NLP Secrets PDF
NLP Secrets PDF
NLP Secrets: Upgrade Your Mind with Neuro-Linguistic Programming by Pete Casale Published by Creative Media NZ Ltd Cover Design by Pete Casale www.cre8ve.co.nz Copyright 2012 Creative Media NZ Ltd Written and Illustrated by Pete Casale All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without prior written permission of the publisher. Disclaimer The advice in this book is provided as general information only. The publisher cannot guarantee that this information is free of typographical or content errors. Furthermore, the content contains educational information only up to its original publication date. The publisher nor the author shall be held responsible for any negative effects on health or wellbeing as a result of using the techniques described. THE AUTHOR AND THE PUBLISHER WILL ASSUME NO LIABILITY NOR RESPONSIBILITY TO ANY PERSON OR ENTITY WITH RESPECT TO ANY LOSS OR DAMAGE RELATED DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY TO THE INFORMATION IN THIS BOOK. THE PUBLISHER WILL PROVIDE NO REMEDY FOR INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE, OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES ARISING FROM THIS BOOK, INCLUDING SUCH FROM NEGLIGENCE, STRICT LIABILITY, OR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT, EVEN AFTER NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
Contents
What Is NLP?................................................................................ 5
NLP Techniques
Anchoring..................................................................................... 8 Pattern Interruption................................................................... 10 Swish.......................................................................................... 12 Loop Break. ................................................................................ 14 Framing...................................................................................... 17 The Meta Model. ....................................................................... 22 Presuppositions.......................................................................... 24 Mirroring.................................................................................... 26 Hypnosis..................................................................................... 28
NLP Applications
Seduction................................................................................... 33 Confidence................................................................................. 41 Rapport...................................................................................... 46 Lie Detecting. ............................................................................. 50 Phobias....................................................................................... 52 Weight Loss................................................................................ 56 Quit Smoking.............................................................................. 60 Final Thoughts............................................................................ 63
Foreword
Thanks for buying my e-book! This is the culmination of many years of investigation into NLP. I began writing this book when I was 28 years old. Today I am 31 years old, about to turn 32. Over the years I have discovered myriad websites full of information about NLP. When I first began studying it, I believed it was a true science. Quickly, I realised that a lot of the NLP techniques out there had no scientific basis whatsoever. I took it upon myself to find only the scientifically sound techniques, understand them, explain them, and apply them. The only techniques you find in this book are the ones that are backed up by the scientific method. Thus my motto: If a technique has no scientific basis, or no noticeable effect better than that of a placebo or psychosomatics, then I am not interested. This is the NLP secret. Enjoy!
What Is NLP?
NLP, or neuro-linguistic programming, is a school of psychological techniques that effectively communicates with the listeners subconscious or unconscious mind. In modern-day terms, brain-hax. The end result is that you can communicate / argue / negotiate / persuade people (or yourself) much more effectively. Astoundingly, significantly, suspiciously more effectively! Neuro: Pertaining the neurons, or nerves, the brains communication tool Linguistic: Pertaining to language Programming: To configure or set the way something works
Instead, youd say to him Come here right now! which might make a massive difference if a speeding car is just seconds away. This is a very basic example of NLP (in fact it is barely classified as NLP, as it just scrapes the surface). Another example of this technique might be when people say to themselves Okay, dont forget to buy milk on the way home. They are more likely to forget. Instead, they should say Remember to buy milk when Im passing the shop. That way, they picture the shop as they say the word, and when they see that picture in real life, ie, they are likely to remember to buy some milk. (If they wanted to be even more sure to remember the milk, they should say When I pass the shop, Ill have to be careful because milk will explode out the windows, covering me in cold milk. This imagery invoke senses and emotions into the mnemonic - but thats another subject!) On a level of 1 to 9, this technique is a 1 in terms of complexity and depth. There are hundreds of tiny tricks we can use in neuro-linguistic programming, as you get higher in the scale you are getting closer to hypnosis.
There are many different NLP techniques that can be used for many different purposes. Each NLP technique can be used by itself or in combination with other NLP techniques to create fresh and effective methods of getting inside the mind. In this section well look at eight of the best NLP techniques known to man.
Anchoring
Anchoring is a useful NLP technique for inducing a certain frame of mind or emotion, such as happiness or relaxation. It usually involves a touch, gesture or word as an anchor, like a bookmark for a desired emotion, and recall it again later using that same anchor.
Pattern Interruption
Pattern interruption is an effective NLP technique for storing key words into a listeners subconscious mind. This can be combined with other NLP techniques such as anchoring for some excellent party tricks, or to give someone a message that for reasons unknown to them appears very heart-felt or significant. Pattern interruption works by luring the listeners inner monologue or even their pure subconscious train of thought into a pattern or sequence. When that pattern is established, you then jolt them out of that pattern at a critical moment before the pattern completes. This leaves the listeners subconscious mind waiting for the next part of the pattern to occur, while their conscious mind is distracted.
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The dog might say well yes, Ive been waiting to a command like that. And the dog will bring me the wallet. This is a very crude example of pattern interruption. This exact example obviously wont work, but the NLP technique itself is very potent. As I mentioned earlier, pattern interruption is how Derren Brown talked complete strangers into giving him their wallets in 20 seconds flat. He did combine it with a few other NLP techniques, but pattern interruption played a crucial role.
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Swish
Swish, also known as Swish Pattern, is an NLP technique that is very useful for replacing an unfavourable emotion or behaviour with a more useful one. With a little bit of creativity, Swish can be used to do a lot of useful things, such as make going to the gym more fun or making foods that are good for you taste better. Think of Swish as a neuro-linguistic programming version of your computers copy and paste function. On your computer, you have some text, you copy them, and paste them somewhere else. With Swish, you can take part of a memory or neurological tag and paste it over the tag of a different memory.
