom-it must explana-
the
light is let in to him through
case o he student the
the law, so
surely as he takes advantage of
tion of the law, and so
surely will he grow.
* *
ONCE.-Usually the new stu-
Some Effects Noticeable at
his development in about
four or five
dent notices the effects of
immediately however,
davs Asensation which comes almost
After each
is one of increased
self-respect and self-confidence
of a desire an actual
physical
conscious retention of the force
in the brain and nerves.
sensation of power and fullness is noticed
It is not assertive in
This isnot at all like conceit or vanity.
re-assuring. Let the beginner
the least but simply restful and
criticise himself frankly. Do not make the mistake of laying
attraction upon the. selfishness or
bad
the blame for your lack of
was all
taste of others. Whatever the fault has been, be sure it
yours.
scious desire for approbation. Do you get it? No. Does he get
yours? Yes. Does he endeavor to get it? No. Perhaps you
"can to the principles of conserving
now refer more intelligently
forces explained in the foregoing lessons. B is drawing force
from you instead of you drawing it from him.
— 27 —
wrong
Whit You Should Do.— Stop. You are on the tack.
X
"fortune" seems at last to
* kL
make
"I iMs
lost so,ne of
have turned in your favor
have sought in vain and
(Mr
the true student unhappy.
satisfaction in his
which now are
mif
f-hVr^rse
Quite the reverse,
of power.
the things
H
a g oriS
g
Remember there
than those you now
entertain
are other desires greater
LESSON IX.
-^Jj,
people are
we* spot tohis
man between y
and too *
^^u"
„Wy as
^
you do
that speck of a ^
^ ^Make
eyes uneasdy
'
Make to you;
U» at Y°
look make him
fe ^^
h]s
A- CENTRAL GAZE
GAZE
p.. OROINARY
OF THE LAWS OF
MENTAL
by A KNOWLEDGE
MADE EASY DY jy.nu\.
A HARD INTERVIEW
CURRENTS.
Do not
instant
self '
* * *
^ ^tSown "mage
™u? ovui
your dg in
'^acointance. You may use
a mirror or depend
entirely on your mag-
anything you like,
^ta^JS^W
tence Woithlnd.
you must think out each sen-
Then address the image in strong,
full, con-
— 33 —
fident tones.Round out each syllable and dwell upon it. Let
Point your finger,
your words ring out—straight from the chest.
pace the use impressive gestures, do and say anything you
floor,
actually
would like to do and say were the person addressed
present.
This is a splendid exercise. develop self-confidence
It will
the
TheCultivation of the Magnetic Glance. After
himself the value of the
student has learned and demonstrated to
needs but little other
conservation of mental currents, he really
help. Still a few aids to development
may seem important to
some students and I will mention some.
gazing at a point be-
In the preceding lesson, the method of
For the sake
tween the eyes of the person addressed is described.
method as the "Central Gaze.
of convenience we will refer to that
any and
Do not make the mistake of using this promiscuously on
for the purpose of making yourself im-
all occasions. It is solely
when you wish to be so. There such a thing as being
is
pressive
oppressively impressive, and this is to be avoided. Use your force
attractive. Be pleas-
with tact and discretion. Pleasantness
is
in the development of
an effective gaze and expression. Place
before you, or stand before a large
a small mirror on a table
inches from the glass. With a
mirror with your face about 15
dull pointed instrument, make a little dot
pencil or some other
or dent on the root of your
nose directly between the eyes. This
minutes, and is for the
mark will remain about ten or fifteen
your attention and gaze. In
purpose of assisting to concentrate
mirror, focus your gaze unfalter-
looking at your image in the
— 34 —
— 35-
ingly upon that spot between the eyes. Remain perfectly mo-
tionless, gazing fixedly at the central point. Try to keep from
winking. When you feel impelled to wink, simply raise the lids
a power-
The mirror exercise just described, rapidly develops
ful and magnetic eye. The eye is the window of the soul and
from eye to eye.
among psychic sensitives thoughts are often read
eye. Should it
You cannot be too careful to develop a masterful
glasses, the effect of the
happen that the student habitually wears
care should be used not to
exercise is still the same, but more
strain the eyes. The fact that you wear glasses does not mater-
weaken your ability to cultivate your gaze, and indeed, some-
ially
times adds impressiveness.
LESSON XI.
* * +
(1) —
Mental Photography. After getting into the calm
and passive state sit at a table and write a terse suggestion very
plainly on a white sheet of paper.For instance, write
"I will that my troubles with John Jones cease," or "I will
impress So-and-So favorably," or "I will that So-and-So be im-
pelled to do this." After writing your desire plainly and briefly,
sit back comfortably and gaze fixedly at it, concentrating in-
tensely, yet with calmness, on the meaning of the lines before
you, breathing slowly and deeply meanwhile.
This is Metotal-Photography. The theory is that forceful
mental currents are thus most perfectly formed. If you begin
with reasonable and simple requests of a general nature, such as
desire for a gradual improvement in Health, an improved and
strengthened character, a better memory, a sweeter temper, you
will probably succeed from the start, and as you develop you can
make your demands more definite and go more into details as in
the examples just mentioned. So long as you ask for things
which do not in any way, directly or indirectly, conflict zvith the
— 37 —
-38-
rights or happiness of other people you will meet
with a degree
with which
of success based upon the sincerity and intelligence
you adopt your instructions.
the
cord situated behind the pit of
nerve center in the spinal that
very good logic
stomach Some scientists claim, and with
abdominal brain-and that it not only
his fs really a brain-the breathmg
"tain bodily functions, such as
involuntary
control
— 39 —
nature of the indi-
a»A heart pulsations, -but also the emotional
»u*
^^^
P
look upon the so
vial^ A ew menial scientists now
£mL ma-netic center or nerve
scientists operate as
^
follows:
e* P— magnet capable of af-
y ° f °therS
Th6Se
-
VIBRATION THEORY.
STIMULATING THE SOLAR PLEXUS FOE THE RADIATING
collapsed and
With each breath the chest and abdomen are each
distended, alternately five times rather
rapidly. Arest of half
Another rest of half
a minute follows and the act is repeated.
a minute and it is repeated for the third
and last time.
acts
The attentive student can readily see that this exercise
directly upon the solar-plexus, giving it
a stimulating internal
massage through the movement of adjacent organs.
The mental
gratified must be held
side of the idea is that the desire to be
the stimulation of
calmly in mind during the exercise, and that
the solar-plexus or nerve battery sends out
the thought in vibra-
less receptive nervous
tions which take effect upon the more or
organism of the other persons who are concerned.
but
Much is claimed for the effectiveness of their system,
virtue in affecting others, it certainly
has a re-
whatever its
the student so far as giving him poise, calm-
markable effect upon
ness and relief from depression are concerned.
—40 —
—
fO The Muscular Method. 'The
third and last method
Faith-Success Through
:
F uth Assists but not Essential-Acquired LlNK.
^SSiy^ROVOKED IOEAS-IPEAS OETEN THE CONNECTING
Psychically Pro-
Acquired Faith. Success Through
Faith would help
voked Ideas.—You probably admit that
Even without Faith
you along faster, but say you have no
faith.
with Faith you can
you can develop in Personal Magnetism, but
that if you really desire the
do better. Therefore, let me tell you
get it merely by re-
advantage which Faith would give, you can
not so hard as it seems. The
fusing to consider doubt. That is
fact that you are studying shows
that you are anxious to learn.
It won't hurt
Therefore, you are willing to follow instructions.
you or weaken you in any way to refuse to consider doubt
at least.
dent and is bound to show itself in his face and manner even
though he may not realize it.
The Basis of Will-power Development. — It is sufficient
of mental surroundings
before you can reach material results.
student's impatient de-
While I cannot sympathize with the
sire for active projection of his force,
an
when he understands the
slower but much surer passive method, 1 can cover the point
he raises.
-46-
electric the-
AProcess of Induction.—Adopting the proved
conductor arouses a sym-
ory that to pass a current near another
pathetic current in that conductor, let us say
you wish to impress
or influence a new
acquaintance.
instrument through
Fix in your mind the fact that he is an
instrument which not
which mental currents pass that you are an
;
„f S
Projecting Force Through
Affirmation .—-Another method
projection of influence is
Hon
through Affirmation. For
gathering and taire that some
are at a social
Sue
tostance
present
P
- -nt
U htrtnd^tive hy hundreds
of experi-
SiumsS
— 47 —
him, "You
At thesame time repeat mentally as if addressing
me."
want to meet me. You want to meet
and seek to send it out to him,
Make this a forcible affirmation
as it were, through your eyes.
Of course, no
Some Preparation Absolutely Necessary.—
of the slight-
attraction is
method either of active or of passive
est value if the student lets go
of his own accumulated force.
of force, as de-
That is if he neglects the constant preservation
neither is it advisable or
scribed 'in the earlier lessons. Further,
direct methods such as
even reasonably possible to employ any
those just mentioned, until the student
has digested and become
science outlined in the
proficient in the general principles of the
foregoing lessons.
A must be paid on everything, and in the case ot the
price
absolute sup-
attainment of personal magnetism the price is the
pression of vanity in any and all \ts
countless forms.
~ 4» —
LESSON XV.
conclusion :
^ ^
^ „,v,«
who cslnve
a slav
c a to anv bad
^
. * ;
Anyone
netism
physical may
.
^JT!^X^<^-'»
^ Y™
might draw force trom
such drafts when you are
pos.hye;
You are nroof
prooi g
against _ m
you.
untamed.
self
All through q{ faave j.
^
pressed "P»
you are learmng '°
J™;"^
™ ake Xce
a "at is without individuality
or
your-
individua li,y, a part of
published by
Divided Mo
twenty Lessons*
««««
Published by
THE PSYCHIC RESEARCH COMPANY.
CHICAGO.
COPYRIGHTED 1900 and 1901.
BY
THE PSYCHIC RESEARCH COMPANY
CHICAGO, U. S. A.
. . . INDEX . . .
Part I.
— —
forming These Feats Caution Gradual Advance Why the Sixth —
Sense is Not Active.
—
LESSON 2. A First Experiment—How to Conduct It— Muscular Clues
— —
I
Part T.
Ce$$on 1.
of the
It isintended that these Lessons shall form in every sense
being
word a complete Course in Mind-Reading, the sustained idea
cultivation of this power women are fully as apt as men, and some-
into two parts; the first part being devoted to what is erroneously call-
ance.
which follow.
The experiments must not be hurried over; nor must too many
experiments be tried on one evening. When either brain or body is
more quickly than others, do they not? So we, who are merely
him this ability to read the minds of others. But objective education
like any human
has dwarfed the importance of mental communion, and
faculty which is permitted to rust, the sixth sense
has dwindled into
have befallen those dear to us, long before the sad news could reach us
startle us, we do not, after the first moment of the shock, seek to un-
we grasp the significance of the thought that while we may never un-
derstand the scope and breadth of the Power, nor know the composi-
£e$$o» 11.
recalled. Upon
when they have resumed their seats, the performer
is
first upon the place where it is hidden, then upon the article itself, I
think I can find the place and name the article. I wish the other peo-
son whose hand I take must agree to give his whole attention to this
undertaking, and I should prefer that you select one among your num-
ber who is sensitive in his or her nature, and who has the power of
Then some one of those who saw where the article was hidden
will put his right hand in the left hand of the performer, and the lat-
ter will use the impressions he receives from the muscular contractions
of the hand he holds to guide him little by little to the spot where the
in some excitement, "Think now; think. Keep your mind upoa the
place. Think only of the spot selected!" The effect of this sudden
This vibration takes one of two forms at first. It may be in the form
bration of the hand he holds. Remember that the guide is not aware
simple explanation of the manner in which the results are attained, but
we an assure you that while Mind-Reading and mental communion
are facts which we shall deal with in due course, this explanation of
gives this clue to the performer is also simple, and is expressed in the
sentence:
pany the mental conditions of fear, joy, sorrow, hope, anger, surprise,
Think of some object lying to the right of you which you wish to
very simple, you cannot at once successfully perform all the experi-
the simple feat to the most complicated one; to begin with the selec-
tion of an object thought of by the guide, and to close with the most
astonishing feat of all to the beholder, that of opening a safe, the com-
bination of which is known only to the manager and cashier. We do
not know of anything which makes such an impression upon those
who witness it as this performance. It makes converts to the Mind-
form. Your audience will not thank you for your frankness, and you
will have the dissatisfaction of knowing that you have spoiled your
ever was.
It has been made plain to you that the means employed to per.
by keeping his attention fixed upon the performance, you will find
We should advise you to work at least one month upon the following:
giving up one hour each evening to their
experiments given in Part I,
to perform any
performance at the end of which time you will be able
of the feats of the celebrated Johnstone
and Bishop. If you will
£e$$on TU.
There are two things for you to remember. One is that by feign-
ing excitement while you perform these feats you throw your guide
rather off his guard, rendering him as impulsive as you seem to be,
and so increase the strength of the clue he gives you. The other is
that you are not confined to any one means of securing these clues.
You were shown above, in the analyzed experiment, how the muscu-
ber that in each and all cases the clues transmitted are of the same
nature, and when you have mastered one method, you will easily
trials you are able to recognize at once the meaning of every motion
You will know in what direction to move:
of the guide's hand.
where to search to find a hidden article, and you will KNOW when
you take an object in your hand, whether it is the object thought of
£e$$on U.
pile upon the table, and places the book the fourth from the top of
these per-
the pile. You are acting as the Mind-Reader throughout
you are summoned
formances, and having been properly blindfolded
giving you his hand/and act-
to enter the room, one of the company
medium or guide. The blindfolding not only heightens
ing as your
assists you to keep your attention
the effect of the performance, but
8
guide's hand, by shutting
out your vision
upon the orations of your
for you to do
of surrounding objects
and persons. The first thing
that he is to concentrate his mind
after impressing upon your guide
forward or sideways. Wait
upon the article, is to take a few steps
follow. And
Your first clue is the clue of direction to
for clues.
waving in the air, you will feel your guide's hand not only ascending
reaches the level of
with you, but checking you as soon as your hand
down upon yours slightly if your hand rises much
the table, bearing
above the table, relaxing suddenly when you touch the table itself.
jects on the table, but you are warned by the resistance in the hand
right object. Finally, you
you hold that you have not vet reached the
9
lay your hand upon the pile of books, and at once there is the
a book, and will pass from this to more difficult feats. The guide's
hand will indicate to you, again by the sudden relaxation, just when
your hand touches the right book, the book selected, and an addi-
tional help to you will be the behavior of the audience. You will al-
feats (especially if they believe that their own concentration upon the
article contributes to the success of the performance) that just as soon
as success is attained, and before you have even time to hold the book
aloft, a sigh of relief and rustle of skirts will announce to you that
Cesson UT-
For the next experiment the audience selects a pin during your
absence from the room, and one of the number going to the side of
1he room makes a hole with the pin in the wall in full view of all
those present. He silently calls the attention of the company to the
place where he has driven in the pin. He then withdraws the pin and
of the
done, and the audience is fully informed of the whereabouts
pin, you are summoned to enter, and taking the hand
of your guide,
then to place the pin exactly in the hole mad* by the member of the
Before preparing to perform this feat it is well for you to
audknce.
tell your audience just what you intend to do; that you will find a
hidden pin and stick it in a hole in the wall, &c— this will simplify
discover that you are to search on the floor for this pin instead of
hand will tell you whether you are right in stooping towards the floor
or carpet, and once sure that you are right, your reason tells you that
the pin will not be left on the surface, but will be hidden for greater
now you will perform a feat which will seem to your audience very
marvelous, and quite unexplainable upon any other hypothesis than
that of genuine thought transference. Taking the pin in your disen-
gaged hand you wave it to and fro across a space in the wall, and
having discovered by stooping and gradually rising to your full height
just about the altitude of the hole, you make your motions slower
and slower until you have located the exact spot in which the pin was-
first inserted. Even at a first attempt you will find that you can.
strike within a couple of inches of this spot, and with practice you
will be able to drive the pin exactly into the hole. To find this
hole you look for the relaxation of the guide's muscles when you
strike the altitude; then the hand you hold gives a drawing motion to
left or right, followed by another complete pause when you get with-
in a small radius of the exact spot, then a slight tension one way or
the other, left or right, up or down, as your pin-point travels in small
circles or curves nearer or further from the point aimed at, and finally
11
a full relaxation and dropping of your hand when the spot is found.
Slight as these signs may be in some guides, they are the same in all,
meaning of every sign; and success in this work is simply the reward
of sharpened observation.
