NLP
Abbreviations
make me curious
What is NLP all about?
NLP is short
for Neuro-Linguistic Programming. This "programming" is
a set of communication and thinking skills used by people all over
the world.
In 1975, a mathematician
and a linguist asked a very powerful question. He wondered if you
could study people with a very highly developed skill and discover
a way to transfer that skill to others. As Richard Bandler and John
Grinder explored this question, they developed NLP. Their earliest
models of excellence were hypnotist Milton Erickson, family therapist
Virginia Satir, and Gestalt therapist Fritz Perls. Bandler and Grinder
found that genius is transportable -- they were able to teach others
to be as highly effective as these models.
They
named their techniques Neuro-Linguistic Programming. Neuro refers
to the brain and nervous system, which is powered by sensory input
-- what we see, hear, feel, smell and taste. Linguistic refers to
language, the "packaging" for our thoughts. Programming
is the arrangement and sequencing of data.
This
excavation of excellence continues today, and now you can be a part
of it through NLP coaching, training, home study courses and certification
classes.
What
makes NLP worth learning?
Three
of the greatest challenges of being human are:
- Understanding ourselves
- Understanding others
- Making ourselves understood by others.
NLP will give you techniques to help you to access all of your resources,
any time you need them, and develop understanding and rapport with
others. NIP techniques work in harmony with your own beliefs and preferences
and give you powerful tools to change your behavior.
Come
to you senses and know your own mind!
Awareness
of how you use your senses is at the heart of NLP. Every person
has representational systems -- patterns they use to take in data,
give it meaning, and recall information. All people take in information
through the senses. What you may not know consciously is that you
prefer one set of sensory input over the others. (This doesn't mean
you don't use your other senses too -- but one sense is probably
your "lead.")
Visual
people mentally create pictures and store and retrieve information
as pictures.
Auditory
people enjoy constant internal monologues -- they learn and access
information by sound.
Kinesthetic people feel (by touching and through emotions) and store
and retrieve information that way.
These
are the most common preferences, or in NLP-speak, "modalities".
We
reveal our preferences by our choice of language, how quickly we
speak, the voice range/tone, the location of the breathing (high
in the chest vs. low in the chest) and the movement of our eyes.
NLP
Made Easy Home Study Course
4 Tape Set
NLP
Communication Model
This
now famous model of communication, what is it all about and why
is it giving you information that is not generally well known. Is
this seminar an unfair advantage?
Learn what NLP is all about. What makes NLP worth learning for you?
How you can go from your present State to your desired State. Why
is the non-verbal (93%) as important if not more important than
the Verbal part of us (7%).
Rapport
- build trust and credibility instantly with anyone.
You
will learn to develop faster ways of gaining instant rapport with
your friends, family & anyone you are communicating with. We
will cover the following: breathing, predicates, key words, eye
blinks, posture, head tilt, rhythms, pet words and more. Come to
your senses and know your own mind. What are Representations systems
and why are they so vitally important to us in our everyday communications
with others? How to ask the right questions and more importantly
expect and get high quality answers.
Eye
Patterns
You
will learn to detect subtle eye movements of people. This will allow
you to detect whether the person you are talking to is telling you
the truth. Become a human lie detector.
Sensory
Acuity
What
would it be like to know exactly how people think? Because you will
be able to use your eyes & ears to detect, without guessing
anymore, the way in which people think and why they think that way!
|