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CONSCIOUS: Recall the good memory, please. SUBCONSCIOUS: Okay - weve just been given an order to recall the good memory. Let me see... here it is! Okay. Here is the memory, and here are the good feelings associated with it. CONSCIOUS: Thanks. Concentrate on that feeling. SUBCONSCIOUS: Affirmative. Im strengthening that good feeling. Ill have the brain release a very mild amount of endorphins as well. CONSCIOUS: Now recall the bad memory, please. SUBCONSCIOUS: Yes sir, here is the bad memory, this is what it looks like. Now actually, the feelings associated with this memory are different, Ill just look them up... CONSCIOUS: SWISH! Back to the good memory! SUBCONSCIOUS: Oh! I hadnt finished collecting that last memorys feelings. No matter. Back to the good memory. Still good feelings. CONSCIOUS: Yes, concentrate on those good feelings. Now, recall the bad memory again. SUBCONSCIOUS: Affirmative. Okay now the last time I brought up the bad memory, we had good feelings... CONSCIOUS: Yes! Keep those good feelings! SUBCONSCIOUS: Hmm... Im not sure. Ill double check that bad memory for feelings... CONSCIOUS: No you dont! SWISH! Good memory again! How do I feel? SUBCONSCIOUS: Good memory is here, again. Good feelings, of course. CONSCIOUS: SWISH! Back to the bad memory. How do I feel? SUBCONSCIOUS: Again, the last 2 times we had the bad memory, there were good feelings. But let me check... CONSCIOUS: SWISH! Good memory, just tell me how I feel... SUBCONSCIOUS: Good feeling. CONSCIOUS: SWISH! How do I feel? SUBCONSCIOUS: Good feeling... CONSCIOUS: SWISH! SUBCONSCIOUS: Good feeling... CONSCIOUS: SWISH! SWISH! SWISH-SWISH! SUBCONSCIOUS: Good, good, good... CONSCIOUS: Now, please recall the bad memory and confirm, how do I feel about it? SUBCONSCIOUS: Like I say, good. CONSCIOUS: Heh, heh, heh. Sucker.
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Loop Break
Loop Break is an experimental NLP technique that allows you to consciously change or stop an unconscious process. It works by breaking a looping process that your body uses naturally to enter various higher alpha brain states such as anxiety, fear, anger, rage and stress.
What is Happening in Our Brains During Highly Emotional States Like This?
The reason we get quickly get more and more emotion is there is a loop occurring between our amygdala (region of the brain responsible for emotion), our memory and our body, which is bypassing our frontal lobes which is the region of the brain responsible for moderating our behaviour. See the diagram on the next page.
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HYPOTHALAMUS Body, please get ready for stress by increasing heart rate and tensing muscles.
BODY Heart rate raised. Muscles Tensed. What is the correct response now? HIPPOCAMPUS (MEMORY) This feeling matches up with stress. Here I will show you some other memories that also include this feeling of stress.
AMYGDALA (EMOTIONS) Look at these stressful memories. THIS was the feeling associated with those memories.
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BODY Heart rate raised. Muscles Tensed. What is the correct response now? HIPPOCAMPUS (MEMORY) This feeling matches up with stress. Here I will show you some other memories that also include this feeling of stress. CONSCIOUS MIND I dont want to be stressed. I am going to LOOP BREAK this sucker. YOUR VOICE BOX One. Two. Three. I am comforted by the thought that this situation, no matter how unpleasant, does not have the power to take away the awesome holiday to Brazil Im going to have next month! AMYGDALA (EMOTIONS) That holiday will be a lot of fun. I feel welcome anticipation and excitement. THIS is an example of excitement. CONSCIOUS MIND Woo hoo. Stress averted. I laugh at this situation and its pathetic inability to make me angry or stressed! Haha!
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Framing
Framing is one of those NLP techniques that fits in well with other NLP techniques. The framing technique itself is a type of emotional amplifier or de-amplifier, which works by rebuilding (or could be perhaps considered correcting) links in your limbic system between your amygdala and your hippocampus. What makes the framing NLP technique most affective is its simplicity and ability to be applied easily in conjunction with other NLP techniques. Before I explain exactly how to do framing, it is best if you can understand its importance and applications before you go into it. We learn lessons in life from bad memories, and good memories. In effect, memories can be bad or good, but in reality memories are emotionless highlight reels of past events. No, thats not a typo, I do mean emotionless. Before you rage and throw your Kindle away in anger, please consider this - memories and emotions are clearly stored / produced by different parts of the brain. Given that those two parts of the brain are right next to each other, but they are still separate parts of the brain. The hippocampus stores and produces your memories, and your amygdala is responsible for your emotions. Exercise: Right now, recall a memory that has negative emotions attached. Nothing traumatic! Use something like failing a test or an unsuccessful interview. Got one? Good. Read on.
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Since the emotions are not stored in a memory, they are merely referenced; so it must be possible to edit the emotions associated with a memory!
Framing! The NLP Technique That Edits Your Emotional Response To a Memory
This example is for negative framing - which is usually applied to negative memories. It is called negative framing because it works to reduce (negate) the emotions associated with a memory. The example will use a memory of a bad interview. You know, that interviews that you tried really hard for, but you get stuck in traffic, you arrived 10 minutes late, and the interviewer seemed to think youd been intimate with his mother. If you havent had a bad interview before, you can pick another memory with negative emotions attached. Step one: Take the memory and reduce the highlight reel to a single snapshot that represents that memory. This strange-looking character will represent my negative interview memory:
Now go ahead and step back from the memory of your bad interview. So if you are looking at the memory through your own eyes, step back so you can see yourself, in the situation. If you already used a third person perspective, take a further step back so you are slightly further away than before:
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So now you can see yourself, in a single snapshot that represents our bad interview. Now make the picture black and white. Make it a little bit blurry or out of focus, like a very old photo. You can make it a sepia tone if you like:
Now for the namesake - put a frame around it. It can be any kind of frame, from an old fashioned heavy frame to a modern stainless steel frame. Stylise the picture a little bit to suit the frame. For example, see the canvas texture below a painting, or notice the shine from the glass cover:
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Now put that frame on the wall, in an art gallery, or in a restaurant, anywhere you want. Try different lighting on the painting. Watch other people look at the painting, then move on:
Now, how does the situation feel? Is it still as stressful? The feelings should have dampened noticeably. Try again, repeat this process and it should further reduce the effect. Effectively what is happening is our minds are treating the memory more like just a picture. It helps detach us emotionally from a memory, and by way of NLP tricks our brain into dampening any links to the emotions the memory may refer to. Try NLP framing technique on someone else. Just read out the steps above and ask them afterwards how they feel about the emotion. Next well look at how framing can be used in an interesting way to achieve an entirely different result, in the NLP technique positive framing.
