| 
			  
			  
			  
			 
			from
			
			JonRappoport Website 
			  
			  
			  
			  
				
					
						| 
			Jack True was  
			one of the most innovative hypnotherapists of 
			our time.  
			Largely unknown in academic circles, uninterested in 
			publishing his work, Jack focused on his patients. 
			We met in 1987. We became friends and colleagues.  
			Over the course of 
			several years, I interviewed him many times.
			Jack eventually gave up on straight  
			hypnosis-and-suggestion as a way 
			to do therapy.  
			He said, "I’m finding that people who come to my 
			office are already in a hypnotic state,  
			so my job is to wake them up." 
			Jon Rappoport |  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			
			REFLEXIVE RESISTANCE
 by Jon Rappoport
 January 14, 2012
 
			from
			
			JonRappoport Website 
			
 
			INTRODUCTIONSince I’ve written hundreds of articles that attempt to stimulate 
			imagination, I’ve had to take into account the resistance - many 
			people pretending they’re simply "the audience." They watch. They 
			keep their distance. They enjoy the show.
 
 If they think I might be writing about them, they deflect the 
			message like a matador.
 
 In some strange way, the reflex to deflect keeps the universe in the 
			condition of status quo.
 
 Because, think about it. What would happen if a few billion people, 
			on this planet alone, woke up one morning galvanized by their 
			imaginations to such a degree that they began to create new 
			realities at an unprecedented rate?
 
 Life would never be the same.
 
 To personify what I mean by status quo, it’s as if a deal were 
			taking place, under the table, between humans and the universe. 
			"We’ll pretend imagination doesn’t exist, and you, universe, keep us 
			enchanted by things as they are."
 
 Hopefully, you understand that I’m talking about magic here - or the 
			lack of it.
 
 Almost all discussions of mind control, programming, operant 
			conditioning never visit this territory, where the really big-time 
			programming lives.
 
 Well, what is this conditioning? What is its nature?
 
 After many years of considering these questions, my answer is 
			simple. It’s resistance. That’s the beginning and end of it.
			I know, it sounds too simple.
 
 There must be a complex structure involved. In fact, humans would be 
			drawn to a structure like that. Fascinated, absorbed. They would 
			sign up in droves to study it. Why? Because it would constitute yet 
			another deflection. It would allow them to wriggle off the hook.
 
 I’ll offer you another considered conclusion. Even if there were 
			such a structure, whose purpose was to keep people from exercising 
			their imaginations to the fullest, once that system was probed, 
			understood, and eradicated, humans would remain in limbo. They would 
			still be one step from creating new realities - just as they are now.
 
 In another context, with a different implied meaning, T.S. Eliot 
			famously wrote,
 
				
				"We shall not cease from 
				exploration/and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive 
				where we started and know the place for the first time." 
			Remove all the supposed programming, and we’re really where we 
			started, but in this case we don’t know the place for the first 
			time, we don’t know very much more than we did. We’re rather 
			bewildered, like the institutionalized person who looks at the open 
			door to his cell one day and doesn’t step beyond it.
 Because the resistance is still there.
 
 The word "will" has been pretty much removed from the modern 
			vocabulary.
 
				
				"He doesn’t have the will to do the 
				work." 
			We’re taught there are layers and layers of social, psychological, 
			and political factors that separate a person from acting on an idea. 
			And all these factors must be addressed.
 You want operant conditioning? There it is: the deleting of the idea 
			of will behind an avalanche of fake knowledge.
 
 To live through and by imagination is a choice, taken or not taken 
			in freedom. That’s the short and long of it, and no amount of 
			complaining will change the situation.
 
 To put it another way, resistance is not a thing that sits in the 
			mind like a solid object. It is a generalized description of a 
			person saying NO. It really refers to a refusal to act.
 
 People ask,
 
				
				"But why does the person say no. Why 
				does he refuse?" 
			They hope to find a mechanism which, if corrected, will turn the no 
			into a yes. In words, a revolution achieved passively. 
				
				"Sir, just sit here and we’ll insert 
				this needle and remove the obstruction and then everything will 
				change." 
			Really?
 It doesn’t work that way.
 
 Here’s another picture.
 
			  
			All the refusals, over time, tend to pile up 
			into a glob. If you could peel them away, one by one, you wouldn’t 
			have curtailed the ongoing decision to refuse, you would have merely 
			taken off some incidental debris surrounding it. 
				
			 
			Choice.
 That’s the background for a conversation I had in the late 1980s 
			with my friend and colleague, Jack True, the most innovative 
			hypnotherapist I’ve ever encountered.
 
			  
			In this interview, I touch on 
			the beginnings of the Magic Theater:
 
 
				
				Q (Rappoport): Just give me your response to this: a person can say 
			YES or NO.
 A (Jack): Yes isn’t necessarily better than no. It depends on the 
			situation.
 
 Q: Are they both pure choices?
 
 A: What else could they be?
 
 Q: The result of habit? The result of long chains of cause and 
			effect?
 
 A: Yeah, sure, you could analyze it that way, but then you’d miss 
			the point.
 
 Q: Which is?
 
 A: Take this kind of thing. 
				"Shah ousted. The president refuses to 
			send troops to Iran." People assume the president has a choice. They 
			don’t say, "The president couldn’t send troops, because when he was 
			a small boy, his father punished him for shooting a water pistol at 
			a neighbor." (laughs)
 
 Q: He’s accountable for his decisions.
 
 A: Yes. And he’s free to make those decisions either way. So is 
			everyone.
 
 Q: We have mountains of "psychological research" that deny that.
 
 A: Yeah, well, we have mountains of research that say the universe 
			started with an explosion. So?
 
 Q: Freedom exists.
 
 A: If not, what are we doing here?
 
 Q: Why are we talking at all?
 
 A: Right.
 
 Q: You can lead a patient to water, but you can’t make him drink.
 
 A: No. I make him drink.
 
 Q: How?
 
 A: I find an avenue that’s clear and I send him down that avenue.
 
 Q: Not sure I understand.
 
 A: I find a channel along which he can use his imagination, and I 
			can get him to do it, because it’s fairly easy for him.
 
 Q: You give him a taste of what’s that like.
 
 A: Many tastes.
 
 Q: Which takes ingenuity.
 
 A: I have a fair amount of that.
 
 Q: For instance, you have patients invent dreams.
 
 A: They’re used to dreaming. They know what it is. So I can tip the 
			scale a little and get them to create dreams they never had. But if 
			I had a patient who told me he never dreamed, I’d find another way.
 
 Q: Suppose you have a patient who digs in his heels and says he 
			doesn’t want to use his imagination at all?
 
 A: That’s the 
				"no." He makes his free choice.
 
 Q: Why does he choose "no?"
 
 A: Why? Because he prefers 
				"no" in this case, just like he prefers 
			to eat fish rather than spinach. He prefers the city to the country. 
			I take him at his word.
 
 Q: So if he doesn’t want to invent anything, you leave him alone?
 
 A: Hell no. I trick him.
 
 Q: How?
 
 A: Maybe he makes furniture in his garage. So we talk about that, 
			and I have him speculate about what kind of furniture he might make. 
			New things. I get him going in that direction. And finally I say, 
				"Well, suppose you were dreaming about furniture? What kind of crazy 
			thing might you see in the dream?" And he starts talking about a 
			chair with six legs. Whatever. Or he has a problem with his boss. 
			And I ask him what he’d really like to say to the boss and that 
			develops into a little role playing.
 
 Q: You play the boss and he plays himself.
 
 A: Sure. I’ve done that. So he’s making it up. And I lead him into 
			new places. As the boss, I’ll suddenly say, "You know, I have this 
			project I want to get you involved with. I need you to spy on a few 
			people who wormed their way into the company.
 
				  
				They’re plants from 
			our competitor." And that might work. We’d be off and running. He 
			says he doesn’t want to use his imagination, but he’s doing it. I 
			play out that string as long as I can. I had a guy, we ended up 
			talking about missions to another solar system, and he was the cook 
			on the ship.
 Q: Theater.
 
 A: Yeah.
 
 Q: Any roles are possible. I like it.
 
 A: No limits on that.
 
 Q: I could play a president and you could play the sap rising in a 
			tree in March.
 
 A: Why not?
 
 Q: I’ve always admired Psychodrama. But I’ve wanted to extend the 
			range of possible roles.
 
 A: Well, with any psychologist, that range tends to be limited, 
			because you’re thinking about direct therapy. You want to choose 
			roles that seem relevant to the patient’s problems.
 
 Q: But that’s not necessary. Maybe the wilder the roles, the better.
 
 A: As long as the patients is imagining and inventing, why not?
 
 Q: I once had a dream where I saw these poles in the ground. It was 
			as if I was looking at the universe. It was a huge space with poles 
			in the ground. That’s all it was. The poles were sunk very deep in 
			the ground. The idea was, this is the pattern. This is where things 
			are placed. It’s fixed. It doesn’t change its basic structure. That 
			was the feeling.
 
 A: But if you start playing all sorts of roles, the pattern does 
			change.
 
 Q: That’s right.
 
 A: Well, that’s what I do with patients. They have a kind of fixed 
			firmament.
 
				  
				So instead of trying to pry one pole out of the ground so 
			we can move it, I just have the patient invent. I get him to invent 
			dreams he never had, and the pattern shifts. Things that were fixed 
			become mobile. And when that happens, the system he has starts to 
			disintegrate. It’s like moving an iceberg.  
				  
				Do you get behind it and 
			push with your hands, or do you go to the root? The root is, a 
			person has a pattern of ideas and feelings, and he keeps it in 
			place. I have him imagine other things, and after a while the 
			pattern moves. It breaks apart.
 Q: How did you figure this out?
 
 A: Well, partly through conversations you and I have had about 
			painting. Also, from Psychodrama. And initially from old Tibetan 
			techniques. They were all about imagination.
 
 Q: This isn’t hypnotism.
 
 A: It’s reverse hypnosis.
 
 Q: Meaning?
 
 A: I once had a patient, a business type. An executive. He was 
			always falling asleep at his desk. It was like a sickness for him. 
			That’s how he saw it. And I told him flat-out that he was trying to 
			have a dream, and that was what was going on. He was trying to dream 
			something, and he couldn’t get to it.
 
				  
				We talked about that for a 
			long time. But then it occurred to me that he was in a sort of 
			waking trance. He was, every day, succumbing to a little bit of that 
			trance. So I put him in a light trance, in my office, and I tried to 
			find where that thing was coming from. I tried to locate the "state 
			of hypnosis" he was in. And I couldn’t.  
				  
				So I had him invent a few 
			dreams. And he was off like a rocket, making up dreams. It was 
			pretty powerful. We did this for six or seven sessions, and after 
			that he wasn’t falling asleep at work anymore. The change was quite 
			remarkable.
 Q: What conclusion did you come to?
 
 A: He had been in a waking trance at work because he was in a basic 
			trance, a more basic trance.
 
 Q: I don’t get it.
 
 A: He was in a trance 
				"about imagination." He was putting himself in 
			a trance so he wouldn’t use his imagination.
 
 Q: Oh.
 
 A: That’s the granddaddy of all trances, you see? A person puts 
			himself in a trance as a way of saying no to his own imagination. 
			And in this patient’s case, he would literally fall asleep. So when 
			I had him invent dreams, he went right with his imagination, and he 
			woke up. He didn’t need that waking trance anymore.
 
 Q: You’re saying everybody is in that trance.
 
 A: You bet. That’s what we’re dealing with here. That’s planet 
			Earth.
 
 Q: So people–
 
 A: Look, you talk to people about their imagination, and most of the 
			time they draw a blank. They don’t think you’re talking about 
			anything important. See? They say, "Yeah, well, that’s interesting, 
			but I have to get back to folding napkins."
 
				  
				Or moving pieces of 
			paper around on their desks. You could give that guy speed and he’d 
			seem to wake up, but he wouldn’t really know what to do. He wouldn’t 
			start imagining and inventing like crazy, because he’s still saying 
			no to that.
 A person pretends, on some level, that all this business about 
			imagination doesn’t mean much at all. But actually it’s very, very 
			big. The trance he’s in is all about not using his imagination. 
			That’s how he says no. He falls asleep. He walks around, but he’s 
			asleep. He’s asleep IN A PARTICULAR WAY.
 
				  
				He asleep when it comes to 
			imagination. Which means he’s asleep when it comes to the core of 
			existence!
 Q: Imagination.
 
 A: Yeah. Reality is what’s left over when a person doesn’t use his 
			imagination in a powerful way.
 
 Q: So if you had him play the role of God and you played the role of 
			Merlin, something might trigger him to wake up.
 
 A: Theater is waking up if you do it right. I had a patient who 
			wanted to be a choreographer in the worst way. She was a secretary 
			but she wanted to be a choreographer. So with her, it was a straight 
			line. I had her imagine all sorts of dances. You know, programs. 
			Performances. Fragments of ballets.
 
				  
				And eventually, she became a 
			choreographer. I used desire as the way in. Her desire. Because it 
			was right there, in the open. I used her desire to get her to use 
			her imagination, and eventually all the barriers fell. See, other 
			people would say I tapped into her desire to be something different 
			in her life. But that wasn’t it. I used her desire to get her to use 
			her imagination. And that was the key.  
				  
				Once she was rolling with 
			that, she woke up. She woke up from the trance. She was saying no to 
			her own imagination, and I helped her turn that no into a yes. 
			Sounds corny, but that was it. It wasn’t faked. It was real.
 Q: How long did it take?
 
 A: Six months.
 
 Q: But you didn’t undo any programming.
 
 A: What programming? Her refusal to invent? I don’t give a damn 
			about programming or conditioning. I’m not trying to undo anything. 
			I’m not trying to do surgery. I’m not trying to pick things apart.
 
 Q: Why not?
 
 A: My boy, you and I could sit here and make up thousands of quite 
			sophisticated patterns or systems of programming. We could invent 
			all sorts of crap that supposedly resides in consciousness that 
			keeps a person from imagining and inventing. We could speculate and 
			assume and presume.
 
				  
				We could play the roles of brain researchers or 
			whatever. But in my experience, there’s NOTHING THERE. There isn’t 
			any programming. Not really. Not when it comes to imagination. You 
			either imagine or you don’t imagine. My job is to get people to 
			imagine. I’m deviously clever about it. I’m a genius at getting 
			people to go out on some road of imagining.
 Q: If we wrote a book about the whole pattern of consciousness that 
			keeps people from imagining–
 
 A: If we did that, if we made it all up, we’d have people drooling 
			to learn about it. They’d come out of the woodwork. They’d pay good 
			money to learn all about why they’re screwed. People LOVE that. But 
			it wouldn’t amount to anything. The whole idea is much simpler than 
			that. You either imagine or you don’t. And my job is to get them to 
			imagine.
 
 Q: Not just in little drips and drops.
 
 A: No. FOREVER.
 
				
				End of interview
 
			
 
 
 
			
			JACK TRUE ON ULTIMATES -
			STEVE JOBS AND THE TECHNOLOGY FETISH
 
			by Jon RappoportOctober 29, 2011
 
			from
			
			JonRappoport Website 
			
 
			Here is another interview with my late friend and 
			colleague, Jack True, innovative hypnotherapist and philosopher.
 Twenty-three years after the conversation, I’ve written an 
			introduction to it:
 
			  
				
				STEVE JOBS AND THE TECHNOLOGY FETISHOver years and decades, I’ve watched religions and quasi-religions 
			spring up and flourish and disappear.
   
				I’ve watched some of them 
			become hard and nasty. Little dictatorships. I’ve watched people, 
			overnight, drop into fundamentalism.  
				  
				The clothes, the hair, the 
			slogans. I’ve watched spiritual movements soften and spread out into 
			the culture like attenuated marshmallow, hypnotizing their followers 
			into believing in imminent apocalypse.    
				The "good kind." Space 
			aliens. The Force. Gaia. The Universe. 
					
					"And a Prophet will arise among 
					you." 
				The eulogies for Steve Jobs testify to the love of his products. I’m 
			trying to figure out what the weeping was all about. The 
			inconsolable weeping.
 So let me speak as a representative of the Stone Age.
 
 I don’t own a cell phone or a laptop. I work at a sturdy three-piece 
			block that sits on my desk and doesn’t go anywhere. I don’t know who 
			manufactured it and I don’t care. I wrote my first book, AIDS INC. - 
			Scandal of the Century, on a portable typewriter in 1987.
 
				  
				The 
			manuscript, chapter by chapter, was retyped by my publisher on what 
			he called a word processor. I wrote The Secret Behind Secret 
			Societies on an ancient computer. The screen was black and the 
			letters were orange. The floppy disks were converted to little hard 
			discs by Dave.
 But when I was 22, in 1960, something new hit the scene. Audio 
			cassettes and cassette recorders. Until then, it was all reel to 
			reel. The shift to cassettes was rather astonishing, because you 
			could carry around a little machine and record people. You could 
			interview them. You could tape (badly) their music. (Much later, 
			when I did hours and hours of lectures for my San Diego publisher, I 
			would sit at my desk at home with a cassette fieldpack and a mike 
			and talk.)
 
 No one at the time (1960) went RELIGIOUS over audio cassettes. There 
			were no armies of geeks who publicly celebrated the change and made 
			Prophecies about the Dawn of a New Future.
 
 The first time I had an inkling that people were taken with the 
			technology itself was 1977, when a friend told me jazz musician Joe 
			Zawinul had a little inexpensive tape set-up he used to record 
			himself playing piano at home, and the sound quality was 
			professional.
 
 I asked my friend if he’d heard any of these home recordings. Was it 
			good music? He scratched his head. Of course he hadn’t heard them. 
			But that wasn’t the point, he said. The point was you could 
			establish a home studio for very little money. I persisted in 
			thinking the music was what was important. That’s my fetish.
 
 I had reacted to stereo the same way, when it first came in. The 
			idea that the sounds of different instruments were channeled into 
			separate speakers seemed like a bad idea. In clubs, I had never 
			heard music that way. Rather, it came at me like a wall of sound. 
			That’s what I was used to.
 
				  
				And surround-sound was particularly 
			absurd, because who cared about hearing music moving in from behind? 
			Ditto for headphones. I didn’t like them. They produced sound in a 
			space I didn’t care about. For me, the music (live) was always 
			coming from a bandstand and traveling to me on a line. Even if that 
			was actually an illusion, given the placement of speakers in the 
			club, it was the way I conceived it.
 Messianic prophets, of course, have been touting Digital as the 
			awakening of mass salvation. The machines and the programming are 
			what counts.
 
 And this machine worship is somehow tied in with the popularity of 
			the equipment, as if we have proof, by the degree of consumer 
			demand, that we’re indeed entering into a new age.
 
 A movie called The Social Network arrives on the scene. It’s hailed 
			as a masterpiece, a "reflection of the enormous changes the culture 
				is experiencing."
   
				Changes in what direction? Is the fact that a 
			billion people can announce their existence to "friends" achieving 
			some sort of instant magic? Are we supposed to celebrate the arrival 
			of a boy billionaire? Is the praise for Mark Zuckerberg’s work any 
			different from the kind of admiration ladled on the earlier 
			breakthrough in creating the Barbie Doll series?
 Does consumer demand automatically make a product vital and 
			wonderful and even spiritual?
 
 Think about how this demand (audience response) operates in the area 
			of politics/media–
 
					
					"Well, Joe, I think he handled 
					the press conference well. He said all the right things. He 
					didn’t make it appear he was reading from a script. The 
					Independent voters out there are going to like this." 
				In other words, it doesn’t really matter what the pol actually 
			stands for. It only matters that the broad audience will like how he 
			said what he said.
 And so a product like Facebook is judged solely in terms of how 
			consumers react to it. If they love it, it’s an innovation. It’s 
			satisfied a hunger. It must be brilliant. More than that, it must be 
			heraldic. It must be a step forward in the evolution of the species. 
			It might even be from God.
 
					
					"Zuckerberg knew what the public 
					wanted before the public knew. That was his genius." 
				As if, what else could genius be about? You see a hole in the 
			market, you develop a product, you sell it into that hole. 
					
					"Well, that’s all IQ has ever 
					been. Even a guy like Einstein - he knew the world was ready 
					for some kind of relativity, so he put together a theory and 
					sold it." 
				And the iPad. It’s wonderful because people want what it allows them 
			to do? Before it appeared, people didn’t realize how much they’d 
			love it? But then, there it was, and it struck a universal chord? 
			And therefore, it’s automatically AMAZING?
 So if the Roman Church has a billion members, that means the Pope is 
			a tremendous person? The Pilgrimage to Mecca is good because 
			millions and millions of people make it?
 
					
					"No, no, no! You don’t get it! 
					All these devices give us multiple options for instant 
					global communication. We can reach out anywhere in 
					milliseconds!" 
				Yes, I agree. It’s good. But that does mean people should actually 
			weep when Steve Jobs dies?
 Should we place flowers on the grave of the inventor of the Walkman?
 
 I’m just pointing out that times have changed. Larger numbers of 
			people have developed a deep cosmic love for machines. (Star Wars, 
			1977, sparked a profound passion for two of them.)
 
 When walking talking robots come along and serve your needs in the 
			home and at work, address you by name, anticipate what you’ll want 
			in the next five minutes, you’ll cry when they’re superseded by the 
			newer model. You’ll bury them in the backyard next to the dog. 
			You’ll hang their photos above the mantle. You’ll see a shrink to 
			work out the issue of their passing.
 
 Some of you.
 
 And when the man or woman who invented that robot dies, you’ll stand 
			outside their building and light candles. You’ll agitate for a 
			national holiday. You’ll watch the funeral on whatever television 
			looks like then. You’ll store holograms of this inventor next to 
			your bed, and you’ll activate them on occasion before going to 
			sleep.
 
 And people will say,
 
					
					"That saint knew what we wanted 
					before we did. That’s what made him so great. That’s real 
					greatness." 
				Churches will spring up. 
					
					"The very meaning of what a 
					thing is, is measured solely by how many people want it." 
				And as usual, the actual art involved in inventing those robots will 
			be overlooked. Because people will say such talent remains a mystery 
			locked in the genes of a very few. They will say the rest of us are 
			merely ordinary folk who have no imagination at all.
 But not to worry. We can put our picture up on a page and list our 
			interests and recount our activities of the day and share them with 
			other people who have the same interests. This is our miracle. This 
			is our reward and our basic hunger, and we can feed it.
 
 Rejoice!
 
 Look no further!
 