Ce$$on UTT.
from its number one to serve as the victim, another to pose as the
and then hides the body in one place and the weapon in another,
lastly secreting himself from observation. When all is ready you, en-
tering the room, blindfolded of course, will find first the weapon used,
then the victim, and finally the murderer. Then, standing the victim
your eyes. It is always essential to the success of each and all of these
of
experiments that the guide you choose shall have an accurate habit
observation, and a good memory, so that he will remember where the
various articles and persons are hidden, and will not confuse you by
blow. To
ment, except the performance of the act of striking the
manner in which
hold your guide's hand, and discover through it the
not as difficult as it sounds, and not as
the victim met his death is
whatever the weapon may be, and brandishing the weapon here and
accustomed indication that
there while your other hand waits for the
you are right or wrong.
the forming of tableaux or
Another very pretty experiment is
member of the group to fall naturally into his right attitude and
position.
but one which you can successfully per-
A more difficult feat,
and so with the others, until the full number is written. A better
hand in your left while you numbers on the board with your
trace the
right. For this experiment, begin to make your figures very SLOWLY.
You must be cautious over the first three figures: after that the ex-
clues easily in this experiment after writing, and rubbing out, two or
three figures, call for a new guide, requesting the new one to pay very
close attention to the matter in hand, and to keep the number, the first
'
number, well in his mind until you have written it: then to concen-
13
hate on the second, and so on. This will have the effect of fixing the
guide's eye upon the motions of your chalk, and the figures it traces
often effective in other experiments at critical times, when you are not
times. Having found one who is very sensitive and responsive, you
will make better progress by using such a one whenever possible, re-
membering, however, that for your early practice the greater number
for you, since you need all the experience in sign reading which
Eessow UTTI.
instance it is better however that the hand of the guide be laid flatly
and
from the days of Brown and Bishop. A
committee is selected,
by the committee, and taking the hand of one of the two members who
have already covered the route, he will be led to a carriage in waiting,
will climb into the driver's seat, take the reins in one hand, and the
guide's hand in the other, and will drive at a break-neck speed through
the streets to the hotel chosen. He will make his way to the hotel
office, find the register, turn to the page, and find the name which has
been fixed upon. Then he will return to the carriage and drive back
to the place whence he came by the second route taken by the two
members of the committee spoken of above.
tie the ends together. The natural thing for the committeeman to do
is to tie those ends together as requested, without insisting upon an ex-
amination of the way in which the handkerchief is folded. He com-
forts himself by thinking that he will tie that bandage so tight that it
will be impossible for the performer to shift it, or see under it. But
the performer does not want to see under it, if he has been allowed to
do the folding himself. He can see through it, and very clearly, as
corner, fold almost to the centre and stop. You have now folded the
side shows two folds parallel, and almost touching each other. This
side of the handkerchief is held to the eyes, and the plain surface is
exposed to the view of the spectators. Naturally they think that the
through a single fold of silk in the centre of the bandage, and while
hindered by the single fold of silk, and a drive to any part of the city
possible point. He takes care that a portion of the cotton over each
eye shall be against his forehead. Now when the bandaging is com-
pleted, his frown relaxes, and the result is that as the bandage rises,
the cotton rises with it, sufficiently to allow for vision beneath. Now
if the performer raises his eyebrows, the bandage will elevate itself
possibilities in the way of robbery and loss, and they are so deeply
impressed by the result that they are incapable of analysis of the
METHOD.
To you who are a novice in the reading of vibrations it is certain
experiments you will be able at the end of one month to open any
safe in the country, provided the manager or cashier who knows
the
combination will give you his attention during your effort. The very
tentionon the part of any one of the persons who knows the combi-
and you will receive strong clues as you proceed. However,
nation,
not advise you to attempt this feat too soon. It is not necessary
we do
special directions for its performance, because
all you
to give you any
will need to succeed in it is the right interpretation of signs which a
will
cultivation in yourself of sensitiveness to these sign-messages
render easy.
You are finally admonished again that to
explain how a feat is
mind -Reading.
vening space directly to the mind of another. The person who sends
out the thought is the Projector.
These terms will be more easily remembered and create less con-
you admirably to
send one, and the practice of muscle-reading
fits
muscle-reader.
years mind-reading has been known to be a fact, but it
For many
manifesting irregularly, and
has been regarded as a capricious agent
regarded as a special and
working by unknown laws. Or it has been
persons to the exclusion of
and unusual power conferred upon some
others.
Emoit XT.
state of nervousness;
that he corrugate his
work himself up into any
any way. He should be calm,
brows, or do violence to himself in
on
quiet, self-possessed, reposeful.
He should not be over-anxious
His attitude of mind should
the one hand, or skeptical on the
other.
all things; to
investigator, willing to try
be merely that of the patient
true. He is not even
test all things;and to hold fast that which is
:
19
After a certain num-
required to believe that he can transfer thought.
working with a fairly good Receiver, his results
ber of trials, if he is
For a first experiment let some one blindfold you as in the muscle-
re-entering the room you shall go to, and touch, some person present.
When you are recalled, stand in the middle of the room and let the
them to direct you by stages how you are to proceed. If, for in-
stance, the person whom you are to touch is directly behind you, each
member of the company must will you to step backwards first of all.
The members of the company must not make the mistake of begin-
ning with a general mental order that you touch such and such a person.
They must direct you by degrees. It is sufficient for them to repeat
silently the command, " Step backwards." If you comply with the
thought sent out, their silent orders should continue in this wise
member also that in the face of any number of failures you are bound
all, but allow it to take its course. Your best attitude of mind is one
without, and for that reason, passivity and absence of all eagerness to
of an
be allowed to be present. There should be no introduction
element that is at all likely to be concerned at a failure. Among your
of
own family your success or failure will not be considered a matter
a
vital importance, and as your own mental condition will be largely
"keeping the mind a blank." Let anything happen that will hap-
thought which in any
pen. There must be in your mind no train of is
degree exciting; all must be calm, serious, attentive. When the im-
in several ways. It may take the
pression reaches you it may come
form of a whisper, " Step back." It may take the form merely of an
21
follow any im-
impression to reach you, and
Wait, therefore, for the
of cases we have
pulse that may come to
you. In the largest per cent
in the form of an
impulse to
notification comes
found that the first
impulse
Wait for a repetition of the
move in a certain direction.
not be in a hurry to act
upon the first
Wait for its insistence. Do
Wait for its confirmation. Every-
faint impression that strikes
you.
first it will seem that the thought
thing must have a beginning, and
at
sufficiently to
of the company cannot penetrate your consciousness
experiment.
Ecsson XII.
Let the members of the company place before them upon a table
spot of
in a good one of a pack of playing cards—say the eight
light,
familiar object, say, a spade. Before his mind can grasp the meaning
of the object, his eye must carry a picture of the object to his intelli-
gence. His memory must then assist his intelligence to the extent of
But Telepathy deals first with Reflection or Picture only, the reflection
of an image without regard to the meaning of the image. It is there-
fore possible for children who do not know the meaning of the object
establishes the important fact that it is only necessary for the Projector
to get a clear view of the object he wishes to transmit a picture of in
mission that communication can only take place when there is under-
standing, as between adult and adult. It makes plain that the position
sary a broadening of our hypothesis of the law upon which the pro-
cess is founded. This broader theory is that Telepathy may be accom-
plished by surface reflection without intelligence, or, more exactly,
without understanding, as in the case of the children who do not know
the meaning of the picture transferred
And because this is true, therefore, anything that will assist the
insisted on. They do not concern themselves with the question HOW
the Receiver is to get the picture of the object. Their whole duty is
of paper and roll it into the form of a funnel, two feet long and about
four inches in diameter. Better still, have made a four-sict d funnel
of card-board, two feet long, two inches deep, four inches across. Any
modifications or improvements that may suggest themselves to you in
first hatched in the brain of a Mr. L. W. Roberts, who called his in-
crude instrument will work as well as the more costly. Now place the
card selected upon the table under a strong light. Let the members
of the company hold the funnels to their eyes and the effect will be to
SHUT FROM view surrounding objects, and to assist the concentration
of VISION of each member solely upon the card. As you are probably
It is quite a mis-
card must not be allowed to fade into indistinctness.
the PROJECTOR. It
take to suppose that the drowsy condition assists
of the re-
is, a fact that a drowsy condition on the part
however,
experiment. The
ceiver sometimes helps towards the success of an
are therefore required to keep wide
awake,
members of the company
and perfect by closing their
and to keep their vision of the card clear
movement of the object is
eyes for a second as soon as any blurring or
correct con-
noticed. These points being carefully noted, we have the
Receiver for the suc-
ditions present in the behavior of Projectors and
£e$$oit X1U.
surroundings. The cards selected, with the answers given by the Re-
When it has been found that the Receiver succeeds in a good per j
experiment. For this purpose the card test as above should be per-
formed as follows;
If there are four Projectors in the assembled Company they
should take an evening each with the same Receiver, and conduct
the experiment with the twelve cards, each Projector noting down re-
sults for himself. Only the Projector who is conducting the experi-
ment must be permitted to know the cards, and to guard against any
possibility of error it is well to clear the room of all other persons.
Each Projector should keep the results which are shown upon his re-
cord strictly to himself, not sharing his information even with the Re-
ceiver. At the end of the four days a meeting should be held, and
port with the Receiver. And in future that Projector should work
with that Receiver. I
ful than the rest with this Receiver that the other three are not equally
work with this Receiver. Any one of the three may obtain even more-
•26
a scientific basis in
spend this time, and begin
Ited experiments
.
jectors and Receivers,
a^M
of their com-
away
rly
*
Lessen XU-
rest ten minutes, or even desist for the time being. Now the Receiver
your thought." After trying this a few times the Receiver will gain
and Pro-
periment without contact of any kind between the Receiver
into which no element of luck or coincidence
can enter. It is
jector
well therefore to spend some days over this alone, before proceeding
Notice here
to increase the distance between Projector and
Receiver.
intimately
Let it be some one whom I do not know, but someone very
the personality while you say
connected with you, so that you feel
more difficult than
fhe name to yourself." This will be found slightly
evening is
one complete success in an
the preceding experiment, but
Projector
experiments between the
The foregoing
worth waiting for.
variations as may occur to either
and Receiver with such simple
any attempt is made
at least before
should be practiced for one week
distances.
to communicate across long
Cesson XUl
two rooms with
The next experiment should be conducted
in
order should be of such a nature that it may take at once the form of
a simple impulse.
29
infinitely varied, and from this we pass
This experiment may be
more valuable possibilities of Telepathy.
to a consideration of the
communion between Projector and Receiver has
When the proper
practice of sending and
receiving messages,
been thus far cultivated, the
part of the city to another
may be indulged.
at stated times from one
renders the
time should be set apart, as it
For this it is necessary that a
But with practice comes such
experiment more likely to succeed.
necessary that any time be
facility of execution that later it is not
receiving of a message. The Projector
chosen for the sending or
Come." The Receiver gete the im-
sends the thought: "lam sick.
Lesson xun.
given us the triumph of Electricity.
The Nineteenth Century has
will be without doubt the Mental Age the
The Twentieth Century
turned wrttun;
Already the eye of the world
is
triumph of Thought. of
the great scientists
receiving the attention of
the psychological is
is established as
a Fact and a genera
Europe. Already Telepathy
into our daily semce
It *
effort is being made to impressTelepathy
plainly how step by
Lessons to show clearly and
the purpose of these
be developed and pre
>^bly exer-
"power of Telepathy may
manner, step by step,
Course we shall in the same
cised In a later
woman, who earnestly de-
man or
Zw how it is possible for every
naught the Law
"Idevelop the powersof a Yogi,and to set at Laws of Mate*
to day. What are the
Matter as we know them
artificial limitations which our imperfect
Are the not merely the
be, Yes. Not the true
knowledge has imposed? The answer must
Laws as they seem to our imperfect know-
Laws of Matter, but the
perfected, and the X-Ray
proved
ledge When the Crookes Tube was
solid substance, the Law
of Vibration
that a ray of light could penetrate
on the construction of Matter
was firmly established, but our opinions
underwent a modification; in-
and resolution of substance into atoms
telepathic message was sent
When the first
deed a radical change.
again upset,
and received, our ancient and respectable opinions were
be
recognize that information could
and we could no longer refuse to
the five physical senses. The
conveyed by a means or avenue other than
and Re-
history of Education is a history of Construction, Demolition,
In
construction. - As knowledge comes to us we broaden our horizon.
cannot hold to the old narrow
beliefs. To be
the face of Facts we
the overmastering spirit of the times. We are
abreast of the times is
and believe that in the early days of the race thought was more fre-
tude of a sense that must have been of the greatest service in those
early days when speech was rude and figurative. This decrepitude
Telepathy.
Ce$$on XIX.
record should be kept from day to day. We have said before that
cities. The essential point is that wherever the Receiver and Projector
strictest accuracy in noting down the
may be, they shall observe the
results obtained. In order
time accorded to each experiment, and
the
time by the
that there may be no question concerning accuracy in the
as being conducted by
watch, let us consider the following experiment
32
two persons living in the same city.
Time: 4 o'clock P. M.
Object: A silver quarter.
Endeavor: To transmit date.
money before him on the table, puts
He then places the piece of
for ten minutes he keeps a clear
view
his telepascope to his eye, and
happiness, and good cheer, but we have not entered into possession.
practice of Telepathy has
been
We could multiply instances where this
of the greatest service to its initiates, but it is not the purpose of these
Lessons to deal with examples. Rather the object has been to teach
the same time giving a hint of the possi-
you how to obtain results, at
his journeys the husband is not only content in the knowledge that he
As ig-
belief that is founded
belief in question is a
that we know as Evil, let
us seek knowl-
norance is the mother of all
so much o the
Telepathy we have a key to
edge, confident that in
may some day unlock for us the
human nature that it
mys erious in knowledge of good and evil:
Zc between two worlds: the key of
IN
Hypnotism, Mesmerism
clairvoyance,
Suggestive Therapeutics,
AND THE
SLEEP CURE,
GIVING
PUBLISHED BY
THE PSYCHIC RESEARCH COMPANY,
CHICAGO.
COPYRIGHTED 1900 and 1901.
BY
THE PSYCHIC RESEARCH COMPANY
CHICAGO, U. S. A.
on
Notice.— This work is protected by copyright
slmaltsjieous initial publication in the U. B. -al
A., i*
other
British Isles, France. Germany and 1
—
The Method of Verbal Suggestion Liebeault's Mode of Procedure The —
— —
Intention of This Method Sleep Suggestions A Second Treatment
Conclusion of Second Treatment— The Memory is AmenaSle to Sug-
gestion 27
—
Hypnotizing a Number of Persons Prefatory Explanations Noting the —
—
Symptoms— Suggesting the Idea of Sleep Rousing the Company
Conclusions Drawn from Their Testimony 37
—3—
INDEX.
Properties
The Sub-Conscious Mind—Evidence ef Double Consciousness—
Sub-Conscious— Where the Force
in Common— The Credulity of the
Lies—Vis Medicatrix Nature— The Power of Belief 54
^Sleep-Curing During
The Difference Between Hypnosis and Natural
Natural Sleep-The Method Reproduced in
France—The Method of
Quiet Suggestions-Curing
Giving Suggestions During Sleep-Giving
Experi-
Stammering-The Process Grows Easier by Repetition-An
57
ment in Passive Somnambulism
Post-Hypnotic Suggestions-
Post-Hypnotic Suggestions-How to Give
for His Conduct-Strengdienmg the
The Subject Makes Excuses
Suggestions Fail-Suggestions Can be Re-
Suggestion-When These
Time These Experiments Hold Good-So-Callcd
fused—The Length of
Hypnotism-How to Overcome the Resistance of the
Instantaneous
Succeeds-Where Dan-
Subiect—Why the Insistence of the Operator
Case-The Importance of Post-Hyp-
ger Lies-What to Do in Such
notic Suggestions
tism
INDEX.
Hypnotism —
Cure of Drug Habits Fallacies of Material Treatment
in the
— How —
Dipsomania How Often to Give Treatments The
to Treat —
—
Morphine and Cocaine Habits The Danger of the Advertised Cures
The Philosophy of the "Bread Pill"— Electricity as an Adjuvant. ..105
— —
b
1
INDEX.
M^
of his
psychic
have come here this evening to try a few experiments
in
raising at the same time the left hand. So proceeding with this
fall upon the
left hand when you say "right" again, the left hands
knees heavy and dead. The idea conveyed by this experiment
will be one of muscular relaxation itself, their first step in
under-
standing that the idea of passivity suggested by your words reacts
upon their muscles to the extent that they can produce in them-
selves complete physical repose. After this has been done five
or
six times, get up from your chair and going to each member
the same time
of the circle in turn, say, "relax completely," at
lifting first the right and then the left hand and dropping them,
to
thought only to yourself and repeat this talisman continually
vourself throughout all your experiments.
How to Strengthen Your Own Self-confidence.—The
effect will be to strengthen your own self-confidence
and to give to
which will pow-
your eyes that look of determination and force
erfully influence your circle. Now raise your hands and rest
them on each side of your subject's head, just above the ears, very
lightly, so as to cause him no feeling of discomfort by
pressure
upon the face. Looking him squarely between the eyes for ten
seconds, allow your hands to remain in that position. Then,
moving your left foot back a step, slowly and very lightly draw
your hands back over the sides of his head, at the same time
bending your body backwards a little at the hips; your two
hands will come together in front of his forehead, then, with a
slow motion separate them and bending forward again place
them again upon his head in the same position as before and
withdraw them slowly and lingeringly as before. Do this three
times before you speak.
