The Power of Thought
Chapter 3
VICTIMS OF SUGGESTION
WE are all victims, more or less, of suggestion. Strong-minded and
unscrupulous people deliberately influence others by suggestion,
in order to take advantage of them. Counsel in Court says to a witness:
"I suggest to you," and then follows a suggestion that
may be both untrue and unfair, yet it may so overwhelm or confuse
a witness as to destroy the value of his evidence. Thus does a strong
mind dominate a weaker by force of will and suggestion.
The hypnotist suggests to his victim that a piece of cold metal
applied to his bare back is a red hot iron, and immediately the
flesh is scorched and blistered, much the same as would be the case
if the metal were actually red hot. Or he may suggest to his victim
that a cup of paraffin is a cup of lemonade, and he, the victim,
will then drink it, evidently enjoying it and thinking it to be
lemonade. Thus in these and many other ways does the hypnotist show
how powerful suggestion is.
In one of Dr. Schofield's books, I think it is, a tale is told of
two well-known physicians who, in order to prove the power of suggestion,
beckoned to a man in a restaurant and then told him that he was
seriously ill and ought to be in bed. The man, knowing their reputation
and high standing as medical men, believed them, went home, took
to his bed and died. It is only fair and charitable to suppose that
neither of the doctors expected anything more than a slight illness
to result from what would appear to be foolish and reprehensible
action.
We are told, day by day, in our daily paper to take so-and-so's
pills. We may not heed the suggestion for years perhaps, yet, sooner
or later, we may find ourselves either taking the pills or advising
somebody else to do so. You see a man with streaming eyes, sneezing
and using his handkerchief. This sight suggests influenza to you,
with the result that, if you are not positively minded, you may
shortly develop an attack yourself.
In a thousand and one different ways we are affected by suggestion.
We receive it through the eyes, the ears, taste, smell, and touch.
We are victims of it at every turn, unless we learn to become positive-minded
and proof against suggestion in all its forms.
There is not space for me to do more than mention other ways by
which we are unconsciously affected and influenced by suggestion.
Newspaper and magazine advertising of patent medicines are most
potent and powerful mediums of suggestion. We have already mentioned
the effect of being told day by day, in our paper and by means of
hoardings, to take a certain make of pills. But modern ideas of
advertising worthless nostrums and harmful drugs leave such methods
of advertising far behind as regards suggestive force and value.
Pictures of people sneezing, and of others doubled up with painful
backs, can have only one effect, and that is to make people imagine
that they possess the ailment described.
I remember when a boy, reading in the papers of that day, long advertisements
which were headed: "What is this new disease that is come upon
us?" I was so affected that I became convinced that I had the
disease, and badly too. I became so alarmed that I would no doubt
have speedily become really ill if I had not told my parents my
fears. Never shall I forget the shouts of merriment that greeted
my confession. It seemed as though they would never cease laughing.
But they laughed me out of my fears, and I have kept a positive
mind towards or against patent medicine advertisements ever since.
Many of my readers must have read the late Jerome K. Jerome's humorous
account of his experience with a medical work of symptoms. He said
that by the time he had finished reading the book he found he had
every disease under the sun except Housemaid's Knee. Written, no
doubt, to raise a laugh and to amuse, yet containing a modicum of
truth, which, if realised by the masses, would quickly cause the
nostrum mongers to shut up shop.
Then there is what is termed "mass suggestion". We are
all inclined to think the same thoughts as the mob, and to have
the same emotions aroused within us as sway the masses of the people.
It is very easy for a positive person to sway the thoughts and emotions
of a crowd of people. It is difficult for one of the crowd not to
be moved with the crowd. This is why people, who in the ordinary
way are sensible, go "mafficking" on occasions of national
rejoicing. It is also the reason why people who are peaceable and
harmless in private life may, when in a crowd, join in acts of violence
and disorder. It is simply that the mass emotion gets hold of them,
influencing them so strongly they get carried away.
It is a fact that some people are more easily influenced by suggestion
than others. Some are stolid and phlegmatic, and upon these suggestion
appears to have less effect. Others, on the contrary, are more sensitive
and highly strung. These are greatly influenced by suggestion, falling
an easy prey until they learn to become proof against it. Such may
feel that they are "hard done by", and that life has dealt
unfairly with them, by making them so sensitive. But they need not
pity themselves, for the reason that they have, instead, much to
be thankful for, for people of this type are those who can benefit
most by suggestion when it is properly and scientifically made use
of.
Finally, we come to the subject of temptation. All of us are tempted
in some way or other. What would tempt one severely might not affect
another at all, but each is tempted in a way peculiar to himself.
What is temptation, but suggestion? We need not argue as to where,
or from whom, the suggestion comes; it is surely sufficient for
us to know that we are victims of it, until we learn how to resist
it successfully. There is no more subtle suggestion than that of
temptation. It is so clever it seems impossible to counter it in
any way. Even at our best moments, when we would rise to noble deeds,
base ideas and motives are suggested to us. If we are not to fall
we must exercise eternal vigilance. And it is because of this that
we are told in the greatest of all books, by the greatest of all
teachers: "Watch and pray lest ye enter into temptation."
In concluding this chapter let me touch lightly on the teaching
of those who state that almost everything is suggestion. Their theory
is that we possess only consciousness, and that all that forms our
life is the result of suggestion. Thus, so they say, poverty is
the result of acceptance of suggestions of poverty: disease, the
result of acceptance of suggestions of disease: trouble, the result
of acceptance of suggestions of trouble, and so on. To counteract
these suggestions, auto-suggestions of an opposite kind are recommended.
The poverty stricken person is advised to whisper to himself, as
he falls asleep, suggestions of wealth, prosperity and plenty. If
the subconscious, or, as some say the unconscious, mind accepts
the suggestion, then poverty is at an end. The diseased person does
the same, except that he uses suggestions of health, with a similar
pleasing result, IF the subconscious or "power mind" within
will only accept the suggestion whispered to it.
All this may appear to be pure rubbish and "bunkum" to
most of our readers. While, however, the writer is not prepared
to accept such teaching in the above crude form, yet, so he believes,
there is a considerable amount of truth in it. It is not, however,
advisable to tinker about with the subconscious mind in this way.
Many today are suffering from the effects of unwise experiments
made without knowledge or experience.
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