 Thousands, millions of little boys and girls will grow up who spend 
			their every waking hour calculating the sizes of audiences. This 
			many people attended that historic concert or that Super Bowl or 
			that post-election speech or the launch of that product or that 
			religious convocation or that parade. To them, the events themselves 
			will mean absolutely nothing.
 
				  
				And when these little boys and girls 
			grow up, they’ll find a career which allows them to do marketing. 
			Marketing will be metaphysics. It will describe and explain the 
			universe as well as it can be explained.
 And many robots will serve them. The marketers will be the most 
			important people in the world. The search for meaning will have 
			reached an apotheosis.
 
					
					"If X is a person, place, thing, 
					or event, what IS it? Its existence is identical with 
					however many people express praise for it. It is nothing 
					else, and it never was. All prior formulations were in 
					error. Persons, places, things, and events are not composed 
					of anything. They don’t exist at all, except insofar as 
					other people like them, love them, want them." 
				From which two corollaries flow: 
					
					It doesn’t matter why people want an X or to what use they put it.And that X which is most wanted is automatically the most important 
			thing in the world.
 
				Doll, fertilizer, dog, applesauce, cigarette, Facebook, nail polish, 
			the Bible, burger, slavery, iPad, Moses, brain implant, ice, 
			microwave, heroin, ice cream - whatever emerges from the pack with the 
			largest audience is THE FINAL AND PROFOUND MEANING OF VALUE.
 Amen.
 
 In this formulation, people don’t really have anything in their 
			souls except what they want to own. And the main item they pass back 
			and forth to one another is that preference. A few billion people 
			pass, back and forth: I LIKE THIS, I DON’T LIKE THAT. And what most 
			people like, whatever that is, must have been invented by a 
			transcendent genius.
 
 Facebook and iPad. Their inventors have to be Prophets, right? Not 
			just smart, not just clever.
 
 I don’t know. If I have to pick a messiah out of the marketplace, 
			I’m going with the guy who invented the belt for pants. Or the shoe. 
			Or the garage. Maybe the shovel.
 
 I’m weeping for the passing of the guy who came up with the concept 
			of haircuts. That’s my church. Why not?
 
 Maybe it’s too many people who took too many drugs. I don’t know. 
			But I look at an iPad and I remain unmoved. Yes, I know it’s smart. 
			Very smart, okay? It can play music but it doesn’t invent music, 
			right?
 
 By the way, if you think the revolution in Egypt was started by a 
			hundred "student intellectuals" in Cairo cafes working Facebook, you 
			need more drugs. Or fewer drugs.
 
 So that’s my shot from The Stone Age.
 
 And yes, I know I’m typing this on a computer, and I can post it in 
			seconds, and it can travel around the world in a few minutes, and 
			that’s pretty terrific. I know that. But I’m not thinking 
				"revelation" or "iPhone in the heavens" or "the new Jerusalem."
 
 I’m not sitting on the floor of my living room building a hill out 
			of dirt and debris, mimicking the place where the Mothership will 
			land and make Contact.
 
			
 Okay. That’s the introduction - here’s the interview with Jack True.
 
 
				
				Q (Jon): People seem to be taken with discovering ultimates. I mean, 
			they want to–
 A (Jack): They want to escape from themselves and meet up with the 
			Cosmic Radio Station.
 
 Q: The what?
 
 A: You know. It broadcasts information and wisdom at the same time. 
			And the wisdom has this fantastic quality to enter into the brain 
			and mind and transform them.
 
 Q: Like a drug.
 
 A: Well, yes.
 
 Q: So this is what people are looking for.
 
 A: All the time. They’re putting out SOS signals and waiting for a 
			response from the aether.
 
 Q: It’s like the wrap-up of a story.
 
 A: Exactly. They’re looking for the end of the story. It’s just like 
			television. Suppose, all of a sudden, all the dramas on TV were 
			shown - for, say, a month - with all the endings chopped out. People 
			would riot in the streets. They’d attack the White House. They’d 
			burn down cities.
 
 Q: Got to have the end.
 
 A: Absolutely. Write a story without an ending and people will say 
			you’re subversive. It must be scheme to take over the world.
 
 Q: You see this in your patients?
 
 A: Sure. They think, at first, that I’m the end of their story. I’m 
			the one who will write the conclusion. In the old days, when I was 
			doing standard hypnosis, I had a patient who was all screwed up 
			because he had a story wedged into his subconscious about a war. I 
			won’t go into all the detail, but I used to find plot lines floating 
			around in people’s skulls.
 
				  
				These stories came out under hypnosis. 
			They didn’t necessarily have anything to do with the patients’ 
			lives. They were just there. And this one was about a weird war. And 
			it had no ending. The patient didn’t know which side won. (laughs)
 Q: Weird.
 
 A: Very. But I was used to that kind of thing. So I had the guy make 
			up a dozen or so endings to the war. Just cook them up. And the 
			story drifted away and didn’t mean anything anymore. But I use that 
			illustration to show you how important endings can be to people. 
			Ending equals Ultimate. They’re essentially the same thing. "How 
				does it end? I have to know."
 
 Q: With an Ultimate, the person has to know and he has to possess it 
			himself. He has to be there and live it.
 
 A: And of course, that ending has to vector in from Somewhere Else. 
			You see?
 
				  
				That’s what magic is to most people. It’s the ending that 
			floats in from the aether. The final illumination and enlightenment. 
			The funny thing is, people will grab on to almost anything. The 
			culture gives it to them. The culture could give them cookies and 
			milk and they’d take it, as long as enough people accepted cookies 
			and milk as an Ultimate.  
				  
				That’s all it takes. Other people accepting 
			it. Cookies and milk. A king with divine right. A new car. A trip to 
			Italy. A climb up a mountain where a lost city once existed. Doesn’t 
			matter.
 Q: People are very keen on "the latest trends," when it comes to Ultimates.
 
 A: Yeah, that’s what I mean. The legitimacy of the Ultimate derives 
			from the fact that other people, lots of other people buy it. A guy 
			writes an article about a shaman in the jungles of South America who 
			says the Rain is coming.
 
				  
				And this Rain will be the last thing that 
			happens - and after that, we’ll all experience The Great Change and 
			that will be the ending. See? And that article gets repeated over 
			and over, until it becomes a Prophecy. And lots of people are 
			talking about it. Attributing special symbolic importance to it.  
				  
				And 
			then some person in Atlanta hears about the Rain from twelve of his 
			friends, and he says, "This is what I’ve been looking for. The Rain. 
			This is the ending I’ve been seeking." He’s got to have an ending. 
			So he grabs this one.
 Q: Because, if he didn’t have an ending?
 
 A: He would be on his own. He doesn’t like that. He doesn’t have the 
			wherewithal to figure out what to do then. He doesn’t see himself as 
			a person with extraordinary resources, so he doesn’t know where to 
			start, where to dig in.
 
 Q: So that’s where the Big Audience is.
 
 A: Hell yes. If you want to build a big audience, give them endings. 
			Narrow it down to One. The Ending. Teach it, preach it. The 
			enslavement of the whole world. Even that could be an ending. It 
			sounds awful, but at least it’s an Ultimate.
 
				  
				See? People will grab 
			that. I’m not talking about whether such an enslavement is actually 
			going to happen. Doesn’t matter. Sell it anyway. You’ll have an 
			audience. Anything that smells like an ending - they’ll grab it. Their 
			psychology demands it. Their conditioning demands it. They’ve got to 
			have an ending.
 Q: What about The New Future?
 
 A: Yes, that works. On one level, it sounds like a non-ending, but 
			to the mind it tends to register like an ending. To a lot of minds. 
			Because The Future comes across like a fait accompli. "From that 
			moment on, when the future arrives, everything will be different. 
			We’ll all be in a different space. We’ll know what we need to know."
 
				  
				Even freedom can work that way, if it’s twisted in the right way. 
			People will think of freedom as an ending because they don’t think 
			about action. They think about possession, as in owning something. "I own freedom." Therefore, everything is okay. They have that 
			abstract idea called freedom - it’s given to them on a silver platter, 
			and then that’s the ending. A complete delusion.
 Q: I suppose security and protection can work that way, too.
 
 A: Sure. More endings. "When the State has all the means necessary 
			to protect me, I’ll be in a safe cocoon, and then I’ll be fine. I’ll 
			be an Ultimate." It’s very, very, very shortsighted, of course, but 
			a mind can buy that.
 
				  
				BECAUSE THE MIND IS LOOKING FOR AN ENDING. A 
			REVELATION OF SOME KIND THAT PROMISES A VAGUE PERFECTION.  
				  
				Here’s 
			another one. "Technology will save us." What the hell does that 
			mean? How in the world is technology, all on its own, going to save 
			anybody?
 Q: It’s a totem
 
 A: It’s transplanting a very old idea on to a new thing. The 
			technology is new, and the idea of Pagan Illumination or Tribal 
			Apotheosis or whatever you want to call it is grafted on to that. 
			The technology buffs see themselves as a kind of special 
			tribe - mostly, I think, because they want to believe they have a 
				"primitive kind of strength."
 
				  
				It’s just like kids who buy caps with 
			the logo of their favorite sports team on it. But in this case, the 
			technology crowd –a lot of them - come from a cerebral background. 
			They didn’t play sports. They want to seem rough and tough in some 
			way, so they love this idea that they’re in a tribe, a clan, with 
			special powers. It is like rubbing a totem or an amulet. 
				  
				And they 
			build this up in their minds, and then they think it’s their 
			Ultimate - they’re members of the Tribe who will take the rest of us 
			into the Promised Land. They’re the muscle-minded leaders. They’re 
			really the ones who’ll take us into Outer Space.
 Q: The technology tribe.
 
 A: I had a patient who was trying to bring me into one of his groups 
			of friends.
 
				  
				See, I would be the "mind specialist." I would be the 
			guy who had all sorts of wise things to say about the power of the 
			mind. I opted out, of course. I didn’t want to have anything to do 
			with it. Besides, this guy had a boatload of problems with his wife. 
			He needed some serious help. He had gone into marriage thinking it 
			was the Ultimate that would end all his problems.  
				  
				And he found out 
			he couldn’t talk to his wife at all. He was tongue-tied. When he 
			came to me, he thought I would put him in a trance and make some 
			suggestions to him, and then he’d wake up and all his problems would 
			be solved. It took me a few months just to convince him that 
			wouldn’t work.
 Q: Why wouldn’t it work?
 
 A: Because a person isn’t a machine. Despite all evidence to the 
			contrary (laughs), a human being is alive. These technology people 
			have all sorts of naïve ideas.
 
 Q: So what did you do with him?
 
 A: I put him in a very light trance, and I had him invent lots of 
			dreams about his wife. Situations that would never occur in ordinary 
			life. He came up with space voyages and trips into underground 
			cities and so on. I mean, LOTS of dreams. This went on for many 
			sessions. And then something happened to him. He began to see he 
			could talk to his wife - about what was most important to him.
 
				  
				He was 
			in love with the idea of going out into space. So began to talk to 
			her about that. She was very relieved that he talking at all. She 
			listened. And then, gradually, she opened up to him. And it went 
			from there. He was staggered to discover that they could talk about 
			things.
 Q: Did you know it would turn out that way?
 
 A: I had a hunch and I followed it. A lot of people are afraid of 
			what happens on a day to day basis.
 
 Q: What do you mean?
 
 A: They think if they just give in to living every day, something 
			bad will happen. So they look for an Ultimate. But the Ultimate can 
			be injected into the every-day reality and transmute it. Completely 
			transform it. And when that happens, the Ultimate turns into 
			something else. Not just a Final Principle, but a path into action. 
			That’s the test.
 
 Q: What’s the test?
 
 A: Take the most profound thing you think, and inject it into your 
			life. See what happens to it then. Maybe it collapses and falls 
			apart. Maybe it can’t stand up to the every-day. But maybe you find 
			what you’re looking for. You get a platform for real exploration. 
			Let me give you a negative example. You’ve got all these military 
			and intelligence people playing around with computers.
 
				  
				After a 
			while, because computers process information, these people think 
			they’ve got their hands on something mystical. Pieces of 
			information, run through machines - they see that as mystical.  
				  
				Because 
			they’re buffered off from life. They live in compounds. They get 
			weird. They play their games and they think they’re approaching some 
			sort of religious revelation that will give them the power to 
			control everything with information and the machines that process 
			information. They think that "everything is information." See, 
			that’s an Ultimate.  
				  
				But these people, as I say, are living an 
			artificial existence. They never really get to test that theory in 
			real life. They have no real life they can just walk into. 
			Everything for them is military. They think that there is a sum 
			total of pieces of information, and if they can build big enough 
			computers, they can run the sum total and something like "God" will 
			come out the other end and they’ll have it.  
				  
				But information is just 
			information. It isn’t naturally imbued with power or life or the 
			kind of subjective slant that can give a person leverage for his 
			future. And neither will the sum of information. No matter how big 
			the sum is.
 Q: The same thing is true about technology in general.
 
 A: Yes. I mean, you can become much more facile when you have better 
			technology. But we’ve all known facile people. What do they get in 
			the end? Nothing. You need more than facility.
 
 Q: So what are we supposed to do? Strip away technology and strip 
			away all that facility from people?
 
 A: Can’t do that. Doing all this work with patients, I’ve learned 
			you can’t do "surgery." You can’t remove the things that are 
			bothering people. You certainly can’t remove things people think 
			they must have. You can’t take that away. Even if you could, it 
			wouldn’t do any good.
 
				  
				You have to establish a setting in which they 
			discover, for themselves, other options, other ways of living and 
			being. When I have people, for example, in a light trance and I have 
			them invent many dreams, all sorts of dreams, that’s what’s 
			happening. The accretion of other possibilities. It bleeds into 
			their consciousness. 
				  
				Sometimes quickly, sometimes slowly. You take a 
			horse who’s spent many years dragging a carriage around, with a bit 
			and harness, and you put him out into a field, he’ll slowly realize 
			he has space. And one day, he’ll trot, and then he’ll run. He’ll 
			start running. He’ll get to that. Well, with a human being, there 
			isn’t just one thing he’ll do. He’s not just destined to realize one 
			thing he was built for.  
				  
				A human has all sorts of choices. But he’ll 
			come to them, and he’ll make a choice, given enough time and enough 
			space.
 Q: And enough invention.
 
 A: Yeah. When I have a person inventing dreams, that’s the elixir. 
			That’s the thing that opens up the spaces. Many spaces. That’s what 
			pulls the trigger on transformation. In the absence of invention, 
			people will reach for some sort of unmoving Ultimate, because that’s 
			all they can see.
 
 Q: But you’re not against technology.
 
 A: Of course not. You think I want to live without a light bulb or a 
			refrigerator? I like technology. I want to see the human race get 
			out into space in a big way.
 
				  
				But if the love of technology becomes 
			an Ultimate, I think we’ll lose the necessary will. We’ll mess 
			around with lesser technical things. We won’t see the need and the 
			adventure on the big stage. We’ll bog down. Going into deep space is 
			about us, not the machines. It’s destiny for us, not the machines. 
			 
				  
				If you asked people whether they’d rather have a little device they 
			could put on the roof of their car that would move around and wash 
			and wax the car and crawl under the hood on its own and check the 
			oil - or a real rocket ship that would take ten people to the middle 
			of the galaxy, I don’t know…I think a majority of people would 
			rather have the little thing for the car.  
				  
				And if ten companies made 
			those little machines for the car, and if people talked to each 
			other about the relative benefits of the little machines - you see how 
			we can get caught up in technology as the main subject, when it’s 
			just an adjective hanging from us and OUR future.
 Q: The Church of the Robot.
 
 A: Yeah, that’s coming, too. "I named my robot Lulu. 
				What’s your robot’s name?" "Mike. Can Lulu make dinner in less 
				than ten minutes from scratch?"
 
			
 
 
			  
			
			JACK TRUE INTERVIEWED -
			THE TITANIC FUTURE
 
			by Jon RappoportOctober 26, 2011
 
			from
			
			JonRappoport Website 
			
 
			Here is another interview (from 1991) with my late 
			friend and colleague, hypnotherapist Jack True. I’ve been publishing 
			these conversations for years now.
 If this is first time you’ve read one, you’re in for a treat. Jack 
			was a magnificent thinker and practitioner. He never tried to talk 
			down to people. He let fly with his deepest insights, no matter how 
			revolutionary or complex.
 
			  
			He always laid it all on the line.
 
				
				Q (Rappoport): What was it you were saying before we sat down?
 A (Jack True): The major fact of our time is that there are large 
			numbers of people who have freed themselves from the prison of 
			ideologies and fundamentalisms. They just don’t know where to go 
			next. At some level of mind, they’re considering magic.
 
 Q: The basic confusion surrounding this subject [magic] hasn’t been 
			well articulated. It comes down to a question: is magic a space you 
			enter, or is it something you create?
 
 A: You just said a mouthful. Let’s get to that later. Meanwhile, I 
			want to talk about experiences I’ve had with patients.
 
 Q: Go ahead.
 
 A: With a surprising number of people, under hypnosis, we find that 
			they already have a picture of the future.
 
 Q: Their own future?
 
 A: Well, yes, but it’s more than that. They have a vision of the 
			future of the planet.
 
 Q: You mean an opinion about the future?
 
 A: No. This is much bigger than that. It’s as if the whole future, 
			like a big chunk of reality, is just sitting there, in their 
			subconscious. They had no idea it was there until they bumped into 
			it.
 
 Q: Like a -
 
 A: Like a whole novel. A book. The future. It feels to them like 
			precognition. It’s knowledge about what hasn’t happened yet.
 
 Q: Really.
 
 A: Yes.
 
 Q: Each one has a "book" about the future? Each book is different?
 
 A: See, if we suppose that somewhere there is a record of past, 
			present, and future, what some people call, for example, the Akashic 
			Records, what’s the assumption?
 
 Q: What do you mean?
 
 A: What’s the common assumption about what these records reveal?
 
 Q: You tell me.
 
 A: The assumption is these future events are laid out, they’re 
			described, they’re revealed. You know, THIS will happen, and then 
			THAT will happen.
 
 Q: Well, sure.
 
 A: No. Something is wrong with that. I think people have been 
			misinterpreting what the Akashic Records are all about. They’re 
			taking too narrow a view. They’re looking through narrow filters.
 
 Q: And if you take off the filters?
 
 A: You see hundreds of different equally-convincing futures sitting 
			there, side by side. That’s what’s in the Records. Not just one 
			future. And what I’m saying is…
 
 Q: The exact same situation is mirrored in your patients.
 
 A: You bet. Exactly. In other words, the Akashic Records are 
			reallydistributed in the subconscious mind of people. That’s where 
			they are. It’s a whole vast library.
 
 Q: Keep going.
 
 A: This is the hard part. You have to be there with a patient, when 
			he’s under hypnosis, to see and experience and feel how CONVINCING 
			his "book of the future" is. It’s quite fantastic. It isn’t some 
			little dribbling thing about what’s going to happen fifty years from 
			now. It’s titanic. It’s as if you came across a whole block of 
			hidden treasure in the patient’s subconscious. There it is, 
			undisturbed, in a cave. No dust on it. It’s pristine and very 
			detailed. And when the patient describes it, it just rolls out. It’s 
			a river of information.
 
 Q: That’s pretty spectacular.
 
 A: Here’s what I’ve found with some patients. They’re already living 
			in the "book of the future" that’s in their subconscious. They 
			already have a role in that future.
 
 Q: Even though they’re here and now…
 
 A: They’re acting in the present according to their role in the 
			future. It sounds weird, I know. But that’s what’s happening.
 
 Q: That would make a person pretty maladjusted.
 
 A: Yes and no. No, because the power of that 
				"future role" is so 
			strong, they are acting in the present to bring about that future. 
			That’s what they’re doing.
 
 Q: But they have no idea they’re doing it.
 
 A: None. They’re totally in the dark. Until they get a look at the 
			future book in their subconscious. Then everything changes for them. 
			Then they open their eyes.
 
 Q: It’s funny, you’re turning the traditional view of psychology on 
			its head.
 
 A: Yes. Supposedly, what’s happened to you in the past has a 
			tremendous influence on how you act in the present. What I’m saying 
			is, the future that’s embedded in your subconscious is a much 
			stronger influence on how you act in the present.
 
 Q: It’s as if a person has been cast in a stage play that’s going to 
			take place in the future.
 
 A: Yes, let’s say the play is going to take place four hundred years 
			in the future. But you start acting out that role right now.
 
 Q: So the present is the sum total of all futures?
 
 A: (laughs) Yeah. That’s what I was getting to. The present moment 
			in Earth history is the sum total or average of all the futures that 
			are embedded in people’s subconscious.
 
 Q: All right. What happens when a person becomes aware he has a 
			whole future embedded in his subconscious mind?
 
 A: He recovers power.
 
 Q: Just like that.
 
 A: When he sees what that future is, a tremendous amount of energy 
			is suddenly available to him. How can I put this? It’s as if he has 
			this 5000-piece orchestra in his mind. He doesn’t know that, all 
			right? But he’s a trumpet player in that orchestra. That’s his 
			future role. And in one way or another, perhaps symbolically, he’s 
			acting out that role in the present, right now. But because he can’t 
			hear the whole orchestra, he doesn’t feel the overall power. Then, 
			under hypnosis, he finds the orchestra. He hears the whole thing. 
			NOW the power of that transfers to him.
 
 Q: And what does he do with that power?
 
 A: Yes. That’s the key question. The answer is, he has to create 
			with it. There’s nothing else he can do with it. That’s what the 
			power is for. Here is the catch, the important thing. Now that’s 
			he’s seen the future embedded in his mind, for the first time, he 
			has a choice. He can use that power to create anything he wants to. 
			It’s up to him.
 
 Q: So in hypnosis, you give people the experience of power.
 
 A: That’s what I’m doing. That power is magic. And to answer the 
			question you posed, at the beginning, about what magic is, it’s not 
			about entering into a space of magic. It’s really about creating.
 
 Q: Creating magic.
 
 A: With that power. Yes.
 
 Q: The history of Western philosophy had three basic phases. The 
			first episode was taken up in depicting What Exists as a final 
			Reality. Metaphysics. The second episode shifted the focus to the 
			investigation of how we perceive and know. Epistemology. And the 
			third phase, which has barely begun, involves imagination and 
			creative power - in other words, inventing that which has never 
			existed before.
 
 A: I would agree with that. Creating is magic.
 
 Q: Extraordinary talents and so-called paranormal abilities are 
			actually offshoots of imagination?
 
 A: Talent, which seems to be a native and natural phenomenon, is 
			created by the individual below the threshold of his own conscious 
			mind.
 
 Q: Why does the individual create talent he can’t remember creating?
 