Positive Framing
Positive framing is the same NLP process as negative framing, just it goes the other way round. So instead of being a normal memory moving into a dulled, framed memory, you can take a normal memory and amplify it into a strong, vivid memory. Why would anyone want to do that? There are several reasons that I can think of for now: 1. You may have a very nice memory of someone or something that you want to amplify. 2. You may have an uncertain memory of a person, so you could use positive framing to investigate your feelings about that person.
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3. You may want to use a feeling you associate with a certain memory (such as the feeling of achievement associated with accomplishing a goal) that you want to harness and use with other NLP techniques, or use it as a trigger. Well do a simple exercise to explain positive framing. In this example, were going to get ready for a job interview. Perhaps you arent very confident when it comes to interviews, and you want to use positive framing get yourself into a more positive frame of mind - aha! See what I did there? Mildly clever wordplay is just one of the many benefits this book has to offer. First of all, just picture yourself in a plain, empty room. Look at the picture of yourself. Dont force it to a certain setting, just ask yourself this: What do other people see when they look at me? Thats the picture we want! What can you see? Which way are you facing? What are you doing? What are you wearing? Dont let it change based on these questions - just observe for now. Now keep that picture of yourself, and now your pictured self has just been given the news that they got the job they wanted, AND they are getting paid twice as much as they thought! Watch your pictured self react to this news - in terms of body posture. Imagine the job being even better than expected, and watch yourself feel really proud and happy. See your neck perk and eyes light up! Now put your pictured self in your job interview clothes. Ready to go for the interview, and already knowing that the job is a sure thing. Look how confident and excited you look, and double and triple that feeling. Now bring vivid colours into the picture - feel the temperature of the room and the feeling of the clothes against your skin. Imagine the smell as if youve just brushed your teeth, a fresh, ready-to-go smell. Hear your own calm, confident breathing. Increase the size of the picture, so its even closer. Notice how the excited, confident feeling increases as you widen the frame. Now increase the picture even further, like a 90-foot LCD screen at point blank. Have your pictured self step out of the picture towards you and as this happens, sink yourself into the photo so that you are looking through your pictured selfs eyes. Notice the feelings of excitement, pride and confidence beam and hum with intensity, as you look through your supercharged eyes. Take this feeling and use it. Focus on this feeling. Take as long as you need to realise that this supercharged you is you. Its not an imagined version of yourself, it actually is you. This is your self image, and it is all you need to be exactly the way you want to be. Your self image is immensely powerful, and you have 100% power over it. Use this as often as possible. This NLP technique never diminishes, it only gets stronger and faster and more brilliant with practice. Positive framing is certainly one of the most powerful amplifier techniques NLP has to offer. This can be used to amplify any emotion and get your anchors and swish patterns really humming! For an example, I use framing with swish and anchors in the NLP phobia cure for the fear of flying, discussed later. Of course, you can modify it to work with most phobias - even the fear of job interviews!
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The Meta Model is a therapeutic technique you can use to help understand other peoples problems or help them understand their own problems better. Literally, the Meta Model means to deconstruct what someone is saying so you can find the underlying cause of the problem. It is often the case, that when someone has a problem, they subconsciously already know what the solution is. It is also often the case that they do not like the obvious solution, so they keep stirring the problem in hopes that a new, better solution will come up. This is very common in relationship problems. The Meta Model is designed to deconstruct the way someone words their problem, to get to the bottom of it. For example: Jim: Bro, my girlfriend can be SO annoying sometimes! Basic Response: Why, whats she doing? This response (perhaps incorrectly) assumes the girlfriend is doing something specific to annoy Jim. To get into the Meta Model, the response must make as few assumptions as possible. Jim: Bro, my girlfriend can be SO annoying sometimes! Meta Response: What exactly is happening when you find yourself feeling the most annoyed?
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3. The hypothalamus now bounces these emotions between the prefrontal cortex (which makes us conscious of the emotion), the hippocampus (to match it up with past memories of this particular friend and other instances of this situation), and the frontal lobes (which make decisions on how to act). This produces a snowball effect until I have either decided to take action or leave it. 4. When the prefrontal cortex has decided that it will take action (ie - I have decided I will say something to my friend) the frontal lobes produce myriad synaptic connections to decide specifically how to act, until I decide to say something in a joking manner, hoping my friend will take the hint. 5. This command is sent to the temporal lobes which construct a draft sentence which bounces back and forth between the limbic system and frontal lobes until I have a suitable sentence. 6. The temporal lobes will send messages to the brainstem by way of the basal ganglia to get the body to actually grin and say the words Next time, IM going to order a lobster you cheap-ass SOB! Haha! 7. Ill now watch for his body language and response to register how effective my communication was. You can see that although I got a little carried away there, I have written this in a very basic way. In reality there were millions upon millions of neurons firing to create that one little sentence. So you can see how easy it is to miscommunicate, and how difficult a task our brain has to interpret these deepset emotions (deep structure) into verbal communication (surface structure). So the key to the Meta Model is trying to deconstruct what the person is saying until we can really start getting into the deep structure.
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Presuppositions
Although presuppositions are covered by the classic NLP syllabus, it is often misunderstood. Its a simple building block of the Meta Model but because of its use in hypnosis and suggestion I think the humble presupposition deserves its own little chapter.
What Is A Presupposition?
A presupposition is a structure of language that makes unverbalised assumptions. For example, I could say to you Im not going to Burger King again! which would make the presupposition that I had been to Burger King before. A devious barrister in a courtroom might ask a man have you stopped beating your wife? to give the presupposition that the man used to (or still does) beat his wife. These are obvious presuppositions and are only really worth mentioning quickly to show an example of what a presupposition is. Increasingly often you can hear people saying things like I know MY religion is right! Why? Because I feel it in my heart! The subtle presupposition here is the word why which is intended to fill in for us. By skipping over it quickly, we are prone to accept that we were probably going to ask why ourselves. In fact, we did not ask why, and this kind of subtle presupposition is made very useful for people who want to steer our conversations in a particular direction.