What to Say in the Falling Forward Test. After the —
third time, say to him very slowly and impressively, always
keeping your gaze directed at the root of his nose and always
being careful that his eyes do not wander from yours for a sec-
ond "Now you feel a drawing impulse causing you to fall for-
:
ward. Do not resist it I shall catch you let yourself go. You
; ;
are coming forward. You cannot resist. You are falling for-
—
ward, falling forward, let yourself go so." At this point your
subject, still keeping his eyes fastened upon yours, will sway
forward and of course you must be careful to catch him so that
he comes to no' harm.
—
Be Sure to Avoid Hurting the Subject. Be very care-
ful in all these experiments that you never allow a subject to
fall, as that destroys his confidence in you and it is upon this
confidence that you build your influence over him. When you
have caught him he will instantly recover himself and you
may say, "All right, wide awake." Then send him back to his
seat and do not allow any discussion among the members of the
circle. Proceed in this way with everyone separately and indi-
vidually for two reasons First, that you may determine which
:
one in the circle you can most easily influence, and secondly, thus
prepare the different members of the circle for the tests which are
to follow. Do not leave this test until you have fairly mastered it
yourself and are able to produce this motion of falling forward
in every subject whom you try to influence.
How to Meet Opposition and Skepticism. Should you —
meet with anyone who is either of a stubborn or argumentative dis-
side by
position, you must waive that kind of thing entirely on one
saying something as follows "No
: doubt you could have resisted
I have already
this drawing influence if you had tried to do so, but
completely passive, and I
told you that you are to make yourself
if you
cannot conduct these experiments successfully with you
argue with yourself or with me. All I require from you is
the
tip one at a time, and standing your subject with his face to the
wall and his back to the circle, you take a position behind him
with your back to the circle, and placing the forefinger of your
right hand lightly at the base of the brain, just above the neck,
lay your left hand against the side of his head, above the ear,
so that the fingers rest upon his left temple.
The Falling Backward Test. Tell him — now to close his
eyes and very slowly and gradually draw your left hand back un-
til it is clear of his head, saying, as you
gradually lighten the
pressure of your right forefinger so that he can scarcely feel it
— 14 —
touch him, "Now you feel the influencedrawing you back. You
are falling backwards into my arms. Let yourself go as the feel-
ing becomes stronger. You are falling backward, falling back-
ward." While you are saying this— saying it very slowly, with
—
a pause between each word you are slowly repeating the draw-
ing back with the left hand upon his head very slowly, and some-
times almost instantly, but always after this formula has been re-
peated a few times, your subject will sway upon his heels and fall
a little out of the perpendicular. When he has swayed back per-
the idea that the experiment is at an end. This concludes the first
experiment in the waking state and you have now a clue to the
two
or three most easily influenced persons in your circle.
Experiment No. 2. Call one of the three forward, and stand-
:ing him with his back to the circle, tell him again to look
you
straight in the eye and under no circumstances to remove
his
s
igaze from yours. Now stretch your hands out towards him,
rpalms upward and tell him to grasp your hands tightly as tightly ;
3as he possibly can. At the same time bend your head forward a
little until it is within six inches of his own.
—
I
>your policy here to fully agree with him, assuring him, how-
ever, that because of his concentration upon your words it was
:
think, he can
you hold his eyes fixed, he cannot think. If he
but receive an
resist. He must not he allowed to do anything
idea from you. Among the three subjects,
however, whom you
have found verv susceptible to these experiments,
you will meet
they will try
with no resistance whatever. On the contrary,
but will
each and all their very hardest to separate their hands
you to lay your hands upon your subject's forehead and talk reas-
suringly to him. The mental condition which I wish you to
arouse in your subject is one of thorough good nature and con-
tent. I want you to make him feel, as you very easily can, that
you are absolutely his friend and that you will take care that
nothing happens to him to injure him in any way. Encourage
in him, therefore, by your conversation a feeling of friendly
rapport and perfect trust. You will find that at this stage he is
becoming just as much interested in these experiments as you
are yourself, and he will do his utmost to give you always his
full attention, which is all that you need to make them a suc-
cess.
—
Impossible to Fail. Remember that not a single experi-
ment which I have given you here can possibly fail when you
secure the right kind of a subject and when you faithfully carry
out in their minutest detail all the directions I give you, omitting
nothing.
Experiment No. 5. We have dealt so far with the inhibition
or prevention of muscular action.
Inhibiting Speech. — Now we come to the inhibition of
the faculty of speech, which is only a short step further. It
will seem to you perhaps that it must be a very difficult thing
to prevent a person in the waking from both remember-
state
ing his name and speaking that name aloud at one and the
same time, but if you will remember what I said previously about
the power of the mind in grasping only one dominant idea, you
will understand how it comes about that this experiment is just
as easy to carry out successfully as any of those preceding,
— 20 —
bearing in mind the fact that you must not attempt it upon any
hut your most susceptible subjects, those upon whom you have
successfully practiced the experiments preceding.
—
Conducting the Experiment. Standing your patient on
his feet before you, with his back to the circle, and placing both
of your hands on the sides of his head, as in the falling forward
experiment, request him, as before, to look steadily into your
eyes, while you direct your gaze, as always, at the root of his
nose. Now incline your head a little closely to him and say
sharply: "Giveme your whole attention. You have forgotten
your name. You cannot speak it. You cannot remember it.
You do not know it. You cannot utter a sound. You have for-
gotten it." Withdraw your hand and stepping back a pace, point
your finger at the root of his nose, repeating sharply, "You can-
not speak your name." Give him three or four seconds in which
to make the attempt and then snap your fingers and say, "All
right, you have it now; what is it?" when he will immediately
say it aloud in a tone of great relief.
—
Cannot Think or Speak. It is not true to assume, as
some of your circle may, that he remembered the name and
could have spoken it, because in this case, as I have found in
numerous experiments where the matter has been properly con-
ducted, there is neither memory nor speech possible and yet
the subject is to all appearance wide awake. It is quite true
upon one part of the body tends to produce a flow of blood in the
direction of the part thought of. This we call dirigation of
the blood and it is possible by steadily concentrating your at-
tention upon the sensation of heat in the feet, for example, to
cure yourself of that unfortunate condition known as cold feet by
the simplr agency of the force of your concentration. This is
perhaps one of the very finest examples of the power of the mind
:
22 —
over the body and the power of the mind alone to affect the cir-
culation of the blood.
The Basis of Cure. — It is really upon such a well-known
physiological fact as this that the cures wrought by mental sci-
ence and hypnotism, as well 'as by Christian Science and auto-
Conclusion
Hypnotism Electro-
its name, whether we call it Mesmerism,
old power viz., the power
Biology or Statuvolence, it is the same
gathered together from various
of the mind over the body. I have
sources many methods of Hypnotizing,
and I venture to say that
there will be no student of these Lessons
who will be incapable
intend to
of successfully applying several of these methods. I
teach you how to Hypnotize.
no one
Everyone Can Learn to Use the Power.—There is
the meaning of written
of ordinary intelligence who understands
Instruction all
language who cannot learn from this Course of
that could be taught him any School of Suggestive Thera-
in
Mode of Procedure-
The Method of Verbal Suggestion-Liebeault's Second
Method-Sleep Suggestions-A
The Intention of This Memory Is
Treatment-Conclusion of Second Treatment-The
Amenable to Suggestion.
hand, asks him a few questions, and receiving the patient's as-
you every night of your life, that is to say, you will pass from a
condition of active waking life into, first a drowsy, somnolent
state in which you hear but do not heed greatly what is said to
you, and in which you feel averse to making any voluntary mo-
tion you will pass from that condition into a state of ordinary
;
sleep in which you will be, as you are every night of your life,
unconscious of what is happening about you. From this condi-
tion you will wake when I choose to wake you, greatly refreshed
— 27 —
and strengthened, and you will note the disappearance of your
pain." While he is saying these words the Doctor moves his fin-
gers with a slow, circular movement, having a circumference of
about one foot, round and round in front of and below the patient's
eyes. He continues this circular movement of his fingers, at the
same time requesting the patient to keep his eyes and his atten-
tion fastened only upon the movement of his fingers, for about
are very heavy indeed, and that you cannot open them." He lays
his hand lightly upon the eyelids of the patient and says: "Your
eyes are shut tight and you have no power to open them." The
:
eyes are tightly shut and you have no power to open them. You
will pass now into a condition of deeper sleep. Upon awakening
you will not remember anything that has happened. Your mem-
ory will be obliterated for the time being. You will only be con-
scious of the fact that you have slept profoundly, and feel much
benefited in health." The patient is now left to himself as before,
for perhaps fifteen minutes, at the end of which time the
Doctor re-enters the room, and passing his hand lightly across
the forehead of the patient says
Conclusion of Second Treatment. —"You have had a good
restand a refreshing sleep. You
have no more pains in
will
your head, and your mental much brighter and
faculties will be
more alert for this rest. You will wake when I count three, and
hereafter when I wish to Hypnotize you for your benefit you
will pass at once into a condition of profound sleep. Now I
shall wake you quietly and without any nervous shock one, two, ;
be a little above the level of his eyes make him perfectly com-
;
or less under the magnetic influence. Do not try to lift his hand
again, because he may be one of the lethargic kind of subjects
to lift them." w Pause here again and then say, "Try to lift them,
they will not open." If you see that he makes an ineffectual at-
:
—34—
tempt to open his eyes you may understand that your patient is
in the same mental condition as was the patient of Dr. Liebeault
mentioned in the previous Lesson.
—
How to Know the Magnetic Sleep. But if there should
be no movement whatever from him, and if he should seem to
pay no attention whatever to your exhortation that he try to lift
his eyelids, you may take it for granted that you have induced
in him a deeper state of magnetic sleep, one which it is better for
you not and you will therefore say to him as follows
to disturb ;
"Sleep profoundly and dream that you are traveling many thou-
sands of miles from here, visiting scenes and places you never ^
saw. Let your spirit go whither it will, and when you awake
in one hour from this time, you will tell me where you have been
and what you have seen and everything will be clearly impressed
upon your mind when you awake. Sleep for one hour and
awake of your own accord at the end of that time." Here' we
leave this patient also.
LESSON IV.
which the headrest is not more than six inches higher than the
body of the couch. Let your patient lie full length upon the couch
and seat yourself at its head. Bend over the couch in such a way
that when your patient's eyes are upturned to yours it is not
diffi-
cult for him to keep his gaze riveted upon you. To make this
more plain to you I should say that there must be in this case no
great strain upon the eyesight of the patient. Now bend over the
couch so that your face is not more than from four to six inches
from your patient's. Keep your eyes fastened upon his. Instruct
him to keep his eyes fastened upon yours. Allow no sound to
escape you. There should be no noise of any kind in the room or
out of it to disturb you. Maintain this position if necessary for
one hour to two hours, keeping in your mind the firm resolve that
your patient must sleep. In half an hour or less his eyelids will
quiver, but a word from you will redirect his attention to you and
he will make another effort to keep them open. These efforts
will become gradually less and less pronounced, until the sense of
-35-
36-
HYPNOTIZING A NUMBER OK
Idea of Sleep-Rousing thl
Noting the Symptoms-Suggesting the
Their Testimony.
Company-Conclusions Drawn from
—37 —
-38-
fixed object in your hands you have brought
upon the bright
about in yourselves a lessening of the circulation of blood in
the brain, consequently you feel drowsy and inclined to sleep.
This drowsiness will increase, and will deepen as you continue
to gaze fixedly at the object you hold. When the blood leaves the
brain, sleep follows. Your fixity of attention upon the object
you hold has brought about the required change in the circulation,
and you will now gradually pass into the condition of sleep.
Let nothing disturb you."
Rousing the Company. — Some of those affected will now
fall asleep, and in the course of about five minutes you may
drowsy some will say that they were fast asleep. The first
have
;
second
been guilty of allowing their attention to wander;
the
of Sex of No Im-
The Qualifications of a Good Operator-Question
Hypnotize-The
poSce-What Hypnotism Is-The Power to
Importance of Assumption-Developing a Powerful Gaze.
brings with him a young man. Your friend says : "I have heard
that you are a great Hypnotist, and I should very much like to
bring him to you in order that you may demonstrate the power
of Hypnotism upon him in the correction of the habit of lazi-
ness. See what you can do with him." Here is a typical case
which occurs in the practice of every operator, and the right
method of procedure may be here given at length, so that the
them open; they must close now and you will be asleep. Close
them." Keep your right hand upon the back of his neck as hereto-
fore, and put your left hand upon his forehead, saying,
"Sleep,"
Very soon the subject will relax his muscles and settle back
with a sigh of satisfaction. Let him remain so for
in his chair
some time saying nothing to him at all.
—
Maintain Silence in the Room. Request the person who
accompanied him to your office to remain perfectly quiet through-
out the whole performance, making no noise to attract the at-,
tention of the subject, and offering no suggestions .whatever
- 46-
either to him or to you. This point should be insisted upon
before the beginning of the treatment.
Affecting the Boy's Muscular Action. After allowing—
your subject to rest for a few moments, say in a very low tone
of voice: "You are fast asleep and nothing will
wake you;
nothing will hurt you you ;
can open your eyes when I tell you
quietly away from and stroke the arm nearest to you two
his neck
quickly to a horizontal position, and
or three times, then raise it
I put it;" stroke it two or
sav "Your arm will remain fixed as
three times again and say,
"You see that your arm remains
it down. It will stay m any posi-
fixed and you cannot take
are sound asleep, and you will do
tion in which I place it; you
cannot wake up until I teU
anything I tell you to do, but you
remain in the position in which
vou to wake." The arm will arm
it is placed, and you may
then say: "No one can bend your
or take it down until I give them
leave."
Rigidity.—
The First Stages of Catalepsy or Muscular
— 47 —
is a good plan
You can proceed so with the other arm, and it
in this manner, provided
to make both arms and legs rigid
that your subject is a boy or a young
man who has nothing the
matter with his general health, and upon whom a
muscular ex-
periment of this kind will have no exciting effect.
Removing the Rigidity—When his limbs are all horizontally
stretched in this manner you may say to him, "Now
I shall
MIS fEIT
few
and repeating this double stroke a
ine the clothing lightly, stand-
easily and just as soundly
ttae ''You can sleep just as
ZJs uvor
when
your feet as sitting in the
I tell you to
chair. You wdl
open them, and you
open your
will see what I tell you
e
tell you to feel, everything
11 w
to see You will also feel what I
you to
You now say: "Although I should
" tell
be real to y ou will still be
not be wide awake; you
ooen vour eyes you will
.
you wdl no be
asle p you will s'ee
ghte/ed at them, and you will
not
you see them
te ~
some very curious things but
X^^S
n that they are real
and
yoS will only know that
t0 this experiment
Suggestions.-Iu
GrviNG Quick, Positive
— 49 —
it necessary that you should speak quickly and without hesi-
is
hands, saying: "You are not afraid of snakes. You have al-
ways wanted to have a snake for a pet. Open your eyes and
look at the snake which I have put in your hands. It will not bite
you or hurt you. You are not afraid of it. Hold it tight or
it will get away." The boy opens his eyes, and in the place
of the stick sees, as he supposes, a snake, but as you have im-
pressed upon him that he will not feel alarmed he does not ex-
perience any distaste for the reptile and will even fondle it affec-
tionately. You could if you were so disposed instantly trans-
form this feeling of affection into one of fear, by exclaiming:
"Take care, or it will bite you !" All stage Hypnotists play in this
— 50-
fears and affections, that is to say the emotions,
manner upon the
of their subjects. _ ...
it is just as easy
Do Not Induce Fear in Subjects.-]** only of
of Hypnotism by making use
to demonstrate the force
him,
to the subject as by fnghtemng
tests which are pleasurable
use of this power for an inferior end.
and I strongly deprecate any
boy is now in the condi-
Active SoMNAMBULisM.-This
Somnambulism. You have induced
tion which is called Active him an ob-
that is to say, you have given
in his mind an illusion;
it by your suggestion
into another object,
ject and transformed
forming an Illusion of the Senses.
You now say to him: Let us
it on
put the snake away," and taking it out of his-hands you lay
face once or
one side Then pass your hands rapidly over his
This is all that is necessary to trans-
twice and say, "Sleep,."
Somnambulic into profound sleep.
form the condition of Active
Illusion oe the Sense oe Taste, Let him stand for a
feet, and then say.
You
moment swaying lightly upon his Here
are very fond of fruit.
