You've just bought a new car. It's the latest model; it has the whiz-bang features that will definitely single you out from the merely mortal driving rank and file. You know you paid a bit (maybe a lot) too much, but with this car you make a unique and powerful statement to all others on the road. This car is as different from the herd as you are! Yet, as you drive this rare sparkling beauty home from the lot you suddenly notice the roadways dotted with several other nearly identical cars. Hmmm...never noticed those before. Somewhat deflated, it slowly dawns on you that your chromium highlighted beauty came from an assembly line, and it obviously wasn't the only one of it's species turned out that day. You 'uniqueness' becomes similar to dozens of other drivers.
This is an occurrence so common it has a name: "seeing the same car syndrome." How is it that our subjective experience of the world can change so sharply with a simple purchase? We can either assume there is a profound metaphysical change, and the infinite cosmic auto-assembly plant suddenly seeded our roads with more of your cherished previously 'unique' vehicle; or, that somehow the act of buying and valuing this four-wheeled beauty has changed your perceptual apparatus. I am going to argue for the latter, and show you how to use that phenomenon.
Our experience of the world is made up of a magical concoction of sensory experience, memory, and imagination. Research has shown that our visual experience of our world at any given moment is made up of approximately 30 percent actual sensory data, and 70 percent of memory and imagination. Most of what we see isn't technically what's there, but what we think ought to be there. That last bit makes way for some delightful mischief. Obviously, sight isn't the only sense involved, and there is a corroborative networking of sight and sound (the two distance senses). Vision, however, is usually the more distinct and detailed sense, and will tend to drive the auditory sense. If you doubt this, and are old enough, recall drive-in theaters. We would put a cheesy speaker in one window, and watch a screen usually at least half a football field away. Within a few minutes, we would forget the actual screen/speaker placement, and hallucinate the sounds emanating from the screen.
So, according to this argument, those cars were always there, they were just existing in that 70% of your visual world with which you have artistic license.
As a stage hypnotist, I can suggest a volunteer visually hallucinate the crowd as naked. I am not asking the client to violate his actual optical experience; I am merely playing with the 70% majority part of his visual experience that he is 'making up' anyway.
More usefully, I can suggest to a person with a fear of public speaking, that the crowd she sees are smiling, supporting her, and wishing her well. I am only suggesting changes in the part of her experience that she is mentally constructing. 30% of the crowd she really sees may be responding however they do-good, bad, or indifferent. I'm just asking her to focus on the friendly bunch that she has created. They are smiling, and so is she.
How about if you make up your mind to see opportunity. Make your waking thoughts the instruction "The world is full of opportunity, and I am going to see it today!" You'll begin to have an effect on the 70% of the world that you have an automatic say about. If you can see lots of people driving your car, you might be able to see lots of people offering you new opportunities. At least it is worth a try.
- Related Articles
- Related Q&A
- Conversational Hypnosis - Hypnotic Induction Techniques
- Self Hypnosis - Hypnotize Yourself For Relaxation
- Do Want To Know How Hypnotism Help In Reducing Weight?
- Learning Hypnosis For Free
- Just What Is The Simple Truth About Hypnosis?
- Using Hypnotic Rapport in Your Conversational Hypnosis
- How To Hypnotize A Woman Using Underground Hypnosis Techniques
- Hypnosis Weight Loss Program




Your Evolutionary Potential - How To Be In Step
By: E. Smith | 24/12/2009Within everyone is the capacity to be a powerful center for change... vast sweeping change. Not by changing one self, but by stepping into one's evolutionary potential to become change. "We are not separate from our environment." Everything, including us, in spiritual and physical form is simply a part of the...
Discover Surprising Reasons How Anyone Can EMBRACE ADVERSITY in Minutes!
By: Miyoshi | 24/12/2009If you are experiencing an adverse situation, you may be embarking upon the greatest opportunity to have a breakthrough in your life! Surprisingly you're going to see how adversity is shaping you into being the person, happy and fulfilled, that you want to be.
Embrace New Opportunities for the New Face Of Retirement
By: Tracey Fieber | 23/12/2009Change is inevitable throughout life. In order to grow, improve, thrive and even profit, change must happen. Sometimes you must take that leap of faith, knowing you are fully supported, so you can be truly free from constraints.