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This suggestion, which you will read probably about the exact time you take your first bite of the massproduced burger, is that the burger is delicious. But the statement also makes two devious presuppositions: Firstly by saying Unique? they are presupposing that the statement has been made that the burger is unique, and they are answering your statement. Secondly, they are presupposing that YOU made that statement by saying You might even say its delicious! In fact, I did not state that the burger was unique (it certainly isnt) nor do I believe it is therefore delicious. It is simply a mild form of hypnosis in an attempt to drive future sales.
Presuppositions in Hypnosis
Presuppositions are the foundation of hypnosis induction. NLP master Derren Brown advises that the best method of hypnosis induction is a rapid series of presuppositions. The format of choice is As and So - which is a template that can be applied to anything that is happening and turn it into evidence that the hypnotic state is increasing. For example: As you sit there in your seat you feel more relaxed, so too you notice your eyelids becoming heavier. And as your eyes become heavier and heavier, so too they become harder and harder to keep open. Each of these statements take a truth (you are sitting in your seat) so you are bound to feel relaxed, and the statement presupposes that when you feel more relaxed you also feel your eyelids becoming heavier. And because you are feeling more relaxed, you automatically accept that your eyelids must be getting heavier. And so it happens. Although these presuppositions are stated only slightly deviated from the truth, they become very powerful suggestions that are increasingly easy to follow.
Presuppositions in Conversation
Lets imagine youre talking to a friend, having a pleasant conversation. And now, a third person comes along who you know to be fairly abrasive. What do you say to get them to leave, without seeming to be rude or inviting a confrontation? Think about it, what kind of thing would you say? A lot of us will end up saying - and Im sure weve all done this a few times before - something along the lines of Well it was good seeing you again, Ill see you at the next one Im sure, haha? then hold out your hand for them to shake it goodbye. More than likely, youll add some body language signals by standing next to your friend and facing in the same direction as them. When you put it straight out there, its quite obviously a presupposition that they are moving along, and youre saying goodbye. Quite often, the intruder will want to mirror your politeness and go along with your presupposition, then wander away feeling mysteriously like theyve been kicked out of something, but probably wont be able to put their finger on it. Okay! Maybe my example is a bit rough around the edges but Im sure Ive made my point - presuppositions are powerfully subtle suggestion tools. In fact, most of us already use them daily, but maybe dont realise they are called presuppositions.
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Mirroring
Mirroring is one of the (if not the) most useful NLP techniques there are. If someone is very good at mirroring, it is very difficult to dislike them. Mirroring, while considered part of the NLP syllabus, has been used innately by people throughout history. Even chimps (our genetic ancestors) use mirroring within their groups. This begs the question, why do I need to write about mirroring, if its so natural? Because just like any other skill you can name, there are vastly different levels of ability, and you can get much better by practicing. Mirroring is simply the process of mimicking subtle behaviours with whoever we are communicating. Before you go and start mimicking someones every word, be aware that mirroring must be subtle as to appear to be unconscious! This is the difference between a good conversation and a punch or slap. Mirroring can be achieved by copying any of these things: Speech patterns Body language Vocabulary style or specific choices of words Pace, tempo, pitch, tone, volume
Some say that accents can be mirrored, but I dont think this is true. If you mimic somebodys accent, it is immediately raised to conscious levels and stops being conducive to good communication and rapport.
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The point is, the more different something / someone is from ourselves, the more we fear it. This goes for anything - cultures, races, religions, species, it doesnt matter. This is why mirroring is so effective, it is the art of making yourself more similar to your chosen person. On an unconscious level, this builds trust and rapport.
Kinaesthetic Feeling That doesnt feel right / I cant put my finger on it These are not set-in-stone guidelines, however. Sometimes we use words of a certain state just because were used to hearing them ourselves. If you can modify your own language to be the same as the person you are talking to, this can go a long way towards building rapport and trust. For example, if you can determine that someone is a visual person, you would be better off describing how something looks rather than how something sounds.
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Hypnosis is not what many people think it is. A hypnotic trance is not a brain-dead, obey-all zombification during which you are completely unaware of your surroundings. Hypnosis does not usually induce a deep catatonic state, although with enough patience and the right subject, it can create an analogue of catatonia. When someone is on a stage pretending to eat their own shoe or be chased by a wildergoat, they are aware they are on a stage. Likewise if they are in a hypnotherapists office being asked to picture themselves as a child, they know they are only picturing it. They will not confuse it with reality, thinking they are actually a child. They may feel like the child, and act like the child, but they will know they have been hypnotized and are sitting on a hypnotherapists couch. Hypnosis is best thought of as a special state of mind which is very relaxed, mindful, and above all, suggestible. When you are in a state of hypnosis or hypnotic trance, you have a strong sense of ability to control your own brain, which is why it marries up with NLP so closely.
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5. At the end, always make sure the person is completely free from any belief he may still be hypnotised. If he thinks he is half under, he will be. Take your time bringing them out of the trance. 6. Take it slowly, and only in a controlled, safe, environment. No time pressures. 7. Treat it as a relaxation tool, not an entertainment tool.
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Here is a quick script you can read to your subject. It basically goes over the induction, you should modify it to suit your subject and your surroundings. Read in a calm, clear voice. Sit back and relax. Place your hands comfortably at your sides. Allow my words to just wash over you as suggestions are placed you find yourself following them. Everything here is safe and peaceful and as you feel your body becoming more and more relaxed you find you can shift your relaxation to your eyes. With your eyes alone, gently look upwards and as you notice your eyelids feeling slightly heavier, you allow your body to sink down comfortably into the chair. As your eyes slowly grow heavier, you can allow them to close. As you breathe, let your body numb and relax deeper into the chair. As you feel your body relaxing, so it becomes more numb and eventually the comfortable relaxation drifts up into your shoulders. As you feel your legs wanting to let go, let them go deep and relaxed into the chair, and your feet deflate deep into the floor. The relaxation makes its way up your neck and as it does, a peaceful, warm electricity shoots tingles down into your armpits and shoots down your arms into your fingers, as if warm sparks are dancing on the tips of your fingers. Allow the relaxed state to climb further up your neck and into your head, getting closer and closer to the very centre of your consciousness. Allow your mind to go sleepier and sleepier until you are perfectly relaxed. In your minds eye, imagine youre standing at the top of a staircase of ten stairs, with a door at the bottom of it. As we count down from ten, with each count youll take a step and become more and more relaxed, blissfully deeper and deeper into this trance, ten. As you feel your body becoming more and more relaxed you step down again, nine. Because your body is feeling so relaxed right now it is almost impossible to perceive, eight. As you begin to notice that your body is almost completely numb, you can now forget about your body and step down seven. Deeper and deeper into the relaxed, peaceful, comfortable state, six. The stairway becomes more and more vivid as you become more relaxed, five. As you descend your inner staircase, you start to notice how the stairs may feel against your feet, four. Deeper and deeper into this relaxed, super-comfortable trance, three. More and more comfortable, more and more relaxed, two. Relaxed peaceful trance, one. Open the door and your body goes to SLEEP and your mind wakes up.
