로이 마스터스: Every high is a new low "칭찬을 머리에 두지 말고, 비판을 가슴에 두지 마라." 외부 자극에 휘둘리지 않고 내적 균형을 유지하면 세상을 바라보는 당신의 관점을 완전히 바꿀 것이다.
https://m.youtube.com/shorts/imsy5jB3NgY
Every high is a new low "칭찬을 머리에 두지 말고, 비판을 가슴에 두지 마라." 외부 자극에 휘둘리지 않고 내적 균형을 유지하면 세상을 바라보는 당신의 관점을 완전히 바꿀 것이다.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roy_Masters_(commentator)
Lessons in hypnotism
During his early years in Brighton, Masters saw a stage hypnosis presentation in which the hypnotist easily induced volunteer subjects to do strange and outlandish things. Masters remembered pondering the question: "Why can't hypnotism be used to make people act sensibly, rather than foolishly?"[6]
Upon further exploration of hypnotism in the 1950s, Masters repudiated hypnotherapy, but he soon opened the Institute of Hypnosis in Houston. There, he saw as many as 30 clients a day for consultations, and he said he "unhypnotised" them instead of hypnotizing them.[2]
Masters called hypnosis a "duplication of life's errors":
When I was a hypnotist, they used to say to me "You're a hypnotist, are you? When are you going to put me to sleep?" And I would say "Well when are you going to wake up? Because you're already asleep." Hypnosis is an altered state of consciousness...When a person is hypnotized—or reacts to stress, which is the same thing—he's not aware that he's being influenced. And when he is under the influence, he moves and has his being according to somebody else's will. And we don't realize that but when we do realize it, we make excuses. We deny. We deny that somebody else is controlling us other than us. That's our problem.
— Roy Masters, appearance on The Joe Franklin Show
About his decision to change his profession from diamond cutting to hypnosis, Masters said the following in an interview: "I had my own business, but I left that lucrative work because I had a calling for this kind of work. I'm more interested in what I'm doing now than anything else."[7]
Masters set the precedent for the legalization of the non-medical practice of hypnosis when he was charged with practicing medicine without a license at the age of 30.[2][8] He was sentenced to serve 30 days in jail[2] and was transparent about the experience with his radio listeners. According to Masters, he hypnotized a young girl who had broken her arm to take her pain away until the ambulance arrived. (For the medical practice of hypnotism, see hypnotism precursors, such as Dave Elman.)
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