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Transcript from the Therapist
Magazine.
Griffin: Can I take you back to the beginning, how
you became interested in hypnosis, because when you qualified
as a Surgeon, it wasnt part of the curriculum.
Dr. Gibson: When I was a boy, there was a clergyman
who used hypnosis for people who were getting seasick, and
he cured them. I was most impressed by him. Later on when
I took up medicine, I went to my professor, I told him about
hypnosis and he told me that no doctor uses hypnosis, it is
only used by quacks. When I was in the Channel Islands a few
years later, a man put on a stage hypnosis show there and
I saw the possibilities.
I asked a psychiatrist if hypnosis could be used to treat
an asthma case. He said he could do it himself. He took the
asthma case into a mental hospital, the doors were locked,
the relatives werent allowed to see the patient for
three days, and the patient came back a wreck.
Griffin: He was allegedly using hypnosis.
Dr. Gibson: I suppose he knew a bit about it but he
didnt know much. It was while I was practising surgery
in the Middle East as a young graduate that I first encountered
the beneficial effect of the controlled use of the subconscious
mind. A Bedouin tribesman had a growth on his leg which tracked
down between the muscles. He knew it would have to be removed.
But he said I wont have any anaesthetic.
I offered him a local anaesthetic but he refused it. I operated
on him, I myself felt that he must be suffering great pain.
I actually felt the pain myself. When the operation was over,
he said calmly, may I see it before you put the dressing
on?. It was only later when I learned to operate with
hypnosis that I realised that he hadnt suffered any
pain at all. Then later on I was in Africa, about 36 years
ago, I was in a practice there, I was the surgical part of
the practice. I went to see a man who had a bad chest, his
bed was burnt from going to sleep smoking a cigarette at night.
I was afraid of him setting the house on fire, for he had
children in the house and it was a long way from anyone. I
thought the children could be burnt to death. So I thought
Id hypnotise him, he was my first case. He went very
deep. I was thrilled by it, and after that I got into it in
a big way.
Griffin: Did he stop smoking?
Dr. Gibson: I dont know. He responded to my
post-hypnotic suggestions and I took it for granted hed
Stop. I knew nothing about hypnosis then. Nowadays I would
get him to confirm that he had stopped.
Griffin: So that was your first case!
Dr. Gibson: Then, only three days later a person rang
up. She had a paralysed leg and I couldnt help but think
it was psychosomatic. I went to see her and it was and she
got over it in about half an hour. I had enough sense to try
to get her to face up to the things that made her get a paralysed
leg.
Griffin: So you were doing psychotherapy as well as
hypnosis from that point.
Dr. Gibson: And she was going to have a baby, and
she had the baby under hypnosis. It was absolutely marvellous.
Dr. Griffin: That was some time later?
Dr. Gibson: That was about a fortnight later.
Griffin: So youd established your credentials
by getting her leg cured.
Dr. Gibson: After that I used hypnotherapy whenever
possible. Later I came back to Ireland and took up a job as
a surgeon in the hospital, here in Naas and a very busy practice
it was too.
Griffin: What was the reaction of the doctors here
in the hospital when they saw you using hypnosis?
Dr. Gibson: Positive. I had no complaints in twenty
years of working.
Griffin: So they had an open minded attitude to you
using hypnosis and using it as an anaesthetic?
Dr. Gibson: Yes.
Griffin: So how many operations do you think youve
performed using hypnosis as anaesthetic?
Dr. Gibson: Over 4000, but that includes all the simple
operations as well. I used it all of the time, for dislocations,
for fractures, for people injured in car accidents. Very often
they would have had a meal beforehand, and of course then
wed have to wait a long time for the stomach to empty
but with hypnosis, I could work straight away.
Griffin: Do you think that was saving money as well?
Dr. Gibson: The amount of money saved was something
enormous.
Griffin: Yes, I was wondering about that. In terms
of Theatre time and keeping people longer in bed and having
more doctors involved.
Dr. Gibson: They never considered that.
Griffin: Something that would be very relevant today,
dont you think, when all the state medical services
are overburdened financially?
Dr. Gibson: Well, they could cut down expenses tremendously.
You take a fractured nose, admit to hospital, operate the
next day. Whereas I would just take the fellow and hypnotise
him and give it push to straighten it, put on a splint to
keep it in place, and then let him home. The cost would be
a few shillings instead of the cost of an admission.
Griffin: So would you see a case for doctors and anaesthetists
being actually trained in hypnosis and using it?