 A: (laughs) He wants to be a human being who can do extraordinary 
			things. He doesn’t want to step out of the shadows and reveal 
			himself as a magician. Here is the real question: what do you do 
			when you are imagining and creating enough of unique reality that it 
			glides past the eyes of others like a silent and invisible train?
 
 Q: You see the need to bring others to perceive the level at which 
			you’re creating.
 
 A: Maybe so. Because if you are creating magic, you will run into 
			many, many, many people who are blind to that. They won’t see it. 
			They just won’t see it.
 
 Q: Let’s get back to this "book of the future" in a person’s mind. 
			Any idea where that comes from?
 
 A: I think so, yes. In one sense, and you have to look at this from 
			several points of view…in one sense, the "book" is basically a 
			long-term creation by the person himself, out of bits and pieces.
 
 Q: It doesn’t come down from some "higher power."
 
 A: The higher power belongs to the person. But I would go further. 
			In some sense, the person has already been to the future.
 
 Q: Explain that.
 
 A: It’s hard to put it into words. It’s more than [the person 
			having] an opinion about the future. It’s more than [the person 
			engaging in] mere prediction. It’s that, plus other factors. It’s 
			supernatural or paranormal, for lack of better terms. The person has 
			already been there. He’s been to the future. He’s gone beyond where 
			it’s supposed to be possible to go. It’s not just seeing. It’s more 
			like traveling. It’s a combination of creating and traveling.
 
 Q: That’s pretty far-out.
 
 A: Consciousness can travel. Consciousness isn’t bounded. It can go 
			anywhere. But we assume that isn’t so. We live by other rules.
 
 Q: What do you mean by that last sentence?
 
 A: We’re invested in a picture of reality. In that picture, certain 
			things are possible and certain things aren’t. We bought stock in a 
			restricted picture of reality.
 
 Q: Why?
 
 A: Well, I could give all sorts of answers to that question. It 
			depends on what level we are looking at.
 
 Q: Level of consciousness?
 
 A: Yes. Consciousness doesn’t necessarily see a limited picture of 
			reality as a negative thing. It sees it as an opportunity. A 
			configuration, if you will. You’re a painter. You can paint on a 
			tiny canvas or a huge one. Both have their advantages. Do you see? 
			We’re able to have different and unique kinds of experiences within 
			this picture of reality that we’ve bought. We have different 
			options.
 
				  
				Even though we’re living inside this picture of reality, 
			it’s an infinity. There are an infinity of things we can do. It’s 
			just, you might say, a different infinity of things than what we 
			could do inside a much larger picture of reality.
 Q: So you’re saying that, inside this picture of reality we’ve 
			bought, magic isn’t supposed to be possible.
 
 A: I’m sort of saying that, yes. The extreme boundaries [of this 
			picture of reality] are fuzzy. But you see, there are rules and then 
			there are Rules with a capital R. They’re different.
 
 Q: How so?
 
 A: Rules with a big R…that would be a final kind of judgment 
			rendered by some external higher power. That would be, "No, you 
			can’t do magic in this sphere [picture of reality]." That’s not what 
			I mean. That’s not the case. We set our own rules. We bought our own 
			picture of reality, this reality, and we set the standards and 
			rules. So we can break them. It’s possible. It’s going against the 
			grain, but so what? We can do that.
 
 Q: It’s like undoing a habit?
 
 A: Yes. For example, we have the habit of stashing what we can’t 
			create or are not supposed to create - where do we stash it? In the 
			future. That’s where we can put all the things we don’t do inside 
			this picture of reality.
 
 Q: Which creates a kind of longing.
 
 A: Yes.
 
 Q: A nostalgia for the future.
 
 A: Right.
 
 Q: And wouldn’t you say that, at this point in the history of Earth 
			culture, that longing is increasing?
 
 A: I would. So we have a collective force that is building up for 
			the magic that we have put in the future. That desire is growing.
 
 Q: In that sense, then, the limited picture of reality we’ve 
			invested in is expanding?
 
 A: Yes. The more important sense of 
				"expanding universe"…this is 
			what it is.
 
 Q: Can this picture of reality expand to the breaking point?
 
 A: That’s what I see.
 
 Q: We’ve had enough.
 
 A: We’re tired of it. We’re fed up.
 
 Q: That’s a natural outcome?
 
 A: Oh yes. I would say it is.
 
 Q: Because when I look at the history of the arts, that’s what I see 
			there. The trend, for some time, has been in the direction of 
			cracking apart the old picture.
 
 A: Sure. I would agree. But you see, in that process, you need 
			people who can understand what, for example, the arts are doing.
 
 Q: Meaning what?
 
 A: You can have, say, a hundred thousand people who are breaking 
			apart the old picture, but what happens if…let me put this another 
			way. When you break apart the old picture, you’re changing the modes 
			of perception. That goes along with the breakthrough. You’re 
			actually speaking another kind of language, one that has different 
			meanings. And those meanings don’t exist inside the old picture of 
			reality. This is crucial to understand.
 
 Q: You’re saying that, in order to keep existing inside the old 
			picture, you have to restrict the field or the range of meaning.
 
 A: Absolutely. You see? Inside the picture, you can express a whole 
			range of meanings, but if you go outside that range, it doesn’t 
			compute. It doesn’t get across. That’s one way you actually hold the 
			restricted picture together. You restrict the range of expressions 
			and things that MEAN SOMETHING. People limit their comprehension of 
			meaning. So if you come along and start talking with meanings that 
			go outside the accepted range, people scratch their heads and shrug 
			and say they don’t understand.
 
 Q: As an analogy, it’s like the light spectrum.
 
 A: Right. We limit the range of what we can see. So if someone comes 
			along and shows us a wave-length that isn’t in the so-called visible 
			spectrum and says, look at this, we say there is nothing there.
 
 Q: It’s the same thing with meaning.
 
 A: Yes. We have languages that, by their structure, permit a certain 
				"territory" of meaning. It’s big. But it isn’t everything. Not by a 
			long shot. And as long as we hold on to these languages for dear 
			life, we’re going to claim we have a monopoly on all possible 
			meaning.
 
 Q: And therefore we’re going to harden the structure of the picture 
			of reality we’ve bought into.
 
 A: Yes. It’s that structure that’s weakening. People are accepting 
			meanings that are borderline. They’re stretching their 
			comprehension.
 
 Q: Everything we’re talking about here has the ring of a state of 
			hypnosis.
 
 A: It’s programming at deep levels.
 
 Q: Self-inflicted.
 
 A: That’s what many people find the hardest to accept - that they’re 
			hypnotizing themselves.
 
 Q: Hypnotizing themselves into believing that MEANING can only exist 
			within a narrow framework. And everything else is complete 
			gibberish.
 
 A: That’s called society. Civilization. That’s what you get as the 
			collective outcome. That’s why people will sign up for going out and 
			trying to expand various empires through conquest. Because 
			essentially, they’ll blame everything else under the sun for the 
			programming they’ve inflicted on themselves. Of course, it’s all 
			done on an unconscious level.
 
 Q: It’s been my contention that consciousness creates more 
			consciousness, and in that sense, existence is dynamic. There is no 
			such thing as a "final" state of consciousness.
 
 A: That’s a very fertile area. You’re going against the idea that 
			there is an ultimate reality.
 
 Q: That’s right. Whether you look at reality as something external 
			to us or internal to our state of consciousness, there is no final 
			place where you wind up and discover you’ve reached the destination.
 
 A: Every experience I’ve had with patients tells me the same thing. 
			And what we’ve been discussing here - pictures of reality - that also 
			confirms it for me.
 
 Q: We buy this picture of reality, because living inside it, we can 
			create more and new consciousness, consciousness that never existed 
			before.
 
 A: Every reality affords the same opportunity. People have the wrong 
			idea about infinity. They say, for example, that there is a state of 
			infinite consciousness - but you see, that’s really like saying you 
			have all the consciousness there is to have. That’s not so. You 
			never have it all, because you create it, and creation has no limit.
 
 Q: Infinite consciousness isn’t like some gigantic coat you can slip 
			on. It doesn’t already exist.
 
 A: No. We keep creating it.
 
 Q: This limited picture of reality we live in - how long can it last?
 
 A: As long as we want it to.
 
 Q: But the individual doesn’t have to wait for everyone else to 
			break out. He can exit from the picture.
 
 A: Sure. But other people won’t necessarily understand he’s escaped.
 
 Q: Because other people are still loyal to all the restrictions 
			they’ve programmed into themselves.
 
 A: It’s a tug of war. Old meaning versus new meaning. Science, for 
			all its advances, is still basically married to old meaning. Old 
			ways of formulating language.
 
 Q: Old meaning has a kind of structure.
 
 A: It gives birth to many structures, but they all obey the same old 
			rules. They may be fascinating and instructive, but they still obey 
			the old rules that say, "THIS means something, but THAT is 
				meaningless."
 
 Q: I remember a philosophical text called The Meaning of Meaning. It 
			was actually about literary criticism. IA Richards.
 
 A: You can actually analyze 
				"old meaning" and see something about it 
			how operates. For instance, if words describe what exists in the 
			physical world, those words mean something.
 
				  
				If you have a sentence 
			that has a subject, verb, and object, the sentence probably means 
			something. But if you have a sentence that obscures or erases the 
			distinction between subject, object, and verb, then that is often 
			called "meaningless." When you stop and think about it, though, why? 
			Why can’t we understand and comprehend outside that linguistic 
			structure?  
				  
				The answer is simple. We’ve HEAVILY programmed ourselves 
			NOT to understand anything outside that structure. We’re ABSOLUTELY 
			sure it’s meaningless. That’s how good the programming is.
 Q: So there is a major connection between magic and language.
 
 A: Language, as we usually accept it, is built to rule out magic.
 
 Q: The language we use rules out many possible relationships between 
			things.
 
 A: It also rules out the KINDS of relationships that are possible. 
			See, let’s take this example. A man looks at a radio on a table and 
			he focuses on it, and it rises three feet into the air. Most people 
			would say, if there was no trick involved, that was magic. But it’s 
			still within the realm of subject, verb, and object. We may not 
			believe the event happened, but we understand what it means.
 
				  
				But 
			there is another level of magic, where the basic relationships of 
			subject, verb, and object are gone. New kinds of relationships enter 
			in. We don’t have words in our language to describe those 
			relationships. So we don’t see them. They’re invisible. This would 
			be magic that is invisible to us.
 Q: Based on different kinds of relationships.
 
 A: Right.
 
 Q: Then we have people who attempt to explain mysteries by claiming 
			that things we already know about are the cause of that mystery. 
			Like genes.
 
 A: Sure. These scientists try to make their speculations into 
			respectable theories. They’ll say that all human behavior is 
			explainable by genes. You have a gene for this and a gene for that.
 
 Q: There is, for example, they’ll say, a gene for imagination.
 
 A: Imagination is a mystery to them. They want to explain it away. 
			So they claim a gene controls it. Language does the same sort of 
			thing. It attempts to reduce mysteries down to relationships we’re 
			programmed to accept, relationships we’re familiar with. But in the 
			process, it misses the magic completely.
 
 Q: You actually see this kind of programming in your patients?
 
 A: All the time. You just have to want to find it. I’m NOT talking 
			about making hypnotic suggestions to people to guide them where you 
			want them to go. All I do is use hypnosis to put them in a light 
			trance where they can focus more clearly. Then we nose around in the 
			interior landscape. We see what’s there. Patients encounter their 
			own programming. They encounter…it’s not exactly RULES…it’s more 
			like cardinal illustrations of the kinds of relationships that are 
			meaningful…it’s almost like looking at the simple grammar of our 
			language.
 
 Q: But you don’t try to dismantle that programming, do you?
 
 A: Why should I? That would be like saying we should all destroy the 
			English language. Ridiculous. That would be like saying that, in 
			order to teach a person to fly, you lead him out on a cliff, and 
			then you blow up the cliff under him, and then he’ll fly. No, you 
			use the cliff as a platform, and then one way or another, you figure 
			out a way to fly off the cliff into the sky.
 
 Q: Well, if you look at the history of poetry, that’s what you see. 
			Poets who use the language to keep stretching "the meaning of 
			meaning." The expansion of meaning and possible relationships 
			between things.
 
 A: Which is why imagination is magic.
 
 Q: I would say that on this planet, imagination is just getting 
			started.
 
 A: I agree. My new experimental ideas about therapy are all in that 
			direction. Getting people to invent realities.
 
 Q: Whereas society is moving in the direction of turning out 
			androids.
 
 A: Societies always do that. It’s their bread and butter. They 
			create Reality Soldiers. People dedicated to the picture of reality 
			we’re living in. It’s the organizing principle.
 
 Q: There are lots of names for that.
 
 A: Doesn’t matter what you call it. It’s the same pattern. You’re 
			trying to organize people. It works up to a certain point, and then 
			it doesn’t work anymore. The already limited picture of reality 
			shrinks. It becomes a pressure on the psyche, and the psyche wants 
			to break out.
 
 Q: But people always think that when they break out, they’re going 
			to find a super-reality sitting behind ordinary reality.
 
 A: Well, basically, when you break out, you don’t find ultimate 
			reality. You find you’re the reality. Which makes absolutely no 
			sense at all unless you’re creating. You’re the center, and you 
			create.
 
 Q: For many people, that’s an idea they don’t understand.
 
 A: For them, it’s an invisible idea. It goes right by them, and they 
			don’t notice it.
 
 Q: There are lots of smart people who try to use the limited picture 
			of reality to explain itself.
 
 A: If I understand what you mean, that’s like asking an elephant to 
			describe his digestive processes. But let me take that ball and run 
			with it.
 
				  
				There are sociologists and psychologists and futurists and 
			computer types, information analysts, who try to make predictions 
			about the future based on the concept that events and people are in 
			a meaningful flux. They document trends. They see what seem to be 
			random occurrences as moving toward a meeting place, where they will 
			combine to produce an important change. 
				  
				They factor in all sorts of 
			aspects, from earthquakes and weather to population shifts, to the 
			innovation of new technology, to political developments, to what is 
			happening in markets, and so on - all these factors - and then they make 
			their predictions.
 Q: They believe in Pattern.
 
 A: Well, that’s the whole point. They believe the background context 
			of the picture of reality contains moving parts that conspire to 
			produce change, sometimes momentous change. They might not admit it, 
			but they think the conspiracy of these moving parts is inherent in 
			reality itself.
 
				  
				They, the researchers, are searching out these 
			relevant moving parts, and they’re pretending to see how the flux is 
			coming to a place where the parts collide and make something very 
			important happen. What’s significant is that these people are smart, 
			they’re in good jobs, they’re listened to, and they constitute a 
			kind of elite.  
				  
				They are opinion leaders, you might say. Everyone 
			thinks they’re a "new intelligentsia." This is the supposed cutting 
			edge of knowledge. It’s a cultural phenomenon that these futurists 
			have risen to the top of the heap. Here’s what is basically 
			happening: by assuming that there IS some inherent pattern in the 
			ways things work in this picture of reality, by assuming that this 
			pattern comes together at certain moments to produce THE FUTURE, we 
			have a new class of people who are, actually, RE-ENFORCING THE 
			PICTURE OF REALITY WE’RE ALL LIVING IN.  
				  
				While other people are 
			breaking apart the picture, these futurists are shoring it up. And I 
			think you’re going to see a lot more from these so-called 
			experts…because the Reality Soldiers are becoming more desperate. 
			They feel the ground rumbling under their feet. They sense that the 
			cluster of Old Meaning is breaking apart and new meanings are 
			leaking in.  
				  
				They don’t want that to happen, so they’re floating a 
			spurious science of prediction, they’re claiming that the picture of 
			reality can tell us "all about reality"…but that is a sham. It’s not 
			true.
 Q: Fake science is being invented all over the place to cement in 
			the old picture of limited reality. The dam is breaking, and these 
			people are trying to patch it up.
 
 A: Yes. You can see that everywhere. For example, in the area you 
			cover as a reporter, health and medicine, the old picture is 
			disintegrating. People are realizing that disease can be best 
			understood by taking into account the whole body, not just one piece 
			here and one piece there.
 
				  
				And if you take into account the whole 
			body and the whole person, the picture of reality gets bigger, and 
			what passed for correct assessment in the past is outmoded. This is 
			viewed as a threat. So researchers keep inventing fake diseases and 
			mental disorders to try to keep the old picture in place. And 
			they’re failing. I think that’s also true on a larger scale. 
				  
				I hope 
			we’re going to see extremes of new meaning leaking in all over. Then 
			we’ll see some magic. 
			
 
 
			  
			  
			
			
			JACK TRUE IN CONVERSATION -
			JACK TRUE AND THE MAGIC THEATER 
			by Jon RappoportOctober 22, 2011
 
			from
			
			JonRappoport Website 
			
 
			Here is another interview with Jack True, my late 
			friend and colleague, hypnotherapist extraordinaire.
 This conversation contributed to the eventual creation of the Magic 
			Theater.
 
 
				
				Q (Jon): Talk about the word 
				"identity."
 A (Jack): It’s a poor word, a lousy word, a deceptive word, a 
			meaningless word - because it seems to encompass the whole individual. 
			If a patient "loses his identity," he’s got nothing left. He’s in a 
			vacuum. That’s nonsense. He doesn’t lose his identity. I prefer "role." There are many roles. You can pick one and act it out, and 
			if you don’t like it, you can throw it away and pick another one. 
			There is no "identity." It’s a phony word, in this context.
 
 Q: So in hypnotherapy, you don’t fool around with 
				"identity."
 
 A: Of course not. I sometimes present a stage, a theater, though. 
			It’s a space where the patient can picture anything he wants to. 
			It’s open. It invites creative action. It has characters on it. Not 
			mine, the patient’s. A stage gives you real experience.
 
 Q: An example?
 
 A: The patient invents a scene. Let’s say he puts a mother up there 
			arguing with her son. Drama. Then, a few stragglers show up and mill 
			around. Then, a tiger walks out on the stage and starts talking.
 
 Q: A tiger?
 
 A: Sure, why not? You have something against tigers? He talks about 
			his life, or he talks about the price of coffee, or he talks about 
			the mother and the son. I’m not doing any of this, you understand? 
			I’m not making any suggestions. The patient is. He fleshing out the 
			scene. Some remarkable things happen. Often, it’s fun. The patient 
			feels liberated. He can populate a stage with characters.
 
 Q: Sounds a little like Psychodrama.
 
 A: Yes, but you see, the patient picks the roles. And there is no 
			way to know why. Or what connections exist to him, if any. It’s wide 
			open. Just like existence. Why hem it in. We have whole universes to 
			play with. Once I had a man who staged a whole Central American 
			revolution on stage, in his imagination. As I recall it was secretly 
			bankrolled by Coca Cola. He was laughing much of the time. He had 
			CIA people moving in and out, KGB, Chinese spies, ETs. It was like a 
			Bosch painting reworked by Groucho Marx. At the next session, he 
			told me he’d just had the happiest week of his life.
 
 Q: Opening up things.
 
 A: Of course. That’s the whole point. You invent characters and you 
			have them talk to each other and do things to each other. I picture 
			it as a kind of tinker-toy set expanding out of the mind. A set of 
			characters.
 
				  
				It’s the change from mono-theme, which is the setting of 
			the mind under usual circumstances, one theme, one attitude, one 
			circle of emotions you play over and over - you extend mind with 
			characters popping out all over the place. You theatricalize the 
			mind, and the mind seems to want that, seems to have been waiting 
			for it.
 Q: The word "mono-theme." That strikes me as very important.
 
 A: Well, that’s what mind tends to do, see. It takes one central 
			viewpoint and everything comes out from there. It’s like the mouth 
			of a trumpet. All the music comes out there. Mono-sound. And then, 
			and this is the revolution, you change that. Instead, the person 
			invents characters, roles. All sorts of roles. Any roles. King, 
			peasant, slacker, alien, ant, fly, tiger, tree that talks, rock that 
			talks, sky, a cloud, a piece of gold, whatever. And there is no 
			formula for picking these roles.
 
 Q: Now, is the patient under hypnosis when he does this?
 
 A: He’s in a light trance, which is to say he’s relaxed, he isn’t 
			thinking about ordinary stuff.. He’s in an easy frame of mind. But 
			I’m not making any suggestions to him then. I’m not telling him what 
			stage to invent or what characters to choose. None of that.
 
 Q: You’re making basic assumptions about reality?
 
 A: Damn right I am. I’m assuming that people live in a shrunken 
			reality, much narrower than they want. But there they are. And this 
			is a problem. You might say it is THE problem. From it flow all 
			sorts of difficulties.
 
				  
				So I’m setting the stage for people to open 
			up that narrow reality. I’m encouraging that tendency. I’m opening 
			the windows so more light and air can come in. Look at it this way. 
			A guy goes into his garage and sees his old hopeless car. Lots of 
			things wrong with it. He fixes this, he fixes that, he hopes the car 
			will last. He tries to hold on to that car for as long as he can. So 
			what is he thinking about? The one car. The only car.  
				  
				But instead, I 
			introduce him to another garage in which there are 100 cars. Bang. 
			Everything changes. Well, this is the mind. It tends to focus on a 
			limited number of things. It works those things over, and eventually 
			the mind feels there is a cloud of a problem looming overhead. Why? 
			For no other reason than it is focusing on a very limited number of 
			things, possibilities, ideas.  
				  
				The things themselves really aren’t 
			the problem, although the person certainly thinks so. No. The 
			problem is the narrow focusing. The constant massaging of the same 
			material, the same old stuff. Over and over. So I open all that up. 
			I set the stage so the person can imagine and invent 30 new things. 
			On a stage. Characters interacting.  
				  
				Some characters stay, others 
			disappear. It doesn’t matter. Nobody’s keeping score. No rules.
 Q: At first, this seems counter-intuitive.
 
 A: Yeah, because the person has the habit of massaging six things in 
			his mind over and over. But then the light dawns. He can invent 
			characters, personae, roles. He can do it. He can do it without 
			concern for plot or story or tight definition. He can just do it 
			willy-nilly.
 
 Q: So his mind relaxes.
 
 A: It relaxes and it becomes more active, more adventurous, more 
			imaginative. The patient feels this happening.
 
 Q: From problem-consciousness to creative consciousness.
 
 A: Yeah.
 
 Q: Is reduction ever the answer?
 
 A: Sure, if you’re engraving somebody’s name on a plaque. You 
			concentrate on that and nothing else. But generally speaking, no. 
			Some people suggest that if you can reduce thought and mind to zero 
			you’ll be fine. Better than fine. Well, let’s say you could do that.
 