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During Hypnosis
Use positive words and sentence structure. Avoid using negative words, so rather than saying You cant feel your legs say Your legs are numb. If the person gets uncomfortable, ask them if they want to wake up out of the trance. If they do not answer, take them out of their trance. If a person in unresponsive to leaving the trance, touch them on the arm as you give a command. If you touch their arm as you say anything, it will add gravity to your statement.
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NLP has countless applications in everyday life. Well look at some of the most popular applications here - the art of seduction, improving confidence, building rapport, detecting lies, curing phobias, losing weight and quitting smoking. Once you understand the principles, feel free to apply the techniques youve learned to other situations that have importance in your life.
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Seduction is an entire art on its own. If you have a thorough understanding of NLP, seduction is a straightforward process. Some suggest that using NLP for seduction is unethical, and that we shouldnt use mind control for seduction, but I strongly disagree. Everyone who attempts seduction is using some form of mind control whether they know it or not. Buying flowers, wearing cologne, and even having dinner with someone has far deeper psychological connections than you may expect, and are all forms of mind control. What? Am I suggesting that something as simple as a man buying flowers for a woman is a form of mind control? Yes, I am, and Ill tell you why. Its not just the fact that the woman is associating being presented with flowers with the arrival of the man. She is associating the pleasant smell of the rose with the man. Unlike most senses, smell goes directly to our limbic system which stores memory and is the seat of emotions. The man is essentially saying Heres a rose, BANG, now when you remember me, you remember a PLEASANT SMELL and the emotion of being PLEASED by that smell. You dont think it consciously. But your subconscious is 100% aware of that association. Whats more, the unethical argument falls flat on the basis that if someone has already made up their mind about you, it extremely difficult to turn them around. For example, you cannot get someone who rates you as a 1 to rate you as a 10 just with some clever NLP. You cannot make a woman who hates you suddenly take off all her clothes and ravage you with NLP. Not even hypnosis can do that. But you can turn someone from a 4 to a 7, or from an Im not so sure to a yes please! Make sense?
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Where To Meet
The best place to meet someone is a nightclub. Just kidding! While a nightclub is a viable place to meet people for romantic encounters or sex, its far from ideal if youre looking for a long term affair. In this case, you should use your entire life to meet new people. The more things you go out and do, the more people you have the opportunity to talk to. The more people you talk to, the more people you meet. Thats hardly something you didnt already know, right? You want to find the ideal place that you can go to meet people for potential relationships? Anywhere, of course! Supermarket, cafes, on the street, on the beach, at concerts, parties, on the bus, at work, anywhere! It really depends on your lifestyle. You may not think these are places people like to be approached, because its not expected at these places. But what if you look at it from the other perspective - where do YOU go specifically to be approached? Nowhere! You do things in your life, and if someone happens to start talking to you, its an opening to a new relationship. So it stands to reason that the more things youre doing, the more opportunities open up.
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How to Approach
Its hard to know how to approach someone, especially when they are a stranger and you are worried about rejection. The key (as a friend of mine so eloquently put it) is to pick up your balls and just do it. But to approach someone is one thing, to approach someone in an interesting, non-threatening manner is another. Picture this. Joe sees Jane for the first time, she is sitting at a cafe table by herself. Lets say they are both single, Joe considers himself to be a 6 on the scale of 1 to 10, and Jane considers herself to be an 8. Joe thinks she looks nice and wants to approach her. Hes approached women before, but it always takes that little bit of courage each time. He overcomes that mental barrier and walks up to her and asks if the other seat is available. What is going to happen in Janes mind? It is more than likely that this strange man is interested in her romantically. She will have just half a second to look at the man, make a judgement about him based on his appearance, and decide whether or not it is worth interrupting what she was doing for an unknown amount of time while this man talks to her. It is likely that Jane will say no, usually by telling a white like as to not hurt Joes feelings - something like Sorry, my friend will be here soon. That is going to be the end of all possibilities as far as Joe is concerned. So what mistake did Joe make? In my opinion, he made many. First of all, he pressured her into making a snap decision at first glance. The default answer is always going to be no, even if you are Brad Pitts more handsome brother. This is the same for men and women (despite what men may think). It is an evolutionary trait that we are by default cautious of strangers, as they may be threatening to us.
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But girls love bad guys! I hear you crying. And I assure you that any bad guy was at least nonthreatening when he met the girl who apparently loves him. Now, here is a list of things people dont like: 1. Being judged. If youre sitting at a cafe, and someone comes up to you all confident, like they know best, with a serious look on their face and standing over you, this is a threat. Whether you believe in evolution or youre still under the belief that were not just clever monkeys who can talk, it doesnt matter: this person is showing dominance, and therefore is threatening us. Anything we are likely to say with any real semblance of our true beliefs, any revelations of our true selves, will be met with judgement, and we dont want that. So we respond by stoically making that threat go away.
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Well, I say how to talk to girls but this applies to talking to anyone for the point of romantic interest. Doesnt matter if you are a man or a woman, looking for a man or a woman; were all human beings, our brains are made the same way, so the rules are pretty much exactly the same. In our hypothetical situation, we corrected Joes approach to Jane so it was very non-threatening and offset her defensive systems with a time deflection.
