logs.omegle.com/ea688db6e52adeff
Yet Another One!
Yet Another One!
After comparing it to the log before it, I guess a late Happy Birthday is in order! Cool session as well.
logs.omegle.com/e20948ed7fb5acfe
IT'S GETTING HOT IN HERE,SO TAKE OFF ALL YOUR CLOTHES! (don't know what to type down tbh.)
IT'S GETTING HOT IN HERE,SO TAKE OFF ALL YOUR CLOTHES! (don't know what to type down tbh.)
*peaks into this thread again*
Oh yay this is still going :D
Oh yay this is still going :D
When did this threat go from legit hypnosis logs to RP only? Or seemingly RP only, at least. Feels like the last couple pages have been only RP postings.
bullet said:
When did this threat go from legit hypnosis logs to RP only? Or seemingly RP only, at least. Feels like the last couple pages have been only RP postings.
When did this threat go from legit hypnosis logs to RP only? Or seemingly RP only, at least. Feels like the last couple pages have been only RP postings.
Aye, certainly seems that way. Kinda disappointing, really.
pastebin.com/utPCc9yj
This is a text session transcript of my latest personal experiment. While I was giving an induction to a very literal and logical person, I had assumed from the tone of their voice that they had entered trance, so I didn't bother including the final trance-out element of my induction. About halfway through the session, they suddenly jumped in with a very cogent point, and I was so taken aback I had to ask, "Are you in trance?" "No," they said, they weren't. I performed a number of suggestibility tests, and determined they were very well and deeply hypnotized. But how could they be one, without the other?
Naturally, this sparked some interest. I found a number of schools of thought that differentiated the two concepts of trance and hypnosis more clearly. It's entirely possible to be very suggestible, very hypnotized, without ever entering the focused, dropped trance state, and so I created the induction and basic session shown above.
The session pasted is one of several. In a future voice session with a different subject to test the idea's soundness, I convinced them to forget having done a previous suggestibility test, to prove how suggestible they were and how uncritical they were of my commands and logic. For those among our number who experience hypnosis recreationally, I suggest attempting your own take on this eye-opening experiment, of Hypnosis without Trance.
This is a text session transcript of my latest personal experiment. While I was giving an induction to a very literal and logical person, I had assumed from the tone of their voice that they had entered trance, so I didn't bother including the final trance-out element of my induction. About halfway through the session, they suddenly jumped in with a very cogent point, and I was so taken aback I had to ask, "Are you in trance?" "No," they said, they weren't. I performed a number of suggestibility tests, and determined they were very well and deeply hypnotized. But how could they be one, without the other?
Naturally, this sparked some interest. I found a number of schools of thought that differentiated the two concepts of trance and hypnosis more clearly. It's entirely possible to be very suggestible, very hypnotized, without ever entering the focused, dropped trance state, and so I created the induction and basic session shown above.
The session pasted is one of several. In a future voice session with a different subject to test the idea's soundness, I convinced them to forget having done a previous suggestibility test, to prove how suggestible they were and how uncritical they were of my commands and logic. For those among our number who experience hypnosis recreationally, I suggest attempting your own take on this eye-opening experiment, of Hypnosis without Trance.
I've actually met another member of the hub during a roleplay (it was on shamchat, not on omegle, and I don't have any logs, sorry).