You like apples and oranges.
one of a choice variety, and
you can have it
Is a very fine apple,
apple or a sweeter
o ear You will think you never tasted a finer
Take it and eat it now." You
can then put m
his hand
one evidence of
will eat it with every
2 ordinary raw potato, and he
him to speak to you,
atis Ton Hitherto you have not asked
him and he will answer. Ask him
how
out you can now question him a
he does not at once reply give
he enjoy the apple, and if can when
just as well as he
suction forcibly that he can speak
then that he enjoys the appl
hef wide-awake. He will tell you You have thus induced the
like another,
very much and would
illusion of the sense of taste. .
sam
iZmrmo the Sense oe Smell.-You can take this
little while you can
educate him up to suci a
subiect and in a sense of
nota of practice that
you can positively inhib.t the
strong ammonia held un-
=ll to such a degree that a bottle of He
absolutely no effect whatever.
W hil nostrils will produce
be made to accept the bottle
of am.no-
Wn b y suggestion
and inhale the fumes with
Tas bo tt °of eau de cologne
end to the variety
e'dent pleasure. There is no fj%™£
— 51 —
ject from the induction of occasional non-injurious illusions, but
their very frequent use is not to be countenanced.
The Use —
of Illusions as Evidence. They are only useful
as showing you beyond the possibility of a doubt that there re-
sides in the human mind a power which is superior to the sense
perception of every day life. They demonstrate the truth of
Hypnotism and the power of Hypnotism and with this demon-
stration you should be perfectly content, without seeking to
abuse it.
her
urally a talkative boy he will
be very garrulous and will ask
great inv-
all manner of questions,
at the same time showing
est in her replies. You have thus induced the boy a Hal- m
lucination; that is have created a picture of something
to say, you
not exist. You will thus perceive clearly
in his mind which did
and Hallucination.
Illusion
the difference between
Changing Somnambulism into Sleep—Now
go, over to
Sleep Aftei
over his eyes and say
the boy, pass your hands
fear of Hypnotism, and you will
go to
this you will have no
head and say
sleep for me as I lay my hand upon your
as soon
long process
•sleep
'
not be necessary to go through any
It will
sleep instantly at any time
of
with you any more. You will
the day wish it and
whenever command it You will go over
I
pass into a profound sleep, m
which I
to your chair now and
necessary to cure the habit of
shall give you the Suggestions
to
laziness in you. Walk over to your chair and go soundly
to rest in his chair for
about
sleep
»
Now you allow the boy
five minutes, preserving absolute
silence m the room.
Then lay your hand
Giving Educational Suggestions.
"You have been very back-
upon his head impressively, saying: It is not
been a very idle boy
ward in your studies and have time on
disobedient and from this
yolr nature to be idle or
different disposition. You will be
you will show an entirely
school; you will be obe-
eaP-er to succeed in your class work at
g in every respect
a thoroughly good boy
d e nt to your parents'and and
health will be good and
you will feel strong^ active
Your
S
u
e
frnm
and
f Vi i
go"and
«s time
chs.a
^
at a little
in the room you
should now take a seat
knee
— 53~
from the boy, and end of the ten minutes, possibly almost
at the
rarely it happens
In Case of too Profound Sleep.—Very
condition of sleep
that the subject passes into so profound
a
ishment at the length of time that has elapsed by the clock since
he first got into the chair. There is never any danger that the
subject will sleep longer than you suggest, and that it will be im-
possible for you to wake unless you transgress some of the
LESSON IX.
The —
Sub-conscious Mind. Thus far you have been given
only typical methods of inducing Hypnotism in your subjects.
You are now ready for further instruction dealing with the
part which the sub-conscious mind plays in these phenomena.
A simple illustration will best convey to you the truth of the
proposition that man is not a creature of one consciousness only
that there exists in him another consciousness which we call
sub-consciousness.
—
Evidence of Double Consciousness. You are well aware
of the fact that when you dream at night you are making use
of an intelligence or a consciousness which differs in its chief
characteristics from the waking consciousness. The chief point
of difference lies in the fact that dreams can scarcely be said
to show much reason in their composition. It is this absence
The —
Difference Between Hypnosis and Natural Sleep Curing Dur-
ing Natural Sleep—The Method Reproduced in France The —
—
Method of Giving Suggestions During Sleep Giving Quiet Sug-
— —
gestions Curing Stammering The Process Grows Easier by
—
Repetition An Experiment in Passive Somnambulism.
the attention of the sleeper. This, whole subject was first laid
before the American public in a short treatise which I wrote in
June, 1897, entitled "Education During Sleep," and giving in-
stances of cures which I had been able to perform in this way,
&uch disorders stammering, enuresis, chorea, nervousness,
as
fears and bad habits, having readily yielded to this means of treat-
ment. Remember what was said in the previous lesson about the
power resident in the sub-conscious mind, and you will readily
see the philosophy of the system.
The Method Reproduced in France. —About one year after
— 57 —
-58-
I published this discovery, Dr. Paul Farez contributed to the
Revue de l'Hypnotisme of Paris a series of articles indorsing
and corroborating my theory and results. It is now generally
accepted among psychologists that educational and moral influ-
ences can be in this manner engraved upon the minds of the
sleepers. The method to follow is always the same, and it is
not necessary to waste much space in detailing it. You have been
shown how to give positive Suggestion in the preceding Lessons.
Let us suppose, since it is always easier to teach by illustration,
MOTHER Be CHILD
that you have a son who has fallen into the habit of stammering, a
habit which is usually picked up by children in imitation of some
one of their acquaintances. In order to treat this habit success-
fully you should say to your boy before he goes to bed at night,
asleep and talk-
"I shall come to you to-night when you are sound
to you. You will not be surprised to hear
me speaking to you, and
answer
you will not take the trouble to wake up. But you will
me when I speak to you."
'
The Method of Giving Suggestions During Sleep.— After
should go to him, and
allowing him ample time to go to sleep, you
his forehead in order to
lying down beside him, begin stroking
disturbing him to the
quietly introduce into his mind without
are near him. Any-
point of wakefulness the knowledge that you
-59-
been awakened, this subject will suddenly look round for his hat,
phases.
—
Strengthening the Suggestion.. In order to make a post-
hypnotic suggestion more easily effective it is better to connect
the suggestion with some act of your own which
shall have a
suppose
double bearing upon the suggestion itself, as for instance,
you say to your subject while he is asleep, "When you see me go
the hands
out of the room you will get up from your chair and put
of the clock forward half an hour and will not remember that
you have done so," you then make the post-hypnotic suggestion
fulfillment
very easy of accomplishment because you connect the
the room. Remem-
of your suggestion with your act of leaving
bering the tenacity of the sub-conscious memory you will under-
your previous sug-
stand how it is that when you leave the room,
consciousness in the
gestion comes back to the subject's waking
accept it at the
form of an impulse because he has not refused to
time it was given him.
When These Suggestions Fail.—The only post-hypnotic
suggestion
Suggestions Can be Refused.—In order that a
and accepted by the
may be effective it must be firmly believed
I admit that in some
instances very unpalatable sug-
subject
gestions are accepted by the subject
and that he is apparently
A
-63-
things which in his wak-
against his will compelled to do certain
ing state he would not do, but I have
always found in a case of
distasteful was ever
post-hypnotic suggestion that nothing very
brought to bear by
accepted no matter how much pressure was
suggestion was made.
the operator nor howsoever forcibly the
sometimes, as I say,
In presence of the operator the subject will
but in the
do things which in his waking state he would not do,
suggestion is usu-
absence of the operator, when a post-hypnotic
he will not perform the acts suggested to him if
ally carried out,
process
they are disagreeable or unpleasant. This simplifies the
very much and puts it upon a reasonable basis.
The Length of Time These Experiments Hold Good. —
post-hypnotic suggestion may be given to the subject to take
effect one week, one month or even one year from the time of the
1
your subject alone nature will take her own time to bring him
-65-
sub-conscious life to the surface
so to speak from the depths of
again, and he will awake none the worse.
Post-
The Importance of Post-Hypnotic Suggestions.—
all the phenomena of
hypnotic suggestion is the most valuable of
sub-conscious-
Hypnotism because it has lasting effect upon the
any-
ness. The ordinary suggestions which you would give to
one of your patients, viz.
: "You will feel much better when you
post-
awake and this improvement will be permanent," are really
mind which
hypnotic suggestions because they deal with a state of
is to occur after the Hypnosis has
terminated. Therefore you will
readily understand the importance of post-hypnotic suggestion
and its efficacy.
f
LESSON XII.
It Is Induced-The Danger
in Thts
The State of Catalepsy-How
—
Condition The State Becomes
Involuntary.
a condition of Hypnot-
There is
The State of Catalepsy.
ism in as Catalepsy which is
made much of by stage per orm-
alone. Those ot
Lt which I strongly advise you to let severely witnessed the
e
entertainments have
vnu TheThave s en hypnotic
7 physique carrying the
Llcle of a mTn or woman of slight
SP
1 of severThundred
pounds while suspended between
resteer the body other than
that
two
afforded
or tables wiA no
aie grown g
head to his feet, You
boy any
to bend yourself.
«-»>
Wherever i p y
"l ^ ^
imnossible for you
pi- you
,
You
would be
would find his pulse-beat st» wh.c
upon the surface of fc
no other evidence
enduring. Your
^f™\t Z ^t chle to place
Strain
v:u"
upon you.
e
The TbSd!
ettect
eff°ect u™
p
^w
is
^
sometimes startling,
and he
*U
^"ance* » this Condition. But although
-67-
phenomenon of Catalepsy is very good evidence of the peculiar
power of the body when called into operation under suggestion
I know no
there is a real danger in Catalepsy, which so far as
operator, and no Course of Instruction in Hypnotism, have ever
yet pointed out. The danger is that this habit of straining the
muscles in a continuous rigidity during sleep is very apt, like any
other habit, to fasten itself upon the performer and the old story
of Jekyll and Hyde may be unfortunately repeated. The moral
of that remarkable book lay in the fact that against the wish of
the hero, Dr. Jekyll, his inferior self fastened itself upon him and
chose to assert its individuality.
The State Becomes Involuntary. —The danger in a con-
tinuous practice of Catalepsy is that during natural sleep it is
turn, and especially rub the scalp thoroughly with the fingers in
order to permit it to regain its relaxed condition. It has lately
-69-
-70-
been shown that Hypnotism cures headaches generally because
of the relaxation which accompanies Hypnotism, which relaxa-
tion, extending as it does to the blood vessels, permits the con-
gestion to subside, and so removes the pressure on the nerves
which caused the pain. In curing rheumatism it is not sufficient
to suggest to the patient simply that his rheumatism is gone and
will not return. You will find that during the Hypnotic sleep
you can lay your hand upon an inflamed joint which to touch
in the waking state would have occasioned excessive agony. The
cry of pain which the inflamed joint sends to the brain and which
is transferred by the brain to consciousness, is not heard during
Hypnosis. Your suggestion thaj; there is no pain in the affected
part is the most potent suggestion of the two. This is the com-
mand which the brain carries first to the consciousness, and
which the consciousness assumes to be true.
—
The Rationale of Curing Pain. The result is that you
have cut off the communication between the brain, which is the
interpreting agent, and the seat of the pain in the elbow, or the
knee or the wrist or wherever the pain may be. Upon this
principle all cures of inflammatory conditions are made by Hyp-
notism. It is the command of analgesia which you send to the
brain which severs the connection between the old painful con-
dition and the consciousness, and the result is that the pain is no
longer felt.
LESSON XV.
down the hand which he has been holding, and quietly stroke the
arms from the shoulder downward, repeating very soothingly the
formulas to the effect that the patient will pass into profound
refreshing sleep and will awake refreshed and strengthened and
free from all pain. In all such cases it is not even necessary to
make the test of inhibition of muscular action. It is not even
necessary to say to the patient "You cannot open your eyes."
:
—
Make Use of No Tests. Bear in mind that nothing in the
nature of a test should be permitted. Content yourself with posi-
tive suggestion and the request that the patient shall not remove
his eyes from your face. The alleviation of the pain and the sub-
sequent sleep are both brought about by the tranquilizing effect
upon the nerves which this novel method of treatment ensures,
the indirect cause being that the patient's attention is diverted
from his own trouble and fastened upon something else. As his
attention wanders it must be brought back to the matter in hand,
The mind has always governed and the mind will always govern.
We must therefore devote our study to the law of cure which
shall most directly reach the mind.
LESSON XVI.
asleep.
Why This Method Succeeds. —The philosophy of this sys-
tem is, first, that it asks nothing difficult of the patient.
Secondly,
it keeps alive the attention until drowsiness interferes. Thirdly,
the mere act of opening and closing the eyes frequently induces
a heavy feeling in the eyelids which is in itself a strong sugges-
tion of sleep. Fourthly, the fact that the eyes are closed makes
the patient -more amenable to the suggestions of sleep and to the
— 77 —
-78-
of the eyes shuts out the pa-
idea of sleep, because the closing
objects, and the mind therefore be-
tient'sview of surrounding
operations and less aggressive.
comes at once less active in its
Physicians have told me that they
have succeeded in some of their
prof oundest sleep by this means
most obstinate cases in inducing
It would be a great
mistake to suppose that because one method
patient therefore that patient cannot
will not apparently affect a
by any other method be put to
sleep.
of making an impression
upon the mind of another.
LESSON XVII.
beneficent agent. But this does not alter the fact that there is a
power resident in man which can inhibit and prevent the recur-
rence of pain.
The Power in Man. —The power is within, and it only re-
mains to call it into action. It can be best brought out by the
strong suggestion of another given during Hypnosis. The com-
mand, "There shall be no pain," is equivalent to a response from
the patient to the effect that he agrees that he will feel no pain.
It is therefore easy to understand that the power is essentially
within the patient. It is his own power called into action by an-
other. He may not know it ; he may not believe it you may
;
not
be able to convince him that this power is resident in himself.
But the logical explanation of the whole matter is here.
The Double Nature of the Power. The forces of the —
body are always two- fold; they always run in parallel lines.
There is always the impulsive force and the inhibitivc force.
The power to act and the power to check the power to suffer, and
;
the power to check suffering. The very fact that the patient is
— 82 —
-83-
argument sufficient that he has also the power
able to feel pain is
to still it.
1"="
Ti I
"I
case to say that they were inspired by God to overcome pain. The
plain truth is that God has implanted in the human being a power
to subdue and overcome pain which can be brought into action
just as soon as the right stimulusis discovered and applied- In
some cases this stimulus has been in the form of a sudden shock
caused by disturbing news, as in the cases where bedridden per-
sons have suddenly been cured of their ailments upon receipt of
distressing intelligence. Or it may take the form of Hypnotic
Suggestion, as when the operator commands the pain to depart.
The Healing —
Shrines. Or it may take the form of a
Shrine, as in the case of the famous grotto of Ste. Anne de
Beaupre of Quebec, where many afflicted persons are annually
healed of long-standing disordersor it may take the form of an
;
Passive Somnambulism to
Allay Pain.-H you
^Inducing who is to under-
analgesia in a patient
are called upon to induce the
at least two weeks beforehand
go a painful surgical operation,
hypnotized, and it is well to repeat prac-
patient Should be daily
These suggestions
SaS tt same suggestions every day. a pro- m
should take the following form:
When your patient is
would please
found sleep you should say to him: "I think it
the country, and we will now go
you to-da/to take a trip into
which is waiting for us. We
downstairs and enter the carriage
through the streets of the town a long
are now being driven out
into the fields; far away
from all noise^and bustle We
distance
magnificent orest. You see the
are now close to the edge of a
you hear the birds singing; you
see the
trees in front of you; im-
scene
the forest, and the whole
flowers iowing at the edge of
pS you as one of wonderful beauty.
We
will get out here,
ourselves -ming
through the
Sd leave the carriage, and enjoy
will take this one
this path to the left and I
forest. You will take
shall meet again later on.
You wil then
to the right and we
seen during
tell me wn re you
have been and what you have
contentment and
a sense of great
your wanderingl You will feel had at last
happiness within you, a feeling of freedom, as if you
thoroughly enjoying
cast away suffering and pain, and were
all
feel absolutely no
yoursdi Nothing will hurt you. You wil
pain whatever at this
pain You are incapable of feeling any
time
have now induced
Experiencing a Dream-activity.-You _
condition of passive
somnambulism, which m
in your patient a Th
himself to be wandering the forest m
atehe fully believes
reality, and the expressions of delight
not a dream to him, but a show
the alteration in
which escape his lips and
presented to h m He is tor ne
how firmly he holds the idea happy. At this
Sne
ame being, as you have suggested, completely
™™S> minor tests, such as forci-
^^
* •
time it is
subject { im^to
best to 1 [
induce Hypnotism in persons whom one meets for the first time
are in the main unreliable, it is a fact that instantaneous hypnosis
is possible, though rare. It has already been explained to you how
by post-hypnotic suggestion it would appear to the onlooker that
the person plunged instantly into deep somnambulism at a touch
from the operator was indeed instantaneously hypnotized, but you
have been shown that this effect was due to the efficacy of the
post-hypnotic suggestion which was previously given the subject
to the effect that hereafter at any time if the operator so desired
the subject would immediately fall asleep. You see that this is
quite a different thing from suddenly hypnotizing a person whom
you meet for the first time. There are, however, two methods,
and two only, by which this remarkable feat can be accomplished.
