‘Close your eyes and relax every part of your body,’ said Pat.
She then went through each part of my body in turn suggesting that it was now warm and soft, much as we did in yoga, except that Pat concentrated on unusual parts such as my stomach and I realised how much tension I carried there. She was speaking very softly and I could only just hear her.
I wasn’t frightened as I knew now, after our practice session the previous week, that hypnosis didn’t involve loss of control. It was almost the opposite. I was more in control because I was steering from a different part of myself, a deeper part. And my initial trust of Pat had only deepened over the two years that Frog and I had been seeing her.
In the practice session I’d sat in my usual armchair. Now I was on a futon on the floor of Pat’s room, on my back, covered in a light blanket.
As before she asked me to count down in my head from one hundred and to tell her when the numbers disappeared, which they did very quickly as my usual brain took a back seat and I found myself in a world of shadows and fleeting glimpses as if I was halfway between sleep and being awake.
This time she carried on.
‘You’re walking down some stairs,’ she said. ‘Tell me what you see.’
Frog and I had scuttled back to Devon after the visit to my parents, as ever relieved to be home. I had continued still seeing Pat on my own.
Over the months that I'd been seeing her, we’d discussed my migraines, which were plaguing me more and more, and my eating disorders – which twisted and turned and changed their form but never quite went away, even though they were better than they’d been in my teens and early twenties.
She knew about Brian in London and the terrifying black hole I’d fallen into after he’d taken my virginity and vanished, as well as the impression I’d had at the time of a black shutter crashing down on my life.
I’d told her about my sexual encounters as a teenager, gropings in the dark which had disgusted me.
We’d discussed my upbringing, how sex was strictly forbidden before marriage but not encouraged after it as women weren’t supposed to enjoy sex.
She knew of course about my parents and their condemnation of Frog.
But did all this explain my struggles, my inability to love him properly?
She wondered if there was something much earlier going on, perhaps even some form of childhood sexual abuse.
But I couldn’t remember anything, except for a strange recollection of being fetched from school by unfamiliar people and then left at the side of the road.
Or was it a dream?
She’d given me a book to read called When You and Your Mother Can’t Be Friends which took the reader back to their childhood at different ages and I found myself weeping uncontrollably from the age of four onwards over the whole week while I read the book.
Had something happened at around that time?
She’d suggested hypnotherapy as a way to uncover hidden memories – and deal with them.
I didn’t answer Pat immediately as I was concentrating on the stairs I was walking down. I knew them well. As I came to the familiar right-angled turn by a window Pat spoke again.
‘Where are you now?’ she asked.
‘I’m in our old house,’ I said, finding it hard to speak, not because I didn’t want to but because my muscles were so relaxed. ‘Coming down the stairs.’
Our ‘old house’ was where we lived until I was six.
‘How old are you?’
‘I’m four,’ I said.
I don’t know how I knew that. It simply arrived in my head.
‘What are you wearing?’
‘A red-checked tartan skirt with straps,’ I said.
Again, I knew that instantly and had a vivid picture in my head of the skirt. I'd never seen it before.
‘What’s happening?’ she asked.
‘Someone’s coming out of the kitchen,’ I said. ‘A man.’
I remembered every room in the old house, and often travelled through them in my mind. The kitchen door was almost opposite the bottom of the stairs.
‘And?’ said Pat.
‘He’s got a grey apron on,’ I said. ‘The whole of his middle is a grey blur.’
‘Do you know him?’ asked Pat.
‘I don’t think so,’ I said.
Then I screamed.
I was falling into the black hole again and this time it was even more frightening than it had been in London as I had no protection, nothing outside me to fall back on.
My stomach was rising through my body.
‘Help! I’m going to be sick,’ I yelled.
‘Count back up to a hundred,’ Pat commanded. ‘Now.’
It was like making my way up from the bottom of the ocean.
‘Count back up to a hundred,’ Pat commanded. ‘Now.’
It was like making my way up from the bottom of the ocean.
Even though we persevered with the hypnotherapy, we never went quite so deep again. It wasn’t deliberate on my part to avoid anything but I suppose that somewhere inside I was too afraid. And nor did Pat ever ask me about that incident again.
I felt that it was a pity we hadn’t persevered but I guessed that Pat had had to stop the session as you couldn’t have someone vomiting when half paralysed and lying on their back. It would have been too dangerous.
I desperately wanted to pull my weeds up by the root but perhaps some weeds were not yet ready to be removed.
I had no idea what that whole session had been about.
I felt that it was a pity we hadn’t persevered but I guessed that Pat had had to stop the session as you couldn’t have someone vomiting when half paralysed and lying on their back. It would have been too dangerous.
I desperately wanted to pull my weeds up by the root but perhaps some weeds were not yet ready to be removed.
I had no idea what that whole session had been about.
Pat led me into hypnosis slightly differently each time. Usually we started with stairs. Sometimes I went through a mysterious door. Sometimes she asked me to imagine a beautiful safe space, such as sitting under a tree. Sometimes I found a helper – an angelic being who accompanied in my adventures and kept me safe.
We explored different aspects of my life and worked out strategies for dealing with difficulties, reprogramming my mental and emotional processes.
I went back into past lives, including past lives with Frog, to see what I could learn from them.
I did a lot of crying, with the tears trickling into my ears and me unable to do anything about them.
The sessions ended with light, with me with me imagining being filled and surrounded with it.
However vivid my experiences under hypnosis, most of them dissipated like dreams soon after I woke, and Frog who was also having hypnosis found the same happened with him, so we couldn’t really talk about what we were doing, although we tried.
We did ask Pat about having hypnosis together, but somehow we never did.
We explored different aspects of my life and worked out strategies for dealing with difficulties, reprogramming my mental and emotional processes.
I went back into past lives, including past lives with Frog, to see what I could learn from them.
I did a lot of crying, with the tears trickling into my ears and me unable to do anything about them.
The sessions ended with light, with me with me imagining being filled and surrounded with it.
However vivid my experiences under hypnosis, most of them dissipated like dreams soon after I woke, and Frog who was also having hypnosis found the same happened with him, so we couldn’t really talk about what we were doing, although we tried.
We did ask Pat about having hypnosis together, but somehow we never did.
It always took me several minutes to be able to move after I’d come back from a session and opened my eyes.
One day – nearly a year perhaps into the hypnotherapy – it took me more than a few minutes. I lay, scarcely able to breathe, for what felt like hours. It was frightening. I felt as if I'd never be able to move again.
At last I was able to wiggle my fingers.
‘I feel like I’ve been on a very long journey,’ I whispered.
‘You have,’ said Pat.
One day – nearly a year perhaps into the hypnotherapy – it took me more than a few minutes. I lay, scarcely able to breathe, for what felt like hours. It was frightening. I felt as if I'd never be able to move again.
At last I was able to wiggle my fingers.
‘I feel like I’ve been on a very long journey,’ I whispered.
‘You have,’ said Pat.
To be continued . . .