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NEURO-LINGUISTIC PROGRAMMING
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With Dr John La Tourrette
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With Dirk Bansch
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Master NLP Trainer & World Speed Hitting Record Holder |
Master NLP Trainer
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Introduction to NLP
Just imagine what you would do if your bread machine arrived without instructions.
That of course, pales in comparison to the immense complexity of our brains (unimaginably more bake cycles).
Each of us happen to possess in our skulls, the most sophisticated computers
ever conceived of and no one thought to provide instructions. No wonder changing
how we do the simplest task, often meets with failure.
If you climbed behind the wheel of a car for the very first time and had no
instructions to guide you, how far do you think you'd get before driving into
a ditch or up a telephone pole.
So, how do NLPer's create the knowledge necessary to learn how to operate
our own minds?
Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) studies the structure of how humans think
and experience the world. Obviously, the structure of something so subjective
does not lend itself to precise, statistical formulae but instead leads to
models of how these things work. From these models, techniques for quickly
and effectively changing thoughts, behaviors and beliefs that limit you have
been developed.
Warning! The following paragraph contains big, ugly, hard-to-understand words
developed by a linguist. This is the only downside to NLP Iknow of and we're
staying up nights trying to fix it. Parental guidance is suggested.
Many of the models in NLP were created by studying people who did things exquisitely
well. Models such as meta-model, metaprogram, sensory acuity, Milton-model,
representational systems and submodalities among others, provide a diverse
set of tools for creating change in yourself and others.
Someone who wanted to create a model for learning to drive a car really well,
might approach a expert in the field something like this - Instead of asking
an expert driver, " How do you drive?" ("Very well, thank you."),
they would be concentrating not on the content of what they did but on the
underlying structure such as how they represent driving in their mind, the
beliefs and attitudes they had about driving, the strategies they used in
making decisions, how often they change their oil, (skip that last one) among
other factors.
Let's use something called submodalities as an example of how a model works. By understanding how we perceive the world through our five senses, we can then understand how some people can respond very resourcefully in a situation and others do not. Once you learn how those who remain resourceful set up their representations, then it's a simple matter to teach others to do the same thing.
The Example: Imagine seeing an enormous spider
dangling directly in front of your face. Now clear your mind (sorry, didn't
want to leave that image hanging around). A common way for people to have
a phobic reaction to spiders or anything related to them, is to picture a
spider completely oversized and far too close in their minds.
Spiders are tiny, well-mannered creatures that are far more frightened of
you than you should be of them but try telling that to someone with that particular
phobia.
So, why don't these phobic people notice the images they're creating? The
popular belief is that we don't pay much attention to what's going on in our
unconscious. If you considered the enormous amount of information your brain
has to process each day, it's probably best that we don't spend much time
dwelling on it (otherwise, we would probably sit around babbling and drooling
and eventually starve to death).
Well, what do we do about our friend with the phobia, Extra-strength cans
of Raid for a house warming gift?
NLPers ask the question, "If another person can have fun playing with
their pet spider, what can we learn about them that we could teach the phobic
person so they can play with spiders, too?" (Or something like that).
The spider-lover would most likely have an image representing spiders that
was proportionally correct and at a reasonable distance and possibly other
factors not worth getting into right now. Knowing the difference, the NLPer
can use one of many techniques to help the phobic person relearn their reaction
to spiders so that it is similar in nature to the spider-lover's (hopefully
less of the lover part).The above example may
sound complicated but phobia treatments often take less than half an hour.
An powerful change with a minimal investment of time and effort.
NLP is based on many useful presuppositions that support the attitude that change is imminent. One of the most important is, NLP is about what works, not what should work. In other words, if what you're doing isn't working, try something else, anything else, regardless of whether what you had been doing should have worked. Flexibility is the key element in a given system, the one who is most likely to do well responds to changing (or unchanging) circumstances. That's one reason NLP has made so much progress in an area where such is not the norm. Innovators try out things with little regard as to its "truth" or "reality", NLP is much more interested in results and giving people what they want from life (sappy yes, but "true" nonetheless).
This is the end of the Introduction to NLP. What you have just read is very incomplete but hopefully gives you a taste of what NLP is about.
I highly recommend you continue your investigation of how NLP can enhance
all aspects of your life from improving your relationships with loved ones,
learning to teach effectively, gaining a stronger sense of self esteem, greater
motivation, better understanding of communication, enhancing your business
or career, bending steel bars in a single bound and an enormous amount of
other things that involve the use of your brain.
I want to make this site as useful to everyone as we can and encourage any
suggestions or comments you may have.
Presuppositions
Presuppositions are beliefs that someone practicing NLP will find useful for
creating changes in themselves and the world, more easily and effectively.
The emphasis here should be on "useful" not whether each one could
be proven to be "true". Practitioners of NLP often include different
presuppositions in their list but what follows are the most common.
Communication is more than what you're
saying.