NLP Seduction: Rule # 5 Stand or sit side-by-side rather than face to face.
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NLP Seduction: Rule # 6 Keep the conversation interesting, humorous, and moving forward. If you get stuck, use the Question-Comment-Joke method to keep it alive.
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Confidence is one of those things that can help in every aspect of your life, and can be gained or strengthened quite easily using NLP. Confidence gained by way of NLP is just as powerful as confidence gained through experience. Once this is understood, and you master the ability to gain confidence through NLP, it becomes a snowballing juggernaut of positivity. Confidence is a relatively simple psychological tool that provides great power, so why is it so hard for most people to achieve? In my opinion, most of the blame can be attributed to the fact that humans spend the first dozen years of their life actively attacking the confidence of all around them. Some people stop this in their teens, others do this their whole lives. This is because of the flawed human instinct that you can gain confidence yourself by destroying the confidence of others. Luckily, this particular flaw can be turned around to work for us using NLP. Take the picture above. Its a cat who confidently sees himself as a lion. When other cats see him, they dont see a lion, they see a cat. But the cats body language will show to all the other cats that he holds himself in high regard, as if he were a lion. The other cats will think that the lion cat is very sure of himself, and probably for a good reason. After all, throughout the cats childhood, he must have been thoroughly tested by all the other kittens yet he has such confidence! No other cat will question this confidence, they will simply accept it.
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NEURO-PHYSICAL EFFECT Body reflects anxiety. Tense up. Be defensive and do not open up to further emotional damage. This reflects in our body language.
ENCOUNTER I am meeting some new people for the first time. How am I feeling about this? HIPPOCAMPUS (MEMORY) Last time I met some new people, they didnt like me. I was just being myself. I am clearly not a likeable person. I better act differently.
AMYGDALA (EMOTIONS) Oh no! The feelings were bad last time. Dont let this happen again! Sense of doom and worry!
Now compare that to the following, which is a positive confidence cycle: ENCOUNTER I am meeting some new people for the first time. How am I feeling about this? HIPPOCAMPUS (MEMORY) Last time I met some new people, they liked me. I was just being myself. It seemed to work well. Ill just be myself again.
NEURO-PHYSICAL EFFECT Body is feeling great. I am relaxed and happy, and this will shine through in my body language and voice.
AMYGDALA (EMOTIONS) I enjoyed the acceptance I gained in my last encounter. I will enjoy this one. Feeling of enjoyment is activated.
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As soon as you approach, the strangers smile with their eyes, you FEEL they are interested in you. You start talking and merge right in with their conversation. The group takes you in as one of their own 100% seamlessly. You are not acting differently, you are being yourself, and everyone loves it. Feel how confident you are just being yourself. Continue to reinforce this anchor, and every time you feel the confidence, press the anchor again. You must associate the emotional feeling of confidence with the physical sensation of the anchor.
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I want you to take a snapshot of that memory weve just created. Something that encompasses the height of the confident feeling. Now take the snapshot and make it bolder and more vivid. Bring it closer to you, make it larger, the size of a large wall. Make the snapshot detailed and realistic. Feel the feeling of the snapshot, and reinforce the anchor. Make everything as large, bold, and vivid as you possibly can. Now double it again! Step into the snapshot. Look through your own eyes in that confident setting, feel the confidence as strongly as you can, and reinforce the anchor again. Keep doing this for a good minute or two.
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Rapport is important in life. If I had only one interpersonal skill in an otherwise dull, boring personality, that skill would be rapport. No question about it. Rapport is that feeling you get when you look at someone and instantly think I will get on well with this person. Rapport is what bonds us. Rapport (pronounced ra-Pore) is often a difficult concept to grasp. If you want an example of rapport, look at this mans face: Its the movie star Jackie Chan, sure, but ignore that for a second. Pretend youve never seen him before. Go on, stare at his face for ten seconds. What do you think hes like, as a person? Do you think youd get on with him? Try to guess, from looking at his face, if hes a nice guy. Chances are, you will think hes a nice guy. Very approachable. Look at his head, how he carries it in a humble, slightly-downward angle, yet the slight tilt shows warmth and kindness. His smile is mostly with his eyes, and he shows his teeth which tells us hes genuine. These, so subtle mannerisms help make up the concept of rapport, which can be your most powerful, formidable weapon. Why? It doesnt make a stranger think they like you - no. It makes a stranger actually like you. When people like you, they want to help you, give you business, introduce you to friends, spend more time with you, buy you lovely extravagant hats, and cook you delicious dinners.
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4. The limbic system, hard at work, constructs these various tags into a mixture of various emotions, in this case, pleasure. 5. The amygdala generates a mild sympathetic emotion of pleasure. If it wasnt for this function of being able to feel other peoples feelings, we would be unable to truly tell how other people were feeling. In essence, when a person who we perceive to be happy to see us approaches, our unconscious mind generates a genuine happy to see them feeling. Quite often, however, our super-awesome frontal lobes decide not to show it back. Thus the cycle ends. It feels good to us but the person has no feedback. If we do show the feedback of being happy to see someone, it builds up and they get the feeling of happy to see us. This creates a genuine upward spiral of pleasure, until one of us decides to stop showing it. This mutual pleasure is the essence of rapport.
Both men are wearing suits, smiling. They are both facing slightly to our right, and both smiling with their eyes. Yet one is giving off vastly different rapport facial signals than the other. If you were to meet these men for the first time, which one would you get along with better?
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Rapport Clothing
Clothing should not be too tight or show-offish. For maximum rapport, dont wear muscle tops, revealing dresses, or anything to peacock in a dominant manner. (Peacocking means drawing attention to yourself with wild accessories.) If you do want to peacock, wear something humourous or odd, such as a bright red shirt and an unusual hat. If youre dead-set on showing off your body, then do so in the most subtle possible. The key is to look non-threatening.