Dr. Gibson: I think all doctors and all anaesthetists
should be trained in the use of hypnosis.
Griffin: What do you think stops that happening?
Dr. Gibson: Prejudice!
Griffin: What do you think is the source of that prejudice?
Dr. Gibson: Money!
Griffin: It is not in some people's financial interests
to use hypnosis.
Dr. Gibson: I have trained doctors here and they dont
use it. If they went into surgery and there were twenty people
there and each of them willing to pay for treatment, and if
they were to take the people out who needed hypnotherapy and
give them an hour or an hour and a half, they would obviously
see fewer patients and therefore earn less money. But what
they dont realise in the national health service where
people are paid so much per year, if they treated an asthma
case theyd get better and theyd save an awful
lot of money and save a terrible lot of time.
Griffin: So you think asthma responds well to hypnosis?
Dr. Gibson: Absolutely, dramatically.
Griffin: Is this particular types of asthma?
Dr. Gibson: All cases of asthma, particularly the
children.
Griffin: There was an anecdote in your book about
you once being invited to see what you could do for a hospital
ward full of children suffering from asthma. The children
stayed there an average of six months. All the children you
worked with responded really well to hypnosis. Yet you were
asked to discontinue your work by the hospital authorities.
Dr. Gibson: Yes. They thought I was using magic. There
is probably no condition among children which is so easy to
treat with self hypnosis. I have found that most asthmatics
lose their attacks almost right away, their lives transformed
in the process. Sometimes the attacks stop with the childs
first lesson in relaxation. To help the child (or an adult)
to learn how to relax in the event of another attack a self
hypnosis tape is very useful. If the child has learned to
relax listening to the tape, then in the event of an attack
it is relatively easy for the child to relax listening to
the tape and let the spasm pass.
In my view, having dealt with many asthmatic cases, there
is one factor common to all allergies and that factor is subconscious
fear. It is only in the reaching of the subconscious mind,
with the erasure of the erroneous information stored there
and its replacement with the true facts, that a cure will
be effected. When an asthmatic attack occurs, fear causes
the muscles in the lungs to go into spasm, but if a child
has learned how to relax, the first thing he must think about
is relaxing and then the fear will go and with it the asthmatic
attack. So that in time he becomes free from asthma.
Dr. Griffin: More generally, would you see hypnotherapy
as an effective treatment mode for many illnesses?
Dr. Gibson: I believe hypnosis to be as effective
as antibiotics. Of course antibiotics will cure diseases which
hypnosis cannot help, but hypnosis can cure cases where antibiotics
are of no use whatsoever.
Griffin: Can you expand on that?
Dr. Gibson: If any doctor were to practise without
using antibiotics he would risk being struck off the medical
register many of his patients would die unnecessarily
without their use. Yet, if one who had used hypnosis were
faced with the choice of whether he should give up using antibiotics
or hypnosis, he would be faced with a difficult choice. At
first sight it might appear that antibiotics are, beyond question,
the more important. Yet antibiotics, unlike hypnosis, can
touch only a small proportion of human suffering. When penicillin
was first discovered, a small batch was sent to the north
of England for experimental use, no one seemed to believe
in it and it lay there unused. Consequently, even though a
relatively junior surgeon, I was allowed to make the first
trial and I injected it into a septic hip joint. The result
was dramatic and I have prescribed antibiotics ever since.
I believe that shutting ones eyes to the use of hypnotherapy
is as unscientific as the shutting of ones eyes to the
possible use of penicillin, because if they are closed to
the fact that there is access to the subconscious mind, we
will continue to treat patients symptomatically with such
things as tranquillisers, sleeping tablets, bronchial dilators
instead of aiming at curing the root cause of their complaints.
Griffin: How can hypnosis help one to find that root
cause?
Dr. Gibson: The nervous system is composed of the
voluntary and autonomic nervous system. The autonomic system
is controlled by the subconscious mind. If we as doctors do
not accept this fact then we are cowboys. Cowboys without
lassoos, for if we cannot catch this elusive beast, we will
continue to see the appalling unnecessary suffering and death
from readily curable psychosomatic diseases.
Griffin: The other side of all this is if that people
respond so well to positive suggestion then presumably influential
figures like doctors in their practice may be giving what
are in effect hypnotic suggestions, and may not be aware they're
giving them when they are giving prognoses on illnesses. When
the doctor casually says we are talking here about months
rather than years the patient may take that as gospel,
they may take it as a form of hypnotic suggestion and actually
die on cue.
Dr. Gibson: Its true.
