Dissociation and Displacement: Where Goes the “Ouch?”
- 30 June 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis
- Vol. 33 (1) , 1-10
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00029157.1990.10402895
Abstract
Hypnosis is widely used to relieve pain. Current theory emphasizes its dissociative features. Multiple personality patients can eliminate pain in the primary personality by displacing it into underlying alters. The Hilgards demonstrated that normal hypnotized subjects can similarly dissociate pain into a covert cognitive structural system which they called the “hidden observer.” The Watkins discovered that “hidden observers” appeared to be the same phenomenon as “ego states.” “Ego-state theory” assumes that human personality develops through integration and differentiation. At one end of the continuum, “differentiation” is adaptive. Ego states possess relatively permeable boundaries as in normal moods. At the other end ego-state boundaries become less permeable. Normal “differentiation” becomes maladaptive “dissociation” and multiple personalities may be created. In the intermediate range of the differentiation/dissociation continuum, “covert” ego states can be found in many normal subjects who volunteer for hypnotic laboratory experiments. Normal individuals, like multiple personalities and “hidden observer” subjects, can displace (dissociate) pain into “covert” ego states. The pain is not eliminated. This suggests that when we remove pain by hypnosis we may not be getting away “scot-free.”This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ego-State Therapy for Eating DisordersAmerican Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, 1987
- Uses of Hypnosis with Multiple PersonalityPsychiatric Annals, 1984
- Ego State Therapy in the Management of ResistanceAmerican Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, 1982
- The phenomena and characteristics of self-hypnosisInternational Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 1981
- Congenital insensitivity to pain: A critique.Psychological Bulletin, 1963
- The major symptoms of hysteria.Published by American Psychological Association (APA) ,1907