				  
				Then what? Sooner or later you’re going to have to create. You’re 
			going to want to create. And that’s where reduction doesn’t work. 
			You’ll create one thing and one thing only? No. Create widely, with 
			energy. The political destination of the power elite in this world 
			is reductionism as a philosophy. But not for themselves.  
				  
				For 
			everyone else. It’s a con. It’s a game wherein they try to convince 
			people to shrink. As if shrinking is the answer. Shrinking is never 
			the answer. Shrinking creates the apparent necessity of groups. The 
			individual is submerged. That’s ludicrous. It’s theater with no 
			theater. It’s like religion.  
				  
				See, religion is making a bet. It’s 
			betting that the imagination involved in its stories are enough, are 
			enough for the masses, are enough for the masses to say, "Well, I 
			can’t imagine any kind of theater better than the theater in these 
			religious stories, so I’ll stick with the Last Supper and Jonah and 
			the Whale." 
				  
				That’s what it all comes down to. It’s silly. But there 
			it is. The bet. And I’m betting on the opposite thing. That a person 
			can come up with stuff that makes those coagulated religious 
			mass-stories look like child’s play. And I’ve been proven right.  
				  
				And 
			when that happens, the patient becomes more joyful, more flexible, 
			more alive. I like that. I like to see that.
 Q: You’re running your own theater.
 
 A: Yeah, I guess I am. The theater of expansion.
 
 Q: When you have a patient, and he’s doing this kind of theater you 
			describe, does it matter whether it’s tragedy or comedy?
 
 A: That’s an interesting question. Here’s what I’ve found. If a 
			patient starts out with sadness and gloom, if he keeps going long 
			enough, if he keeps populating the stage with more characters, 
			things get lighter after a while. It happens because he’s offloading 
			reductionism and shrunken realities. He’s getting rid of that, and 
			so his mood lightens. Things become more juicy and alive. He’s 
			feeling his oats. He’s flexing his creative muscles.
 
 Q: And that affects his state of mind and his feelings.
 
 A: I told you, some time ago, that I stopped doing traditional 
			hypnosis with patients, because I found that most of them were 
			already in a hypnotic state. Some part of them was already in trance 
			and reacting to old suggestions. At that point, my job was to figure 
			out how to reverse the hypnotic state that was already there, was 
			already in place.
 
				  
				The answer was: get them to create. Get them to 
			imagine.  
				  
				That reverses a hypnotic state. A hypnotic state is a state 
			of reduced mind. Traditionally, a trance is induced to prepare a 
			person for suggestions. But he’s already acting and thinking on the 
			basis of suggestions. So what good does it do to add more crap to 
			the pile?
 Q: From an elite-control point of view, you’d want a whole 
			population in a trance, so you could run their behavior through 
			suggestions.
 
 A: Yes, and that’s already happening. Media are the instrument for 
			conveying suggestions. So our job is not to swat all the suggestions 
			like flies. There are too many of them. Our job is to eliminate the 
			trance. But even that isn’t enough. Because a person who just woke 
			up needs more. He needs an overall direction. He needs a way to 
			approach life. The approach is imagination and creating. But you 
			see, you don’t create much if you don’t use imagination. Imagination 
			gives you new avenues along which you can create.
 
 Q: That kind of knocks out the idea of revelation.
 
 A: Revelation is something you see suddenly. Something you never saw 
			before. So suppose I could snap my fingers and make you experience a 
			revelation. Then where would you be? You’d be sitting there seeing 
			something fantastic. For how long? A minute? An hour? And then what? 
			You only know seeing. (laughs) Get it? That’s all you know. Seeing.
 
				  
				And then what you’re seeing fades out. And then you’re just there. 
			You don’t have anything to do. People have a confusion about this. 
			They think if they see something new, it’s all they need. That’s 
			baloney. They need to imagine and create, because that’s endless.
 Q: Correct me if I’m wrong, but I don’t recall any religion with 
			that doctrine.
 
 A: (laughs) That doctrine would be a sure-fire way to empty out the 
			churches.
 
 Q: Maybe we need to start a religion.
 
 A: The Church of Create Your Ass Off.
 
			  
			
			
 
			  
			THE UNIQUE OBJECT -
			AN INTERVIEW WITH JACK TRUE
 
			by Jon RappoportMarch 11, 2011
 
			from
			
			JonRappoport Website 
			  
			  
			This interview with Jack took place, to the best of 
			my memory, in the summer of 1990.  
			  
			Reconstructing it from my notes, I 
			see Jack is describing one of many ways he worked with patients to 
			move them into "a new way of seeing."
 
				
				Q: Why is it important to allow your patients to see 
				"beyond ordinary reality?"
 A: The answer to that is, of course, obvious. But I’ll try to give 
			you a slightly different slant on it. You could say that everything 
			a person believes or is conditioned to believe is held in place, 
			held in one place, like a corral.
 
				  
				The sheep in the corral are all 
			his beliefs, and they stand there. There is a fence around the 
			corral, and the gate is locked by the way he views reality. As long 
			as he views reality in the same way, the gate is going to be locked. 
			And his beliefs are going remain there. They’re not going to change. 
				  
				But if, for some reason, he begins to see reality in a new way, the 
			lock on the gate is going to spring open, and the beliefs are going 
			to scatter and disperse.
 Q: So, in hypnotherapy, you try to get patients to–
 
 A: Not through suggestions, but by other strategies.
 
 Q: For example?
 
 A: With certain patients who I feel are up to to it, I bring in the 
			idea of a unique object.
 
 Q: What’s that?
 
 A: A unique object, for my purposes, is a one-of-a-kind thing that 
			never existed before and will never exist again. It could be 
			anything.
 
 Q: There are lots of unique objects.
 
 A: Depends on how you look at that meaning. I’m talking about a 
			thing that isn’t composed of whatever everything else is composed 
			of. So a unique object isn’t made out of atoms. It’s different.
 
 Q: Like a very strange chair?
 
 A: Why not? It could be anything. But it’s utterly unlike anything 
			else.
 
 Q: Not sure I follow you.
 
 A: I put a patient in a light trance. That means he’s aware, and it 
			also means he can focus. His mind is, for the moment, uncluttered. 
			He’s not thinking fifteen thoughts. He’s in a sort of zero state. 
			Calm. He can think and he can respond, but he’s not distracted. His 
			consciousness is relaxed and open. He’s not overly receptive to 
			suggestions. He’s not in a Pavlovian condition. He’s in the moment.
 
 Q: Okay. Then what?
 
 A: Then I describe, in general terms, what a unique object is. And I 
			ask him to conceive of one.
 
 Q: Does he?
 
 A: It varies. Some people work at it but they don’t come up with 
			anything. Other people give me lots of objects, but nothing much 
			happens. In some cases, though, a very interesting thing occurs. The 
			patient begins to see or imagine or think about a truly unique 
			thing.
 
				  
				An object of great significance to him. It’s not me who is 
			telling him the object has great meaning. He comes upon that by 
			himself. It’s all subjective. You see? I give them the general idea 
			of what a unique object is, and then he takes it from there. And 
			what he describes to me isn’t a startling revelation, in terms of 
			the object itself. It’s how he sees it and how he feels about it. 
			It’s like trying to catch lightning in a bottle.  
				  
				When it happens, 
			the patient experiences a change in perception. Right away.
 Q: Because he feels he’s really seeing something unique.
 
 A: That’s right. He feels that. You know, people go through their 
			lives and they see all sorts of things, and nothing much registers 
			with any great impact. It’s often just cultural responses, like, 
				"Well, I’m standing here on top of a mountain, and I’m supposed to 
			be enthralled, so I’ll act like I am." Or "I’m walking through a 
			forest and I’m supposed to feel the majesty of the tall trees, so I 
			will." My idea is to have a patient actually experience something in 
			a spontaneous way.
 
 Q: Give me an example.
 
 A: One patient was quiet for a long time. Then he began talking 
			slowly about…it seemed to be a musical instrument. He got this look 
			in his eye, as if he was feeling something he had never felt before. 
			As if he was making a real discovery. As if this object wasn’t part 
			of the known world.
 
 Q: And then what?
 
 A: The next day, he told me his blood pressure, which had been high, 
			was down to normal levels. His low-level chronic headache was gone. 
			He didn’t need his glasses.
 
 Q: Was this change permanent?
 
 A: The blood pressure never went all the way back to the high level. 
			For about a week, he didn’t need his glasses. The chronic headache 
			eventually became a once-a-month headache. But he also began to see 
			his life differently. His marriage really underwent a revolution. He 
			reconciled with his wife, and they became much happier. His overall 
			mood changed.
 
 Q: All from…
 
 A: From that experience.
 
 Q: And you would say his beliefs changed.
 
 A: Absolutely. Until that point, he had a very restricted view of 
			his possibilities. That all shifted.
 
 Q: Because he glimpsed a unique object.
 
 A: It sounds strange, doesn’t it. But yes. It was a moment in a 
			session. The "gap" between what he believed and what he could see 
			just…fell apart. Here’s how I would characterize it. Perception is 
			often an apparatus where you have whole strings of things that are 
			deemed to be similar.
 
				  
				The person sees A and subconsciously thinks, "Well, A is like B and B is like C and C is like D…" He’s not really 
			seeing A. He’s linking A to other things he’s seen or heard about. 
			It’s not true vivid perception. It’s perception plus memory and 
			thought. It’s a hybrid. And it’s dull. It’s really uninteresting. 
			Which has emotional implications.  
				  
				The person’s level of feeling 
			becomes dull, too. So what happened in this case with the patient 
			was, that whole pattern was broken. For a few minutes, the 
			perception, the seeing was direct. He saw a unique object. Or to put 
			it differently, he saw uniquely.
 Q: And what caused his beliefs to change?
 
 A: Well, if perception is dull, feeling is dull. If feeling is dull, 
			then a person begins to adopt beliefs that will go along with that 
			level of dull feeling. Limited beliefs. Limited ideas about the 
			possibility of his life and even existence itself. So when that 
			whole pattern broke apart, the sun came through. He perceived 
			uniquely. He did it himself. Not through my suggestions. Not through 
			drugs. He did it. And so, automatically, his dull beliefs began to 
			slip away, because there was nothing to hold them in the corral.
 
 Q: He perceived uniquely, so he felt uniquely, and then his beliefs, 
			which were based on, as you say, dull feelings, were unsupported.
 
 A: Right. Life tends to form into an un-unique pattern. That’s what 
			characterizes it. The un-uniqueness is the glue that holds the 
			pattern together. When you melt that glue, you get a chance at 
			liberation.
 
 Q: This reminds me of preconceived knowing. A person has a set of 
			assumptions, and then anything he comes across - information, ideas, 
			concepts - he fits them into the assumptions he already has and…grinds 
			out a conclusion about whether these ideas are of value or not.
 
 A: Yes, it’s the same thing, but what I do with patients relates to 
			direct perception. Direct spontaneous experience.
 
 [At this point, we took a long break. When we came back, we 
			continued the conversation. Jack reiterated some of things he'd been 
			saying, adding a few twists.]
 
 Q: You were talking about political structures.
 
 A: Yes. They are built in relation to public blindness.
 
 Q: What does that mean?
 
 A: To the degree that people think they are blind to what is going 
			on in the world, the political structures that act on their behalf 
			become larger.
 
 Q: Governments are people’s eyes?
 
 A: Absolutely. So the more complex the world becomes, the more 
			people think they are blind, and they allow governments to expand. 
			The formula works from both ends. Government is an apparatus of 
			perception.
 
 Q: Of course, what governments "see" is colored by their agendas.
 
 A: Sure. I didn’t say the government is a reliable set of eyes. I 
			just said it substitutes for people’s blindness. It’s second-hand 
			perception. But I bring it up because it’s very much like what 
			happens within an individual.
 
 Q: How so?
 
 A: A person tends to believe he can’t see what’s really going on, in 
			front of his own eyes. This comes about because of disappointments 
			the person suffers. He sees something and he wants it, and he tries, 
			but he doesn’t get it. So he begins to believe there is something 
			wrong with the way he sees.
 
 Q: That’s a strange idea.
 
 A: Yes, but it’s true. People start out with a simple formula 
				- if I 
			can see it and I want it, I can get it. When that formula doesn’t 
			work enough times, the person begins to believe he isn’t seeing 
			correctly. So he enters into a complex process with his mind, where 
			he appoints a structure, an internal structure to see for him.
 
 Q: A proxy.
 
 A: Yes. And this structure is based on comparisons. A is like B, and 
			B is like C, and C is like D. A person begins to see in categories. 
			He doesn’t perceive directly. Instead of seeing A directly and 
			uniquely, he sees the things A is compared to. He sees a concept. 
			And he gets into cultural norms, seeing what the culture tells him 
			he is supposed to see.
 
 Q: You’re talking about a habit.
 
 A: A deeply ingrained habit.
 
 Q: Aside from the technique of 
				"the unique object," how would it be 
			broken?
 
 A: You’re the one who told me how.
 
 Q: Through imagination.
 
 A: Yes. Because imagination throws a monkey wrench into the 
			apparatus of second-hand perception. It doesn’t go along with A is 
			like B and B is like C.
 
				  
				It comes from a different place. I once did 
			an experiment with ink blots. You know, the ink blot test 
			psychologists use. I took a small group of people and told them I 
			wanted them to look at a few cards with ink blots on them and write 
			down what they could imagine when they saw them. It was all 
			imagination. 
				  
				The people knew that. So first, they wrote down a 
			number, before they looked at any of the cards. The number 
			represented their estimate of their "feeling of well-being" at that 
			moment. It was a scale from 1 to 20, with 20 being highest. Then, 
			after I showed them the cards, and they spent about an hour writing 
			down what they imagined… they wrote down another number - their state 
			of well-being at THAT moment.  
				  
				And in all cases, the second number 
			was higher than the first. The well-being index. (laughs) 
			Imagination raises the level of emotion. It raises energy. And it 
			creates perception. That’s the most important thing. So, 
			essentially, imagination shreds the apparatus of second-hand 
			perception by creating new perception.
 Q: The culture isn’t set up to accommodate that.
 
 A: The culture is all about showing people what they’re supposed to 
			see, through sets of definitions and categorizations. That’s what a 
			culture IS. An apparatus of perception. Imagination works at cross 
			purposes to that.
 
 Q: Because imagination doesn’t care what the culture says or thinks.
 
 A: Right. When you imagine something, you see it right away. You see 
			what you imagine. Your perceive THAT. So it’s a different way of 
			seeing.
 
 Q: And it only applies to the individual.
 
 A: Of course. As soon as it becomes a group enterprise, you’re 
			building a culture. You’re building another second-hand perception 
			apparatus.
 
			  
			  
			  
			  
			  
			
			
			JACK TRUE ON TIME AND SPACE
			- AN INTERVIEWby Jon Rappoport
 March 8, 2011
 
			from
			
			JonRappoport Website 
			  
			  
			In this conversation, from 1990, hypnotherapist Jack 
			True discusses the space-time continuum.
 
				
				Q (Rappoport): How does hypnotic trance relate to space-time?
 A (Jack True): That’s a question I’ve looked into for years. First of 
			all, all trances are not equal. I have my own way of putting people 
			into a light trance, which isn’t deep enough for suggestions to have 
			any effect. It’s about getting a patient into a place where he is 
			able to focus clearly without any distractions. But there is 
			something else, too. In this state of mind, he’s not tied so closely 
			to physical reality. He’s aware of it, but he’s floating. He’s a bit 
			removed from its influence. He’s not so much a slave to it. He’s, 
			you could say, in a different space, and a different time.
 
 Q: He’s in a dream state?
 
 A: Not quite. More like a pre-dream state, just before a dream 
			begins.
 
 Q: Does this have something to do with why sleep is so important?
 
 A: Well, sleep is necessary for several reasons. But in this sense, 
			it’s important because the shackles that tie a person to 
			physical-reality space and time are unhooked. He can go elsewhere.
 
 Q: And why does that matter?
 
 A: Because the space-time continuum is just one reality. And at some 
			level, a human being knows this. That’s the point, you see. He knows 
			this. And he doesn’t want to stay glued to that one reality. Why 
			should he? There are lots of other places to go. And those places, 
			in certain respects, are far more interesting and fulfilling.
 
 Q: You keep coming back to this theme.
 
 A: I have to. It’s central. Desire precedes reality.
 
 Q: That’s an interesting way to put it.
 
 A: It’s accurate. So if a person becomes all wound up in this 
			continuum - which of course he does - than he loses sight of what? 
			Desire. Because it seems then that reality defines what can be 
			legitimately desired. Everything is backwards. Desire becomes 
			diluted and blunted. And that’s when people lose power.
 
 Q: There is pressure to desire something you can make and sell.
 
 A: Yes, and that’s a culture that reflects this obsession with 
				"the 
			one and only reality." If you desire to create something that maybe 
			other people can’t understand and won’t buy…well, 
			reality-governing-desire steps in and says ARE YOU CRAZY?
 
				  
				People 
			think they make no sacrifice by adjusting their desires, but they 
			do. They build up frustration. They accumulate stress. They want to 
			break out. They’re told they need to grow up and act like everyone 
			else - but that’s not it.  
				  
				The space-time continuum and gravity and the 
			way energy works and all the rest of it…in one sense, it’s hype. 
			Pure hype. It’s a message that says: you can’t go against the laws. 
			You can’t move into other dimensions. But think about music. You can 
			create any tempo you want to. You can make a whole new space or 
			series of spaces. You’re inventing space and time. It’s right there. 
			People just don’t want to follow the implications.
 Q: Is the mind in some way married to this continuum?
 
 A: I don’t think so. Does your mind keep you from breaking some 
			rule? At bottom, YOU do. It isn’t something like a mechanism of 
			mind, although that would make a good science fiction story. It’s 
			you.
 
				  
				But when I work with a patient, at some point he realizes that 
			I don’t care about any of that. He can float right off the chair and 
			it’s fine with me. He can disappear and reappear in London, and 
			that’s okay with me. A kind of partnership develops in that way with 
			some of my patients, and it makes a great deal of difference.
 Q: In that sense, you’re like the patient’s subconscious.
 
 A: Yes, that’s right. In his subconscious, he has all sorts of 
			desires that involve going beyond this continuum - and that’s the way 
			I am.
 
 Q: None of this involves religion.
 
 A: Religion? That’s indefinite postponement.
 
 Q: It’s the idea that, in order to reach beyond this continuum, you 
			have to be in debt and you have to be discharging that debt.
 
 A: In what I do, there is no owing. No one is beholden to me for 
			anything.
 
 Q: Do you see space and time of this universe as being connected?
 
 A: I think that’s a hoax. Space is curved and space and time merge 
			in some way? What? I don’t see it. It just seems like apples and 
			oranges. A distraction. A diversion. A confusion that adds to the 
			problem. Maybe it’s a way of expressing a latent desire to become a 
			master of space and time. But time is all about duration…and space 
			is a stage set.
 
				  
				Just because space and time are integrated in 
			equations doesn’t mean they actually merge. Would you say that the 
			men in a rocket are merged with the fuel in the engines? Poetically, 
			maybe. But physically? No.
 Q: Let’s get back to this partnership you mentioned, between you and 
			the patient.
 
 A: It’s a key. The reason I’m tapping into his very deep desires to 
			go beyond the space-time continuum is because I understand that. 
			It’s not just a "therapeutic device." It’s me. Suppose a patient 
			tells me he sees an astral location and he describes it. I could 
			discount that and move on.
 
				  
				But of course I don’t, because I KNOW 
			he’s feeling a new power and eagerness welling up in him, he’s 
			moving into a place he really wants to be, and I want to be in a 
			place like that, too. I want to go exploring. I keep saying this in 
			different ways, but…it has everything to do with repressed desire, 
			on a level that is immense.  
				  
				At that level, the person is all about 
			going beyond the reality defined by this universe. It isn’t just a 
			passing fancy. We all have this tendency to say, "Well, it’s raining 
			today, so we can’t go outside."  
				  
				But underneath that, we don’t care. 
			Rain is not a problem. We don’t care about the excuses we give 
			ourselves. We want more. We want to experience magic. You see, think 
			about Freud. He had a propensity to define repression in terms of 
			sex. That was where he was tuning in. He made a life out of that. 
			That was the level of repressed desire he was looking at. I’m 
			talking about something that is buried much deeper in the psyche, in 
			the subconscious.  
				  
				To turn away from it would be absurd. To turn away 
			and say, well, that’s not real, that’s not doable, that’s not a 
			subject for therapy…why would you do that? It’s staring you right in 
			the face. It’s there. So the first thing a person needs to do is 
			admit he has this desire for magic, for going past all the supposed 
			limits of this physical reality. He has to see and feel that desire 
			in himself.
 Q: Are space and time powerful inhibitors and limiters?
 
 A: I prefer to think of them as delusions.
 
 Q: In what sense?
 
 A: Let’s say you’re in a car and you’re driving along a road. The 
			road is very long. It seems never to end. You keep driving. You 
			believe this road is the only one. You think if you’re driving, 
			you’re on that road. Where else would you be? But of course, there 
			are a million other roads. And–
 
 Q: You can invent roads, too.
 
 A: Yes.
 
 Q: The subconscious knows this?
 
 A: For my purposes, in my work, the subconscious is a generalized 
			term that indicates an interior place where a repressed desire of 
			great proportions is kept under wraps.
 
 Q: What’s real versus what’s delusional 
				- that’s a tricky subject.
 
 A: Yeah. Part of the reason is semantic. You’re using the words in 
			different ways. On one level, physical reality, space and time are 
			very real. But we foster a delusion by thinking they’re the only 
			space and time.
 
				  
				On another level, space and time are 
			invented - they’re not just "there." This is the subject of a great 
			deal of myth, which is an attempt to understand who made the 
			continuum. And, as with any unsettled argument, some people will 
			step in and try to use the situation for their own benefit.  
				  
				But in 
			the meantime…musicians make their own space and time, which is 
			different from the continuum, and you can see by the response of the 
			audiences that this invention has great power and desire associated 
			with it…with music, people are responding to a new universe that is 
			being created.
 Q: The creative is the trump card.
 
 A: The energy of it is–
 
 Q: Unlimited.
 
 A: Yes.
 
			  
			  
			
			
 
			POWER -
			AN INTERVIEW WITH JACK TRUE
 
			by Jon RappoportFebruary 27, 2011
 
			from
			
			JonRappoport Website 
			  
			  
			This interview took place in the fall of 1988. As 
			you can tell, if you’ve been reading the prior interviews, Jack and 
			I tended to jump from one theme to another.  
			  