Griffin: So perhaps part of the education process
that is needed is for all healthcare personnel to be aware
of the power of suggestion both negatively as well as positively.
Dr. Gibson: Weve got to be very aware of that.
Griffin: You on your part must be almost unique to
have performed four thousand operations both major and minor
using hypnosis. Probably very few doctors in the world could
claim to have had that much experience with the medical use
of hypnosis.
Dr. Gibson: Except of course with acupuncture in China.
Acupuncture is I think hypnosis being used.
Griffin: I have seen some research done by two doctors
in the States called Spiegel and Spiegel and they found that
the subjects who responded well to acupuncture also respond
well to hypnosis. They speculated that acupuncture is a form
of hypnotic induction.
Dr. Gibson: It is. About thirty years ago a Mr. Chance,
a great orthopaedic consultant here in Ireland, was taken
with hypnosis and he advised me to use hypnosis but added
" For Goodness sake give them an injection at the same
time, it doesnt matter if its only vitamin B or
water, let them feel the injection does it ". I couldnt
do that, I didnt think it was honest. The acupuncture
people have a needle and they jab the needle in. The acupuncturist
is convinced it works. People are convinced it works, the
hospital is convinced it works and so it does work.
Griffin: But why it works is another matter.
Dr. Gibson: They can put the needles in sites other
than the official sites and it still works. Or they can use
electrical wires to simulate the acupuncture and get even
better results. Their success rate is very similar to that
of pure hypnosis.
Griffin: Since you have raised the issue, can I ask
you when you were using hypnosis in surgery what proportion
of patients would respond to hypnosis?
Dr. Gibson: Thats a question I find hard to
answer as I kept no notes. There is a differences between
a cold case and an emergency. If I said to you, " Will
you have this finger off under hypnosis or a general anaesthetic"
almost for certain you would say a general anaesthetic and
if I tried to hypnotise you, it wouldnt work. But if
you came into hospital with your finger bleeding and your
stomach full and there is no way we can operate on you for
some time, you would accept hypnosis. I think we have a high
rate of patients under those conditions who are good subjects.
Griffin: What is your preferred method of inducing
the anaesthesia? Is it a distraction technique or telling
them that their hand will go numb?
Dr. Gibson: I will start from the beginning. I pick
up the hand very gently. I tell them "If you relax you
will feel less pain. And if you relax very deeply, you may
actually feel no pain at all". I then, holding the arm
in the gentlest way , wash around the wound with an antiseptic
such as iodine which can cause pain, but I am very careful
not to let a drop fall into the wound. Then I get an antiseptic
that doesnt hurt and gently put it into the wound. But
the whole time Im telling them, "If you relax it
will help you. Relax deeper and deeper". And then when
I start to stitch, I pick up a needle, I say to them "I
can give you an injection now and you wont feel any
pain but the injection wont take the pain away completely
because when the effect wears off you will feel the pain again.
But if you relax deeply enough for the stitching not to be
felt it will be grand. I can stitch the wound, then you will
have no pain and no pain afterwards". By this time the
person is probably hypnotised. I can pick out any pieces of
dirt that are in the wound without causing pain. Now the person
is becoming deeply hypnotised and I can dispense with the
anaesthetic and put in a stitch and they wont feel any
pain at all. At the same time it may be necessary to cut the
edges of the wound off to make them even and less ragged.
This will be done without any pain whatsoever. When I have
finished the stitching, the person is feeling very well. They
have enjoyed, actually enjoyed the feeling of the arm being
numb and the wound being stitched. They will accept the feeling
of being free from pain and even be free from pain later on
when the stitches are removed.
Griffin: That really does help clarify the way you
induce anaesthesia with hypnosis.
Dr. Gibson: When I was in Vienna last year I went
out to dinner with friends. There was a man there who didnt
know anything about hypnosis. A colleague asked me to explain
to him how I stitched a wound using hypnosis. I took his hand
very gently and I worked with him. When Id finished,
my colleague said " look at him, his hand is up in the
air and he cant put it down". I had to tell him
"your arm is free".
Griffin: Have you heard about Dr. Escudero in Spain?
I have heard he uses a technique involving the use of saliva
to produce anaesthesia?
Dr. Gibson: There is only one way and that is by getting
the person to relax. He has a hospital where everybody is
keyed up to do this one thing and he believes it, the patients
believe it, the hospital of course believes it, and it works.
