Just relax subject, you’re doing so well for your hypnotherapist. Doesn’t it feel nice to know that you don’t need to remember some things, and can just trust me? Don’t worry, I told you I wouldn’t do anything nefarious to that pretty little head of yours, don’t you remember?
Summary:
This file is designed to give the listener a hypnotic memory gap, which is a void that can be located where certain memories should be, and the listener can be made aware of or be made to focus on that void with the trigger phrase “don’t you remember?”. The file is structured as a hypnotherapy session, where the idea of sinking into pleasant memories, praise, light fractionation and the imagery of tensing and relaxing the mind is used to put the subject into a trance. In trance, the listener has the hypnotic memory gap created, which feels pleasurable to stare into, before the listener has the trigger phrase used to draw their attention to a hypnotic memory gap that exists around things I refer to, some of which happened, some of which did not. The file places emphasis on the idea of trusting the hypnotherapist, and it feeling better to trust and accept than remember sometimes. The file often repeats the framing of “it feels better to not know than to remember”, and posits this as the ultimate answer for when the listener has their hypnotic trigger used on them by someone they want to be able to trigger them in this way, before a countup.
This file also comes with a file specific spiral which features the text "don't you remember?" and a black void in the center of the spiral, as well as a video which consists of the spiral and the audio file.
Effects:
The listener is given a hypnotic memory gap, described as a void where a memory should be, that feels pleasurable to stare into.
The memory gap is described as something that can feel mesmerizing and become hypnotic to look at or simply feel good to look out without being mesmerizing
The memory gap is described as relocating memories, not erasing them, if the listener needs to remember something where a memory gap is, they can find it by searching elsewhere in their mind, though the pleasure of not knowing makes it so easy to not have the will to try when the listener doesn’t need to remember.
The hypnotic trigger phrase “don’t you remember?” draws the listener’s focus to their hypnotic memory gap, and makes them focus on it, when used by someone who the listener wants to be able to trigger them in this way.
Safeties:
The hypnotic memory gap does not erase memories, it merely takes the place where you would expect to find a memory in the listener’s mind, with the memory in question being moved elsewhere in the listener’s mind. If the listener needs to find the memory in question, they can keep searching their mind for it and find it, though in instances where the listener does not need to remember, the pleasure of the hypnotic memory gap can easily seduce the listener into not trying to remember.
The hypnotic trigger is described as working only with someone the listener wants to be able to trigger them in this way.
Gaslighting clarification/What really happened:
The attached script for this file has every instance of the "don't you remember" trigger listed, as well as what actually occurred with each memory the trigger is used to refer to, highlighted in black so you may need to copy and paste the text to see what it says, in order to avoid accidental spoilers.