—
A Stage Method. The first can be used only with any like-
lihood of success upon the stage, because it requires for its suc-
cessful operation the environment of the stage glare and glitter
accompanied by a feeling of expectation and fear on the part of
the subject, coupled with a strong belief in the power of the
operator.
The Marvelous Action of Fear. — I have already spoken
of the peculiar effect of fear in placing the subject in a susceptible
condition. The fact is that fear creates a bewilderment in the
brain of the subject in which it is possible to suddenly drive home
a positive suggestion, with such force that it is permanently estab-
lished in the mind of the subject. It is my belief that there never
was and never will be such a thing as a miracle. And the power
-87-
— 88 —
which was given to the prophets of old was, in my opinion, sim-
ply a knowledge of the force of mind in conflict with matter. The
story of Naaman the Syrian is familiar to all of us, as well as the
retributive fate which overtook Gehazi, the servant of Elisha. In
this day it would seem to be a startling result of fear following
suggestion that a subject previously sound and healthy should be
suddenly smitten with leprosy, but I am not prepared to deny the
possibility of such a result, provided that a condition of extreme
terror had first appeared in the subject, and was used as a f ounda-
— go —
as any other by which to induce this instantaneous hypnosis. The
subject's eyes
act is performed by suddenly thrusting before the
some such bright abject as a silver pencil case, and forcibly assert-
ing that the subject cannot take his eyes from the object,
and will
be compelled to follow the object wherever it may be moved.
Of
course, you can see clearly that if the subject has time to reason
is no power in a silver pen-
this thing out he will know that there
cil case which can attract him
or draw him anywhere against his
influence. It
and 'that it is useless for him to try to withstand its
the eyes of the
frequently happens that a glassy look comes over
and he moves forward in the direction in which the
pencil
subject,
lays his hands over his
case is 'waved. As he moves, the operator
eyes, closes the lids, and says, "You
are wide awake, but you can-
it is but a step toward
not open your eyes." From this condition
its attendant illusions and
the induction of somnambulism, with
hallucinations. .
LESSON XX.
until they are almost but not quite shut. Then permit the eyes
to squint as they naturally will, but be careful not to close the eye-
lids entirely. The lids should be lowered to the point of almost
complete closing, and the head thrown slightly back, permitting
the glance to be directed to the feet. The result is corresponding
heaviness in the eyelids which is the sure precursor of drowsiness
and sleep.
Rolling the Head. —A frequent practice among stage hyp-
notists who wish to influence a refractory subject quickly is,
How —
to Use Auto-suggestion. In this way he can before
putting himself under the influence determine whether he shall
sleep for an hour or two hours. He can give himself just the
same suggestions which an operator would give him. He can
remove pain in himself just as certainly as an operator can re-
move that pain for him. He cannot secure in himself the start-
ling phenomena which the suggestion of another given during
deep Hypnosis will produce, but he can cure himself of many
minor ailments and treat himself positively for nervousness, lack
of sleep, lack of confidence, defective memory, fatigue upon slight
exercise, bad habits, etc. He can do very much for himself
-98-
in this way in the matter of improving his own character and
health.
The Method of Inducing Muscular Fatigue. A very —
important method of producing Hypnosis in a difficult subject
who does not seem to be influenced by the ordinary methods is
the following: Stand him upon his feet and tell him to take a
long, deep breath, raising his arms and flexing them at the el-
bows; him while he holds this breath for eight seconds of
tell
time to make every muscle in his body rigid and hard; arms
and legs and back can all be made rigid by an effort of his^ will
during the time he is holding his breath. At the end of the
eight seconds he must suddenly relax every muscle, and take
eight seconds' breathing slowly and deeply through the.
rest,
nose. Then let him repeat the same performance as above, taking
another deep breath, and holding it for eight seconds, while
he makes every muscle in his body rigid. Again let him relax
every muscle for eight seconds and repeat this exercise for ten
minutes. At the end of that time he will complain of pro-
nounced physical fatigue and you may then put him into the
chair and give him a bright object to look at. When his heart's
action has sunk to the normal, it will not stop there, but because
—
Clairvoyance; What It Is. In Scotland, and more es-
pecially in Denmark, among the peasantry there it is a common
thing to meet with people in whose families for centuries back
the gift of what they call second-sight has been pronounced.
This second-sight is only another name for what is now called
Clairvoyance and seems to be the reflection of intuitive knowl-
edge which is imparted to certain individuals owing to a super-
normal mental condition. While Clairvoyance is common in this
respect, it is also capable of development by Hypnosis, and many
startling prophecies have been made by clairvoyant subjects
under hypnotic control, showing that the power itself is not to
be confused with the power to read the minds of those present,
or to read the minds of those at a distance.
Point of Difference Between Clairvoyance and
—
Thought Transference. The distinguishing line between true
Clairvoyance and Telepathy is that the latter concerns itself only
with things which have happened or are happening within the
knowledge of some one with whom the subject is en rapport,
while Clairvoyance concerns itself most nearly with prophecy
or the foretelling of events which are yet to happen. The
phenomena of Clairvoyance are varied and wonderful in the
extreme, and after first giving you the necessary directions for
inducing Clairvoyance in your best subjects I shall take the
liberty of quoting one of the numerous examples on record
of
Clairvoyant powers given to some human beings and apparently
denied to others.
-99-
100 —
Subjects.— To develop
How to Develop Clairvoyance in
necessary that you select first of
Clairvoyance in your subject it is
all only your best
somnambulists, because a larger proportion of
into the Clairvoyant state than of
these will be found to pass
light conditions of Hypnosis.
Where
those who go only into
who has no memory upon waking of
there is found a subject
during his sleep and who follows
anything which has transpired
post-hypnotic suggestions accurately, and in whom you can in-
illusions at will, such a subject
duce the phenomena of sense
Clear
into the deeper condition of the
will with training pass
a one will develop not only an
Sight" or Clairvoyance. Such
.
Z
is
— 1*3 —
prove each sitting, the same as a person will excel in anything
at
by practice; and our experiment in Clairvoyance had not ad-
vanced much at the time when she commenced falling into this
sleep independently.
—
Tests in Clairvoyance. "Enough, however, was elicited
to prove that she could tell what had transpired in an adjoining
room, and at a distance of two miles; and if at a distance of
two miles, why not at a much greater distance? Those trials
which afforded the most positive evidence of this power were
.
ask him to examine yourself and say what the matter is with
you, he will reply something as follows: "I see your brain dis-
tinctly." "I see your heart." "It seems to be enlarged," or,
"It seems to be normal." "I see your lungs. One of your lungs
is perforated; it looks to me as if it had been injured by tuber-
culosis."
Diagnosing by Clairvoyance.—In this way he will pass
review the organs of the body, and though it may tax
your
in
subjects tells
credulity to believe everything which one of these
the appear-
you, you will come across certain phenomena having
account for.
of revelations, which you will not be able
to
ance
perhaps the one
this line of investigation for it is among
Pursue
others which will best repay you for your
trouble.
all
LESSON XXII.
Material Treat-
Hypnotism in the Cure of Drug Habits—Fallacies of
to Give Treat-
ment—How to Treat Dipsomania—How Often
ments—The Morphine and Cocaine Habits— The Danger of the
Advertised Cures— The Philosophy of the "Bread Pill"—Elec-
tricity as an Adtuvant.
you have never called into activity to help you break up this
craving. This power or force is now being brought into active
operation, and hereafter you will never feel yourself unable to
resist the craving for stimulants which
comes upon you. You
in any form from this
will be free from any desire for alcohol
time forward. You have been living the life of a man absolutely
all a man's strength and purpose. You will feel no pain or an-
noyance because of the withdrawal of your accustomed stimulant.
Every day you will feel stronger and less nervous, and the system
will steadily regain health and its old time
vigor."
Treatments.— For first week give
How Often to Give the
him hypnotic treatment twice a day. For the second week, treat-
ment once a day will be found sufficient, and this plan may
be
LESSON XXIII.
How —
to Awaken Your Subject. Always awaken your
subject by the gradual method of counting "One, Two, Three
Wide-awake." Do not wake him with a snap of the fingers
or by touching him upon the face or any part of the body. The
effect upon his nerves would be the same as if you suddenly
woke a person from his natural sleep by throwing cold water
over him. Give him time to gradually come back from the
depths of sub-consciousness to waking life. Some subjects who
sleep very profoundly are dazed and dizzy for a little while after
being waked up.
The Awakening Pass. — It is sufficient to allow them merely
to rest in the chair for a little while, at the same time making
light passes upward from the chin over the forehead with one
hand and assuring them that the effect is speedily passing away
and that they will be all right in a few moments.
—
Always Remove Hallucinations. Should you induce il-
lusions and hallucinations in any subject, always be careful to
remove them just as soon as the experiment is concluded. Do
not allow any impression which you have made upon the mind
of your patient in the course of the evening's experiments to
remain there unnoticed. Give strong and positive counter-sug-
gestions, putting the subject again into profound sleep in order to
make them. Assure him that he is well and strong, free from
all nervousness, and that the ideas impressed upon him
during
his previous sleep are now and will forever be blotted out "from
his mind and that he will never suffer from such hallucinations
while in the waking state.
—
Involuntary Self-hypnosis. You will find that many of
your subjects become so much interested in the process of put-
ting themselves to sleep, that they fall involuntarily into a con-
— 108 —
— 109 —
dition of Hypnosis during the day, and you may sometimes be
called from your home for the purpose of waking
up a sub-
ject whom you have not tried to influence that
day, but who
hearts of men.
A Course of Instruction
in
Magnetic Healin
IN FIVE PARTS
comprising
Published by
INDEX.
Introduction
Part I.— The Philosophy of Magnetic Healing— All Have the Power
—Polarity— The Hands— For an Example— Why the Hands are
—
Used The Law of Giving—Where the Force is Manufactured
—
Value of Sympathy The Nerve Currents The Power of Union —
— —
The Composition of Nerves The Comprehensiveness of Mag-
—
netic Healing How Nerves Feel —
Nerves are Conscious—The
—
Purpose of Vital Magnetism A Study of Pain The Superiority —
of Magnetic Healing
Part II. — Special Directions to the Magnetic Healer — Caring for the
— —
Hands Advantage of Perspiration Cultivating Self-confidence
— — —
The Basic Truth Points on Behavior The Importance of Gaze
— — —
The Reason Why Important Caution The Breath in Healing
— —
The Secret of the Air Conserving Energy
Part III. —
The Development of Magnetic Powers Where the Force —
Is— —
The Healer's Manner of Breathing Breathing Exercises
Possible Attainments Attaining — Full .Breathing — Sensing the
—
Life-force The Key to Life
ism acts first upon the brain, and its influence is then distributed
to the nerves and fibers.
Whereas Hypnotism requires that the patient shall surrender
something of his individuality and will-power into the
keeping of
another, and works best when sleep has been
induced, Magnetic
Healing asks no surrender of the patient's
will-power or con-
sciousness, but works its best results when the patient is most fully
conscious of all that is transpiring.
Whereas Hypnotism achieves its results by the
effect of one
brain upon another brain, Magnetic
Healing performs its marvels
by the effect of a transference of force from
one body to another
body. Whereas Hypnotism is of
the Brain and theoretical,
Magnetic Healing is of the Spirit and
practical. For this reason,
and because their training as servants
of God fits them peculiarly
for this ennobling work, clergymen
make great Magnetic Healers
lne gift of healing is a spiritual
_ endowment. It is dormant
m every human being. It needs to be
awakened ; to be developed
to be used and nourished
and cared for. It is the greatest of all'
tne gifts.
Ha ed a in a min °r degree; some
W.ST A n Pdevel
e
°P. have neg-
S quality.
the aua
develop
T
'itv
SSeSS 11
m all my
,°
h b
^
th6m the erm the
The purpose of this Course of £
Instruction
of '
^is tr>
students whether they are at
present strong and
well, or sick and ailing,
this great power which is
lying unused,
— —
'5
—6—
and perhaps unknown, within. The gifts of God are not an-
nounced with blare of trumpets. The great forces of Nature are
silent forces. The force of Magnetic Healing is potentially the
same in all. It is silent in action. For some who have over-
looked its existence it is silent forever. But in those who embrace
it as a means of doing good it is ready at any moment to spring to
life.
PART I.
•
is
u
LL
that RhumanTHE PoWER--Th
all
AVE e first thingto bear in mind
beings are potentially the same in their
powers
therefore, although I referred at
the beginning of this chap-
ter to certain persons as
"favored" I did not mean that they
were endowed by nature with special
powers which are denied
to you but that they had
made use of powers which you had
not made use of but which are
neveretheless contained within
you and awaiting development.
Polarity.—The next point for you to
remember is that everv
human being is magnetic. Every human
being attracts and
—7—
—a—
repels. He does this without knowing that he does it. The
practice of Magnetic Healing is strictly the practice of using
this magnetic force consciously, that is to say, projecting it upon
others by determined effort.
The Hands. —Having grasped these points there is yet an-
other for you to commit to memory, which is that in every human
being the right hand is the positive hand and the left hand is
the negative hand. In the practice of magnetic healing the
secret of success is always to transmit your magnetism to the
patient by means of the application of the right hand, using
the left hand to close the circuit as it were, that is, to very
strongly draw the current through the patient's body from your
right hand to your left.
—
For an Example. To make this point a little more clear,
let us suppose that you are giving magnetic treatment to a
The water is the medium of the nerve force, and thus the busi-
ness of the nerve becomes at once a most important and most
complicated proceeding. Each nerve is composed of a bundle
of nerve fibers or tubes, and each nerve trunk has numerous
bundles or nerve fibers, each bundle having its sheath enabling
it to conduct independently of the other.
The nerves conduct;
they convey information; they are intelligent; they are there-
fore the home or the seat of intelligence. The nerves receive
and require nourishment from blood; they ireceive and
the
require electricity; they
convey sensation and feeling, as has
been said, and they also convey nourishment, the nourishment
which is of the Spirit, and the nourishment which is of the
mind. There are two great systems of nerves, the
Cerebro-
spinal and the Sympathetic; distinct and independent; yet
closely connected and at times interdependent the one upon the
other.
The Comprehensiveness of Magnetic Healing. Mag-
netic Healing deals with the action of both nerve-systems,
and is
the rational science of treatment to recognize
first
the necessity
of combining treatment of cerebrospinal and
sympathetic at one
and the same time, forming by the hands of the
Healer the
required current from positive to negative. It will simplify the
study of the nerve systems for you if we divide
them bluntly
into two kinds, the
motor and the sensory. Motor nerves act
upon muscles, and any stimulus to the motor nerves
thus pro-
duces physical action. The Sympathetic Nerve
System possesses
two ganglionic chains running parallel with the
whole vertebral
column. The Cerebro-Spinal System includes
the Cerebrum the
Cerebellum, the Medulla Oblongata, and the
Spinal Cord
How Nerves Feel.— In order to best illustrate how sen-
sation is produced,
quote the following excellent definition
I
by Dr. Babbitt, of Los Angeles, California,
who has done as
much as any modern investigator to familiarize his students
With the principles of Light and Color,
and the finer forces of
nature which surround us.
"We will say a
very keen sensation is felt at the knee.
>
why
is pain felt at that particular point ? Because it is the end of the
circuit, the pointwhere something violent has taken place to upset
the smooth flow of the forces. But will the current to and from
the spine alone cause this pain ? Yes, to some extent, but that con-
scious sensation which discriminates as to the cause or nature of
the pain must come from the frontal cortex of the brain as it
receives the ethers which are radiated upon it from below, or as
it perceives by means of the sight or hearing still more of the
cause."
—
Nerves are Conscious. The only criticism which I have
to make to this excellent definition is that pain is sensed also
without the aid of the understanding, the nerves struck having
intelligence within them. In the light of modern research it
has been made plain that the nerve contains within itself intel-
ligence, and that the brain is no longer the sole interpreter of
the organism. The message being first sensed and understood
by the nerve, the brain is informed of the matter and aids the
sensation by bestowing attention upon it.
The Purpose of Vital Magnetism. —
In the ordinary course
of events the pain would disappear as soon as the nerve-currents
had re-established their harmony, and the province of Vital Mag-
netism in the stilling of pain is to support the electrical current
of nerve-energy, to re-establish the interrupted circuit. The
brain influencing the vaso-motor nerves, sends to the affected part
fresh supplies of blood, causing redness of the part and inflam-
mation. But the part which the brain itself bears in this matter
is that of feverish solicitude, which is likely to do more harm
than good. Here comes in the beneficent action of Magnetism,
to re-establish harmony, and by so doing, to allay the pain and
permit the flux of blood sent to the affected part to return again
to its channels.
