Originally posted by Suggestologist
I agree with that. But recall how you came to believe that. Was it through experiencing a magic trick that proved your own senses (and your causal modeling) could not be fully trusted? Or did you just read about how people are fooled by tricks.
It came from optical illusions (my ruler says the lines are the same length, but my eyes tell me differently) and my younger brother being into magic. I learned a lot of tricks from him (I'm but a two-trick magician myself). The part about magic indicating the fallability of the human senses came from this forum, though I don't remember whose post it was. Maybe it was a commentary. I'm not quite sure how this is relevant (perhaps because I'm sorta sleepy), but I'm pretty sure you've got a point to make about it.
Originally posted by Suggestologist
You do this, let's say, 30 times over 10 years. Could this not be the basis of a conditioned immune response when you now swallow a sugar pill you believe to be the active aspirin?
My understanding of suggestion and placebos and whatnot certainly says it would be, to some degree. Not exactly sure how to test it, but I think we could come up with something.
Originally posted by Suggestologist
Now, you may say that of course we can see that there really is something called "consciousness" and something else called "unconsciousness". But these are just word labels (anchors) which organize our understanding of different types of behaviors and thoughts into categories. Thought field metaphors just organize the categories differently.
I think this is the sort of thing that loses a lot of people here. This is a very fancy way of saying (with additional jargon thrown in) "Words are arbitrary things."
Originally posted by Suggestologist
I agree that they do not
"exist" outside of the mind. However, they may or may not be more useful for the particular intervention.
But why go to all the trouble of having this expansive theory when regular old hypnosis will will do the trick just fine. A skilled hypnotist can gain rapport without having to talk about energy fields. Remember, Reiki is not self-evident. Someone had to come up with the idea. They may not have known that they were doing hypnosis type stuff, but now that we know they were, why not just discard the whole bulky framework of reiki and do the "1000 times deeper" bit?
I heard someone say once that it doesn't matter if it's true, it's just a model. Judge it by the results. But the results here seem (based on more than one anecdote

) to indicate that hypnosis does everything Reiki claims to do.
In fact, even if energy fields are real, why worry about them if they have no more effect than hypnosis? You get the same benefit but you need a *whole* lot more theory to explain it.
Originally posted by Suggestologist
It helps if the hypnotist gains rapport, and paces the ongoing experience of the hypnotic subject. I'm not sure if that's analogous to being "attuned" in reiki. Perhaps you can educate me on what that means.
I'll try, but it may be the blind leading the blind. My understanding of the matter is a quite shaky, but I'll give it my best shot. Perhaps some of the other posters who have had or seen Reiki or talked about it with people can assist me. Being attuned in Reiki is something like becoming an antenna. You learn to feel the spirits of something, and then they act through you. Or maybe it's more like learning about wine. To the uninitiated, like myself, most wines taste pretty much the same. But a wine expert has a lot of experience with the stuff and can tell you all sorts of things about a wine.
Or at least, I think that's the theory. There might be something about guiding spirits, too.
In other words, it looks to me like Reiki offers nothing beyond a very complicated (and unnecessary) framework in which to do hypnosis work.