In Remembrance: The Day I Was Hypnotized


In Remembrance is not about a last tribute to a dead guy; for me, it’s about remembering, while I can, bits and pieces of my colorful childhood.

I was nine years old and thought of nothing but baseball, cartoons, and fireworks. I won’t say my childhood was purified and biblically cleansed; my neighborhood pals and I did get into our share of trouble, resulting in no less than three or four butt-busting per day: my poor mother’s spanking arm was toast by noon. We did nothing bad, just the usual little kid stuff: blowing up mailboxes with Cherry Bombs, setting garages on fire, and fighting the “hard guys” across the tracks. It was the 1950s, and we were the first generation of baby boomers unleashed on our suburban-dwelling families.

Our hijinx had reached a crescendo, and the mothers in the neighborhood were plumb worn down from our growing delinquency. Threats of being sent for a stint at The Dope Farm, a boy’s ranch for unruly boys, had lost their punch: we needed an intervention, and fast.

My neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. Mister, retired Air Force officers and native Californians, were consulted over cocktails and cigarettes in their luscious backyard one summer evening. A few of the mothers and fathers had one too many Hollywood Dirty Martinis and made an early exit from the pow-wow, leaving my folks, a few buzzed moms, and Skippers’ parents to ask for help. The Misters were our heroes, mentors, and dream parents. We would have gladly traded ours for their parental guidance. Mrs. Mister was the neighborhood “it girl,” and all the fathers had the “Hubba Hubba’s” for her: she was an exact pod person for Jayne Mansfield.

Mrs. Mister, after a few double Martini’s, said she knew a doctor who worked miracles with hypnosis. He had convinced Mr. Mister to quit smoking and hypnotized her Poodles, Fred, and Ginger when Mr. Mister had made them street rat crazy after sending them into the stratosphere on his homemade rocket and Doganaut capsule. The dogs were a wreck until Doctor VanDyke got hold of them. She felt the doctor could take some of the piss and vinegar out of us boys and a few of the poor girls that had joined our coterie of mayhem. The plan was hatched.

The Misters gave a backyard cookout, which was the cover for the intervention. Doctor VanDyke set up his office in the Mister’s TV room, and each of us kids was escorted to the Doctor by a parent. Skipper was first to go down, then Georgie, Cheryl, Rhonda, Bean, Frankie, Billy Roy, Stewart, Stevie, and I batted clean-up.

The old guy was covered in creepiness. Bald head, a sharp devil goatee, horned-rim glasses, and a bowtie. My mother sat in the corner as the doctor held a little pendent in front of me, giving instructions to watch the shiny object, and I was getting sleepy. I gave in: Doctor Creepy put me under. It was a nice nap, and I was refreshed and a bit goofy when I joined my pals in the backyard, but something was off, not just with me but with all of us.

Rhonda and Cheryl announced they were no longer friends with us and were quitting the baseball team so they could go back to playing with doll babies. Skipper wouldn’t drink his Kool-Aid; said it tasted like cat turds. Georgie was whimpering and crying like a baby and sucking his thumb, Stevie got all Romeo’d up and tried to plant a kiss on Rhonda, and she whacked him on his head with a Coke bottle, causing blood to run down his face, and I had this sudden urge to pee, which I did without embarrassment, whipping it out in front of all the guests. My poor mother was mortified. Doctor VanDyke had flicked the wrong switches in our young brains; we were now worse than before. The party abruptly ended.

After a week of house arrest, most of us were back to our normal bad behavior. Mrs. Mister learned that Doctor VanDyke was not a real doctor but had learned hypnosis from a mail-order course advertised in the back of the Farmers Almanac. He was a huckster.

The gang went back to our routine, baseball, cartoons, and fireworks. The two girls rejoined the team and threw away the doll babies and dresses. I felt pretty darn good, except I couldn’t bring myself to touch plastic Tupperware; it was like a live Rattlesnake in our kitchen. The old standby staple of every mother’s kitchen scared the liver out of me. It still does.


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11 Replies to “In Remembrance: The Day I Was Hypnotized”

  1. Nonetheless. the good huckster might be able to radically improve the current generation. Maybe their parents, too, eh? You know make them like normal stuff like baseball, cherry bomb practice, and chasing horned toads instead of Trailer Swooft, PINK, liberal bullpuppy, and the Stupid Bowl.

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    1. Right you are. I’m not watching the stupid bowl because of her. It’s now said that all her Swifters girls will be watching the game and singing her songs. This is turning into a Rev. Jim Jones type of thing.

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  2. My parents never really liked me as part of the family, so we never had the question of the proper relationship. It darn sure wasn’t “friendship.” I remember both parents seemed to have perfected that “what in the hell is the matter with you” look. There was some discussion in my house about hypnotism, too, but my father said it would be cheaper to beat it out of me. I’m not sure that worked, either … but he was right about it being more affordable.

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  3. Hard to tell how true some of it is, but you sure had a funny childhood. I think mine was somewhat colorful as well. I’m sure my parents would have liked to try “hypnotism” on me. I caused no trouble OTHER THAN I was headstrong and mouthy and brutally honest. No drugs, no smoking and no real alcohol until i was of age.
    My dad once threatened to send me to some reform school. I think he was bluffing, but it harmed me quite a bit. My brother, in contrast, and according to my dad, “had the milk of human kindness running through his veins.” Trust me, he didn’t, but he was really charming, a Tom Sawyer, lived at home until he was married and thirty while he drove a fancy car and had a boat and all that good stuff. Actually, I love him (he kinda looked like Tom Selleck back then), and despite my dad messing in his life propping him up, we’ve repaired our relationship. Fun guy, really. Good hearted. So we survived it all.

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    1. Thank you for reading my recounts Lynn. All my stories that have myself in them are based on real events although I do take liberties and some turn into what we Texan’s call a “Tall Tale.” This one was mostly true with some added color. I did have a colorful childhood and was blessed with a street-rat-crazy extended family that gives me plenty of ammo. Good that you and brother patched it up. My sis and I are at odds now but hopefully we can patch it up before one of us checks out. My folks used the Dope Farm many times, always a threat us kids took seriously. I had a cousin that was sent there for a year, he came out and robbed a grocery store, so it didn’t do him much good.

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  4. Great story, Phil. Your desperate moms did desperate things because you and the neighborhood little rascals took risks, fought, and got into trouble. You may have driven your parents nuts, but you learned how to interact and didn’t gun down your classmates. Now kids are just plugged in, rarely go outside. and gun down their classmates. 🙂

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