Mesmerizing Minds- Exploring hypnosis with a local specialist By Howard Hardee (howardh@newsreview.com) I was skeptical. I‟d never been hypnotized, and Brian Stracner didn‟t look like any sort of clinician, sitting at his office desk in a maroon robe and sporting a curlicue beard ala Jafar from Disney‟s Aladdin. Still, I played along as Stracner told me to hold up my hand, palm in, and focus on the tips of my fingers. “Imagine what would happen if wedges were being pushed between each finger,” he said, his voice getting softer with each word. The tips of my fingers trembled a little but otherwise didn‟t move. I was still doubtful. “With each deep exhale, imagine that the hand itself is growing heavier, as if there‟s a bag of sand attached to the wrist,” he said. “As your hand relaxes and your fingers spread, you‟ll notice the change of breath as … your mind enters these lighter phases of trance.” Lo and behold, my fingers spread apart unintentionally. And I was in the zone—calm, focused, relaxed. He instructed me to clap my hands. The spell was broken, but the calm lingered. That‟s just one of Stracner‟s induction techniques. He‟ll occasionally use an antique spinning hypnowheel, but he mostly keeps it around because people expect him to have one. For about 10 years, he‟s run North State Hypnosis, now located behind the Best Western Heritage Inn off Cohasset Road. His early sessions were hit-or-miss, he said, but he says over the past eight years, he‟s never failed to hypnotize someone in a clinical setting. The key was realizing that introverted and extroverted people react differently. For example, Stracner said he could tell by my body language, clothes and speech that I‟m naturally introverted. Had I been an extrovert, he would have used direct suggestion (i.e., “Your fingers are moving apart”). “Introverted people don‟t like to be controlled,” he said. “It has to be self-actualization. Instead of telling them what‟s going to happen … it has to manifest in their own minds.” That‟s why stage hypnotists often fail to induce some volunteers from the audience, he said. “You have hypnotists out there who can‟t hypnotize about half the population.” Stracner, a former chef, got into the field of hypnosis quite by accident. About 15 years ago, while he was walking through a parking lot on Nord Avenue, he was hit by a car. The impact herniated a disc in his vertebrae. For months he walked with a cane and every step was excruciating. Doctors prescribed him opioid painkillers, which didn‟t help, and eventually gave him an epidural injection in his spinal cord. His pain only got worse. “I decided I was going to do something else,” Stracner said. “I got a book on yoga, which got me into meditation. That led me to find a book on hypnosis, and then I started working to reduce my pain with