the duration of the study they participated in. If they were taking a pill daily to relieve pain or depression, the pill was a constant
reminder for them to condition, expect, and assign meaning to their intentional activity, thus reinforcing the internal process over and over again. If it was a weekly visit to the hospital to see a doctor and be interviewed about their improvement, the choice to interact in a particular environment with doctors, nurses, equipment, and waiting rooms triggered a host of sensory responses, and through associative memory, they were reminded of a possible new future. They were conditioned from past experiences that the place called a hospital was where people went to get well. They began to anticipate
their future changes and, therefore, assigned intention to the whole healing process. Because all these factors had meaning, they helped make the placebo patients more suggestible to the outcomes they experienced.
So now let’s address the elephant in the room No real physical,
chemical, or therapeutic mechanisms made these changes happen. None of these people had actual surgery, took active medication, or received any real treatment to create these significant alterations in health. The power of their minds so influenced their bodies physiology that they became healed. It’s safe to say that their real transformation happened independent of their conscious minds. Their conscious minds may have
initiated the course of action, but the real work happened subconsciously,
with the subjects remaining totally unaware of
how it happened.
The same is true of Ivan Santiago. The power of his mind under hypnosis so influenced his physiology that even when he was sitting in a freezing ice-cube bath, he didn’t so much as inch. It was the power of his subconscious mind altered by a mere suggestion, however, not his conscious mind, that was responsible for this feat. If he hadn’t accepted the suggestion, the outcome would have been very different.
In addition,
he did what he did without thinking about how he was able to do it in fact, in his mind, he
wasn’t sitting in an ice bath. He was sitting in a perfectly pleasant tub of warm water.
So just as with hypnosis, the placebo effect is created by a person’s consciousness somehow interacting with the autonomic nervous system.
Quite simply, the conscious mind merges with the subconscious mind.
Once the placebo patients accept a thought as a reality, and then believe and trust in the end result emotionally, the next thing that happens is that they get well.
A cascade of physiological events automatically carries out the whole biological change—without their conscious minds being involved. They’re able to enter the operating system where these functions already happen
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routinely, and when they do, it’s as if they’ve planted a seed infertile ground. The system automatically takes over for them. In fact, it’s not anyone’s job to do anything. It just happens.
None of the subjects could
consciously spike dopamine levels by percent and control involuntary tremors with the mind, manufacture new neurotransmitters to combat depression, signal stem cells to morph into white blood cells to mount an immune response, or restore knee cartilage in order to reduce pain—just as Santiago couldn’t have
consciouslyavoided flinching when he lowered his body into that tub. Anyone trying to accomplish any of these feats would certainly be unsuccessful. These people would have to get help from a mind that already knows how to initiate all of these processes. To succeed, they’d have to activate
the autonomic nervous system, the
subconscious mind, and then assign it the task of making new cells and healthy new proteins.
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