In his method the mouth must be wet, if the mouth is wet the
person isnt terrified. If you were terrified it would
be dry. Witchdoctors use it in Africa. A man would commit
a murder, the witchdoctor would get all the men in the village
to line up, and they believed he had magic, and he would go
around with a hot poker and touch all of their tongues and
the murderers tongue would be burnt because his mouth was
dry. Those with wet tongues wouldnt have any pain.
Griffin: When you retired as a surgeon, you then went
into hypnotherapy practice treating psychotherapy patients.
Wasnt that a big change?
Dr. Gibson: Yes it was a big change but remember I
retired at the age of seventy, I had to retire, but I had
so many hypnotherapy cases I was glad to retire. For twenty
years I was practising both surgery and hypnotherapy.
Griffin: I want to ask you where did your expertise
in understanding human nature come from? Thats a completely
different field from being a surgeon.
Dr. Gibson: Very few have much understanding of human
nature, or the ability to share compassion. I suppose I always
was interested in people.
Griffin: I am interested in the approach you take
to the different types of complaints and illnesses as outlined
in your book and tapes. I was impressed by your creative use
of language and suggestion and the psychological insights
that you use. It seems to me they must have come from a lot
of reflection but also there must have been some sources for
this insight and knowledge.
Dr. Gibson: I think most of it came from my religion.
There was a man called Lesley Weatherhead. He wrote many books,
I was interested in what he did.
Griffin: He explored the mind from a psychological,
philosophical and religious perspective. You drew inspiration
from his books?
Dr. Gibson: Yes and from himself.
Griffin: In what way from himself:
Dr. Gibson: I went to hear him preaching, I was spellbound.
Griffin: Do you suppose he was a bit of a hypnotist?
Dr. Gibson: Well, I suppose every good preacher is
really.
Griffin: Do you think that religious views or at least
a commitment to something beyond oneself is important in mental
health?
Dr. Gibson: If they are truly religious!
Griffin: How would you make that distinction?
Dr. Gibson: Some people are religious, but they dont
believe the truth, not in their lives.
Griffin: What do you think is the fundamental religious
truth?
Dr. Gibson: Im not particularly religious in
the terms of orthodox or any other kind of religion. I believe
the world was born with a big bang. I dont know if all
the other things we are told are true.
Griffin: Do you suppose that there is a deeper pattern
that somehow connects human beings, and that religion historically
has tried to encapsulate and express that, and that one doesnt
have to be a member of a formal religion to be aware or have
a sense of this pattern?
Dr. Gibson: Yes.
Griffin: I believe you were the first person to make
a self hypnosis record.
Dr. Gibson: Id be interested in finding out,
I think I was the first in about the late 1950s. It
was for treating any condition but mainly asthma but I didnt
sell them. But in 1962 I made an EP and sold it. In 1970 my
Stop Smoking record was top of the pops in Ireland
for six weeks running.
Griffin: Alternative therapies are becoming increasingly
popular. Do you think this reflects some inadequacies in the
medical model and how its being applied in practice?
Dr. Gibson: I think we have been far too slow to take
on the fact that we have a subconscious mind. In my book I
say, when I gave my lecture to the Medical Society at University
College Dublin, that the medical profession was influenced
by the body snatchers and we learnt about how the body works,
but the dead body has no mind. And still today we spend years
teaching how the body works but only a few minutes teaching
how the mind works. We need to realise that the mind is just
as important as the body. Very early on in my career, I found
that I had been very well taught in the physical side of medicine,
but I had received almost no training in the causes or treatment
of most of the illness I met in practice. We were taught to
treat asthma with cortisone and bronchial dilators. I saw
the attacks disappear for a time but they nearly always returned.
I gave pain killers to migraine suffers but their migraine
returned. I treated insomniacs with sedatives but none was
cured of the underlying cause of their inability to sleep.
I saw the addicts of drugs, alcohol and nicotine listen to
my advice only to reject it. This led me to realise just how
much of human misery has its origins in the mind. To get to
the root of the problem we have to be able to tap into the
power of the subconscious mind and to release the faulty learnings
often contained there.
Griffin: So doctors have to be able to learn to tap
into the power of the mind.
Dr. Gibson: And thats where weve gone
wrong. We havent done that.
Griffin: You take a doctor seeing one hundred and
twenty five or more patients in a week. Would it be practicable
to expect him to be able to utilise that knowledge?
Dr. Gibson: We dont have enough doctors to be
able to treat everybody. Just having a number of people treating
the physical illness is not enough. Weve got to have
people treating the mental side as well. Theres far
greater need on the mental than on the physical side. More
people are in hospital who are suffering from a psychosomatic
illness than from a physical illness.