Rapport Stance
Your stance should be alert and confident, with open gestures. Avoid putting your hands on your hips or folding your arms. Do not press your knees or feet together, as this is a defensive posture. Be willing to shake hands with everyone you meet. If you have sweaty hands, hold a napkin or spare shirt in your right hand - no-one will question it. When it comes time to shake hands, swap the absorbent item into your left hand and your right hand should still be dry by the time you shake hands. You can tell a lot about someone just from watching their posture. Here are five examples of posture:
The legs are identical - all that changes is the position of the arms, shoulders and angle of the head. Can you tell which picture matches which description? 1. Ashamed, shy, not confident 2. Alert, confident, perhaps even aggressively so 3. Neutral, non-threatening 4. Disappointed, bored, uninterested 5. Defensive, threatening, challenging
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Rapport Communication
Building rapport through communication is where it gets very complicated. Given that there are millions of different things you can say, mixed with millions of subtly different gestures and voice tones, you have almost countless options on how to communicate verbally. And because each situation is different, there is no one right thing to say that is always right across the board. Good communication is built through experience, and is based on all the same rapport-building principles weve looked at so far. Being warm, open, friendly and non-judgmental in your speech will all help build rapport with someone. Youll also need to adjust your communication based on the other persons mood, sense of humour, sense of urgency and level of comfort, among many other things. For a quick reading of their mental state, focus on the three factors as listed above: facial expression, clothing and stance.
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Being both an accomplished liar and lie detector is something a lot of people want to know how to do. Learning how to tell if someone is lying is difficult, but learning how to lie convincing is more difficult. Lying is never a clear case - there are certainly powerful indicators but no 100% foolproof methods which is why there are no true lie detectors usable in a court of law. But with a bit of practice, you can easily become the next best thing.
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1. The first sign is the eyes. When the brain is creating a mental picture the eyes instinctively move up and to their right (your left), signifying access to the right hemisphere (creation) and visual cortex (pictures). This usually means they are constructing a picture in their head. If someone is recalling a picture (remembering something that they actually saw) then they would look up and to their left (your right). 2. The eyebrows rising towards the centre of the forehead (where the arrow lands in the picture) is a sign of fear. This sign can occur during or immediately after a lie, because they are scared that you will see through it. 3. Another sign of fear is the sides of the lips turning down. The muscles that control this action are very specific and it is almost impossible to consciously activate them without activating any other liprelated muscles. 4. This is my favourite sign, when someone touches their nose or lips, covers their mouth or in some way touches their face during the telling of a lie. It is very common and is the expression of an urge to conceal themselves or look casual while misdirecting your attention.
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NLP is great for curing phobias, simply because phobias originate from your mind - and NLP allows you to master your mind. In this straightforward we will use the common fear of flying or air travel as an example. The same NLP technique can be applied to almost any phobia. The first thing we have to realise is that almost every phobia (other than natural evolutionary fears, such as fear of things that are different, or fear of heights) is a fear we have learned as a child. They are not automatic. For example, if the fear of flying was automatic, we would expect everyone to be afraid of flying. But theyre not. So the first thing we have to do is identify the lesson that taught us that flying is scary. It may be that we had a shaky plane landing when we were an infant, it may be that weve never even been on a plane but we saw a film that made us doubt the safety. Whatever it is, you need to form a short film in your mind of the scary lesson. Put yourself in the film. Now, imagine a cinema. It can be one that you know quite well. Picture yourself sitting there.
Dont necessarily use the one Ive put as an example. Ive only put these pictures here to illustrate what I mean. Once youve got your cinema pictured, imagine your scary short film up on the screen. But dont push play yet! Its just the first frame, ready to go.
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Take the film and see it on the screen. Picture it. But lets make it black and white.
And now make it blurry, so you can still see whats going on, but make less defined.
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Lets make it smaller. You still will be able to see it, but it needs to be smaller, so it doesnt take up very much of the screen. The film itself will be silent, with some loud comedy music playing. Think Looney Tunes or Monty Python. Any kind of silly music will do, as long as you find it funny and light-hearted.
Now imagine a time when you were super confident. Something youre really good at, such as doing something at work you know like the back of your hand, or laughing with a good friend. Magnify this feeling of confidence and safety! Enhance it, turn up the volume of your confidence, let it shine out in a blinding beam of super-confidence and engulf everything around you. Now double that feeling! And double it again!
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Now watch the film play, and feel free to laugh! At the end of the film, go and congratulate your filmself on getting it done. See how everything is okay, and everything worked out fine! Youre still alive, so theres clearly no point in being afraid anymore! Well done. Shake your hand, pat yourself on the back and both of you can now laugh about the whole thing.
Now put the screen back to full size, full colour, and watch the film backwards, in super fast rewind motion. It should be all over and done in a few seconds. If you want, you can even watch the film through your own eyes (rather than from a cinema screen). How do you feel about it now? Your phobia is alleviated a bit. Repeat these steps as necessary. Get yourself as relaxed as possible every time. The more bold and vivid you can make the experience, the better it will work. This NLP technique for curing phobias will also work on some other emotional memories. Perhaps you are nervous while giving a speech? Or you dont like talking to certain people at work? Even going for a run outside can be turned from a daunting experience to something youre already great at. Give it a try!
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Automatic weight loss cannot be achieved with NLP. But NLP can help you change your eating habits so that you can more easily lose weight. What if celery tasted like chocolate? What if ice cream tasted disgusting and no longer appealed to you? What if going for a run felt better than going to the pub? How easy would it be to lose weight then? Ice cream is delicious, right? How can it possibly become unappealing? The truth is, right now, the pros of ice cream just outweigh the cons in your mind. So you have to concentrate on the cons: Think about that fatty aftertaste it leaves in your mouth. See that fatty aftertaste as a visible, irremovable film that sticks like glue to your mouth. Picture the cold, hard sugars rotting away at your teeth until they become painful and brown. Visualise the fat globules seeping through your insides, oozing their way through your blood vessels and adding themselves into heaving, pale yellow piles of fat under your skin. Imagine the sound of all the saturated animal fats congealing into a sickly putty and clogging up your arteries. How do you imagine that processed fat smells once its stripped of its artificial flavours and sugars? How does that ice cream sound now? Read that paragraph again out loud if you need to. The more vividly you imagine these things, the better they will work. For added effect, read this out with a plate of ice cream is sitting in front of you. Take one spoonful, put it in your mouth, and start reading. Focus on the negative aspects of the food, and they will soon outweigh the positive aspects. The result is that you wont want to buy more ice cream next time youre at the supermarket.