The body communicates constantly in ways that go far beyond words.
People already have all the resources
they need to effect a change.
The resources just weren't lucky enough to be in the right place at the right
time.
Choice is better than no choice.
Need I say more?Every behavior serves a positive
intention and a context in which it has value.
The behavior may never lead to that positive intention but that part of you
can learn new behaviors that do. As to a context that has value, imagine overeating
at an expensive brunch (got your moneys worth didn't you?). Go with me on
this one, it really helps.
There is no such thing as failure, only
feedback.
Every response is useful, you may hate the response but the knowledge you
gain from it is valuable.
If someone can do something, then it can
be modeled and taught to anyone else.
That even includes me.
The map is not the territory.
We cannot contain every bit of information that comes to us in the world,
so we have to create a "map of the territory" and then refer to
the map for our information (see representational systems). By changing a
person's map, we change their reality.The meaning
of your communication is the response you get.
If you get slapped, try anything else.
If you aren't getting the response you
want, try something different.
See above.
People work perfectly.
No one is "broken". They are functioning perfectly in what they
are doing now (even if it is ruining their life), it's a matter of finding
how they function now, so that we can help them change into doing something
they consider more desirable.
Representational Systems &
Submodalities
The representational systems in NLP are simply enough the five senses. We
represent the world using the visual (images), auditory (sounds), kinesthetic
(touch and internal feelings), gustatory (tastes) and olfactory (smells) senses.
We picture ourselves lying on a sunny beach, hear the voice of the lifeguard
yelling, feel the sensation only sand in your bathing suit can produce, taste
the soggy egg salad sandwiches we brought for lunch and smell the aroma of
the surf wafting into our nostrils. Our thinking consists of these images,
sounds, feelings and usually to a lesser extent, tastes and smells. The entirety
of our experiences have been recreated through these senses in our memories
and govern our capabilities and beliefs.
Curiously enough, our predominant representational system in a given context often shows up in our language, for example: Responding to the statement: I think the Jensen project is going well.
Visual: Yep, looks good to me.
Auditory: I been hearing good things about it.
Kinesthetic: I feel good about the whole project.
Olfactory: Smells like a winner to me. Gustatory: I can taste the victory.
It's no wonder smells and tastes are less commonly used considering how hard they are to work into conversation.
The qualities or attributes of the representations you make using your five
senses are submodalities. For example, make a picture of someone you love
in your mind. Now, make the colors more intense and notice how it affects
you response to it. Now make it black and white and notice your response.
Return it to its original shades and hue and bring the image closer. Now move
it farther out. Return the picture to its original state, noticing how each
of those experiments affected your response. Submodalities are the fine tuning
to your representations and can be used to create powerful changes.
The interesting thing to note here is that once you understand that you create
your internal world, you realize you can change it.
Meta-Model
Very simply, the meta-model is set of questions designed to find the explicit
meaning in a person's communication.
For example:
He hurt me.
Meta-Modeler: Who hurt you?
Bob hurt me.
Meta-Modeler: How did he hurt you?
He wouldn't take out the trash like I asked him to.
Another example:I
can't believe he's like that!
Meta-Modeler: Who?
Mel Gibson.
Meta-Modeler: What's he like?
He's so amazingly gorgeous!
Meta-Modeler: Hey, what about me?! (oops, that not Meta-model)
Many of us would have assumed we knew what was meant by "He hurt me."
or "I can't believe he's like that", based on our own experiences.
By having the ability to find other people's meaning in their communication,
we can be more capable in communicating with them.
Sensory Acuity
A person's thought process is very closely tied with their physiology. A dog
senses your fear: how did he know if you didn't tell him. If a friend is depressed,
most of us can tell without even talking with them. We pick up clues from
their body: slumped shoulders, eyes downcast, head down, lack of animation
(and in extreme cases, a loaded pistol held to the head). Sensory acuity takes
these observations beyond the more obviously recognizable clues and uses the
physical feedback in addition to someone's words to gain as much from communication
as possible.
Milton-Model
A set of linguistic patterns derived from Milton Erickson, the father of modern
hypnotherapy. These language patterns are used to help guide someone without
interfering with how they are experiencing it in their minds. For example,
"Think of time you were laughing." It doesn't define when or how
hard you were laughing so it applies to everyone (I hope). The Milton-model
helps with maintaining rapport and is often used in hypnotic or trance state
sessions.
Metaprograms
Metaprograms are filters through which we perceive the world. The old maxim,
is the glass half full or half empty (or just fluidically challenged) is an
example.
Another example would be how two different people might approach an argument. A person with what we would call an "away from" strategy would be likely to be finding any way to get away from the conflict. Someone using a "toward" strategy would be more likely to be heading toward a specific goal, perhaps of finding an amicable solution to the conflict. The primary difference between the two being, when you're moving away from something, you never know what you may back into.
When you change these filters, it can dramatically change how we approach
situations and how we perceive the world.