A Study of Pain. —The question of pain
such a vital one
is
this mat-
in the practice of Magnetic Healing, that I must give
ter further consideration before leaving it. You are aware from
the study of Hypnotism that during hypnotic
experiments pain
is sometimes entirely absent in the subject, and this condition
the operator
of freedom from sensation is held to be induced by
connected with
because of the dissociation of nerve fibers
of the pain.
the cortex leading up to the cortex from the seat
cortex
The position taken in this explanation is that when the
subject is unconscious of pain
is, so to speak, put to sleep, the
13 —
because there is no longer an active brain to interpret the sen-
sation. This explanation is both correct and incorrect. It would
be more exact to say that it is partially correct. By putting
the cortex into a condition of insensibility the operator
has
merely distracted the attention of the patient from the seat
of the pain, and has therefore relieved the patient of
the ob-
trusive help which the brain would have sought
to give if its
attention had been centered upon the pain.
Hypnotism thus re-
lieves the patient of the unnecessary pain which the attention
creates. But inasmuch as the shock of
an operation may be felt
during hypnosis, unattended by any unpleasant
sensation of pain,
we must recognize the presence of another vital and
powerful
force acting in obedience to the will of
the operator, and the best
interests of the subject. This Force is
Vital Magnetism, the Force
which governs sensation when it is called into
action by harmoniz-
ing the nervous system of the individual,
and strengthening the
nerves to repel sensation. The patient
who is surcharged with
Vital Magnetism is indifferent to pain,
and even if the cerebrum is
active, he is unconscious of suffering.
The Superiority of Magnetic Healing.— Hence,
the im-
mense advantage on purely physical grounds
of the Magnetic
treatment over the hypnotic form. The
Magnetic Healer intro-
duces into the system of his patient
by contact of hands with
nerve centers, an access of energy
which brings the vital resist-
ance of the patient up to the point
at which disharmony or pain
is overcome and subdued.
He does this with the full knowl-
edge and understanding of the
patient. He does not throw
the patient upon his own resources,
leaving him to subdue pain
by his own force, though we have seen
that in some hypnotic ex-
periments this is effective. He takesfrom the Nervous Energy
which is m
himself to give to the patient, and thus it
comes about
that after magnetic treatments
patients feel for many hours the
benefit of this additional strength.
PART II.
—
Special Directions to the Magnetic Healer Caring for the Hands —
—
Advantage of Perspiration Cultivating Self-confidence The —
— —
Basic Truth Points on Behavior The Importance of Gaze; The —
Reason Why— —
Important Caution The Breath in Healing The —
—
Secret of the Air Conserving Energy.
which
is that the mind forces
govern disease,
basic
right s ate
of mind in which he can receive
benefit from you. Never a low
yourself to be browbeaten or
confused by the argumen of vouT
Und Stand Plainly that "° U d0
ITL^T
with him that you do not
,
7 not care to a?gu
even seek to change his opinions
bv
that if y ° U t0 hd P him as -tend" to do he
muTd
IT
'
'
SmrSh
inem to nealth.
opposition that they
th
T
I
There are very
handS f ne Wh 15 nly
°
; ° °
will
—
not be will
7o rest"
never advise my students to exnlam
few men
ng to
tW
™
be at
— lb —
every
tfie hands of omnipotent intelligence. It is natural for
human being to respect that which he does not understand and to
be attracted by a force beyond his comprehension.
No. 2—The Eye: As the hands are the instruments by which
the eye the
the magnetic force is directly applied to the body,
is
; ,
— 22
ficult than the preceding, and requires on the part of the student
careful and serious attention.
It consists in the alternate use of the nostrils as in the preced-
ing zveek, but each inhalation should occupy fifteen seconds, the
breath should then be held only ten seconds; and the exhalation
should be again fifteen seconds. Notice particularly the difficulty
you experience in exhaling for fifteen seconds. But it should be
learned. It is necessary to your development, and the rewards are
great.
Fourth Week.
The Exercises for the Fourth Week are devoid of any. re-
strictions in the matter of using first one nostril and then the other
in the Breathing; but the time of inhaling is increased, if possible.
Every inhalation should take twenty seconds; then hold the breath
for ten seconds, and exhale it twenty seconds, thus concluding
the breath. The time of the exercise may be extended from fif-
teen minutes to thirty minutes, including the necessary five min-
utes for preparation.
—
Possible Attainments. Strange as it may seem to you who
know nothing of the development through breathing, some stu-
dents have been known to develop a capacity for inhaling and
exhaling covering a period of five minutes for each complete
breath. The earnest student, at the end of the fourth week,
begins to feel in truth that exaltation of the spirit and bodily
vigor which comes with the presence of large quantities of
Nervous Energy in the system, revivifying and transfiguring him.
In place of weakness he shows strength; the rich color that
has superseded the pallor of his countenance shows how well
his physical body appreciates' the nourishment which it has re-
ceived. The wasted form has filled out, and the clear light
of the Spirit shines from the eye. There is no mistaking the
eye of the Magnetic Healer; it is clear, penetrating, steadfast,
yet not aggressive. Its expression
mild but constant.
is
—
Attaining Full Breathing. After the fourth week the
student should make the practice of deep breathing his constant
aim. The muscles are now so strengthened that they are indif-
ferent to any ordinary strain put upon them. He should begin
to breathe deeply in the morning when he wakes from first
slumber, and without tying himself down to any fixed hours
for Exercise, he should make a point at least once a day of
giving up thirty minutes to his Exercise while he reclines upon
Now his method should be to gradually extend and
a couch.
inhala-
still further extend the length of time occupied by the
tion. The student should, to fit him for attaining full Breathing
Development, practice during the day, whenever the opportunity
presents itself, the Act of Deep Inhalation and holding the
breath. The point to be especially kept in mind at this stage
is that the exhaling of the deep breath not to take place with
is
Length of Com-
plete Breath. Inhalation. Suspension. Exhalation.
24 seconds. 8 seconds. 8 seconds. 8 seconds.
30 seconds. 10 seconds. 10 seconds. 10 seconds.
40 seconds. 15 seconds. 10 seconds. 15 seconds.
50 seconds. 20 seconds. 10 seconds. 20 seconds.
60 seconds. 26 seconds. 8 seconds. 26 seconds.
eral treatment, which must precede the specific treatment for the
different diseases which will be mentioned hereafter. Remember
that this general treatment is to be used upon every patient at the
beginning of every treatment; whether you take a case for one
treatment only or for daily treatment for a month, you must al-
ways begin work by giving this general treatment, proceeding
from this to the specific treatment for the particular disease you
are called upon to treat. Having questioned your patient first as
to his symptoms and habits of life, paying particular attention as
to whether he is suffering from constipation among other things,
proceed to rub the hands briskly together and obtain the feeling
of heat and warmth in the palms and fingers concerning which
you have been already instructed. Now if your patient can come
to see you, it is very evident that he can sit up in a chair and you
therefore will dispose him comfortably in a chair in which the
back is slightly off the angle of the perpendicular, making him as
comfortable as possible. The idea is to make him rest by which
means he will be more thoroughly passive to your influence.
— 25 —
— 26 —
Holding the Attention. — In all your treatments request
your patient to close his eyes, and this for two reasons, (i) that
there may
be less to distract his attention and (2) that he be
not allowed to watch all your methods of procedure and so obtain
an insight into your work under cover of receiving treatments
himself. Tins is your own work and while you are willing to
devote it to the benefit of humanity you should not be willing
to give free instruction to the curious. Therefore, insist upon
it that your patient's eyes shall remain closed throughout the
treatment. Now inform him that you are going to project your
magnetism upon him from head to foot for the purpose of put-
ting his nervous system into harmony, and then while he sits
comfortably in his chair with his feet planted firmly upon the
floor and his hands resting upon his knees, you begin the use
of the long passes.
The Long Pass: Stand in front of your patient and con-
centrate your mind upon the effect you intend to produce. Say
to yourself, "I will relieve this patient of his pain. I will cure
him of his disease. nervous system to harmony.
I will restore his
I will give him freely of my
magnetism. I can do this by my
knowledge of the law of sympathetic transmission of force."
While you are thinking this to yourself, slowly raise both
hands, the fingers being clenched, and in a wide sweep raise
them above the patient's head, bringing them together and un-
clasping the fingers, at a point just above his forehead. Now
spread your fingers out a little, keeping them easily apart but
not rigid and very slowly bring them down past the forehead,
face, chest, abdomen, to the knees, taking a full thirty seconds
to complete this slow longitudinal pass. At the conclusion of
the pass shake the hands as if you were throwing off the diseased
— 28 —
between the two hands. The current is thus passed through the
resistance, which is the patient's body, and returns to the Healer.
The latter becomes conscious of the fact that the circuit is formed
by the sensation of slight tingling in his left hand, and when this
is felt, he withdraws his left hand from contact with the body,
the flesh of the patient. It is not so important that the left hand
be applied to the flesh, but it is always better, when possible,
to have the patient's clothing loosened so as to permit both hands
to touch the flesh. However, in case the patient is of the oppo-
sitesex and of such a sensitive nature that the close contact
seems indelicate, it is better to avoid this nervous antagonism
by working a longer time, with both hands outside the clothing.
No good can be accomplished if the mode of treatment distresses
the patient in any way.
—
The Abdominal Brain. The Solar Plexus is a great nerve
center, so important in its bearing upon the health of the pa-
tient, and so remarkable in its diffusing scope, that it has been
given the name of the Abdominal Brain. No matter what the
negative hand may be doing, the position of the right hand of
the Healer never varies: it is always upon the Solar Plexus.
The force so received from The Healer is radiated through the
entire nervous system from head to foot; thence it sets in the
direction of the Healer's left hand, seeking to complete the cir-
cuit. When the Healer senses that the circuit has been com-
pleted,which sometimes happens in five, sometimes in ten min-
utes, sometimes in less than a minute, he withdraws his left
hand from the spine, or wherever it may be resting, and pro-
ceeds to allow the Force to flow into the patient from his right
hand alone.
Directing the Current. —After waiting thus for a few
minutes, he touches the spine of the patient lightly with the tip
of the third finger of his left hand. The effect is to at once
cause a rush of Force to the point of contact, imparting to
the patient a pleasant tingling not unlike a mild current of elec-
tricity. Sometimes this sensation is so slight as to be scarcely
noticeable, but with the continued treatments becomes more
it
marked. The Healer allows his finger to rest in one place for
a few seconds, and then proceeds to touch the spinal cord from
end to end with the finger of the left hand, causing slight but
now unmistakable shocks to be felt by the patient, who com-
plains sometimes of excessive warmth at the points of contact.
This tapping should proceed for five minutes, at the end of
which time the patient will be conscious of great benefit derived
in the form of additional strength imparted to his system, due
to the presence of Nervous Energy in added quantities to the
nerves and their branches.
—
Length of Treatment. After the current is established,
as described above, ten minutes is the longest treatment that should
be given, and after each treatment the Healer should wash his
hands and dry them carefully. Before beginning treatment he
should see that his hands are warm and slightly moist. If the
hands are cold, clap them or rub them briskly together before
applying them to the patient. If they are dry, moisten -them
— 3i —
slightly with water, allowing free escape of the Force through
the pores of the skin.
The Healer's Manner.—The healer always greets his pa-
tient with a pleasant smile and kindly word. His speech breathes
a spirit of Hope for the sufferer, and his touch is magic to dis-
pel suffering. His bearing is dignified and confident. In giv-
ing these treatments it is not necessary that the left hand of
the Healer should rest upon the flesh of the patient, though
it is better, and results are more speedy, to so arrange mat-
ters when possible. But it is advisable that the right hand
should be next the skin. The left will establish the circuit quite
satisfactorily outside the clothing. There is no fixed rule to fol-
low in giving treatments so far as the position of the patient
is concerned. Nor can it be determined beforehand, whether the
Healer shall stand or sit. In this he must be guided by the most
comfortable position for his patient. The treatments may be given
with advantage when the patient is in bed but a reclining posi-
;
i
— 32 —
The Crisis. —In all these treatments, the Healer looks al-
ways towards one which is known to
certain effect, an effect
physicians as "a crisis." Crises have been recognized in dis-
ease from very early times. A
favorable crisis is attended by
sudden re-establishment of the secretions and excretions. In the
light of our knowledge of the effect of Vital Magnetism it is
easy for us to understand that the checking of the secretions
and excretions, which is a prominent symptom of internal dis-
order, is due to the interruption of the Vital current in its cir-
cuit. A removal of this interruption and a re-establishment of
the current by the addition of nervous energy sets again in
motion the glandular processes of excretion and secretion. At
the establishment of the crisis the skin especially becomes bathed
in perspiration and convalescence immediately follows.
The Force that Directs the Blood. The Healer deals —
first with the nervous system, knowing well that the power of
the functions of the body are primarily under the control of the
Nervous system, and the rational method of treatment in any
and all diseases is to reach function through the nervous system
direct. Anything a slow and cumbersome method. Nor-
else is
mal processes are most speedily established by the application
of Nervous Magnetism in all disorders of the body.
Medical Methods. —When inflammatory deposits have been
—have remained
organized in the tissues until theyhave be-
come hardened—niany means are resorted to by physicians for
their removal. This is confessedly a difficult matter by use of
drugs. Electricity used as an aid to the absorbents to take
is
as there is no form
of disease which it cannot relieve and cure.
The attention of the Magnetic Healer is first directed to the
relief of pain by the introduction of Vital Force through the
nervous system, leaving the eradication of the disease to the
beneficent action of the same agent, working in harmony with
the nervous energy of the patient.
Medical science has pronounced quinine its great auxiliary in
lowering temperature in fever, hut I have yet to hear of a case
where Magnetic Treatment failed to reduce pulse-rate and tem-
perature in one treatment. It is not necessary for the Magnetic
Healer to inform himself accurately regarding the exact degree
of the body's temperature. It is very necessary that the physi-
cian should do so, because in fevers where quinine, antipyrin,
jaborandi and kindred agents have been blunderingly used to
depress the temperature, the thermometer informs the physician
when to discontinue further use of the drug lest the depression
of temperature be carried beyond the point of recuperation, and
collapse occur.
Specific Treatments.
Eet us give our attention now to thecommonest diseases which
you will be called upon to treat and show how each is to bp dealt
—
— 35 —
your previous
with by Magnetic Healing, always remembering
instruction in the general treatments.
Request the patient, the face is flushed, to sit
Headache: if
plexus,
upright in a chair. Place positive hand (right) on the solar
head.
and left hand at base of the brain, above the neck, back of the
nose and forehead for five minutes. Then trail the fingers of the
left hand over the head of the patient from root of the nose to
cervical division of the spine. Instruct in deep and powerful
breathing from abdomen only.
Chills: Recurrent or intermittent, as in ague. Positive
hand on solar plexus negative hand on base of the brain, resting
;
Fluids as above.
Paralysis: on left side, due to injury to right hemis-
If
phere of brain. If on right side, due to injury to left hemisphere.
Treatment, positive hand on solar plexus, negative on affected
part, tapping forcibly with side of the hand to restore sensation.
If paralysis is complete, affecting both sides of the body, treat-
ment is by positive hand on solar plexus, negative on spine, draw-
ing finger-tips from top to bottom to restore currents.
Apoplexy : A
suffusion of blood to the head, causing uncon-
sciousness, and sometimes paralysis. Seat patient upright ; apply
positive hand to solar plexus, negative to base of brain, tapping
spine from top to bottom...
Bright's Disease An affection of the kidneys, which has not
:
-38-
breathing, and magnetism. Positive hand on solar plexus, neg-
ative on region of the kidneys.
Dropsy: A
watery deposit in the tissues, causing swelling.
Treatment, positive hand on solar plexus, negative at base of
brain. Breathing and magnetism cure.
This lesson could be indefinitely prolonged, but sufficient in-
struction in treatment and the principles of treatment has been
given to enable you to take under your care any case of disease
that presents itself. Never forget to instil the importance of fol-
lowing the breathing directions given upon your patient's minds
since upon their earnest co-operation with you in much of the de-
tailof Magnetic Healing their continued health depends. It is
pronounced
method by which the chronic constipation of the
type can be entirely cured when using this process.
the
Directions: At the pit of the patient's stomach covering
inches square against
solar plexus, lay a piece of flannel about 6
patient, apply your left
the bare skin. Now bending over the
hand lumbar or lower division of the spine, allowing the
to the
pressing against the
patient to lie upon that hand, palm upward,
spine. Now apply your mouth to the piece of flannel and breathe
The
through the mouth upon it, inhaling air through the
nose.
_
action in the
effect willbe to almost immediately start peristaltic
may be broken up in
patient and a lifelong habit of constipation
this simple way.
:
— 39 —
—
Cold Insufflation. Cold insufflation has an exactly con-
trary effect and consists of blowing the breath upon the patient
from a distance of several feet for the purpose of calming the
nerves and clearing the brain. Cold insufflation is very useful
banishing drowsiness and stimulating the nerves of the patient
to increasing activity. It isnot especially valuable in curing or
alleviating pains, but is a good thing to use at the conclusion
of a treatment in order to restore the patient quickly to the full
activity of the senses. The breath in cold insufflation should
be directed upon the forehead and eyelids of the patient.