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melts down fat. Not directly, of course, but for the purpose of our NLP learning lets pretend it does. In reality, your fat deposits are broken down by your body to gain energy for the processing of the celery. What is your favourite aspect of celery? If you hate the taste, then use a different vegetable for this example, possibly a carrot or piece of lettuce. Picture the celery being nicely broken down and literally turning old fat deposits into pure water. Concentrate on the taste. Say words like mmm delicious! and really mean them. Act like it is the most delicious piece of food you have eaten in your entire life. Tell other people how great it tastes. Even if you dont quite believe yourself, put on the performance of a lifetime. Your body will react by genuinely starting to like celery. This is the exact method I used on olives, which I used to hate but now very much enjoy. The more times you put on this act, and the more emotion you put behind your act, the faster this will work.
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Eventually you will develop a genuine taste for celery. I have always liked celery, but since I used this technique on olives I now consider them a delicious treat.
The exact same principle applies. To prefer exercise or energy-consuming activities over sedentary activities, you need to rewire your brain a little bit. Again, this is entirely possible, and really not too different from learning to pronounce a word Ive been mispronouncing my entire life, thank you minotaur. When you think should I go exercise? what is the first thing you picture? You picture yourself doing the exercise in question, and asking yourself how you would feel doing that. The answer is probably Id feel tired, Id need to put in a lot of effort and energy, it seems a bit too much like hard work. No! Your brain doesnt tell YOU how to think! YOU tell your BRAIN how to think! Now think should I go exercise? and immediately picture yourself having achieved a specific goal. If you dont already have a goal, set one now. Imagine you are looking at a YouTube clip of yourself in the future, the very moment you achieve that goal. Click on play video and see the screen displaying your future self completing that goal for the first time. Close up on your face, see your expression as you achieve that goal. Listen to your breathing and see the sense of achievement spread across your face. Now step into the video and click replay. Act it out in your mind - how does it feel? How tempting does that exercise sound now?
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Everyone Ive ever met who has permanently quit smoking has done so with the help of NLP and/or hypnosis. Most chemical methods to stop smoking simply help you resist the strong temptation to light up another cigarette. Hypnosis and NLP work much better because they makes the thought of another cigarette unbearable. NLP and hypnosis can make you simply not want another cigarette. In the truest sense, smoking becomes undesirable to the point where you would decline a cigarette even if it was magically 100% cancer-free. There is no temptation to overcome - just a switch back to your original mindset before you started smoking in the first place. The trick is that you need to be determined to quit smoking. If youre slightly indifferent about quitting, its not going to work. This isnt to be confused with being too addicted to quit; its about whether or not you actually WANT to stop smoking. Ask yourself this question: do you want to stop feeling the need to smoke cigarettes? If the answer is yes, then you can make it happen. Youre fighting a war with a parasite called nicotine. This nicotine parasite has been winning the battles so far. But you can win the war, because the battlefield is your body and you are the master of your body. Your mind can change everything! Your mind can make your body a hostile environment for nicotine. Your mind can turn every cell in your body into an anti-nicotine minefield. Your mind is the super-weapon that ends the war. You mind is the key. Most people who I know permanently quit smoking (including my partner Becky) used the techniques detailed in the book The Easy Way to Stop Smoking by Allen Carr. This book embeds NLP techniques that are designed to completely rewire your brain into disliking cigarettes. This is why it is so successful! I use slightly alternative NLP techniques in the following four steps to quit smoking:
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Take three specific instances and play them in your mind over and over again. Overlap them into a rolling, loud and vivid highlight reel of times youve wanted to quit. ACTION: Press and rub your left thumb knuckle into a hard surface, such as your desk or your knee. This feeling should be associated with the following visualisation. You know the cigarette tar that forms in your lungs that you try to cough up? Imagine coughing up all that tar and spitting it into a bucket over the course of several days. Vividly picture that bucket of regurgitated tar and phlegm sopping around in the bucket. How does that cigarette tar smell? What sound does it make if you stir the bucket with a large wooden spoon? Unpleasant? Well how about this - take a mouthful of that thick, hot, sticky, smelly tar, and chew it. Feel the tar sticking to the roof of your mouth as the bitter taste fills your mouth. The smell will be overwhelming, but keep chewing it anyway. Hear the splatch splatch sound of the vile tar squelching in your mouth. Take a big drag on a cigarette at the same time, with the taste of the smoke intertwining with the tar. Now see the disappointment in the eyes of your loved ones as you take a step closer to an early grave. As you inhale the smoke, feel and visualise the smoke carrying all that disgusting tar down into your lungs. Picture the tar sticking to the tissue of your lungs and burning away chunks of your lung tissue. Hear the hissing sound of the boiling tar corroding through your lungs and making them bleed. Exhale and truly feel the pain of the specks of smokey tar searing its way through your throat, infecting your mouth and poisoning the delicate tissues in your nose. Try to cough up all that dried tar stuck to your lungs. Feel the burning pain of the fermented smoke scabs peeling off your insides and retching their way up your throat.
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As in step one, roll the reasons into an overlapping highlight video. Make the video bold and vivid. Make them loud, louder, almost uncomfortably loud. Sense the associated smells, physical feelings and emotional feelings that go with them. Step into the video and increase the intensity further. Reinforce the anchor of pressing your thumb into the hard surface, and play this video over and over in your mind, at least five times. Each time the video plays, increase the size of the video, as if its on a giant IMAX screen. Keep increasing the intensity of the colours, raising the volume, making the picture bigger, brighter and closer and play it again. Continuously reinforce the anchor. Do it now! Make it a real, painful event.
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Final Thoughts
Thanks for reading my e-book! It took me a lot of research and effort to write. I hope you enjoyed it and if so, I hope you also write me a nice review on the Amazon Kindle page :) Most of all, I hope that I have helped you make a positive change in your life. Just understanding the functions of these techniques and how they work can help you apply them to real life situations.
Published by Creative Media NZ Ltd Cover Design by Pete Casale www.cre8ve.co.nz Copyright 2012 Creative Media NZ Ltd Written and Illustrated by Pete Casale All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without prior written permission of the publisher.
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