Although his experiments with his own version of "mesmerism" had shown that "mesmeric analgesia" was entirely possible, it was obvious that his "mesmeric induction" with both patient and operator seated restricted its application to the attenuation of discomfort in seated patients undergoing a fluid-drainage procedure. Inspired by his experimental success, and aware of the need to have his surgical subjects lying on the operating table, he made the extraordinary decision, decided to experiment with the "native" procedure known as
Jhar-Phoonk.
Jhar-Phoonk -- a secular, "
white magic", folk treatment procedure, derived from
an Islamic exorcism ritual known as
Ruqyah -- was routinely performed upon poor, illiterate, impoverished Northern Indian rural workers by itinerant
fakirs or dedicated practitioners (known as
Jhar-Phoonk Walas) to alleviate distress, dispel illness and infirmity, and treat disease. As performed by Esdaile -- on semi-naked subjects, who had had their heads shaven -- the procedure involved an intense combination of continuously stroking the subject (thus,
jhar, "to sweep") and continuously breathing on them (thus,
phoonk, "to blow away"). As performed by Esdaile, the procedure was exhausting: ::The following is the routine observed in the six different hospitals in which I have practised [
Jhar-Phoonk]; and if the plan has any advantage over the European method, I presume it is from the more intimate and extensive connection established between the two systems;
the bodies of both parties being usually naked to the waist, is also of service, no doubt.The patient is desired to lie down in bed in a darkened room, and go to sleep if he can; his head is brought to one end of the bed, and the [operator] seats himself so as to be able to breathe upon the head, and extend his hands readily to the pit of the stomach. He then begins making passes from the back of the head down to the pit of the stomach,
breathing gently on the head and eyes also.
The fingers are held loosely in the shape of claws, and are carried slowly over the parts, at the distance of an inch from the surface, dwelling longer over the eyes, nose, mouth, and sides of the neck; and on reaching the pit of the stomach, the hands are suspended there some minutes. Having continued this process for a quarter or half an hour, the passes may be advantageously ended by pressing both hands lightly on the pit of the stomach for some minutes. -- (Esdaile, 1852b, p.16) As a consequence, Esdaile, whose own health was far from good, soon began to delegate this exhausting work -- which, when necessary, would involve "[having] a patient magnetized for hours each day for ten or twelve days [to his] native assistants, saving his own strength for the performance of surgery" -- and Esdaile himself spoke of how "it is exacting too much of human nature to expect people to sweat for hours
pawing the air". In a short time, Esdaile had gained a wide reputation for painless surgery, especially in cases of the scrotal "tumours" that were
endemic in Bengal at that time due to
filariasis (similar to
elephantiasis) that was transmitted by
mosquitoes. Esdaile's mesmeric anaesthesia was extremely safe: ::"I beg, to state, for the satisfaction of those who have not yet a practical knowledge of the subject, that I have seen no bad consequences whatever arise from persons being operated on when in the mesmeric trance.Cases have occurred in which no pain has been felt subsequent to the operation even; the wounds healing in a few days by the first intention; and in the rest, I have seen no indications of any injury being done to the constitution.On the contrary, it appears to me to have been saved, and that less constitutional disturbance has followed than under ordinary circumstances.There has not been a death among the cases operated on." -- (James Esdaile, 1846b, p.xxiv) However, despite his successes with anaesthesia and his impressive surgical outcomes (exclusively with "native" patients), Esdaile was at a loss to explain these events in the light of his earlier (pre-mesmeric) six years' experience: ::"Since [my first use of
Jhar-Phonk in April 1845,] I have had
every month more operations of this kind than take place in the native hospital in Calcutta in a year, and more than I had for the six years previous.There must be some reason for this, and I only see two ways of accounting for it: my patients, on returning home, either say to their friends similarly afflicted, "Wah! brother, what a soft man the doctor Sahib is! He cut me to pieces for twenty minutes, and I made him believe that I did not feel it. Isn't it a capital joke? Do go and play him the same trick ; you have only to laugh in your elbow, and you will not feel the pain."Or they say to their brother sufferers, — " Look at me ; I have got rid of my burthen, (of 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, or 80 lbs., as it may be,) am restored to the use of my body, and can again work for my bread: this, I assure you, the doctor Sahib did when I was asleep, and I knew nothing about it;—you will be equally lucky, I dare say; and I advise you to go and try; you need not be cut if you feel it."Which of these hypotheses best explains the fact my readers will decide for themselves.It ought to be added, that most of these persons were not paupers, but people in comfortable circumstances, whom no inducement short of painless operations could tempt to enter a charity, or any other hospital; and all who know the natives are aware of this." -- (James Esdaile, 1846b, pp.218–219) According to James Braid, who had, himself, performed the first hypnotism-assisted 'pain-free' surgery several years earlier (in Manchester, in January 1842), Esdaile "believe[d] in the transmission of some peculiar occult influence from the operator to the patient, as the cause of the subsequent phenomena" (Braid, 1847, p.10). And, according to Esdaile, "the [operator] can not only saturate the system of the patient, generally, with his own nervous fluid; but, when his patient becomes very considerably under his influence, can induce local determinations of the nervous energy to various parts, so as to place them, for a time, beyond the patient's volition, even while he retains his general consciousness" (Esdaile, 1852a, p.237). ==Mistaken identification of Esdaile’s
Jhar-Phoonk with d’Eslon’s
magnetization-by-contact==