Self-Hypnosis and Time Distortion

When I was at secondary school, I can remember being sat in my history class and being thoroughly uninspired and bored and watching the clock on the wall behind my teacher. Now, I swear to this day that as I yearned for the time to go past quicker, the second hands on that clock went by slower and slower. One hour felt as if it was ten hours. My experience of time during those lessons was painful. I often struggled to keep awake.

The weekend just gone by was sunny, I spent time in the garden, we had out first barbequeue of the year– I can’t wait for Summer! I know that in years gone by, those Summer days spent with friends and family are experiences that seemed to zip by in an instant.

I am sure that you have had varying experiences of time. Whereby time seemed to fly by or drag, depending on what you were doing. Time DistortionThat is what my Adam Up ezine is all about this week, as well as todays blog entry – Time Distortion. This week, for the very first time ever, my ezine is in audio format, not unlike my old podcast, we thought it would make a nice change, so if you want to listen to me talking about this subject, make sure you are subscribed to my ezine (can do that on most pages on this site).

There are people out there who can seemingly calculate mathematics in an “instant” mentally. There are fantastically successful baseball players who, when focused, seem to experience the ball coming toward them much slower than others seem to. There are also high-speed readers, who can read over 2,000 words per minute and they all experience a sense of time distortion as information flashes through their mind in only seconds. Wouldn’t it be cool if we could do that stuff too?

You know what I am going to say, don’t you?

You can do those things.

As Einstein pointed out, time flows at different rates for each person. Some people have experienced their entire life flash before their eyes in a matter of seconds just prior to a sudden death-risking situation. Also, dream researchers have discovered that a one-minute dream sometimes feels like hours to a dreamer. In one experiment, hypnotised subjects were given imaginary tasks to perform in their minds — like designing a dress and preparing a complicated meal.

They were tricked into thinking they had an hour to accomplish their tasks, but they really had only 10 seconds. After 10 seconds had elapsed in world time, the hypnotised subjects experienced intricate and accurate detail in their inner perception that seemed to them to be a complete hour! Given the same tasks in the waking state often stymied them so badly that they could not think of a single dress design and actually prepared a meal in a very disorganised fashion.

In interviews after the hypnotic sessions, it was revealed that the subjects experienced no difference in their “thinking” and that at no time did they feel hurried or “speeded up”. Time distorted thought thus seems to have superior clarity to usual conscious thought beset with constant distraction.

The experiment was achieved by starting a metronome at 60 beats per minute while the hypnotist stated that he was slowing it down gradually. The subject was to listen carefully as he did so and when in the subject’s opinion the metronome had been slowed down to the rate of one stroke per minute, the subject would acknowledge by saying, “Now.” The metronome’s beating always remained the same, but the hypnotist progressively encouraged the state of suggestibility in the subject by saying that the metronome was going still slower.

Let me run through a process that allows you to distort your perception of time. Remember, you are only distorting your perception of time and not time itself – that is the territory of our sci-fi heroes!

Step One: Get yourself in a place where you are going to be undisturbed for a period of time. Have an audible second-ticking clock n the place you are in. Assume a comfortable position with your arms and legs uncrossed.

Focus on your breathing, move you awareness inside your mind, engage in the moment, observe yourself and use whatever meditative, relaxation or self-hypnosis technique you know to develop a receptive state of mind. Go get my self-hypnosis book if you want to learn how to get into a really good state of self-hypnosis.

Allow yourself a couple of minutes to recall and remember an occasion when time seemed to be dragging… Become aware of how you felt about it, where he feelings were in your body and start to be in that state again as much as you can – access that state and frame of mind.

Step Two: After getting into a deeply relaxed, receptive state, your heartbeat tends to start matching the slow rhythm of 60 beats per minute in line with the clock. Listen closely to the ticking and concentrate on deep rhythmic breathing.

You may want to use your internal dialogue to deliver some suggestions to your mind at this stage to enhance the notion of allowing your brain to slow down…. when suggesting to your mind to do such things, remember to use the words “as if….” Instead of “is.” By that, I mean you can deliver a suggestion to say to yourself that “time feels as if it is going slower and slower…” rather than “time is going slower…” This is because you are not actually altering time. You are altering your perception of it.

Bear that in mind. If you start suggesting to your unconscious that time itself is slowing down, your unconscious will just respond by thinking “no it isn’t” and ignore the suggestion rendering it impotent. Be aware of using the most progressive and precise language and deliver suggestions to help slow your perception of time right down.

Step Three: Begin to start saying something along the lines of this to yourself:

The time between each beat seems longer and longer.

I am more and more relaxed and I have lots and lots of time. All the time in the world.

Time is only relative to what I want it to be.

Each stroke is further and further apart now.

There is lots of time.

I feel so relaxed and at peace with myself.

Time feels as if it is slowing down.

Each beat of the clock feels more and more distantly separated and sounds as if it is too.

Then continue to repeat the above suggestions or similar ones over and over to yourself until you “feel” that each click of the clock is spaced between 2 – 4 minutes apart.

Step Four: Then, whilst in your slowed down, self-hypnotic state and having a suggestive state of mind, you can review any material you wish in a matter of seconds over and over again. By being relaxed and saying to yourself that you have lots of time, your mind does indeed ‘create’ lots of time.

You can and do work at optimal levels of efficiency when you are relaxed and enjoying yourself. The more you practice this exercise, the easier it does become.

Step Five: When you have spent enough time in this slowed-down perception, open your eyes, wiggle your toes and take some deep breaths and get everything into its correct and proper time zone.

Do your best to remember as often as you can to give yourself a post-hypnotic suggestion that the next time that you want to experience self-hypnotic time distortion, it is so much easier and faster to undergo.

Once you have mastered doing this one way, you can begin to use it and apply it so many other things. I have worked with men and women who have learned to heighten their enjoyment of sex by slowing down their experience of their orgasms. I have also used these techniques to allow plane journeys to fly by, so that you step off the plane feeling fresh and free from jetlag. I tend to find that however comfortable they make planes these days, it is really difficult to do much that is constructive whilst on board, so I just get it to seem like it flew by.

You will be amazed how well your mind’s clock can and does work. Have some fun and enjoy slowing time down, especially with the fun-filled Summer on the doorstep.

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2 Responses to “Self-Hypnosis and Time Distortion”

  1. Evelyne

    Hi Adam, I’ve listened to your mp3 and the time distortion excercise was very interesting. Because my time actually contracted. Now, I’m not sure which way I need to spin, is it clockwise or anti-clockwise, and would it make a difference?
    Really enjoyed the audio version of AdamUp, thanks.

    Posted by Evelyne on 16th April, 2010 at 8:56 am.

  2. admin

    Thanks Evelyne, good hearing from you again :-)

    Look out for the next audio next week… it is about time contraction instead of expansion… So could lead to further insight for you… :-)

    Posted by Adam Eason on 20th April, 2010 at 9:02 am.

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