Griffin: What illnesses would you classify as psychosomatic?
Dr. Gibson: Well take all the mental hospitals. There
are more people in the mental hospitals than there are in
the general hospitals. In the general hospital there are a
lot of people injured in accidents caused by alcohol abuse,
people dying through the effects of smoking and other drugs,
and other drugs, and illnesses caused by stress. So if we
broke down the physical illnesses the majority of them could
even be seen as psychosomatically caused.
Griffin: Youll be interested in the report in
the last issue of the Therapist on various methods of getting
people to stop smoking including the patch and it was found
that hypnotherapy was easily the most effective.
Dr. Gibson: I get most people to stop but without
withdrawal symptoms. I dont promise that, but those
who are really keen very often stop without any withdrawal
symptoms.
If someone knows that smoking is likely to cause a great
deal of suffering, but he still retains reservations about
quitting, then it is not nearly so easy. Its important
to have sincerity of intention because this makes reaching
into the emotions and achieving harmony proportionately easier.
But if one has honestly decided not to take nicotine again
than this thought can be transferred to the subconscious mind
and very often the person can stop smoking without withdrawal
symptoms
Griffin: So the very fact that they are highly motivated,
combined with suggestions from you telling them that they
are going to feel comfortable and relaxed and confident as
a non-smoker, is sufficient to generate the ability to be
free form cigarettes without the withdrawal symptoms. Thats
an amazing relief from suffering.
Dr. Gibson: Absolutely! My daughter gave up smoking.
She wouldnt come to me. People dont go to their
relatives, but its three years now and shes still
got the withdrawal symptoms.
Griffin: I notice in your book you are also quite
optimistic about helping people with obesity, that you feel
that hypnotherapy can help them to lose weight successfully.
Dr. Gibson: Losing weight is different. Smoking
we can forget about it, but eating we cant forget. Weve
got to have consistency. If a person wants to lose four stone
they have got to think in terms of a couple of years and not
to think of it happening in a few months. If they think of
it as a long term thing they can learn to gradually reduce
and enjoy their food more than they are enjoying it now. An
over-weight person doesnt usually enjoy his food as
a rule. Some do but most dont.
Griffin: Thats because they feel so guilty.
Dr. Gibson: Yes because they feel guilt. If they would
eat reasonable amounts and stop when they are no longer hungry
they would lose weight, and there is no other way in which
it can be done. Reducing weight in this way does not strain
the will as other dieting methods tend to do. With relaxation
and mind control, the whole being is in harmony in the intention
to lose weight.
Griffin: I was also very impressed as to how you helped
people with drink problems, because there you actually did
some research into the problem as to the best approach and
actually worked and researched with alcoholics as to what
would be the most effective way of doing it.
Dr. Gibson: They used to come here and sit in the
evening, the alcoholics, some of their relatives and some
of the people who treated them. The alcoholics tore my self-
hypnosis record to pieces week after week but I kept on going
until they said they were satisfied with it, and agreed that
had it been available earlier it could have saved them years
of hell.
Griffin: You had the alcoholics fanatisise in hypnosis
about going for a drink .
Dr. Gibson: They loved that part, the part where they
relaxed and imagined themselves drinking, tasting their favourite
tipple and feeling all those sensations of release, entering
as it were another world, a world of happiness and then returning
home the money still in their pockets, with the feeling of
remorse replaced by one of tranquillity. This turned out to
be the most important part of the cassette. For the greatest
thing that alcoholics wish to achieve is a feeling of contentment
that is not gained through drinking.
Griffin: So the cassette (one of thirty set to music)
showed them they could create the same sense of release through
self hypnosis as they previously got through drink. You also
strongly encouraged them to join AA.
Dr. Gibson: Thats right.
Griffin: I understand you were in Lithuania last year;
Dr. Gibson: Yes, I read an appeal that they wanted
books on hypnotherapy and I went out there. I gave them copies
of my book and tapes and did some demonstrations.
Griffin: Was there a language problem?
Dr. Gibson: I worked through an interpreter and they
all went under.
Griffin: What are your plans for the future?
Dr. Gibson: I plan to write a book on hypnosis in
surgery. For my background research I intend to travel to
China and Spain to study their methods of working without
chemical anaesthetics. That should make an interesting chapter.
Griffin: A new chapter in an interesting and productive
life. I wish you luck with your new book and Im sure
it will help to increase both the public and the health service
awareness of the value of hypnosis, properly used, in the
treatment of illness.
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