About me: Danny Nemu

I’m a hypnotist, independent researcher and speaker on a mission to democratise technologies of mind-hacking and unleash the powers that lie dormant within us.

I’m also the author of Science Revealed and Neuro-Apocalypse - you can find about about them and my other interests on my personal website. I live in the part of the imaginal called Hastings, UK.

Hypnosis has completely changed my life. Perhaps it can change yours.

What is Hypnosis?

Hypnosis is a way into trance, which is a natural, pleasurable and profound state of relaxation and focus. It dissolves anxiety while the session is taking place, and the images and ideas you think with during the session become seeds that grow in the fertile soil of the unconscious to help you realise your goals.

Extending conscious control into unconscious processes

Some people think that hypnosis is about giving control of your mind to someone else, but the truth is that your mind is already being manipulated constantly, via advertising and the media, in politics and pillow talk - wherever people use language to communicate.

With hypnosis, we approach the unconscious knowingly, and we can extend control into what is normally beyond our conscious control - slowing the heartbeat, making muscles totally rigid, switching off pain and so on. Seemingly impossible physical feats become quite easy, but even more impressive are the possibilities that open up when we rewrite and reframe stories that limit us.

In trance we become capable of things that are seemingly impossible in our normal waking mode. This is the simple application of the imagination

A radical approach

Since the very beginning of its history, hypnosis has been associated with controversy and with radical anti-authoritarian movements. Any pathway into trance disrupts fixed ideas and acquaints us with a truth that is more intimate, because trance can freeze the narrative. This gives us time to view the cycle of trigger and reaction from outside while also providing a sense of internal calm that makes us less susceptible to the constant manipulation we are subjected to.  

The unconsidered constraints of the morality matrix we grew up in may include such collective thought forms as patriarchy, class dynamics and the idea that success is measured in terms of how much cash you have in your bank rather than how much love you have in your life. This is what Freud called the superego, and when its superiority is undermined much becomes possible.