			Part of the reason was 
			we’d already covered so much ground together, we could anticipate 
			where things were heading.
 
				
				Q (Rappoport): In all our conversations, we always seem to come 
			around to the subject of imagination.
 A (Jack True): Well, you convinced me, finally, it was of the 
			greatest importance. I was always working with it, but I needed to 
			think more about the wider implications.
 
 Q: Such as imagination creates reality?
 
 A: Yes. So there are an infinite number of possible realities. That 
			perspective gives you a different view of the world.
 
 Q: In your work, do you ever approach the issue of power directly?
 
 A: Early in my career, I tried that, but it didn’t work.
 
 Q: Why not?
 
 A: Because my patients were shy about that or afraid.
 
 Q: Even under hypnosis?
 
 A: Yes.
 
 Q: That’s interesting.
 
 A: I thought so. It taught me something. People tend to have a taboo 
			about the whole thing. They go through all sorts of contortions 
			about power. I could see that clearly.
 
 Q: What kind of contortions?
 
 A: Well, it’s like pin the tail on the donkey or musical chairs. 
			Where you put power. To whom or what do you attribute it? See, 
			people know power exists. But it’s not something they admit they 
			want. So they go around in a very circuitous route to pin it 
			somewhere else. The sky has power. Wind has power. The Earth has 
			power.
 
 Q: In recent culture, the word power has taken on a distinctly 
			negative meaning. It’s been conclusively associated with corruption, 
			oppression, and criminal activity.
 
 A: Pop psychology gives the word a slightly different twist, as in 
				"personal power." The context is often "taking back your power," 
			which assumes that, somewhere along the line, someone else had 
			control over you - and now you’re recapturing it. But at best, this 
			diluted vision implies that, from now on, you’ll be be able to make 
			your own decisions. That’s pretty weak.
 
 Q: Power means you can DO. It means you are able. From a Latin root.
 
 A: Let’s go far out. Suppose you want to do something that is 
			thought to be impossible? Suppose you want to read a person’s 
			thoughts from ten miles away? Or you want to move an object on your 
			desk with your mind? Suppose you want to levitate.
 
				  
				There is a 
			general consensus that these paranormal feats of power are 
			impossible. In fact, the consensus weaves together with the fabric 
			of the space-time continuum. One aspect is dependent on the other. 
			Consider the image of two mirrors standing across from each other. 
			The reflections bounce back and forth. One feeds the other. In the 
			same way, the general consensus that levitation is impossible 
			nourishes the "rule of the physical continuum" which states that 
			unaided human levitation is verboten.  
				  
				Let’s shift the focus. Let’s 
			say there is a manuscript in a museum. It has been dated at 4300 BC. 
			For over a century, scholars, linguists, and cryptologists have 
			tried to understand the rows of symbols - and they have utterly 
			failed. They haven’t made a single inroad. Now you look at it. You 
			stand in front of it and look at it for an hour.  
				  
				Do you think your 
			imagination will swing into gear? Damn right it will. You’ll start 
			imagining all sorts of "paranormal" possibilities - even though you 
			can’t name them or describe them. Your imagination will go to places 
			that aren’t pedestrian. This is what happens with a mystery. The 
			mind, the imagination begins to write script, and the script is 
			about realities that are beyond what we ordinarily think about.  
				  
				The 
			imagination is waiting in the bushes, for an opportunity to come out 
			and stretch and get beyond this humdrum continuum. That’s a natural 
			tendency, which we keep under wraps.
 Q: To understand power, you need imagination.
 
 A: Otherwise, you just think about power in terms you already 
			understand. You repeat yourself. You become bored.
 
 Q: You use the word boredom a lot.
 
 A: That’s because it’s the bottom line on the accounting book called 
			Reality. That’s what you finally get to. Reality bores. Power is 
			about exceeding reality. When you stop and think about it, why 
			didn’t humans imbue their gods with no power at all? Why should gods 
			have power at all? They could be farmers tilling the soil or stone 
			masons. The gods have power because human imagination gives it to 
			them. And that happens because humans need to imagine power 
			somewhere. They’re afraid to give it to themselves, so they invent 
			the gods. This is another deflection of the truth on to spaces where 
			it’s "safe" to attribute power. The taboo is: we have power.
 
 Q: In modern times, we have comic books and super-heroes. Superman. 
			Batman. In ancient Greece, another super-hero,
 
 Prometheus, stole fire from the gods and gave it to man. Fire is 
			energy. Energy is a function of imagination. Prometheus stole 
			awareness of creative power and gave it to humans. Power starts with 
			imagining power.
 
 A: But Superman doesn’t try to figure out a way to give his kind of 
			power to humans. That never happens. Several years ago, I met with a 
			man who was trying to start a school. He had this idea. He’d cram 
			grades one through twelve into eight years, and the other four would 
			be nothing but art. All day, all the time. Students doing art. All 
			the arts.
 
 Q: What happened?
 
 A: He could never raise the money. People were afraid of what he was 
			talking about. Immersion in the arts to the point where a reality 
			shift would take place in the minds of the kids. I mean, that’s what 
			he talked about, so his potential investors dried up. They 
			disappeared into the fog. Art is about walking right up the ladder 
			of power. An artist has power. Even if there is no consensus about 
			that. Consensus is the last thing that happens.
 
 Q: Energy is a function of imagination. We’ve talked about that 
			before.
 
 A: I’d liken it to a very dark night. You’re wandering around. You 
			don’t know exactly where you are. Then you see a glint of light 
			ahead. Suddenly, you feel an injection of energy. You feel it. 
			THAT’S the way to get out. When you imagine something new, and you 
			feel it, you get that shot of energy. It’s a potentially endless 
			supply. The old nonsense about entropy [dissipating energy] is a 
			wrong concept.
 
 Q: Why not another kind of theory: there are multiple universes 
			pouring energy and receiving energy from one another. The process 
			just keeps going.
 
 A: If there’s one thing we don’t have a lack of, it’s energy.
 
 Q: So is that how you approach the issue of power with patients?
 
 A: Energy through imagination. And when a person experiences enough 
			energy, he begins to know he has power.
 
 Q: In traditional alchemy, in their cross, the four ends represented 
			the four elements of nature [earth, air, fire, water]. Where the two 
			sticks meet, in the center - that’s called Quintessence. This the 
			quality that can resolve the conflict among the four elements. The 
			Quintessence is imagination.
 
 A: It would be, because it is the thing that gets you beyond the 
			four elements. It puts you out there beyond the inhibiting rules of 
			nature. This whole resurrection of the nature religion that started 
			in the 1960s - it was supposed to be about resolution and peace, but–
 
 Q: The factor they left out of the equation was imagination. They 
			substituted drugs for imagination.
 
 A: I had a patient who, in a light trance, would invent dream after 
			dream.
 
				  
				That’s what I had him do. He must have fabricated fifty 
			dreams altogether, over the over a period of a few months. In every 
			one of those dreams, he put in a power source. Some god or entity 
			that had great power. And then one day, he got a different kind of 
			message. From the sheer invention of these dreams, he was getting a 
			whole lot of energy. He was feeling that.  
				  
				Then it began to dawn on 
			him that he had power. And from then on, the character of the dreams 
			he invented was different. And in his life, he knew he had power. 
			
 
 
			  
			  
			
			
			THE MIND CONTROL INTERVIEW - WITH JACK TRUE 
			by Jon RappoportFebruary 26, 2011
 
			from
			
			JonRappoport Website 
			  
			  
			In the early 1990s, hypnotherapist Jack True and 
			I sat down and discussed his views on mind control.  
			  
			To say the 
			least, Jack presents a very radical interpretation of this subject.
 
				
				Q (Rappoport): Okay. What’s your definition of mind control?
 A (Jack True): It’s the belief that your mind and/or its programming 
			is a complex affair that needs to be unraveled a detail at a time.
 
 Q: What?
 
 A: You heard me.
 
 Q: Sounds like you’re talking about a general approach to the mind.
 
 A: Think it through.
 
 Q: You made the statement. Clarify it.
 
 A: What makes mind control mind control? What makes any kind of 
			limitation limiting? Do you see? It’s the false belief that, in 
			order to undo what has been done, you need to engage in…you need to 
			walk back the way you came. You need to have a set of keys that 
			allows you to unlock all the doors that have been locked in 
			sequence.
 
 Q: Okay. I get it.
 
 A: This is what stops people. The real control factor is what they 
			believe they need to do in order to undo what they believe has been 
			done to them.
 
 Q: And that’s–
 
 A: That’s the cardinal factor of mind control. See, take a person’s 
			life. He goes through all sorts of experiences. He has a few traumas 
			or whatever. He buys some crazy ideas other people are selling. And 
			so forth and so on. Now, he wakes up a little, and he wants to throw 
			away all that and start fresh.
 
				  
				But he thinks he has to enter into a 
			systematic undoing of whatever negative energies and ideas he has 
			picked up. Now he’s really stymied. Because he’s looking at mind as 
			if it’s a closet hung very neatly with things, and he believes he 
			has to find a way to unpack the closet one piece at a time. It’s a 
			very big closet, he believes. It stretches from Alaska to Mexico.
 Q: And you’re saying he has a wrong portrait of the mind. To begin 
			with.
 
 A: Right. Mind is much more fluid than that. Mind is not really the 
			problem. The person is the problem.
 
 Q: What about so-called trauma-based mind control? You know, 
				
				the CIA MKULTRA-type stuff, or the Soviet version. What about that?
 
 A: There are a lot of misconceptions about it. Those bastards used 
			force and drugs. It was basically torture. Now, they might have 
			gotten real cute, in order to create what they said was multiple 
			personalities in a victim.
 
				  
				But whatever system of trance or 
			suggestion they employed, it doesn’t matter. It only matters if the 
			victim, emerging from it, escaping from it, believes that, in order 
			to undo what was done, he has to unpack the closet, he has to undo, 
			a step at a time, what has been done to him. If he does believe 
			that, you’re in a pickle.  
				  
				You now need to bring in a therapist who 
			believes what the victim believes - and together they explore this 
			territory. The therapist offers a complex a system of 
			un-brainwashing that the victim can accept. Based on a shared 
			belief, they can make progress. Here’s an analogy. Let’s say you’re 
			lost in the woods. You’ve been lost for a month.  
				  
				You’re in bad 
			shape. You’re eating leaves and roots. You believe the only way to 
			get out is to walk the way you came - which is a complex task. But 
			that’s what you think. As long as you think that, what else are you 
			going to do? You might be able to make it work. Maybe. In the same 
			way, a complex system of un-brainwashing might work, but to suggest 
			it’s the only or best path is way overstating things.
 Q: Some people are predisposed to playing chess.
 
 A: Exactly! They look south and they see chess. They look north and 
			they see chess. You try to sell them checkers or a helicopter and 
			they turn you down flat. They don’t believe in that. They believe in 
			chess. If they’re lost, you can get them out only if you present 
			your solution so it looks and feels like chess. Otherwise, they 
			refuse.
 
 Q: So for them, chess is mind control.
 
 A: (laughs) Yeah. It’s the filter through which they see reality.
 
 Q: And where does THAT come from?
 
 A: That’s not mind. That’s the person himself. He has chosen that 
			filter and he uses it all the time.
 
 Q: But why did he choose it to begin with?
 
 A: See, we’re walking right back into the same trap. Suppose we say 
			there was a long concatenation of events that FORCED this person to 
			choose that filter. Then where are we? We’re about to conclude, 
			well, the only way to get rid of the filter is to reconstruct the 
			exact string of events that FORCED him to adopt the filter.
 
				  
				To put 
			that whole string under a magnifying glass so he can see it in every 
			detail - and then he can throw away the filter. Which is nonsense. 
			Because when you go back far enough, what you really see is, he 
			chose that filter. He took it and placed it over his eyes. That’s 
			what happened. It doesn’t matter why. It doesn’t matter what reasons 
			he gave himself for choosing it.  
				  
				Sure, he can gain some insight that 
			way, by scoping out the reasons. But really, he has to find a way to 
			leap beyond that filter and start seeing reality in new and 
			different ways - and then one day, he’ll remember the filter and laugh 
			at the whole thing and how silly it was.
 Q: What if he can’t?
 
 A: Who are you? The devil’s advocate?
 
 Q: I’m trying to be.
 
 A: Well, if he can’t, he’s in the mud. It’s like asking me, if a guy 
			is standing on one side of a river that runs from one eternity to 
			another, and he wants to get across, and he refuses to step in the 
			water, how will he succeed? He won’t succeed. He’ll stand on that 
			riverbank for 50 lives or 300 lives or 50,000 lives, until he jumps 
			in the water.
 
 Q: Understood.
 
 A: You’re a painter. So I’ll give you an analogy from painting. A 
			painter is in his studio. He’s looking at the blank canvas. He has 
			the brush in his hands. His filter is "Renaissance perspective." He 
			believes that everything he paints has to have that kind of 
			perspective in it. But he wants to do something new at the same 
			time. That’s his urge. How is going to proceed unless he gets rid of 
			that filter, unless he dares to leap beyond it?
 
 Q: Since anthropology became such a well-known field of study, we’ve 
			had the premise that cultures have different customs, different 
			filters, and "it’s all relative."
 
 A: This is the biggest bunch of baloney going.
 
 Q: Why?
 
 A: Because it assumes that everyone in a given culture has the same 
			filter. Nonsense. When you probe deeper, you find out every person 
			is an individual. But that’s not a popular idea anymore. From my 
			work with patients from all over the world, I’ve satisfied myself 
			that every person has his own filters, which go a lot deeper than 
			cultural artifacts.
 
				  
				See, when a person is dreaming at night, he 
			sometimes lets go of those filters. He takes a leap of imagination, 
			and he’s out there in a new territory, and he’s experiencing things 
			he really wants to experience. And if he remembers what happened 
			when he wakes up in the morning, he feels that exhilaration. He got 
			past the gates.  
				  
				He got past the filters. He was free. And why? 
			Because he created a dream. He imagined his way past the filters. 
			What I do in my work is try to bring that state of affairs into 
			waking life.
 Q: Talk a little more about filters.
 
 A: Okay, you’ve got a person who is involved, in his job, with 
			technology. He’s an engineer. He sees things in terms of problems 
			and solutions. Everywhere he looks, there is a problem to solve, and 
			the way to solve it is through rational exercise. Take a step 
			forward. Formulate a way to make something work a little better. 
			There is nothing wrong with that. Fine.
 
				  
				But as his life goes on, 
			he’s in that basic position. He’s a solver. He sizes up situations 
			as problems, and he works to solve them. It doesn’t make him as 
			happy as it once did. That’s the main thing. He doesn’t get the same 
			kick out of it. Most people would say that’s a function of aging, 
			but it really isn’t. It’s a function of the filter. His filter.  
				  
				His 
			way of approaching reality. You’ve heard of this word entropy? It’s 
			a goofy theory that all over the universe, available energy is 
			running down. It’s dissipating. It doesn’t disappear, but it’s 
			stored in, what could you call it, places of quiet, where nothing is 
			happening. Like a warehouse. Well, what really runs down is a 
			filter. It begins to deteriorate, because the person it belongs to 
			is finding it less and less interesting and exciting. It’s like a 
			book he’s read a thousand times. How much more can he squeeze out of 
			it?  
				  
				This is what mind control comes down to. Your filter. And the 
			general tendency is for it to deteriorate, which doesn’t mean it 
			goes away. It just means it’s less useful and interesting, but 
			nothing takes its place. That’s the problem. It’s a replacement 
			problem. But you see, because this engineer has spent his whole life 
			using that filter, he doesn’t see an alternative. He doesn’t know 
			what else he can do.  
				  
				He’s like a one-trick pony. The trick is 
			wearing out. He looks around for an answer. He looks here and there. 
			He reads a few books. Nothing really clicks. He tries to formulate 
			his own state of mind into a problem he can solve, but he can’t 
			really define the problem.  
				  
				Well, how could he? He’s looking through 
			the problem. The filter.
 Q: And as I’ve suggested to you many times, the answer is 
			imagination.
 
 A: Yes, and in my work and in your work, the issue is, how do you 
			get a person to make that leap? How do you get him to recognize, 
			first of all, that he has this thing called imagination? How do you 
			get him to use it? How do you open up that whole territory? It takes 
			ingenuity. It isn’t just a problem that needs solving. It’s a lot 
			different.
 
 Q: People use filters that can’t process the fact that you can 
			invent something that wasn’t there before.
 
 A: This is true. So that needs to be overcome. You can trick a 
			person into it, but that way has brief results only. You need to go 
			deeper. Higher.
 
			  
			
 
 
			  
			
			
			REBELS AGAINST REALITY -
			THIRD INTERVIEW WITH JACK TRUE 
			by Jon RappoportFebruary 25, 2011
 
			from
			
			JonRappoport Website 
			  
			  
			NOTICE TO MY READERS - As most of you know, I move 
			back and forth between very different subjects in my work. Medical 
			fraud, political commentary, the moves made by global elites, and 
			imagination/creative power/magic.
 
			
			As of late, I’ve stepped up the action by assembling several more 
			interviews with Jack True. These interviews represent what I 
			consider to be the most important area of my long-time focus: 
			imagination/creative power/magic.
 
 I’d like to get responses from readers who are really interested in 
			this aspect. I’m thinking of doing a new seminar on this 
			subject - possibly an in-person live seminar. I sense that events of 
			the past three years have moved some people away from this area, as 
			society has been undergoing various crises. For me, these crises 
			underline the need to dig deeper…to further explore the actual truth 
			and meaning of magic. Are you there? Are you still interested?
 
 In 1988, during a conversation with hypnotherapist Jack True, I 
			kiddingly suggested we form a group called RAR, Rebels Against 
			Reality. A few days later, we picked up the thread of that comment, 
			and we did an interview, part of which I’ve been able to reconstruct 
			from my notes.
 
			  
			I hesitated to print this one at first, because it 
			moves into areas lots of people are quite unfamiliar 
			with - particularly if they’re looking to learn something by comparing 
			it to what they already know… but then I realized I’d crossed that 
			line a long time ago. Way long ago.  
			  
			Buckle up...
 
				
				Q (Rappoport): So you like the idea. Rebels Against Reality.
 A: (Jack True): If it’s taken far enough.
 
 Q: Well, I think we could break it down into several groups. Rebels 
			Against Space, for example. Meaning we would insist on New Spaces.
 
 A: To whom would be lodge our request? City planners?
 
 Q: Hell no. We’d go a lot farther than that. We’d appeal to the 
			Space Mafia.
 
 A: Who are they?
 
 Q: People who make space and sell it. They control the market.
 
 A: So we’d have to raise money to buy new space from them.
 
 Q: No, we’d threaten them by saying we’re ready to make our own.
 
 A: And how would our own be different?
 
 Q: It wouldn’t be continuous. It wouldn’t require time, for example, 
			to move across a chunk of it. You could just disappear from one end 
			and reappear at the other.
 
 A: I’d think there would be a market for that. The military would be 
			very interested.
 
 Q: Yeah, but we’re not selling to them. Our market would be the 
			people who want a break from ordinary reality. Billions of people. 
			Of course, they can get that break if they go to a museum and look 
			at paintings for a long time. But they don’t know that. They think 
			they’re hemmed in.
 
 A: You’ve talked about art as a flood.
 
 Q: Yeah. Flooding the world with so much art that perception of 
			reality changes. It would take a while for it to sink in, but when 
			it did, all sorts of new phenomena would surface.
 
 A: I’d guess that telepathy would expand terrifically. People would 
			get used to space on a different level - not as something you have to 
			travel through, but as a medium. A fluid, maybe. Or better yet, a 
			definition of position. Space simply tells you where you are. It 
			doesn’t tell you what you have to do to go from one position to 
			another. You can transmit thoughts as easily as driving to the 
			market. Easier.
 
 Q: The point is, once you realize that telepathy is very available, 
			the character of thought begins to escalate, because why bother to 
			exchange messages with someone when the thoughts involved are so 
			pedestrian? "I’m going to the movies. Want to go?" "Sure." I mean, 
			who would care about that? [Apparently, I was wrong, because now we 
			have instant Twitter, and people are comfortable sharing the most 
			inane messages.]
 
 A: So you’re saying art would come into its own with telepathy.
 
 Q: Yes, in the form of new languages. Many new languages, where the 
			symbols aren’t denoting specific meanings. They’re open. You get the 
			aesthetic punch, but you leave out the literal. When people are 
			confronted by art at every turn, adventurous art, and when they 
			begin creating it, too, they need to become far more inventive.
 
				  
				I’d 
			compare it to a situation where you have a lot of land - lots of 
			people have a lot of empty land - and you grow vegetables. And then 
			you have enough for your needs, and so does everyone else. So what 
			are you going to do now? You’re going to plant flowers, maybe. 
			You’re going to step into art. You’re going to escalate. See, on a 
			mental level, people are involved with thought-forms all the time. 
			These are like pictures, but they’re not exactly pictures. They’re 
			more like feelings. They have the impact of sensation and feeling. 
			 
				  
				But at the same time, take these people and lead them into a museum, 
			into a room where abstract paintings are hanging all over the place, 
			and they claim to be baffled. Absolutely baffled. It’s ridiculous. 
			It’s like saying people who own cars go to a garage where a hundred 
			cars are parked and they have no idea what they’re seeing.
 A: I’d be in favor of forcing people to live in a museum for a few 
			years. I think some interesting things would happen. They can’t go 
			outside. They have to stay in the museum.
 
 Q: Well, people used to talk about the effect of space on 
			astronauts. This would be like that. Here in the museum, there are 
			hundreds of vastly different realities hanging on the walls, and 
			people see them every hour of every day. Eventually, I think they’d 
			stop their incessant whining about not understanding art, and they’d 
			actually begin to look at what’s on the walls. They’d become 
			involved. They’d realize people have been sending advanced 
				"messages" to one another for centuries.
 
 A: If you were a citizen of ancient Egypt, and you went to sleep and 
			had a dream, my sense is that, when you woke up, you’d be required 
			to seek out an interpretation of the dream from a so-called expert.
 
 Q: Just like now.
 
 A: (laughs) Yeah. You’d go to a local priest who was trained in the 
			accepted cosmology - all the gods and sub-gods, and sub-sub gods, the 
			cosmology that tells you all about their functions and histories and 
			powers…and you’d have this priest tell you what your dream meant. 
			He’d give you the party line, in terms of that cosmology, and you’d 
			wander away with the standard party line.
 