How to Magnetize Objects : A very large part of the prac-
ticeof the Magnetic Healer comes to him through correspondence
from patients living at a distance and it is a matter of great im-
portance to them that they should receive from the Healer articles
magnetized by his force which can be applied by them to the seat
of pain or for the cure of chronic conditions. You must under-
stand therefore how to magnetize an article so that its curative
properties shall be retained for the use of patients at a distance.
Preparing Blotting Paper. —One of the best and most easily
handled articles for conveying magnetic force to a distance is blot-
ting paper and the way to magnetize blotting paper is as follows
Take a piece of new blotting paper about the size of an ordi-
nary envelope and sprinkle it on both sides with a few drops of
water. Now heat your hands very hot by rubbing them together,
shaking them, and clapping them with force one against the other,
and then hold this blotting paper between the palms of the hands
for two minutes impressing your concentrated thought upon the
article, willing strongly that your magnetism shall be absorbed
and retained by it for the benefit of your patient. So proceed with
another piece of blotting paper the same size and having thus sepa-
rately magnetized them, place the two pieces together, and hold
them together between the palms of your hands for a minute or
two. Now wrap them in clean white paper and post them to your
patient, together with a letter giving full directions for use. In
curing diseases of long standing, the paper is to be used by wear-
ing it upon the part which it is desired to treat.
—
In Case of Sores. If desired for the cure of a sore or ulcer
of long standing a thick piece of cloth should be laid upon the
sore and then the blotting paper laid over the cloth. It is bet-
ter that no one but the patient be allowed to handle
the blotting
paper before it is applied in order that there may be no diminu^
— 40 —
tion of magnetism. It is possible to magnetize almost any object
from a ring to a piece of raw potato, so that such objects will
have curative properties, but the blotting paper will be found to
answer most purposes.
How to Magnetize a Glass of Water: It very often hap-
water, one of which has been magnetized, and allow him to dis-
tinguish by the slightly metallic taste of the magnetized water
which is which.
hi
—
TO PROFESSIONAL HEALERS.
If your purpose to take up magnetic healing as a profes-
it is
—
you can get it advertises you.
Don't accept a fee that your patient cannot afford to pay.
Don't accept a fee, except for your time, when you have failed,
for any reason, to benefit a case.
Don't take any acute or critical cases unless they are thrust
upon you forcibly and voluntarily. The present condition of
medical laws in most countries permits physicians to slay their
patients by the thousands, but if someone dies on a healer's hands,
great is the uproar —
from the medical men.
Don't handle contagious diseases, for the same reason.
Don't practice at all unless you have a sweet, clean and pleas-
ant office or room in which to work.
Don't argue or theorize with anyone. Hold yourself good-
naturedly above it, telling them if they want instruction you will
sell it at so much per lesson.
Don't keep bad company or neglect the conventionalities of
society, which are intended for the public good.
;
PART V.
Purpose of This
Absent Treatments-The Power of Thought-The
Chapter— The Force of Good-will— Avoid Self-distrust— The
Law of Living— Natural Aids to Cure— Breathing for Health-
Chest
Form of Breathing—Expressing Suggestions—Increasing
Expansion— Solvent Properties of Fluids— How to Drink Water—
a' Caution—A New System of Exercise— Stretching—First
Exer-
cise on Waking— The System of Muscular Contraction— The
Proper Method—When to Use It— How Often to Do This— Corre-
sponding With Patients—Write Personal Letters Always How —
to Give These Treatments— The Reaction for Good Upon
the
Healer—A Final Word of Advice.
— 44 —
upon any such hypotheses. The only explanafion of such cures
possible is that I was enabled to transmit Thought, Healing
great good in the world. I think that you will find as I found that
the projection of thought is an extremely simple matter. It is in
my opinion so simple that its very simplicity has caused its amaz-
ing force to be overlooked in this age of difficulties surmounted.
—
The Force of Good-will. All that is necessary in order
to project thought successfully is the motive, the intent, the good
purpose, the wish to help, to assist, some one sick and in suffer-
ing. This wish or this desire carries with it a full sense of power
to do that which you wish to do. You can project thought
because you desire to project thought, because your wish is good.
It is very different in the field of action, but in the realm of
thought you, a weak man or woman, are as powerful as the
strongest physically
;
you may not be so, but in
thought you are,
I repeat, as strong as if you were physically whole and sound.
—
Avoid Self-distrust. Bear this point very carefully in>
mind throw out from your mind all self-distrust do not believe
; ;
that because you are yourself perhaps sick and weak therefore you
cannot do any one any good. The reverse is true. Some of our
greatest Magnetic Healers were by no means physically robust
but they, and all of my pupils, without exception bear witness to
the fact that they gain strength themselves in the same proportion
that they give strength to others ; that while they send out to their
patients and their friends, and even to their enemies, full cur-
noble work. .
ment and uncertainty, yet we must not disparage the great work
of those far-seeing physicians who have made the practice of pre-
ventive medicine their study; who have given their time to the
better knowledge of Hygiene, of Diet, of Massage, of Electricity,
Water and Rest, preferring to work with the reasonable and sim-
plemeans which nature has placed in man's way for the improve-
ment of his physical condition, rather than to experiment with
dangerous drugs. Chief among thes<_ aids to health I place the
right use of Breathing. I desire you especially to instruct your
patients in a knowledge of the value of the right use of the lungs
to man. In the Bible the word "spirit" is used in place of the
strict meaning of the Greek word "Pneuma," the Breath. The
importance of breathing is never properly enforced upon the
young; if it were, there would be in this country no such thing
as tuberculosis ; no such thing as consumption since every phy- ;
sician will agree with me that no child is ever born into this world
having consumption developed in him. A
proper exercise of the
lungs would absolutely prevent the development of the germ of
this terrible scourge, and I therefore make it a most important
point in this Course of Instruction that you add to your knowl-
edge and to your form of treatment the points contained in the
following paragraph, and instruct your patients along these lines,
besides followingthem yourself.
Breathing for Health. In order — that your patient may get
the full benefit of this course of treatment he must pay particular
attention to three things. The first is the act of breathing, the
second is the drinking of sufficient cold water, in very small quan-
tities but very frequently, to greatly increase the quantity of blood
in the system, and the third is the form of exercise for invalids
—
which I have found most suitable for all for weak or strong,
young or old. Let us begin with directions for his improved form
of breathing. He has been in the habit of taking a great many
short and easy breaths in order to supply his body with sufficient
oxygen to carry on its work. He has not probably once in the
course of the day taken one full inhalation and exhalation. He
has not taken in just as much air as his lungs could possibly hold
and breathed out to the uttermost extent of compression which the
lung-tissue is capable of. He must
begin to understand that ex-
haling the breath, thus removing carbonic acid from the lungs, is
just as important as inhaling.
Form of Breathing.—He must begin to breathe from the ab-
domen, instead of from the chest. Breathe from the abdomen and
carry upward to the chest so that he feels that he is actually
it
taking into his body all the air it can possibly hold. Let this be
done gradually and without spasmodic jerkings of the muscles.
Ten such breaths as this in the morning first thing when he
awakes, long, slow, gradual, complete, breaths. If he should be
a poor sleeper, and should wake during the night he must repeat
this operation, remembering this comforting fact, that he will do
his system as much good by a half-hour's exercise of this kind as
though he were indulging in the profoundest slumber. This is
the method which gives to the body oxygen to destroy waste mat-
ter and to give heat for the increase of the bodily temperature.
—
Expressing Suggestions. With the expansion of the
lungs he must say to himself, "I am taking in healing and
strength with every breath" every time he exhales a breath let it
;
ever he goes out from the house into the open air, he must take
ten such breaths complete inhalations and exhalations breathing
; ;
only through the nose. This will set the blood tingling and the
heart beating powerfully and well, quickening the circulation and
carrying life and health throughout the body. This will also pre-
vent the taking of colds.
Increasing Chest Expansion. —You will be surprised
how greatly the chest expansion will increase under this
process of breathing exercise ; in the case of dyspepsia too and all
— 47 —
stomach troubles the abdominal breathing is as beneficial as mas-
sage and is sufficient in itself to cure many obstinate cases.
Oxy-
burns
gen also is a great solvent. It is good for rheumatism. It
and destroys the deposits in the system due to imperfect elimina-
tion of waste matter from the blood. Pay particular attention to
the benefits to be derived from the deep breathing.
Solvent Properties of Fluids.—Now as to water-drink-
This is scarcely less important than the breathing.
ing.
take at least five pints of
Every human being should
fluid ofone kind or another during the day or as near that
amount as he can. Neuralgia, headaches, pains of various kinds
and degrees, can almost invariably be traced to an insufficient sup-
ply of moisture for the body's operations. When the nerves are
deprived of sufficient nourishment they cry aloud, and their cry we
call pain. When the blood is not sufficiently recuperated by the
drinking of enough fluids for the body's welfare it draws upon the
supply of fluid which the nerves themselves require the result is ;
that the nerves are starving for lack of moisture, and while the
patient may appear to the eye to be only slightly anemic, the trou-
ble is increasing with the passing of the years and soon assumes
very serious proportions.
How to Drink Water. —Water should be drunk without ice,
in small quantities, a sip at a time, a teaspoonful or a tablespoon-
ful at once, with short intervals between, and while any form of
fluid such as weak tea, coffee, cocoa, chocolate, etc., with the
exception of alcoholic stimulants, is good, cool water is best. The
effect of this continual water drinking is to clear the complexion,
to give weight to the body, to give purity to the blood, and strength
to the individual. Almost immediately a great change will be no-
ticed. The laxative effects will at first be very marked, but after-
wards this becomes a matter of no inconvenience. The improved
sleep, the stronger respiration, the better heart's action, the buoy-
ancy of returning health are all to be largely attributed to this
great cleansing agent, Cool Water.
A Caution. —Guard more than half a
against drinking
tumblerful at a time. Let there be a few moments rest between
each teaspoonful or wineglassful, and the results will be unfail-
ingly beneficial. There is no hour of the day when these instruc-
tions with regard to the drinking of water may not be followed.
There is no hour of the day or night when this water-drinking,
- 4s-
conducted according to the plans here laid down, will he other than
a benefit to your patient.
A —
New System of Exercise. Having now attended to the
refreshments, so to speak, of the body, let us complete the direc-
tions by taking up the necessary consideration of the Third Arm
of the Tripod upon which the health of the body rests. This is
summed up in what is known as Exercise. An invalid's idea of
exercise usually fraught with severe fatigue and some pain.
is
_J 0 —
time should either a sick or a well person use his strength in
lifting weights or in straining the muscles in any manner by
walking, running, etc., to the point at which extreme fatigue is
felt by the body.
The Proper Method. —What is known as the System of
Contraction is simply a healthy method of inducing through the
muscular system a feeling of rest and relaxation following upon
the contraction of the muscles of the body, and here I wish you to
form of exercise is to be used as a prepa-
particularly note that this
ration for the Distant Treatment for health which are to follow.
—
When to Use It. That is to say, this exercise should be
proceeded with about ten minutes before the hour set for the Dis-
tant Treatment arrives. Five minutes should be devoted to the
exercise, and five minutes to restoring the system by complete
relaxation to its condition of natural receptiveness, or passivity,
thus restoring the equilibrium to the nerve-centers, quickening the
pulse and heart's action, etc. The exercise is to be carried out
as follows
Imagine that you are about to raise from the floor a consider-
able weight. You would naturally in order to perform such a feat
strain your muscles to a high tension. Act exactly as if the weight
were in front of you, stoop down to the floor, straining all the
muscles of the body as if in the act of lifting the weight, raise
yourself gradually to your full height and slowly with muscles
still contracted bring your hands together over your head, stretch-
exercise is doing
lows a sense of pleasant languor and lassitude, the
the work it should do. not intended to really tire the patient,
It is
of induc-
and if not carried to excess it will not have the effect
bringing about
ing fatigue, but will on the other hand result in
— 52 —
sympathy with the idea, otherwise you are liable to arouse dis-
cordance and criticism, which will interfere with the quiet
soothing flow of the vital health thought. From this time on
tainly much better that the Healer should write these letters
personally than that he should have them printed, but I under-
stand quite well that in the case, of a large practice it is very
difficult to personally write the many letters required. Neverthe-
lessshould be done.
it
you who are perhaps sick in body and who have taken
up this line of work in the hope that in helping others you
may help yourselves, that the projection of thought is merely
an actual holding in the mind of a thought or idea of health. The
manner in which you are personally to give this Treatment is as
follows : You are to sit in a comfortable chair in a room as much
secured from noise and interruption as possible, close the eyes,
find hold in your hand the letter of the patient whom you wish to
benefit, or hold in your mind the name of the person and his re-
quest. Repeat quietly to yourself the name and address of the
patient. - Go over rapidly, in your mind the symptoms of which he
complains, and 'then repeat to yourself this formula or something
like it; "This patient complains of sickness... I project to him
my. healing thought, and call upon the power resident in him to
meet me in this work of restoring harmony to his system.. I cast
out disease, which is lack of ease, and bespeak for him health re"
;
— S4 —
newed and returning happiness. Let this request be granted. I call
upon the Great Povoer of Good Thought, which is Harmony, which
is Universal Health, to aid me reach this patient, and help him.
to
This is my earnest demand." Repeat again to yourself the name
of this patient, and couple with it the talismanic words "Health"
"Happiness" "Harmony," "Peace." The Thought so projected
does, according to my belief, fully reach the patient and is
the night, you may bear in mind that you can instantly reproduce
sleep for yourself by calling up the affliction of some friend to
your memory and giving that friend a Health Treatment.
A —
Final Word of Advice. In every case I strongly advise
you to inform your patients of what you are about to do. I do not
for a moment say that you could not benefit them without their
knowledge I think you could I think it is being done every day
; ;
this teaching.
/
I
ZOISM
COURSE OF INSTRUCTION
IN
Published by
Knowledge? Wisdom?
The key to all knowledge is in your keeping,
Oneness with God ? Certainty of Immortality ?
You are of God. Immortal.
"The kingdom of Heaven is within you." "Seek ye first the
kingdom of Heaven and all these things shall be added unto you."
The Power is within. Find the Power then use it.;
— ;
PREFACE.
This is the age of Thought. The time has come when roenr
seeking the light, turn to the New Thought for aid. They wish
to live the life if by so doing they may receive knowledge in
exchange for belief. They are ready now to pay the price; to
conform to the Law of Life, if they may receive here the reward
of seeking. The soil is ready for the seed. And they shall
receive it. The promise of Zoismis fulfilled here and now.
The bliss of the soul is not reserved for the dead. Happiness
is for every human being. The cry of the heart for comfort,
for a little from pain, is answered
joy, a little peace, surcease
here. It is met by the New Thought teaching the oneness of
God with man. It is a putting-away of the old weakness; the
old supplication the old fear, dread, shame, and a putting-on of
;
—
Zone, the Life Energy. When a child is born into the
world he contains within himself three essentials: I. Matter. 2.
Zone. 3. Soul. Of these matter alone i9 visible and tangible.
Zone is that which manifests itself as Energy, Life. It is not
Energy ; it is that which makes itself known as Energy or Force.
The Soul is the pure and perfect simple. When the child is con-
ceived this Soul is without personality or individuality. It is a
part of God, the universal spirit of intelligence.
The Purpose —
of This Course. 'The purpose of this Course
of Lessons is to teach you how by steps you may attain that state
of bliss on earth which has been foreshadowed in the lives of the
greatest of the prophets, the Holy Ones, the Saviors, as they have
—
been called they who attained to oneness with God while yet in
the body, and unto whom was given dominion over nature, over
life and death.
;
LESSON II.
—
Illumination from the Soul The Forces Acting Upon the Mind —
The Sum of a Human Experience The Maturing of the Indi- —
—
vidual Mind and Soul Must Be Cemented Together.
skeins into One Purpose that you have been born on earth.
in
You are fulfilling the purpose of your creation. These Lessons
.are written to show you the Way.
LESSON III.
the
T« FirstStep-The Practical Nature of Zoism-Cot.tnting
Difficulties-The Rewards of
Cost-Whvt Zoism Is-Presenting Given.
vice-Wealth Is Attracted- Health
Is
Ser
of giving you this Course in
The First Step.—Instead
Philosophy and the other to the
Two Parts, devoting one to the and
practice of Zoism, I have thought it best to combme them
make each Lesson complete as we
go along.
this chiefly because
The Practical Nature of Zoism.—I do reap-
I would not have
you feel that you have long to wait before
this study. I will tell you what you
ing some advantages from
expect from the doing, and when
are to do; then what you may
will show you that Zoism is
vou may expect these results. This
It is intensely practical and
no mere belief unsupported by Facts.
is founded upon pure
makes no empty assertions whatever. It
reason, the highest guide we have in
forming opinions, and when
that certain things which
by the 'practice of Zoism you have found
I tell you will happen do happen,
you will have warrant for
If what I tell you does
believing that you are on the right track.
in opposition to your
not happen, then only will you proceed
of your Rea-
Reason. My aim is to give your study the support
son as you proceed. In other words, to prove
every point made.
down the book when your casual interest has died away. First,
count the cost. There will be an absolute change in your present
beliefs if your views of the hereafter. That
you are orthodox in
is no small thing. You may with justice say that if you follow
the teachings of your church you will attain to salvation. It is
— 13 —
— 14 —
true, you though not quite in the sense you expect. But it
will,
is absolutely true that if you are as good a man as you can be you
ference upon the strife and intolerance of creeds and sects, know-
ing that in good time the crooked shall be made straight.