Is the Secret, The Law of Attraction Real? 5 Steps to Make it Work For You
By: Laurie J. Brenner | 23/12/2009You may be at the helm of your little boat upon life's seas, but be aware, you're not in charge of the wind.
Minimizing Working Mothers’ Sacrifices: The Power of Making Money Online
By: erica njie | 23/12/2009Before the start of WWII, women traditionally didn’t work outside the home. But, once the U.S. entered WWII, the government realized they needed a larger workforce to build supplies needed to fight the war. Since a large number of our country’s men were over seas serving in the war, the U.S. government began a campaign to recruit women into the work force.
How to Overcome Anxiety Disorders
By: Terry Dixon | 23/12/2009To overcome anxiety disorders we need to understand why we have anxiety, why it becomes so strong and how to control it.
New Year Resolutions - Why Don't They Work?
By: Don | 23/12/2009Many people make New Year Resolutions with the best intentions even though they know that they've failed to keep them in previous years. The reason is often that keeping them relies on Will Power which is a very blunt instrument when it comes to getting what you want. Resolutions are rarely accompanied by a plan that stands a chance of success so these 'best intentions' are often just wishful thinking! But there is a way which need not be too difficult. Firstly, why choose New Year to make a re
Memoirs of a Novice - Meditation pt 4
By: Eric | 23/12/2009What I would like to talk about in this article is more about what I learnt during my time at university. I wanted to pursue a career in neuroscience research. I already knew what my first project was going to be. I wanted to investigate this binaural beat technology for myself, scientifically, in a professional laboratory.
The Myth Of Terminal Curiosity And Cats
By: Richard Lefever | 09/05/2007 | Self HelpCuriosity killed that cat? I think they got it wrong. We've been laboring under the stifling, perhaps even deadly, weight of a botched adage. The 'osity' responsible for the feline fatality had to be of a 'serious' not a 'curious' nature. The suffix "osis" according to my New American Webster...
Paddle Fabrication On The Brown And Stinky Creek!
By: Richard Lefever | 01/05/2007 | Self HelpWe've all been there. Nothing in our sights but nasty threats, impatiently waiting challenges, bad smelling dooms, and impossibly ugly situations. I am referring to the feeling of helplessly sailing into a paralyzing cacophony of menacing boogie-men and purple meanies just ready to pounce. There is a colloquial phrase for...
Piggy Bank Stress Of Smoking
By: Richard Lefever | 30/04/2007 | Self HelpAs a hypnotherapist specializing in a proprietary Smoke Cessation program, I field a lot of questions regarding "How much do you cost?" and "Why are you so expensive?" It amazes me how focused smokers can be on the cost of quitting, without considering the cost of smoking. Yesterday I received...
Will You Be A Kirk, Crunch, Or Kangaroo?
By: Richard Lefever | 28/04/2007 | Self HelpHave you ever noticed that life frequently serves, usually when we are least prepared, opportunities to make life-altering choices. Do I stay at this dead -end, but secure job, or take a chance with a new risky opportunity? Do I step out into a new relationship, or cling to the...
Making Yourself, And Others, Feel Good With Your Tongue!
By: Richard Lefever | 22/04/2007 | Self HelpHow to Make Yourself, and Others, Feel Good With your Tongue! We are blessed with a marvelous and mighty device that can, in moments, stir the best feelings, or the worst, in ourselves and in those around us. That device is, of course, our tongue. I am referring specifically to our...
Drop The Mirror, And Grab The Steering Wheel!
By: Richard Lefever | 22/04/2007 | Self HelpImagine your life is like a road trip. You've packed, you have your bottled water and snacks handy, you've consulted the map and, after much deliberation, you've picked your desired destination. You turn up the radio, and off you go. Minute, hours, days, and years go by. Soon,...
Learn To Fail To "fail"!
By: Richard Lefever | 21/04/2007 | Self HelpWe are all very good at making ourselves feel bad. We come by the habit honestly. Think back to learning to spell in grammar school. Our tests come back from the teacher with the errors marked with red checks. A quick review of our formative years probably shows much more...