 Q: And after a while, you would lose the passion for your own 
			dreams, once you became bored with the cosmology, because what else 
			would you have? There was a complex picture of the universe, and 
			only the priests understood it, and they gave you the chapter and 
			the verse. It was really an anti-art movement. Art is your own. It 
			isn’t some communal culture, despite what the wardens of culture 
			tell us.
 
 A: People are afraid of individual meaning.
 
 Q: They want that shared porridge, handed to them by the people who 
			have so-called special insight. Eventually, this devolves down to a 
			feeling that only the initiated understand anything profound. And 
			then the next phase is complete disinterest or open hostility toward 
			art, unless it imitates physical reality. So imagination goes to 
			sleep. The big sleep. And then people say they don’t understand 
			anything that isn’t practical.
 
 A: This is where waking life becomes hypnosis.
 
 Q: What did you just say? People are afraid of individual meaning. 
			They think that if everyone has his own meanings, there won’t be any 
			basis for understanding. They think this means isolation, even 
			insanity. But it’s just the opposite.
 
				  
				If everyone was transmitting 
			meanings of his own, intensely his own, the level of understanding 
			would rise - because the drabness would be taken out of it, as well as 
			all the false pretension that something horrendously boring is 
			interesting. All that would be gone, wiped off the board. That’s 
			what the flood of art would bring.  
				  
				The character of space and time 
			would change. The drabness of repeating space and time would drain 
			away. People think that going into outer space is so fantastic, and 
			it is, but along the way you pass through interminable stretches 
			where there is nothing but nothing. Space just keeps repeating over 
			and over. It’s completely redundant.
 A: I’ve seen this with some patients. When they’re in trance, it 
			appears that nothing is there. You ask for things, and you get empty 
			space or a vacuum. It goes on and on. I take this as a kind 
			of…coefficient of non-creation. The person isn’t creating anything. 
			But it’s not by clear choice. It’s not like he’s sitting in the Big 
			Void and realizing his potential power. It’s like narcosis.
 
 Q: Amnesia. In those empty spaces, he’s convinced that his creations 
			would only be replicas of what already exists, so he opts out. It’s 
			like watching people fall asleep in church. They’re in their seats 
			listening to a third-rate recitation of a chunk of a cosmology that 
			is already centuries old and nobody really cares about it…and they 
			fall asleep. It’s nothing listening to nothing. What is the sound of 
			no hands clapping? A snore.
 
 A: I’m against instant comprehension. With TV, people know right 
			away what’s passing across the screen. Do you see? They sit there 
			for hours watching these images, and they become trained to expect 
			that they’ll understand everything they see right away. But with 
			art, you have to become engaged. Actively engaged.
 
				  
				You have to work 
			at it. People are losing this faculty. It’s the same with certain 
			ideas. People want ideas laid out for them, nice and neat. If ideas 
			show up that don’t admit to instant understanding, people walk away.
 Q: That’s why I say people have to live in an atmosphere of art. 
			They’ll reject everything at first, but gradually they’ll start to 
			get used to it. They’ll absorb it. Then they’ll start exploring it. 
			Then they’ll start to create it.
 
 A: There is a parallel to hypnotherapy. People think it’s something 
			like sleep, but if it’s done right, what you really get is focus. 
			Concentration on a specific thing. You put a patient in a situation 
			where he can actually look at something.
 
				  
				An idea, an image, a 
			desire. You create the atmosphere where that’s possible. In a real 
			sense, the history of our times will be seen as a history of 
			distraction. People moving from one thought to another, never really 
			digesting anything along the way.
 Q: I’ll tell you about a dream I once had. In the dream, I was 
			sitting in a coffee shop talking to a man who had acted in a 
			repertory company for 30 years, with the same group of people. They 
			had done hundreds of different plays and acted in hundreds of 
			different roles.
 
				  
				And in that conversation, it came out that this 
			man’s immersion in art for 30 years with his group… that man had 
			experienced and created all sorts of effects we would call 
			paranormal. Telepathy, especially. He had a kind of elevated level 
			of thought transference with other people in the company. It 
			happened frequently.  
				  
				But the thing was, they were all used to it. 
			What I mean is, they didn’t talk about it and they didn’t think 
			about it, and they certainly didn’t trumpet it. They didn’t really 
			notice it.
 A: So you mean they were isolated.
 
 Q: Right.
 
 A: They took it for granted. These "paranormal" effects happen all 
			the time in art. But people overlook it, they don’t stop to 
			recognize what’s actually happening. Meanwhile, other "scientific 
			professionals" argue about whether anything paranormal is happening 
			in the world or is possible. It’s a ludicrous situation, when you 
			stop and think about it. It’s right there, under our noses, and 
			still we have–
 
 Q: This slavish devotion to ordinary reality.
 
 A: Yes.
 
			  
			  
			  
			
 JACK TRUE INTERVIEWED AGAIN - DREAM ANALYSIS
 
			by Jon RappoportFebruary 24, 2011
 
			from
			
			JonRappoport Website 
			  
			  
			In this interview, my late friend, 
			hypnotherapist Jack True, discusses dreams.  
			  
			He and I talked about this subject many 
			times.
 
				
				Q (Jon): I look at dreams as 
				adventures. Cultures have always been fixated on analyzing them 
				and finding the hidden meanings.
 A (Jack): Well, when you think about it, trying to dissect 
				things for hidden meanings happens all over the place. The point 
				is, when you arrive at the meaning, what do you have? The whole 
				business falls apart. You’re sitting there with a few sentences 
				of translated meaning, and it really doesn’t help much. I admit 
				it can be an intriguing exercise, and I’m not knocking it, but 
				it makes me yawn.
 
 Q: The most interesting thing about dreams is that people have 
				them. They’re lying in bed, and they’re entering into all sorts 
				of dimensions, and it feels very real. Adventure.
 
 A: Well, you would say that, because you’re an artist.
 
 Q: What would you say?
 
 A: I agree. Many dreams follow the sequence of desire and then 
				manifestation. You want to experience something, and then, bang, 
				it’s there. You’re in a full-blown setting, and there are other 
				people, and you’re feeling what you want to feel. Or you could 
				reverse it. You’re in a setting, you size it up, you see what 
				you desire, and then it happens.
 
 Q: In other words, it’s natural. It’s what people want.
 
 A: They would like their waking lives to be like that. And in 
				the service of that goal, in dreams, all the rules of physical 
				reality go out the window. Dreams are a glimpse into another 
				kind of reality, where the rules aren’t the rigid context. The 
				rules about what can happen with space and time and what can’t 
				happen don’t apply. In that sense, dreams are like art. In art, 
				you can create what you want to.
 
 Q: So there is a general universality in dreams.
 
 A: The universality is, the rules of physical reality don’t take 
				precedence. They don’t determine the outcome. They don’t inhibit 
				the action. You can be in a room talking to someone one second, 
				and the next second you can be up in the clouds flying over a 
				city. This isn’t "a symbol" of something. It’s not about hidden 
				meaning. It’s what it is.
 
 Q: That’s too stark for a lot of people.
 
 A: Well, sure. But so what?
 
 Q: In a lot of cultures, if you have a dream, you’re bound to 
				interpret it by the doctrine of the current mythology or 
				religion.
 
 A: Yeah. One story used to explain another story. If you wrote a 
				novel, would you feel compelled to write another novel 
				explaining the first one? It’s ridiculous. Dreams have inherent 
				magic in them.
 
				  
				Whereas, in your waking life, if you want to go 
				from one city to another, you drive, or you book a flight. You 
				go through all sorts of preparation. Those are the rules. That’s 
				the way it works. In a dream, you can just move from one city to 
				another in no time at all.
 Q: That’s what I’m saying. That instant travel - it’s part of the 
				adventure. If you want to think about a dream after you wake up, 
				think about that.
 
 A: Let’s say you actually had a person who could do that. He’s 
				standing on the corner of 42nd Street and Broadway, and then 
				he’s standing on the beach in San Francisco. No time elapses. 
				All sorts of explanations would be given, in addition to all the 
				denials that it ever happened. He’s an alien from outer space.
 
				  
				He’s a god. He’s the devil. He’s able to hypnotize everybody and 
				make them think he has this extraordinary power. He was using 
				some fabulous machine to make the space shift happen. It was 
				technology, because otherwise it couldn’t have happened.  
				  
				You 
				see, this is the analysis. The interpretation of the event. In 
				the same way, people have dreams and then they wake up and 
				analyze what happened.
 Q: They can’t just accept it.
 
 A: They can’t enjoy it.
 
 Q: You must have patients who tell you about their dreams.
 
 A: Sure. One woman has flying dreams. I finally got her to 
				remember and really feel the sensation of taking off from the 
				ground and how good it was. She decided that was a hell of a lot 
				more important than "what the dream meant." She was flying! She 
				was showing off! She was a performer with an audience. And she 
				was flying!
 
 Q: When we say people are asleep and they need to wake up, we 
				don’t mean they need to stop dreaming.
 
 A: Dreaming is being awake. Awake to a different kind of 
				reality, where imagination has much greater power. Dreams supply 
				what’s missing in physical reality. There are places all over 
				the world where professionals conduct experiments designed to 
				see whether paranormal events can happen. They run tests, 
				experiments, and so on.
 
				  
				That’s fine, but I like to point out 
				that the flavor of the experiments is very bland compared to 
				dreams. Magic isn’t bland. It’s alive. It has color and depth 
				and profound emotion. If you try to leave that out, you don’t 
				have magic anymore. I don’t know what to call it, but it isn’t 
				magic. Do you want to put Merlin in a lab? That would be a joke.
 Q: You have some of your patients invent dreams by the 
				truckload.
 
 A: Yes. It’s a natural tendency and deep desire - dreaming - so why 
				not do it more and do it when you’re awake? What happens is you 
				begin to blend different states of mind. You have states of mind 
				while a person is asleep that give birth to dreams, and then you 
				have the states of mind people usually inhabit when they’re 
				awake…so why not blend them? Why not explore that?
 
 Q: You’re saying there is more than one kind of desire. The sort 
				of desire people experience when they’re awake is different from 
				the sort of desire they experience when they’re asleep.
 
 A: It’s a different quality. In dreams, desire produces a scene, 
				an event, an experience just like that. Desire gives rise to 
				fulfillment. In waking life, it feels different.
 
 Q: Is that because waking life is so different from sleeping?
 
 A: Maybe. But I think it’s something else. When we’re awake, we 
				bamboozle ourselves into thinking that our desires carry 
				relatively little power. And we make the excuse, "Well, the 
				world doesn’t work according to desire. It works on its own, 
				like a machine, and we have to plug into the machine and go 
				along with its processes."
 
 Q: Lots of people have come along and talked about manifesting 
				desire in the world.
 
 A: I know. And usually it doesn’t pan out. Something goes wrong. 
				What I’m saying is, it has to do with state of mind. A person 
				can occupy all sorts of different states of mind - and then 
				different outcomes will result. Dreaming is a state of mind that 
				works when you’re asleep. So what happens when you’re doing 
				something to blend that dreaming state or connect it to waking 
				life in the world? That’s what I’m doing with my patients now. 
				It’s a work in progress.
 
 Q: Any preliminary findings?
 
 A: I’m encouraged. That’s all I can say right now. I have people 
				keeping a book of dreams. Every day, they invent and write down 
				dreams in the book. They aren’t reporting on dreams. They’re 
				creating them. While they’re awake. You see? So in that writing, 
				they’re moving through states of mind they wouldn’t ordinarily 
				occupy while they’re awake.
 
 Q: A similar thing would happen in a play on stage.
 
 A: Yes. An actor is playing a role that doesn’t exist anywhere 
				except on the stage. He’s inventing. The whole play - somewhat 
				like a dream - is taking place on the stage. And the audience is 
				watching a dream unfold. They want that. They want to be awake 
				and watch a dream. They want that experience. They want to blend 
				different states of mind. But most of all, they just want to see 
				a dream while they’re awake.
 
 Q: What you’re doing with patients is like the other side of the 
				coin of lucid dreaming.
 
 A: It seems like it. From what I understand, the practice of 
				lucid dreaming involves cultivating the ability to realize, in 
				the middle of a dream, that you are dreaming - but you don’t wake 
				up in bed. You’re still "in it." But you know you’re having a 
				dream. And then you direct the rest of the dream according to 
				the way you want it to happen. Well, I’m saying, let’s take 
				people who are awake, and let’s have them invent dreams and 
				write them down. Let’s take it from the other end.
 
 Q: What about nightmares?
 
 A: Well, this goes back to what you were saying. A dream is an 
				adventure. Suppose you could decide to embrace "a bad dream" and 
				not be thrown way off by it. While the so-called nightmare is 
				happening, you’re embracing the whole thing because you want to 
				experience it. And so the dream itself takes on a different 
				character. You don’t retract and shrink back so much. You "wrap 
				your arms around" the nasty creature who is coming at you. I 
				believe then that the dream will take on a different character. 
				It won’t be fearful in the same way.
 
 Q: The ancient Tibetans were very much involved in cultivating 
				extraordinary capacities. Levitating, telekinesis, and so on. 
				For them, universe was a product of mind. If you could fully 
				know that, you could experience it. You could make things 
				disappear and create new things out of nothing.
 
 A: I find something of the quality of dream in their work. The 
				flavor of it. They had a culture that supported that. They were 
				intensely creative. They did very intense exercises over long 
				periods of time. It wasn’t your standard religion.
 
 Q: In the past, we’ve talked about film as dream.
 
 A: Well, I think that was the early impact of films. They were 
				dreams on the screen. It was a bit like being led into your own 
				psyche and desires. Whereas, realism is about the fixation on 
				having things as they are in the physical world.
 
 Q: The early films of Ingmar Bergman had a certain dream 
				quality. And even though the subject matter was, at times, 
				despondent, it was alive.
 
 A: When a person goes to escape depression, where does he go? He 
				looks for any kind of life line. He tries to get back into the 
				world. The everyday world. But after a while, what does he have? 
				He may be somewhat happier, but the "real world" doesn’t give 
				him the sense of really being alive in an intense way. No matter 
				how you approach it, the physical world is missing certain 
				factors. It’s missing everything that lies beyond the boundaries 
				laid down by the rules. It’s missing all those qualities you can 
				find in dreams.
 
 Q: The phrase "inventing dreams." What does it mean?
 
 A: Just what it says. You make up a dream. Then another one. It 
				doesn’t matter what they are. It doesn’t mean "the one dream you 
				want to fulfill all your life." Sure, throw that one into the 
				mix. But it means plural. Dreams. Invent dreams. Write them 
				down. Flesh them out. Not just vague general statements. Just 
				keep making them up. Dreams. One after another.
 
 Q: It occurs to me that no one I’ve ever talked to has described 
				a dream in which he was buying and selling something.
 
 A: (laughs) Yeah. That’s the main thing that goes on in the 
				world. But when people sleep, they want to do something else. 
				There is something about the human race - they want to build and 
				envision all sorts of complex machines. It’s fascinating.
 
				  
				And 
				the mind sometimes works that way, too. How complex a thought 
				can you lug around? How intricate can you make the processes of 
				mind? How many halls and corridors and rooms can you install in 
				landscapes of the interior?  
				  
				This gives rise to the idea that the 
				mind itself - and everything you want to discover about it - is very 
				complex. It has to be. You see? So the journey of discovery will 
				be a very long one. I have no problem with that, if people want 
				to entertain and amuse themselves that way. Great.  
				  
				But I think 
				there is short-line way of understanding. You see how the 
				physical world works. It has space and time. And so on. You 
				can’t go from point A to B without some amount of time passing. 
				You can’t look at a clock on a table and make it disappear. You 
				can’t conjure up a rock out of nowhere and make it sit on that 
				table. There are things you can do and can’t do. That’s the 
				message of physical reality.  
				  
				People who are conscious know there 
				is something wrong with that. There’s something wrong with that 
				formulation. It isn’t complete. We humans aren’t just another 
				species that fits into the overall framework of physical 
				reality. There are groups who want us to believe that, who want 
				us to make ourselves more stupid, who want us to imagine 
				ourselves as just another kind of primate. But that’s not so. We 
				aren’t. The trouble is, when some people get hold of this idea 
				of the dream, they use it to remain forever adolescent. They use 
				it to become–
 Q: Glazed donut heads.
 
 A: Yes. They use it to excuse themselves from having anything to 
				do with the world. In a juvenile way. They don’t really want to 
				think. They just want to get what they want when they want it. 
				They don’t want to work. They want a gift to arrive in the mail 
				that will change them for all time. It’s pathetic.
 
				  
				I’m not 
				talking about that at all. I’m talking about something much, 
				much different. Why do we have this capacity to dream when we 
				sleep? Why do we have this capacity to experience a different 
				order of reality full-bore? Do we say it’s just a minor 
				diversion, like a TV show?  
				  
				Or do say it’s a profound clue about 
				the nature of multiple Realities and how we’ve accommodated 
				ourselves to this one type of physical reality, when in fact an 
				infinity of other types of experience are available to us?  
				  
				None 
				of this would be a problem, if it weren’t for the fact that we 
				want and desire those wider experiences - and if we don’t reach 
				them or move toward reaching them, we become frustrated and 
				bored and passive.
 Q: By "wider experiences," you’re including the capacity to make 
				paranormal events happen.
 
 A: Of course I am.
 
 Q: You were…[there is a break in the conversation, and then Jack 
				is off on another topic]
 
 A: I once saw a man dance out a dream. It was a very interesting 
				experience. He did it in a dance studio. There were a few of us 
				there. This was a dream he’d had a few months earlier, which he 
				called the most thrilling experience of his life. He was walking 
				on clouds above a forest covered by fog, in the early morning, 
				and birds of strange shapes and colors came up from the canopy 
				and hovered near him.
 
				  
				He walked on the clouds and felt green 
				rays shooting up through his feet, all the way up his body into 
				his head… when he danced this out in the studio, the whole thing 
				transformed. There was no music. His dance was obviously about 
				him absorbing and using that energy to be able to fly.  
				  
				The dance 
				went on for close to two hours. He was trying to learn to fly, 
				literally. And the process was an exhilarating struggle. A few 
				days later, he told me several nagging health problems he’d been 
				having went away. He said the whole business about being able to 
				fly had been stuck in his craw since he was a child, and he 
				finally realized it was causing him chronic frustration, for 
				many years. He said it didn’t matter if he never learned to fly, 
				he was "working on it," and his body was undergoing many 
				changes, as a result.  
				  
				So, in that case, a desire or goal which 
				everybody would say was totally impossible and crazy became the 
				impetus for him to transform himself. He didn’t automatically 
				reject the whole idea.  
				  
				He accepted it as a real desire, and he 
				began to dance it through. He kept at it, too. He did his dance 
				many times after that. It was alchemy in motion.
 Q: That’s quite unusual, to say the least. He didn’t reject the 
				desire.
 
 A: He kept expanding on it. I thought it was also interesting 
				that he was a football player…see, the point is, we all have 
				desires which are theoretically impossible. These are kinds of 
				desires that show up and are temporarily fulfilled in dreams. We 
				decide to bury them. And we think it doesn’t matter. But it can 
				matter.
 
 Q: You’re talking about the tension between "the rules" of 
				physical reality and what we want.
 
 A: Right. I could also extend that to the rules of society, but 
				let’s stick to this, because I think it’s far more interesting 
				and less understood. Let’s suppose you have a person who really 
				wants to move a cigarette lighter across a table with his mind. 
				He sits there, every day, and he tries, for an hour or two. 
				Nothing happens. But he wants it to happen. That’s tension. He 
				can’t do it.
 
				  
				So he starts to write about it or dance it through 
				or whatever. He’s now giving expression to a desire that runs 
				counter to the limits of physical reality, as these limits are 
				generally understood or accepted. He’s engaging with a desire 
				that "has no basis" in what we call ordinary life. You see? It 
				doesn’t mean he’s gone crazy or he quits his job or he does 
				drugs.  
				  
				It doesn’t mean he leaves his family or grows a beard two 
				feet long or mumbles to himself. This is a straight-out 
				expression of desire. Now, he has to find a way to express the 
				desire. He has to work with this.
 Q: In a way, this was what the Tibetans did. They had exercises 
				for this.
 
 A: Yeah. In a way.
           
			
			
			AN EXPLOSIVE NEW INTERVIEW WITH JACK TRUE 
			by Jon RappoportFebruary 22, 2011
 
			from
			
			JonRappoport Website 
			
 
			Over the years, I’ve had many requests to publish 
			further interviews with my late friend, hypnotherapist Jack True. 
			I’ve assembled another interview here, from my notes.
 What strikes me about all the interviews I did with Jack… he takes 
			his time. He doesn’t feel pressed to make a few points and stop. He 
			not only has a generosity of spirit, but of language, too. It seems, 
			these days, people want quicker and quicker messages. They have less 
			patience. It’s too bad. But I’m certainly not going to cut down 
			things to fit the present mold. Jack deserves all the space I can 
			give him.
 
 In the late 1980s and early 90s, Jack and I had many conversations. 
			He was, I believe, the most innovative hypnotist who ever walked the 
			face of the Earth. Yet, he eventually gave up traditional hypnotism 
			for other methods which he felt would better serve people.
 
 The following conversation took place in the spring of 1988, just 
			prior to publication of my first book, AIDS INC.
 
			  
			Jack was 
			instrumental in that project, along several fronts. And just after 
			the book appeared in print, in his typically mysterious way, he told 
			me the book was on a plane, in a diplomatic pouch, to the USSR, 
			where, he said, people "will be very interested in your findings."
 The following interview (which is not about AIDS INC.) focuses on 
			magic and the means to attain it.
 
 
				
				Q (Rappoport): Do you think people are becoming more superficial?
 A (Jack True): Not only that, they’re becoming cartoons of 
			themselves. But thankfully, there are still some of us who can 
			think.
 
 Q: What do you mean, cartoons?
 
 A: They assess their supposed strengths, and they carve themselves 
			down to fit a desire for success. This leaves them in a strange 
			place, like a bright penny lying in the street. For a second it 
			looks good, but then you realize it’s only a penny. This is how you 
			get a personality shift. A person fastens on to one idea about 
			themselves or the world, and then he sculpts himself to fit that 
			idea. Then everything goes to hell.
 
 Q: Because he becomes terminally bored.
 
 A: Not at first, but eventually, yes. The key to all movements and 
			groups of any kind…a person joins up, feels a thrill of newness - and 
			then up the road realizes dimly something is missing. (laughs) 
			What’s missing is a significant part of himself! It’s fabulous joke 
			when you think about it. A self-performed lobotomy.
 
 Q: Done to attain success.
 