—
Presenting Difficulties. Now, is it worth your while —
speak to you as if this were a mere business proposition is it —
worth your while to know the Truth ? Do you prize knowledge ?
Suppose that knowledge throws you out of sympathy with your
friends, with your families, perhaps estranges some whom you
love, is it worth having? Suppose it changes your ideals?
Change of any kind is something of a shock to us; we love
the old grooves so well. Can you face ridicule? Can you
do without human sympathy? Answer these questions hon-
estly to yourself before you begin to weigh the reward of your
seeking. Count the cost first. Do not enter upon this study as
upon a bargain-hunting expedition. Close this book here for a
moment. If, after you have well weighed what has gone before
you can say with truth, "I count the attainment of knowledge of
the Truth cheap at such a price," then read on, beloved, and all
shall be well. But be honest with yourself.
The Rewards —
of Service. What are the rewards? Past all
belief. Power and Peace and a gladness of the soul that is ever
present with you. Health for sick bodies; joy for sick minds;
rest for discontented, weary hearts; yea, and wealth
for the
— is —
•
thev need it How shall I make you see that
hprl if
The Second Step. —As the first step consisted of a pui e thirst
for knowledge, an attitude of the mind, so the second is like to
it. It is an observing of certain simple commandments and is
The —
Second. Thou shalt speak only Truth is the second.
Falsehood in any form is a bar to progress it defiles the mind.
;
thought you have; every hind word you utter; every wrong
impulse checked; every little wave of envy, greed, anger, haired
jealousy, subdued during the day—all of this means so much good
building material for the Soul. And the Soul quick to use this
is
new material. That is how the effect of your first week's medita-
tion and high thought is shown forth so speedily in your appear-
ance. The work of rebuilding has begun.
The Keynote of Zoism. — I told you to make no radical
-19-
*,<«. habits
•
changes in you
^om m ^ Why?
J
Because the building is to be
^
without haste
^
.There is danger
done
Jn the s
beI *
^ ^Sf7f
er nogr oaiHngs and
fife
strife within.
burn
the
hodv blcomes more and a nvings on
T
S ttse mTn^ habits will
draws to
part. As like u
fall from you without
like throughout the world so your
y our'ntt
soul-body wm^aA to b^ed^
^ ^
s> Yqu wU
Th
"lite fi t a S^SS
paTn or" difsatisf action,
and gradually, very grad-
of the diet,
there will te a lessen^ of
^ v wthout
body. You need give
i!
the
>
\ l^
quantity needed to nourish the new
needed .
Qwn> ^
S ifbfyo °ur^ to^L upon the Zoist's prayer, and to
of conduct.
accept thecommandments of Zoism as your standard
Read no further in this book for one week.
LESSON V.
The Third Step —What
the Practices Are For The Present Rela- —
—
tion of Mind and Body in You The Process of Worry For the —
—
Restoration of Authority The Preliminary Exercise The Pur- —
—
pose of This Exercise Practice it at All Times The Effect —
to Be Noticed.
The Third Step. —We are now ready to enter upon the phy-
sical exercises in Zoism, which are nothing less than the control
of Zone itself in its simplest manifestation in the human body
the act of breathing. Zone is that energy which takes form in all
bodily and mental functions, and the first of these functions, the
most simple and at the same time the most necessary to the exist-
ence of the body, is the act of breathing.
has usurped. Next reflect that so far from the mind habitually
governing your body it does not even govern itself. It flies
directly in the face of its own wish. For instance, you are worried
and disturbed. You do not desire to be worried. On the con-
trary, you would give half your possessions to be free from this
worry. It even keeps you from sleep, impairs your appetite and
— 20 —
— 21 —
this flatly in opposition to your
undermines your health-all
"I cannot help worrying.
desire-and you say weakly
The Process of Worry.—Now what is worry?
process of A
vnur Thou-ht which seems to
be beyond control. A process of
ing the will of its ruler. Body and Mind are both instruments.
They are not rulers, though we have made them so. Let us re-
establish in ourselves the Divine Order—the original plan.
right nostril. Then inhale through the right nostril and exhale
the left and
through the left. Repeat again, inhaling through
the right, and so breathe alternately
seven com-
exhaling through
plete breaths of inhaling and exhaling
through each nostril— four-
It will assist you in this practice if
teen complete breaths in all.
performance.
you close one nostril with the finger during its
exercise
The Purpose of This Exercise.—This preliminary
is for the purification of the nerves
and may be practiced many
to abide by its limita-
times during the day, but you must be careful
tions. Do not extend the number of breaths at any sitting.
seek to
the prayer has a
Fourteen is the number. This exercise following
really a prepa-
very calming effect upon the nervous system. It is
— 22
ration for the mind. During this exercise you must turn the eyes
downward, waiting thought for the mind to become calm. It
in
will strengthen your confidence to note how, when you enter upon
—
Practice It at All Times. Whenever the opportunity offers
itself to you during the day you may practice this preliminary
exercise with benefit to yourself, prefacing it with the Zoist's
prayer, and it must always be used as an introduction, or prepara-
— 23 —
which have to do with control of the
fnr the later exercises
^ ^^
•
"lit SX Says
Swl: and which
hefore taking up the exercise
for the control.of Zone in the
form
whS
is
.of breathing. .
What —
Control of Zone Means The First Exercise Proper A Double —
— —
Purpose Defining the Perceptions When to Practice The Im- —
portance of Retaining the Breath The Second Practice —The —
—
Third Practice The Fourth Practice The Full Breath What — —
the Act of Breathing Should Be.
What Control of Zone Means. —When the three days have
expired you may begin the first of the exercises for control of
the Zone. me show you in a flash what this word control
Let
means to you. When you absolutely control the action of Zone
in you you govern it it is yours to use as you will.
; When it is
yours to use you can direct it whithersoever you will and it will
obey you. Is your friend sick ? You have power to direct Zone
to him, curing him instantly of his sickness. Have you a desire in
your heart? Your control of Zone makes it your medium for
conveying the wish in all itsforce to the object desired and it is
yours. It will come to you as certainly as that a stone which I
throw into the air will fall again to the earth, and for the self-
joy, because that soul-body has etherealized all functions, and the
calmness of the mind permits the joy of living to be sensed as a
fact of almost tangible intensity.
I have laid down these fixed rules for measuring your breath-
ing exercises for your guidance, because we shall not again refer
to them.
After this concern ourselves with the government of the
we
mind, thereby increasing our power and knowledge.
Practice these Breathing Exercises till perfect before passing
on to the following Lesson.
LESSON VII.
How the Mind Gets Power. —All power may become resi-
ient in the Mind, because all power is the property of the Soul
and the Soul is ready to give itself to the Mind in part or whole,
according as the Mind can bear the light. The sun gives light to
the moon, and the gives light to the earth and even so the
moon ;
Soul expresses itself upon Mind, and Mind expresses itself upon
Body. But this mind does not always reflect the Soul. Far
otherwise. The purpose of Zoism is to turn the Mind toward the
Soul, that it may always reflect the light of the Soul.
established. It isonly then that union with the Soul and with
God is made perfect. The highest function of the Mind is not
Reason The highest manifestation of Zone is Thought, but
a higher function of the Mind. That
function is called
+here is
even to conscious
superconscious perception and is superior
Thought, being a blissful knowledge beyond Reason.
When you can hold the mind fixed upon the thought of Love
for one hundred and forty-four seconds, then you have attained
the second step.
you can hold the mind at rest, realizing only one fact,
When
the presence of the Holy One, for three hours, you have
attained
superconsciousness.
not think this is impossible. It is well within your
Do
reach: but you cannot do it to-day or to-morrow. Work pa-
tiently for it. It is worth your while.
The Practice of Attractive Concentration. —Now we
begin the practice of concentration. What is the first step ? To
choose an object. We
might choose anything as an object for
this practice, but, bearing in mind the fact that you wish
to see
body's operations.
of disharmony: interruption to the laws of the
restore harmony,
The cure is in the power of mind and soul to
— 31 —
our good friends claim that
and because they have this power
only. Well, it matters little how they
disease is an error of belief
construe the law so they have
even a slight grasp of it. JDj
fact remains mind rightly directed cures disease. Mind,
that
directed, creates disease. Mind rightly directed pre-
wrongly
vents disease.
of .this lesson
Moving Gradually On.—At the beginning
'I
io yourself your face and form as you wish them to be. Then
realize that they are changing according to your desire. When
you have decided what it is you wish changed in yourself and
(what form it (must take then you have nothing more to do but
realise that the change is taking place. All your body, every
part of it, is changing in obedience to the undirected command
of the mind working upon the subconscious plane. That is a
scientific fact of which you are well aware. There is loss and
repair : loss and repair, change always motion always.
:
—
Directing the Subconscious. Now all you are doing in
making beauty your own is giving an order to this subconscious
mind to work along certain lines to change matter according to
:
made.
otherwords, you first assume
The Force of Assumption.—In
the fact, and later it becomes a fact. This is the philosophy of
practice you will find that your mind,
unused to this
it In its
compulsory attention to one object, is drifting away into various
as soon as you are conscious of
byways of thought. Recall it
its wanderings.
For instance, your object is your own beauty:
have been just as much afraid of your own ridicule as of the rail-
lery of others. Your reason even now rises up and laughs at the
whole process as absurd. But I tell you that your reason is
worth nothing when it conflicts with Law, and Law is only the
Rule of Effects. If what I say will happen does happen then
you have an effect or a fact. Your reason is founded only upon
facts. When you have added this fact to your knowledge then
your Reason is compelled to accept my teaching, and henceforth
so far from condemning this thing as impossible you
say, "It is
—
Effects to Be Noticed. When you have concentrated
upon
sorrow in
Happiness, though you began the practice with great
of the Soul.
your heart, you will be comforted by, the ministration
You will come out of the concentration with peace in your mind,
sorrowfrom
and also, note this, with the power to put off your
attention: it has
your thought. This sorrow has usurped your
light of the soul: it
dominated your mind: it has darkened the
has made you miserable, harassed; perhaps left
you in such acute
;
— 35 —
anguish that you are unable to think: you can only feel —an
agony. Dear friend, this is a pitiful state of mind, but if I can
make you see thatnot meant that you should feel in this way
it is
yourself with this wave of the mind if you do not learn to check
:
but the pain is there, and though you do not analyze it it is pain
that one to whom you had given trust and love could stab you in
return. Now look a little closer. You feel the pain most because
he, the doer, has withdrawn himself from your soul-plane. Perhaps
you idolized him and now you are lonely. Is there not the hopeless
poignant anguish of desertion? So you are lonely, left alone.
You, a God, deserted and alone! Then you have been leaning
upon a human being for light and life and love and peace. Why
has this sorrow come to you ? Can you not see why ? You have
been false to the Godhead within you; you have been building
upon the sand; you have been dragging your divinity down,
down, till it is identified with a human emotion a sense of loss. :
LESSON VIII.
A —
Step Nearer the Goal The Compelling Force of Desire Change —
— —
of Habit The Working of the Leaven The Developing Powers
— —
The First Step in Pure Concentration What to Do What —
—
This Practice Means The Second Step in Pure Concentration —
—
What This Practice Aims to Teach You To Break Down the
Barriers—Length of Time Necessary for This Practice.
A —
Step Nearer the Goal. After two months of this train-
ing you are ready for the higher practices in Concentration.
At this time if you have faithfully and earnestly followed
these Instructions there will be many changes both in you in-
wardly and externally and also in your environments or sur-
roundings. Realize now the truth that your environment is what
you make it: there is no accident in life: there is no force in
happenings of themselves all things come by design when in
: :
Universe. Yet you will note that you have not lost flesh during
your training: rather the reverse. A clear eye, a smooth skin, a
— 37 —
-38-
face of peace and power reflecting a contented mind, these arc
—
yours and these are worth having, are they not? There is never
a contented mind which does not hang its 'banner from the walls
that all the world may see..
The Working —
of the Leaven. And working in union with
this purity of the flesh, for you are still building the spiritual
body, and will be for years yet, is purity of thought. The
trained mind, taught to dwell with pleasure. upon the good, turns
as emphatically from the evil as it once was drawn to it.
Now it will be noticed that impatience, anger, irritability very
rarely come into the mind. Love is its abiding guest; and
Love rules the Universe. be found that fa-
So, too, it will
ance to weakness which the old body did not possess. There is
an elasticity of step which was absent before this training of the
mind. Therea feeling of buoyancy in the body which is one
is
of the reflections, if you but knew, from the content and harmony
within, because the body is just what the mind makes it.
The Developing —
Powers. In the same way the mind is
improved in its working capacity. The artist has powers
of imagination, powers of conceiving and projecting ideas
upon canvas which begin now to approach his ideal of
what his work should be. The mechanic finds his powers of
observation sharpened and his wits quickened. The student finds
his intelligence broadened his brain expanding with new
;
powers
of reasoning and expression. The woman finds the attractive-
sup-
ness of youth returning to her, the wrinkles vanishing the ;
— 39 —
himself has begun the conquest of mankind through Love. First
the control within then the control without.
; But these are only
dawning powers ;
they are embryonic merely ; a promise of that
which is to come.
The First Step in Pure Concentration. You are ready —
now foryour first step in pure concentration. Do not hurry the
good work. Live the Commandments. Make their virtues a
home in your minds. Be them. Practice your breathing steadily
practice your attractive concentration till you are perfect.
The second step in concentration is one of the three separate
steps towards the state of superconsciousness.
ing when you can enjoy exercises which would have left you
fatigued in the early days of your preparation. Fatigue is soon
to be an effect unknown to your body and mind. Lengthen the
time of this however gradually.
gies of the mind in one unbroken wave upon the quality of your
— —
Being 'Love for two minutes and a half or thereabouts.
As this practice is a preparation for that last step which
opens the way to all knowledge it must be minutely dealt with
so far as directions concerning details go.
What This Practice Aims to Teach You. —This is to
be the realizing of the quality of your individuality, and not
your quality alone, but that of all 'Created things in their
essence. God is Love. The Soul is Love. You are Love. (
may 'be laid aside to return to that matter whence it came. But
the Soul, individual, personal, indestructible,
made personal by its
earth-experience, lives on forever, an expression of the •God-head.
Greatly then we desire to enter this state, that to us may
be
given power over all nature, over our own mind and body, and
over the minds and bodies of others.
What This State Is.—The superconsciousness
state of
is a continued state of feeling, perceiving, knowing, without
thought or reasoning. It is attained by a form of concentra-
How —
to Practice This. Let there be no intrusion of
other exercises when you are ready to enter superconsciousness.
Go to your room, alone, and shut the door. Sitting erect, lift your
heart in silence to God, repeating without sound the Zoist's
prayer. After that practice the first step in pure concentration for
a little Mind to every thought. Then opening
while, closing the
the Mind allow only the thought of Love to enter. Passing on
further yet, enter the state of feeling. Know that the Soul is there.
healing. has learned first how to control and direct the Zone
He
before gaining the power to project
own body it from his
in his
the other.
body upon others the one is the key to
;
His Tastes. —The advanced Zoist has no desire for food that
His Mission. —The Zoist's services to the world are not bla-
zoned forth with trumpet. Fame, as we know fame, is not for him.
To praise and blame he is indifferent, because they have in them no
significance to the Soul that knows. Wild animals are subject to
him. His Love encompasses him as a shield and no harm can be-
fall him. His mission is to enlighten the world by radiating pure
and uplifting thought upon the ether by which he is surrounded,
knowing well that in its good time some human mind in need of
comfort will draw to itself this Thought by power of the-attrac-
tion of like to like, and so, perhaps, be directed upon the Way to
Life.
—
His Power. Unto the Zoist who
has attained, is given all
power on earth. He, by his thought, can shield others from harm
he can heal the sick he can restore life to the dead. He can
still
;
born
the tempest and the storm, because he has the faith that
is
moved and cast into the sea," the forces at his command will obey
with Nature's
him. But he manifests his power in conformity
is contrary to Law
design. It is not his pleasure to do that which
manifestation of Law. He
and Order. He is himself a perfect
is without desires of the senses,
or of the heart. He is without
attachments. He loves the Good (God). He sees that every
human being is potentially divine, and his work on earth is
to
\
\