Chase Hughes
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
So I never got that. I think so much of โ there's so many techniques in Scientology that were copied by the CIA on paper. Right. L. Ron Hubbard invented this thing called the Alice in Wonderland technique. We need to bring this up on the screen.
So the, so the line to go right down to that Reddit thing.
So the, so the line to go right down to that Reddit thing.
So the, so the line to go right down to that Reddit thing.
So you don't have to read the article, but essentially what L Ron Humber does is have people read out of this book, uh, of Alison Wonderland. The, the verbiage is very confusing. Um, And L. Ron Hubbard openly wrote about this in his work. And I'll give you all of my research on it.
So you don't have to read the article, but essentially what L Ron Humber does is have people read out of this book, uh, of Alison Wonderland. The, the verbiage is very confusing. Um, And L. Ron Hubbard openly wrote about this in his work. And I'll give you all of my research on it.
So you don't have to read the article, but essentially what L Ron Humber does is have people read out of this book, uh, of Alison Wonderland. The, the verbiage is very confusing. Um, And L. Ron Hubbard openly wrote about this in his work. And I'll give you all of my research on it.
And then the CIA, without even attributing anything to him, copied it almost word for word in an interrogation manual. And I have that PDF, too. Oh, really? Oh, yeah. And then the grandfather of hypnotherapy, Milton Erickson, started writing about it. So being able to speak confusing phrases helps you to be more persuasive about
And then the CIA, without even attributing anything to him, copied it almost word for word in an interrogation manual. And I have that PDF, too. Oh, really? Oh, yeah. And then the grandfather of hypnotherapy, Milton Erickson, started writing about it. So being able to speak confusing phrases helps you to be more persuasive about
And then the CIA, without even attributing anything to him, copied it almost word for word in an interrogation manual. And I have that PDF, too. Oh, really? Oh, yeah. And then the grandfather of hypnotherapy, Milton Erickson, started writing about it. So being able to speak confusing phrases helps you to be more persuasive about
They discovered this in the 50s and 60s that if I can confuse your brain, your brain acts as though someone who is โ it's somebody that's falling. So if you imagine when you're falling, your limbs are flailing all over the place and the first solid object that they come into contact with, it's going to like grab around it no matter what, even if it's a thorn bush or something. Okay. Right? Right.
They discovered this in the 50s and 60s that if I can confuse your brain, your brain acts as though someone who is โ it's somebody that's falling. So if you imagine when you're falling, your limbs are flailing all over the place and the first solid object that they come into contact with, it's going to like grab around it no matter what, even if it's a thorn bush or something. Okay. Right? Right.
They discovered this in the 50s and 60s that if I can confuse your brain, your brain acts as though someone who is โ it's somebody that's falling. So if you imagine when you're falling, your limbs are flailing all over the place and the first solid object that they come into contact with, it's going to like grab around it no matter what, even if it's a thorn bush or something. Okay. Right? Right.
So anything that's solid in that moment of confusion is going to get grabbed onto. So the brain corollary to this is if a person is confused, the first logical piece of information they hear after being confused will be automatically accepted or more automatically accepted without being screened or scrutinized by the brain. Does this make sense? Yeah.
So anything that's solid in that moment of confusion is going to get grabbed onto. So the brain corollary to this is if a person is confused, the first logical piece of information they hear after being confused will be automatically accepted or more automatically accepted without being screened or scrutinized by the brain. Does this make sense? Yeah.
So anything that's solid in that moment of confusion is going to get grabbed onto. So the brain corollary to this is if a person is confused, the first logical piece of information they hear after being confused will be automatically accepted or more automatically accepted without being screened or scrutinized by the brain. Does this make sense? Yeah.
yeah so so how like practically how would this be used um if you spoke a a confusing phrase very confidently and then told somebody to just completely open up right afterward you're gonna you're gonna lower a whole lot of defenses for any technique you want to use afterward so that's a basic way to say that
yeah so so how like practically how would this be used um if you spoke a a confusing phrase very confidently and then told somebody to just completely open up right afterward you're gonna you're gonna lower a whole lot of defenses for any technique you want to use afterward so that's a basic way to say that
yeah so so how like practically how would this be used um if you spoke a a confusing phrase very confidently and then told somebody to just completely open up right afterward you're gonna you're gonna lower a whole lot of defenses for any technique you want to use afterward so that's a basic way to say that
So an example would be, and you know that this is a confusing statement, but if we're in a conversation and I'm speaking in a really confident way and I said something like, how different would it be if the same thing started looking now like it wouldn't change if nothing else really did? And you could just get completely open.