 A: Broadly speaking, yes. And you’re right, boredom is the outcome. 
			But not ordinary boredom. A deep cloud of nothing. A cloud that 
			wraps a person up in non-creativity. It’s like a hypnotic state, in 
			which the patient is sitting there, hoping for a suggestion that 
			will change his life. But it never comes. It’s quiet. Nothing 
			happens.
 
 Q: People have to decide what they really want.
 
 A: But you see, how can they decide when they’re only half 
			themselves, when they’re cut off from the bulk of what they are? 
			It’s a pickle. It’s like trying to drive a very fast car with your 
			knees, or with your eyes closed. Self cut off from self. People 
			parading around like caricatures of what they are. It’s the Disney 
			dream come true.
 
 Q: In the old Disney version, the fantasy is very narrow. It’s a 
			very narrow road.
 
 A: Or here is my analogy. It’s like a performer with no audience.
 
 Q: Why do you say that?
 
 A: You can look at this in one of two ways. You can say we are all 
			the audience now, or you can say there is no audience. Because 
			audiences have been trained to react like dogs. They hear certain 
			bells, and they drool. Is that a real response? No, the point is to 
			break through all that and come out on the other side.
 
 Q: And that’s done how?
 
 A: That’s a secret.
 
 Q: What?
 
 A: It’s a secret. Every person who wants to has to find out for 
			himself. There is no other way. Do you see?
 
 Q: There is no system.
 
 A: Exactly. Systems are sold to prevent breakthroughs from 
			happening. That’s why they’re so popular.
 
 Q: "Here, 
				buy this system and you’ll fail for sure."
 
 A: Yeah. But the package looks nice. Isn’t it great? People don’t 
			open the package because they were only buying the package and the 
			idea that they could be a winner.
 
 Q: Tell me what you mean by breakthrough.
 
 A: You find lost parts of yourself. You stop repeating yourself over 
			and over. You stop being so gentle about everything. You know. "Be 
			nice and you’ll get a gold star." Be nice and you’ll get psychically 
			dead. This gold-star crap is a form of behavior modification. Try 
			this sometime. Tell people they should become spontaneous. Tell a 
			lot of people. Watch what happens. Nothing happens. Because most 
			people don’t even have an inkling about what you mean.
 
 Q: Why don’t they?
 
 A: Because they’ve programmed themselves to ignore that whole area. 
			They’ve built a wall.
 
 Q: They’ve done this consciously?
 
 A: Yes. And then as time passes, they forget what they did.
 
 Q: You’ve seen this with patients?
 
 A: Of course. I’ve had patients remember what they did to 
			themselves, as clearly as they remember walking down the street 
			yesterday. It’s quite illuminating. They see it like a map, all laid 
			out in front of them. But that doesn’t mean they’re suddenly free.
 
 Q: Why not?
 
 A: Because freedom is just opportunity. You actually have to do 
			something to make freedom real. Removing brainwashing doesn’t result 
			in a miracle. You have to eliminate the tendency to brainwash 
			yourself again. And you do that by creating something you really 
			desire.
 
 Q: Desire is a tricky concept.
 
 A: Sure. You get a person who makes a living picking lint off the 
			boss’s suit. Then he un-brainwashes himself, and he says, "Now I’m 
			going to pick the lint off with my left hand rather than my right. 
			That’s my desire." You see? Some people want that level of 
			superficiality.
 
				  
				I mean, that’s the only level they can see.  
				  
				They 
			need wider experience. They need to live. They need all sorts of new 
			experience, so they can find out something closer to their real 
			desires. I’ve worked with patients who, even after a long time, show 
			no evidence that they have deep desires. It’s rather astonishing. It 
			can drive you to believe some humans are actually androids. (laughs)
 Q: What do you think is going on there?
 
 A: I have several answers. I’ll give you one. Some people are so 
			thirsty for control coming from outside themselves - they want to 
			conform so badly - they’ll opt for a whole slate of desires that are 
			entirely synthetic. They sound synthetic and they look synthetic. 
			It’s a form of conformity that runs very deep in them. They 
			basically come into this life with that thirst. Nothing will deter 
			them.
 
 Q: Have you learned anything from these people?
 
 A: Yes. Looking for the programming that causes them to function 
			this way is a dead end. They’re inventing their own destiny as they 
			go. They’re building the conformity, brick by brick.
 
 Q: Dead art.
 
 A: Dead on arrival. They’re inventing the whole charade. It made me 
			look at the whole notion of programming from a new angle. You see, 
			people are imagining reality and then responding to it. So I could 
			put them in trance and then give them suggestions, but then they’d 
			just start to imagine reality according to my guideposts. Do you 
			see? I’d start them on a new path, but they’d be doing the same 
			basic thing.
 
 Q: How do you get around that?
 
 A: It took me a long time to see it. You get them to invent all 
			sorts of different realities. This isn’t as easy as it sounds. But 
			the fundamental approach is valid. How do you wake a person up? You 
			get him to do what he does while he’s asleep. You get him to sleep 
			in many different ways. You go on and on with this, and eventually 
			he’ll realize he’s asleep and he’ll start to wake up.
 
 Q: This works with everybody?
 
 A: No one thing works with everybody.
 
 Q: I know you sometimes use a technique where you have people invent 
			many dreams.
 
 A: It’s one way to get a person to widen their scope. Invent a 
			dream. A dream isn’t bound by time constraints or time patterns or 
			location or plot line. You can have a dream where you’re shifting 
			from place to place without apparent reason. It just happens.
 
 Q: In physical reality, this doesn’t happen.
 
 A: And that tells you something about physical reality. It’s only 
			one form out of many possibilities. Just because it happens to be 
			the form we live in, that doesn’t mean it’s the only way 
			consciousness can operate.
 
 Q: So we have art. An artist goes outside the background context.
 
 A: And why should he want to do that? Because he’s frustrated by the 
			constraints. He glimpses or sees other possibilities and he wants to 
			express them. We could do a lot worse than write our own books of 
			dreams.
 
 Q: A lot of people wouldn’t be ready for that.
 
 A: Well, a lot of people wouldn’t be ready for a free society, 
			either. Does that mean the rest of us shouldn’t have one? What makes 
			a person not ready is obsession. For instance, someone is fixated on 
			having something. I mean really fixated. And in life, he can’t get 
			it. He’s chaining himself inside all sorts of limitations, and yet 
			at the same time he wants something that lies outside those 
			self-imposed boundaries. So if he begins to invent or imagine all 
			sorts of new possibilities for himself, he’s always going to do it 
			so he can get that thing he so desperately wants.
 
 Q: He keeps undermining himself, because he always brings it back to 
			that thing he keeps obsessing about.
 
 A: Yeah. It isn’t a pretty picture. He’s in too much of a hurry. He 
			wants a billion dollars tomorrow. That’s his fixation. Or whatever 
			it is. So when he opens up his imagination, he can’t really fall in 
			love with that process - because he always thinks if he has more 
			imagination and creativity, maybe he’ll get that billion dollars 
			tomorrow.
 
				  
				So his experience is one failure after another, because he 
			has that desire to become Midas tomorrow. It’s an odd thing, but 
			I’ve seen it. It’s one way people can stay immature for a very long 
			time. They don’t really grow up. They’re in perpetual adolescence.
 Q: On a larger scale, that seems to be happening to America.
 
 A: More and more people believe they can be Midas tomorrow. And more 
			and more people believe they can have political utopia tomorrow.
 
 Q: The utopia turns out to be some version of collectivism.
 
 A: I’ve had a people write their own books of dreams.
 
 Q: How does that work?
 
 A: It’s very simple. They just keep inventing dreams and writing 
			them down. Do that for a year every day, and you’ll see some very 
			interesting changes in your conception of reality. But you have to 
			remain grounded at the same time. Because you are living in this 
			world, in this form of reality. That’s the trick, to remain 
			grounded.
 
 Q: Almost sounds like you’re talking about a contradiction.
 
 A: Almost, but not quite. An analogy. Yoga. You’re moving into 
			different areas of consciousness, but you’re also doing strenuous 
			physical work. One isn’t separate from the other. Or take this as an 
			example. A person has an objective - and he can dream about it and see 
			it fulfilled in the dream. The more this happens, over a period of 
			time, the more power he actually has to make that desire come true 
			in life.
 
				  
				His psychic power becomes stronger. But he’s also working 
			to make the desire come true. I mean real work. Get-your-hands- 
			dirty work. Every day. The two aren’t completely separate.
 Q: But there is magic.
 
 A: Of course there’s magic! Behind every mask is a magic state of 
			affairs. You can see it, you can feel it, but you also have to 
			pursue it. Work and magic aren’t contradictory.
 
 Q: What about this old statement 
				- the world is just a stage.
 
 A: Physical reality is a stage set. Just one. We’re slaves to that 
			one way. And we tend to react like slaves when the door to the jail 
			cell opens. We peek out, we take a few steps, and then we go back 
			in. This is the joke. It’s a very big joke. If only more people 
			could laugh at it. That would be progress. But we take it all so 
			seriously. Even the part about escaping. We’re in a comedy, and 
			we’re playing the part of tragic figures. It’s a bad fit.
 
 Q: It’s like a debate with argument and counter-argument. It goes on 
			and on.
 
 A: Yes, that’s right. You remember Steppenwolf, the Hesse novel. 
			Harry, the main character, is all wrapped up in his loneliness, his 
			sense of exile. And Pablo, his guide, is brimming with good cheer 
			and amusement. And the scene at the end, the cosmic laughter. It’s 
			real, that laughter. It’s the exposure of the grand joke. You were 
			living inside a jewel box, and you thought it was the whole 
			universe. And then the lid comes up and you realize the truth, which 
			you’ve always known, underneath all the tons of bullshit.
 
 Q: What happens in hypnotism?
 
 A: Essentially, you have an unspoken contract. The patient is 
			saying, "I want to get out of the thing I’m in. So get me out. I’ll 
			surrender myself to you. Get me out." And the therapist is saying, "Follow my lead. Do what I say. And you’ll experience a shift that 
			feels better than you’re feeling now. You’ll get out for a little 
			while. You’ll feel that."
 
				  
				That’s what happens on one level. On 
			another level, the patient is saying, "I want to believe. Make me 
			believe something exciting." The therapist says, "Okay, I will. I’ll 
			make you believe the rules can be broken. I’ll show you they can." 
			So he puts the patient in a trance, where the patient is relaxed and 
			receptive, and then he says, "That ankle of yours that’s sprained. 
			It’s healing right now. It’s getting better."  
				  
				And the patient 
			believes what the therapist is telling him. He believes in the 
			therapist. Strongly. And that belief puts him in a new reality where 
			things can happen spontaneously. That belief surpasses the rules. 
			And when the therapist brings him out of the trance, his ankle is 
			better. The swelling is down. The pain has diminished.
 Q: So why can’t that breaking of the rules become the new reality 
			all the time?
 
 A: Well, it can. But not because the patient has such a strong 
			belief in the therapist. That would be unworkable as a permanent and 
			forever fix.
 
 Q: But if the patient, on his own, radically changed his beliefs?
 
 A: Yes. That’s how magic comes about. The question is, does it 
			happen in five seconds?
 
 Q: You don’t think it does.
 
 A: I think the patient 
				- who is not a patient anymore - needs to find a 
			vehicle to carry him forward. Well, the vehicle doesn’t do the work. 
			The person does. But he uses a vehicle to help him.
 
 Q: What kind of vehicle?
 
 A: That question is like asking, "Is there one fingerprint we can 
			all share?" And I would say no. Each person has to find such a 
			vehicle for himself. It has to suit him. He might change vehicles a 
			dozen times, as he goes. For example, for you it might be theater. 
			You act. You write. You direct. I don’t know. I’m picking something 
			out of a hat.
 
 Q: And how long would I do that?
 
 A: Now we’re going to get metaphysical. How long does it take a 
			person to become a slave? How long until his own slavery, as real as 
			it is, becomes entirely invisible to him? How long does it take for 
			him to fully accept the rules of physical reality - this stage play 
			we’re in? This is where we have to depart from the culture we’re 
			living in. We have to talk about many lives, living many lives, 
			reincarnation, and so forth.
 
 Q: You’re saying it takes many lives to sink all the way down into 
			the stage play we call reality, with no consciousness that there is 
			something else - and therefore, it could take many lives to get out of 
			it. To get to magic on a permanent basis.
 
 A: Yeah. I know people don’t like to hear that. They want the 
			glimpse of magic, the moment of magic they had on Tuesday to become 
			permanent right now. They want that dream to take hold now and never 
			leave. They want to levitate tonight and be able to levitate and 
			hover and fly forever after that.
 
				  
				So I say, sure, okay, why not? Are 
			you ready to stop believing in the rules of the stage play 
			altogether? Are you ready to move beyond that now? And are you also 
			ready to be able to leave the stage play and come back to it 
			whenever you want to - because, since you’re here in this stage play, 
			it appears you have some attachment to it. It appears on some level 
			that you want it. 
				  
				I’m not imposing limitations on anybody. I’m just 
			reporting on the situation as I see it. What’s magic? Levitation, 
			bi-location, invisibility, instantaneous shifting from one place to 
			another, seeing the future, telepathy, changing shape, time travel, 
			telekinesis…is that what magic is? Spontaneously projecting a 
			thought and turning it into a reality in front of you and everybody 
			else? This is what we all think magic is? Right? Okay, I agree. 
			These are magical things.  
				  
				So how long does it take for a slave to 
			get there, to leave this old reality behind? And then to come back 
			and be here and live inside this stage play? Exit and enter? Anytime 
			he wants to? Isn’t this what we mean by magic? So I’m saying magic 
			is invention of new realities relative to this monolithic one. And 
			you get there by inventing all sorts of new realities, on and on. 
			 
				  
				You keep doing that, regardless of what you may feel. You keep on. 
			And for that, you need a vehicle. And you keep on inventing 
			realities that are close to what you desire. That’s what you do. You 
			need a vehicle to do that. Maybe a better way of saying it is, you 
			need a medium by which to express those new realities. Do you see?
 Q: The traditional culture supposes that a person has to remove or 
			de-condition limiting beliefs in order to make progress.
 
 A: Yes, I know that. I know all about it.
 
 Q: And?
 
 A: And I haven’t found that to be true. First of all, many people 
			get all wound up and tied up and encased in the method, whatever it 
			is, of getting rid of limiting beliefs. They get snarled up in that. 
			It becomes a habit. A crutch. And second, how do you really get rid 
			of a limitation? You put a cow in a corral with a fence, and you 
			leave him there for two years.
 
				  
				That’s limiting, wouldn’t you say?  
				  
				Now you open the door. Is he supposed to stand there and think about 
			how and why he’s become used to being inside the corral? Or is he 
			supposed to walk out into the open field? He has to walk out. So 
			it’s the same with this reality. But there is one big difference. We 
			don’t see the open field. All we see is this reality. So we don’t 
			just walk out of the corral. We wouldn’t know how or where to go. 
			Instead, we invent different and new realities. 
				  
				Is that a little 
			clearer now? We become inventors of new realities. And in doing 
			that, we gain new power. And somewhere up the line, that power 
			translates into magic. We can do magic.
 Q: So, to invent different realities, you need a vehicle, a medium 
			like paint or words. You don’t just sit their and ruminate.
 
 A: Right. I knew a person who made maps of lands and countries that 
			don’t exist. Hundreds of maps. An architect. After working with him 
			for a while, I told him it was time for him to invent new realities 
			by the ton. And he didn’t know how. I said to him, "You’re an 
			architect! Make models. Make cities." And he went off and thought 
			about it and decided to create maps. From what I hear, he’s still 
			going strong.
 
 Q: By inventing realities, you eventually get to magic.
 
 A: It isn’t hocus-pocus.
 
 Q: People wish it was.
 
 A: Yeah. I know. (laughs) Sorry to disappoint them.
 
			
			Note: Some of the ideas in this interview came from Jack, and some 
			came from him by way of me. Jack and I talked a great deal in the 
			old days. A large amount of cross-fertilization occurred. I carry on 
			this work today.
             
			
			
			The Jack True Interview - Part 1 
			by Jon RappoportApril 
			27, 2009
 
			from
			
			RealTalkWorld Website 
			  
			
			I met Jack True in 1987 while I was working on my first book, AIDS 
			INC. A mutual friend introduced us one afternoon at the UCLA 
			Biomedical Library, where I was combing through medical journals.
 
 Jack seemed to know a great deal about medical-research fraud. He 
			pointed me to studies in the stacks, and then we sat down and had a 
			long talk about animal research, and I learned more than I wanted to 
			know about the cruelty of that industry.
 
 I discovered that Jack was a Hypnotherapist. I had always been 
			interested in hypnosis. He suggested we meet again and talk about 
			his research. This led to many dinners at a Chinese restaurant in 
			Santa Monica, California.
 
 A few days after AIDS INC. was published, Jack casually told me a 
			copy of the book was in a diplomatic pouch heading to Moscow. I 
			tried to press him, but he refused to give me details, except to say 
			people in Russia would certainly be interested in my conclusions 
			about the inaccuracy of the viral studies that had been carried out 
			at the US National Institutes of Health.
 
 As I discovered over the next five years of conversations, Jack had 
			been approached by "government contractors," who were interested in 
			his work on the cutting edge of human potential. Jack consistently 
			turned down their offers.
 
 After his untimely death in the mid-1990s, I went through my notes 
			and tapes of our conversations. What emerged were the astounding 
			findings of a unique mind. Spread out in front of me, in these 
			notes, were wide-ranging and daring explorations of a researcher who 
			was determined to extend the possibilities of human capacity.
 
 Jack and I shared many ideas we had independently arrived (at), from 
			different routes. Painting had unlocked many doors for me. Jack had 
			ventured into creative areas that went far beyond the traditional 
			notion of hypnosis as a method for planting suggestions.
 
 I’m happy to present, here, a compilation and re-editing of several 
			of our interviews. I think you’ll find, as you read Jack’s remarks, 
			that there IS something new under the sun. Jack had great disdain 
			for limits, and he wasn’t just pushing the envelope. He was pushing 
			the envelope and the letter and the whole Post Office. He was a rare 
			combination of researcher, artist, and rebel.
 
 I call him the Spy in the House of Infinity.
 
 
				
				Q: Why hypnosis?
 A: At first, it was a fascination with the idea of changing beliefs. 
			I could put a patient in a trance and make suggestions, and these 
			suggestions would appear to alter the patient’s inhibiting 
			convictions.
 
 Q: Why do you say "appear"?
 
 A: Well, that’s the point. It’s a dead end. The patient keeps 
			kicking out the new beliefs and retreating back to familiar 
			territory.
 
 Q: Give an example of a suggestion.
 
 A: 
				"You’re happy." "You’re satisfied with your life." "Your leg 
				feels better." "You can run faster." "Your arm is healed."
 
 Q: Seems pretty simple.
 
 A: The immediate results can be tremendous. But, in most cases, they 
			faded. The patient slips back.
 
 Q: Given that this was what you were doing with patients, you must 
			have become discouraged.
 
 A: I wanted to go farther, understand more. I began looking for a 
			system. I wanted a protocol that would do an end-run around the 
			patient’s tendency to fall back on old habits.
 
 Q: A system.
 
 A: You know, a better mechanism. A smarter approach. I wanted 
			tricks. But that didn’t work, either. It seemed as if something in 
			the patient was much smarter than what I could devise.
 
 Q: Smarter in what sense?
 
 A: In remaining essentially passive.
 
 Q: But if a patient were truly passive, wouldn"t he then accept all 
			your hypnotic suggestions and become different?
 
 A: No. The kind of passivity I’m talking about is 
				"staying the 
			same." I found deeper levels, shall we say, where people want to 
			stay the same. And when you look at what that is, you see it’s an 
			acceptance of a lowest common denominator of what they already are. 
			It’s like a person who drives his car a few miles to a lake, he’s 
			got his bathing suit on, he gets out of the car, he goes over to the 
			lake, he sits down, and he stays there. He’s in his bathing suit 
			with a towel next to him, but he never goes in the water.
 
 Q: What would happen if he did go in the water?
 
 A: He’d feel something new. He’d have a new experience that would 
			change his whole outlook on his future. It would be revolutionary 
			for him.
 
 Q: But that’s why he went to the lake.
 
 A: We don’t know that. That’s not definite. While he sits at the 
			edge of the lake, he starts thinking about all sorts of things. And 
			that rumination becomes the substitute for actually jumping in the 
			lake. When he finally gets up and goes back to his car and drives 
			home, he decides the rumination was why he really went to the lake.
 
				  
				The rumination was enough. He rationalizes the whole trip and turns 
			it into something acceptable. I have no problem with that. We all do 
			it. But after he goes to the lake a few hundred times and never 
			jumps into the water, he develops a kind of crust. He’s shielded 
			against a breakthrough.
 But think about this: Why is it that human beings can be hypnotized 
			at all? I mean it’s not inevitable in the scheme of things.
 
 Q: So what’s the answer?
 
 A: Most people want to give up their will to another person. They 
			want that experience. They’re waiting for it, so to speak. It’s part 
			of what they think of as life - like going to the movies or running on 
			the beach or flying in an airplane.
 
 Q: They want to surrender.
 
 A: Not always, but yes.
 
 Q: And this is because?
 
 A: They think something good is going to happen.
 
 Q: They think they’ll find out some secret?
 
 A: It’s a very fundamental idea.
 
 Q: Explain.
 
 A: You search through the jungle for the lost fountain of youth, and 
			you hack away overgrowth and you endure bugs and snakes and all 
			sorts of unpleasantness - trying your best to exert your own will 
			power toward that fabled goal - and then what? Then, when you finally 
			find the fountain, you surrender to it. You drink and bathe in the 
			water and you let it do its work on you.
 
 Q: And that’s like being hypnotized?
 
 A: You’re looking for something to override your normal will power, 
			your normal processes, your normal drive to go get what you want. 
			People want Ultimate Experiences or Illuminations, and they believe 
			these revelations will come as a result of their surrendering the 
			whole shooting match to something else. Rather than treating this 
			human tendency as perfectly normal and natural, I treated it as a 
			kind of marvel to be examined and rolled around and examined from 
			all sides.
 
				  
				Take the example of an amusement park. You see people 
			throwing baseballs at lead bowling pins to win a stuffed bear, but 
			the most popular events are the rides like the giant roller 
			coaster - because they take you over at some point, they make you 
			surrender your "normal" state of mind to a "revelation" - that of 
			being thrown into, forced into, another reality, a so-called special 
			reality where your normal perception is shoved into the background.
 In the early days, when I was learning about how to hypnotize 
			people, I found that I was very good at it, because I was utterly 
			convinced that people wanted to be put in a trance. They were lining 
			up to surrender their will power. I knew that in my bones. And so I 
			instinctively found a way to give them exactly what they wanted.
 
				  
				I 
			never felt I was breaking some internal rule they were living by. 
			The deeper rule was: Do me; hypnotize me; take away my will.
 Q: It was a kind of pleasure for them.
 
 A: To be taken over.
 
 Q: "Let the sound of the ocean roll over me, and let the sun beat 
			down on me." What’s wrong with that?
 
 A: Well, in my early days, I didn’t think there was anything wrong 
			with it. I was just cooperating with what I considered was the 
			Deeper Law.
 
 Q: How far did you take that?
 
 A: In some cases, all the way. If a person wanted a new outlook on 
			life, an outlook that he thought was better than anything he could 
			manufacture himself, I was there to give it to him. That was my job. 
			To turn things inside out and install a better, more positive theme 
			to his life.
 
 Q: And you were okay with that?
 
 A: For a time. I refused to think there was anything better. For 
			example, I was treating a kleptomaniac, a woman who couldn’t stop 
			stealing. She told me she had tried everything to stop, but nothing 
			worked. So I dove in and tried to give her a new outlook, an outlook 
			that didn’t require her to steal. I tried to give her a better state 
			of mind in wholesale form, by making suggestions over a long period 
			of time while she was under, while she was in a trance.
 
 Q: How did that work out?
 
 A: She loved the short periods when she was under, when she let go 
			of her own will power. It was like a vacation for her. But 
			eventually the whole thing collapsed of its own weight and she was 
			back to square one.
 
 Q: What did you conclude about why your effort collapsed?
 
 A: First, I assumed that I hadn’t done the actual hypnosis well 
			enough. That was silly. I had done it well. Then I decided that I 
			had failed because I hadn’t ATTACHED this new outlook I was 
				"installing" to some key part of her personality. The "imported new 
			personality" had no foundation; it just floated in the sea of her 
			mind like an island, and eventually it was overwhelmed by her 
			stronger impulses. I assumed my attempt at mind control wasn’t 
			reaching deep enough roots in her. That’s when I went back and 
			re-studied all the information on CIA mind control.
 
 Q: From a new perspective.
 
 A: Yes. Because I had to admit I was doing mind control, pure and 
			simple. I had to admit that.
 
 Q: It didn’t make you happy.
 
 A: Not at all.
 
 Q: So what did you see when you reviewed the CIA data again?
 
 A: The obvious, I guess. They were working from duress. They were 
			attaching their suggestions to their "patients" by forcing them to 
			surrender their own personalities, at which point they tried, in a 
			sense, to install new personalities.
 
 Q: Talk more about the whole idea that a person wants to surrender 
			his will in order to find some Ultimate Thing.
 
 A: The sense that a person wants to surrender his will at all 
				- where 
			does that come from? It comes from past experiences where he taught 
			himself - or others taught him - that will power is frustrating and 
			doesn’t get you where you want to go in life. So he looks for 
			another way out and he selects THE SURRENDER OF THE WILL. There are 
			many places in the culture he finds that teaching.
 
 Q: How did you feel when you came to this conclusion?
 
 A: First depressed, then elated.
 
 Q: Why elated?
 
 A: Because it became apparent to me that a person could, on his own, 
			without the mind control factor, INVENT his own outlook on life and 
			thereby reach his goals. And hypnotism, if it were going to do any 
			good at all, would have to somehow participate in that journey.
 
 Q: When you say "invent his own outlook" -
 
 A: I don’t mean blot out the past and become a smiling robot with a 
			Plan. I don’t mean some horribly grotesque smiling mask of "positive 
			thinking." I mean something much richer and fuller.
 
 Q: How can hypnotism assist a person in this work, if hypnotism is 
			all about getting a person to surrender his will and accept 
			suggestions from the therapist?
 
 A: That was the question. I was elated because it was a very stark 
			question, and it framed my future work. Things may not have been 
			solved for me, but they were suddenly clear, for the first time. My 
			job was to take a "science" that was really all about surrender and 
			use it for the opposite purpose. My job was to make hypnotism into a 
			thing that could make the will more powerful. My job was to help 
			people create at a deeper level for themselves. On the surface, it 
			seemed like this task would be impossible. But that was just fine 
			with me. I’ve always enjoyed paradox. I felt at home with paradox. 
			Give me a saw and tell me I have to find a way to paint pictures 
			with it, and I’m happy.
 
 Speaking of which, you paint, so let’s use that. Let’s say you 
			really want to do a huge painting, a fresco that spans a whole wall. 
			That’s your major idea. So how do you get there? You may, while 
			you’re asleep, dream of some of the images, but you’re going to have 
			to get on the ladder and PAINT. And keep painting until you say, 
			that’s it, and then you stop.
 
 If you keep on creating long enough, creating in the direction of 
			what is most important for you, you’ll also learn about CREATION 
			ITSELF. See? Creating is will power that has found its home. That’s 
			where will power really wants to be. CREATING. The more you create, 
			the more you’re moving into it, you’re immersed in it, and you’re 
			becoming more satisfied.
 
 Q: "Only the gods really 
				create."
 
 A: Yeah. That’s a major piece of mind control.
 
 Q: And if we go the other way? If we just keep creating?
 
 A: We become what we really are. I worked out ways to use hypnotism 
			to stimulate the creative urge in people. As a kick start.
 
 Imagine a fictional ant colony. On the lowest level, the ants just 
			follow their orders, so to speak. They do exactly what is expected 
			of them and nothing more. No deviation. Now, a few of the ants 
			graduate from there to realizing that following orders has the 
			flavor of, let’s call it, doing the right thing.
 
				  
				They’re following 
			orders, but they also realize they’re doing the right thing. Then, 
			out of that small group, a few ants begin to see that they’re 
			creating. They’re creating their own actions - and at that point, they 
			veer off. They don’t follow orders anymore. They think about what 
			they really want to create. And then THAT’S what they create. And 
			they feel they’re on a whole new level. And they are.
 Q: At which point, the whole ant colony could begin to disintegrate.
 
 A: Don’t blame me.
 
 Q: But you think this disintegration is a good thing.
 
 A: Disintegration of a perfect system that makes more and more 
			obedient ants? Yes.
 
 Q: On a political level -
 
 A: I’m talking about healthy disintegration, which is really 
			decentralization of power.
 
 Q: Many people would say we all need to act in concert to preserve 
			civilization.
 
 A: Concert is not necessarily the same thing as obedience. But let’s 
			not split hairs. If you want to be an ant, go right ahead. You’ll 
			always have a place. As long as you surrender your own will long 
			enough.
 
 Q: As times get tougher, more people look for a way to become ants.
 
 A: Yes they do. And this is what they call "preservation of 
			civilization." The whole question is, what do you mean by 
			CIVILIZATION? Do you mean a billion people acting on orders from an 
			elite? Ants always drift toward the absolute Collective.
 
 Q: Are you taking a cruel position here?
 
 A: Not at all. Cruel is getting people to surrender their will to 
			create. Cruel is getting people to think they must create in the 
			mode of the All.
 
 Q: What’s the All?
 
 A: The fiction that we are really constrained to making our little 
			part of the anthill and that’s it. And the fiction that there is a 
			wider purpose and entity behind this, and it’s running the whole 
			show, and we have to surrender to THAT.
 
 Q: And what is the opposite?
 
 A: What each person can find by flying over the anthill.
 
 Q: That’s a whole different picture of what society would become.
 
 A: Yeah.
 
 Q: In this picture, what is the glue that holds things together?
 
 A: The glue is what we always said it was. You can’t use your 
			freedom to curtail the freedom of another. We always said that, but 
			we didn’t really mean it.
 
 Q: Suppose a person wants to create something shallow and stupid.
 
 A: Then by creating it and getting it he stands a chance of 
			discovering it’s shallow and stupid, whereas if he just hopes for it 
			and wishes for it and whines about it, he has NO chance of finding 
			out it’s shallow and stupid.
 
 Q: Suppose he creates it and finds out it’s stupid. What does he do 
			then?
 
 A: Figures out something else he wants. And then creates whatever he 
			has to create to get that.
 
 Q: And if THAT turns out to be shallow and stupid?
 
 A: Repeat step A and B over and over until he decides he’s creating 
			something that isn’t stupid.
 
 Q: And in this process he finds out something about creation itself.
 
 A: That’s the bonus. And the bonus becomes the main event, 
			eventually.
 
 Q: How so?
 
 A: You take a special horse that is very dumb. And you think, this 
			horse is so dumb I have to lock him in the stall and leave him 
			there, because he doesn’t know what to do with himself. Will that 
			work? Of course not. So instead, you let the horse out of the stall. 
			The dumb horse is now free to create. So the first thing he does is, 
			he eats 12 bales of hay. He vomits it up. Then he eats 12 more bales 
			and pukes again. Then he walks around in a circle for three weeks 
			and falls down. Then he walks in a straight line toward the horizon 
			because he thinks that’s where he wants to go. But he gets tired and 
			lies down and goes to sleep. You see? He keeps creating dumb things. 
			But finally, after three years, he decides to try running. And 
			discovers he loves to run. THIS is really what he wants. He’s not 
			dumb anymore. So he runs and runs, and in the process he realizes 
			that he’s CREATING. And a light bulb goes on in his head. Now he is 
			doing more than running. He is somehow more than he was. And 
			eventually, by this process he learns to fly, and you’ve got 
			Pegasus. (laughs)
 
 Q: Okay. Suppose the first time you let this dumb horse out of the 
			stall you force him to run. Won’t he get where he wants to be 
			faster?
 
 A: He might. But chances are he’s too dumb at that point to realize 
			that running is what he wants. So he keeps stopping. He didn’t go 
			through the process himself.
 
 Q: Do you think there is a limit on what a person can create?
 
 A: No.
 
 Q: He can create gold bars out of thin air?
 
 A: Yes.
 
 Q: You really mean that?
 
 A: Yes.
 
 Q: How does a person create gold bars out of thin air?
 
 A: I’ll tell you this. He doesn’t do it the first time he’s let out 
			of the stall. It might take a million incarnations. Depends on who 
			he is.
 
 Q: What about a person who creates crime, murder?
 
 A: The principle of freedom applies. You are free to create anything 
			that doesn’t curtail the freedom of another person. If a person 
			commits murder, you lock him up or you execute him.
 
 Q: If a person knowingly creates 50,000 tons of toxic chemicals as 
			the head of a huge corporation that he has built?
 
 A: You lock him up. And you make him pay for the cleanup. I say lock 
			him up for a long time.
 
 Q: But then you are limiting his ability to create.
 
 A: I sure as hell hope so.
 
 Q: Do you believe a person can create his way out of the space-time 
			continuum? If he wants to?
 
 A: Of course.
 
 Q: What gave you the idea that individual creativity has such great 
			potential power?
 
 A: Many, many clues. For example, in my own practice, I saw patients 
			who were able to do extraordinary things, if only briefly. A patient 
			moved an object on a table without touching it. Another patient blew 
			out a light bulb in my office. By "looking at it." He did this 
			twice. These are the very little things. There are other events and 
			experiences. But it doesn’t matter what I’ve seen. It only matters 
			what other people believe and do.
 
 When I put someone in a light trance, what I’m dealing with is a 
			person who, for the moment, is free from a whole host of suggestions 
			that otherwise would be guiding his opinions and perceptions. It’s 
			an interesting moment. What should I do? Just give him more 
			suggestions? He already has too many of those in his waking life.
 
 I have that person create reality. I have him invent a dream or 
			construct a scene, any scene. Something. Anything.
 
 Q: But that would seem to be the opposite of discovering what 
			reality is.
 
 A: IS? Creating reality is putting your foot on the road to 
			discovering what reality CAN BE. The situation is very fluid, my 
			friend. Reality is malleable. That is what I learned from my 
			patients. Reality isn’t just one thing, like a present you unwrap.
 
 Q: That’s like saying you have to tell lies to arrive at the truth.
 
 A: You’re a little off base there. But I’ll go along with it. In 
			which case, the whole point is these are YOUR lies. You fumble 
			around and create lies or whatever you want to call them. And in the 
			process you arrive at the truth, somewhere down the line.
 
 I’ll give you a patient summary. Man of about 35 comes into my 
			office and tells me he’s bothered by his marriage. Things are not 
			working out. He wants to find the right formula, but he can’t. No 
			matter what he does, he feels a lack. He feels he’s screwing it up. 
			He tries to do all the right things, but nothing good comes out of 
			it. He just gets himself into more hot water.
 
 Q: He’s confused.
 
 A: And this is good, because otherwise he never would be making the 
			effort to make things come out right. So I put him into a light 
			trance. I then get him to INVENT scenes and dreams. All sorts of 
			scenes.
 
 Q: And this helps him how?
 
 A: He begins to expand his own ideas about what reality can be. And 
			once he does that, he begins to get a kind of feedback from his own 
			inventions. He tends to drop his fixation on fixing his own 
			marriage. You see, "his own marriage" is a more or less a fixed ";non-idea" that traps him into thinking that he is tinkering with 
			one thing that needs the right part inserted - like a car that won’t 
			run.
 
 Q: Whereas?
 
 A: His current marriage is a lowest common denominator that he 
			derives from vague images. He is laboring under the delusion that 
			his current marriage is one very real thing, like an object inside a 
			vacuum jar.
 
 Q: But it isn’t.
 
 A: Correct. It’s a congealed derivation. For, example, we look at a 
			table and think it’s one thing that has a set number of uses. But 
			then an artist comes along and takes that table and paints it and 
			cuts it up and re-glues it and it’s something else entirely.
 
 When I had this patient invent all sorts of scenes and dreams, he 
			began to see that his marriage was just one outcome of his own sense 
			of reality. He was living inside a trap. The trap didn’t need 
			tinkering. It needed something else introduced from the outside. And 
				"the outside" is his own imagination.
 
 Q: So, suppose his marriage was suffering because he was insisting 
			that his wife should do x,y,z when she didn’t want to.
 
 A: And suppose I then say, 
				"Look, all you have to do is stop 
			insisting she do x,y,z."
 
 Q: And he follows your advice.
 
 A: And then something else will crop up. Some other problem. 
			Forever, over and over. Because he is living inside a trap. A trap 
			he made. But he doesn’t see this.
 
				  
				And even if he and I completely 
			dismantle that marriage into "parts" and I make him examine each 
			one, that process isn’t going to fix it. It’s like a physicist who 
			is trying to gain a new understanding of life itself. He keeps 
			breaking down particles into smaller and smaller particles. And 
			nothing happens. Because he’s in the wrong pew to begin with.
 Well, that’s the way it works with reality itself. Reality is not 
			one thing like a car. Reality, the ordinary boring repetitious 
			version, is WHAT WE ARE LEFT WITH WHEN WE STOP CREATING REALITIES. 
			And how do you fix THAT problem? By tinkering with the sludge you’re 
			left with? No.
 
 Q: How does this connect to the whole subject of the master-slave 
			relationship?
 
 A: A slave has one reality, which is formed by his abandonment of 
			the process of creating realities.
 
 Q: Therefore, anything that will make him stop creating realities 
			functions as a way of making him a slave.
 
 A: Yes, that’s right.
 
 Q: And you came to this in your work?
 
 A: I sure as hell did. You see, one of the basic problems is the 
			drive for perfection.
 
 Nothing is perfect. To want perfection is to want that leftover 
			sludge called reality. You fuss with that sludge and you try to even 
			out the corners and paint it pink and fix the edges and so forth. 
			But you lose. Because you can’t get perfection out of something that 
			is a residue to begin with. I’ve had many patients who wanted to 
			change their lives by fixing a losing proposition - a bad house that 
			was sinking in its foundations, so to speak, and the person wanted 
			to replace shingles on the roof and bring in a new carpet.
 
 Q: Where does that drive for perfection come from in the first 
			place?
 
 A: It comes from the sense that the reality you are dealing with is 
			the only one that exists, and therefore you must make it as 
			obsessively good as you possibly can. That perfectionism is based on 
			a basic insecurity, because, deep down, the person knows that he is 
			working with a lie. One and only one reality is a lie. A reality 
			that is GIVEN is a lie. Realities are created.
 
 Q: Even in 
				terms of the cosmos itself -
 
 A: We are working with a lie. There are an infinite number of 
			possible cosmos-es. Let’s say I have a patient who can respond to 
			the idea of creating a brand new cosmos. He can do that. He does do 
			that.
 
 Q: In his mind.
 
 A: Right. And over the course of a year or two, he creates five 
			thousand more. What’ll happen? He’ll begin to get a whole new sense 
			of what is possible. I did have just such a patient. He had come to 
			me because of a personal crisis in faith. After we finished, he no 
			longer felt he needed to "fix" his current metaphysical belief 
			system. He saw that as a foolish enterprise. He graduated from being 
			a tinkerer to being a full-blooded adventurer. In the process, he 
			became quite a good remote viewer. That was just a byproduct. We 
			weren’t aiming for that.
           
			
			
			Interview With A Hypnotherapist 
			by Jon RappoportApril 
			16, 2009
 
			from
			
			RealTalkWorld Website 
			
 Note: The following article/interview was written by Jon Rappoport for 
			his teleseminar: Techniques for Stress Reduction. I think Jon’s 
			interview with the late Hypnotherapist, Jack True is compatible with 
			our discussion.
 
 
			
			This piece is about the GRAND ILLUSION.
 
 It has to do with the conviction that impending events are forming a 
			pattern that has some climax, some revelation, some grand finale.
 
 In the late 1990s, we saw this conviction at work in a huge way. 
			Millions of people were swept up in the coming Y2K disaster. Radio 
			shows spent hours on it. And Y2K wasn’t the only element.
 
 In general, many perceived that the turn of the century was a 
			magnetic force, drawing to it all sorts of happenings that would 
			crack the egg of normal reality. Once and for all.
 
 Not because anyone here on Earth was DOING something, but because 
			events were forming up by themselves, under the direction of unseen 
			causes.
 
 There was the specter of earth changes, earthquakes on a new scale, 
			and a collapse of infrastructure. Radio hosts wove together every 
			strange occurrence to create an expectation.
 
 Of course, as we know, the end of every century has seen such 
			machinations.
 
 Here is a brief interview with the late Jack True, who was, in my 
			opinion, the most innovative Hypnotherapist on the planet. The 
			approximate date of this conversation was June 1991.
 
 
				
				Q: What do you make of the constant idea that 
				"there is something in 
			the air, something afoot"?
 A: It stimulates people, which isn’t a bad thing. But it also gets 
			people to think that every good or bad thing, on a grand scale, is a 
			Force to which they should hitch their wagons. It’s a human attempt 
			to FIND ENERGY SOMEWHERE.
 
 Q: Find energy?
 
 A: Yes. People are walled off from the sense that they can create 
			energy, so they look for big amounts of it wherever it might be, and 
			then they try to swim with it.
 
 Q: And when that doesn’t lead anywhere?
 
 A: Depression sets in.
 
 Q: Well, on a political level, the same thing happens every four 
			years.
 
 A: I know. The same desire to be part of the big force that is 
			sweeping the nation, to support one candidate, to catch the wave.
 
 Q: So this is a habit.
 
 A: Right.
 
 Q: And what is the antidote to it?
 
 A: At the risk of sounding trite, creating your own energy.
 
 Q: And how does one do that?
 
 A: That’s like asking how you use your fingers to grip an object. If 
			you’ve forgotten, you have to remember or re-learn the skill. This 
			is the hardest thing for people to understand.
 
 Q: Yet, in your work with patients, you have them do all sorts of 
			techniques to re-learn that ability.
 
 A: There is no contradiction there. Except, I’m not making myself 
			the source of their ability. I’m trying to empower them so they act 
			on their own.
 
 Q: When you have people literally invent dreams 
				- what is happening 
			there?
 
 A: Dreams are often happening on a somewhat larger scale than daily 
			life. So when people invent their dreams consciously, they are 
			creating larger energies. They get familiar with that.
 
 Q: And after they do it, what happens when they go back to their 
			lives, where those energies don’t usually play a part?
 
 A: People feel a contradiction. I encourage that. It’s the first 
			step to making a change. Why would you change your life, unless you 
			felt you had much more to give than your life was able to absorb?
 
 Q: And this works out for your patients?
 
 A: Not always, but sometimes. The analogy I would offer goes like 
			this: you discover that you can sing. But you are working as an 
			accountant. So do you change course, or do you fall back on the 
			tried and true? No one can make that decision for you.
 
 Q: How about this analogy? You find out you can make a cup slide off 
			a table with your mind. Now you have to figure out a way to 
			integrate that ability in your life.
 
 A: Yes. That would be the same sort of thing.
 
 Q: There is a reflex that makes people think every large 
			accomplishment they achieve has a hidden cause, that it "comes from 
			somewhere else." Not from them.
 
 A: I could analyze that reflex for a long time. But to boil it down, 
			I would say the individual Self, in this day and age, does not 
			usually perceive its own size and scope. Therefore Self thinks 
			things are coming from somewhere else, when they are actually coming 
			from an uncharted or forgotten area of Self.
 
 Q: That’s an exciting idea.
 
 A: It also happens to be a true idea. So then, should one simply 
			wake up part way and accept these marvelous moments as 
				"subconsciously derived," or should one also explore the forgotten 
			areas of Self? I choose the latter road. I’m an advocate of 
			individual power. I don’t think one has to be afraid of it. I think 
			one has to find out about it.
 
 Q: And what about the people who use their power to do bad things?
 
 A: That’s just the way it is. Every power can be turned north or 
			south. Which is the justification often used to try to limit the 
			power of everyone - -to put that power under a ceiling - a ceiling built 
			by those few who think they know what’s best.
 
 Q: Reminds me of the 
				"Hitler syndrome."
 
 A: Yes. Unfettered power is equated with Hitler, as if we would all 
			become Hitlers if we were left to our own devices. A lie. And in a 
			way, Hitler was created as a prelude to all this NWO (New World 
			Order) stuff, which is based on the idea that power is bad and must 
			be reserved for the elite, who know how to handle it.
 
 Q: The population is given these object lessons.
 
 A: Yes. Every villain is portrayed as someone whose real crime was 
			tapping into too much power - and therefore, we have to reduce 
			everyone down to weakness. "For the good of all."
 
 Q: So these 
				waves of feeling that "something incredible is in the air, 
				something incredible is afoot" -
 
 A: It is a way to make people feel their best bet to have power is 
			to give it away to unseen forces and then to connect, as slaves, to 
			those forces.
   
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