Archive for April, 2007
11
04
2007
Posted by: Matt in movies
At some point, scientists say, our Sun will die. It will burn itself out and cease to give us the life that we all enjoy. In Sunshine, Earth has sent its last hope to the Sun in an effort to revive it before our planet freezes in space.
Aboard the Icarus II are eight astronauts and scientists, their mission; to fire an immense nuclear bomb in to the heart of the sun which will, hopefully, resurrect the star and breathe new life on our freezing homeworld. Protected from the Sun’s rays by an immense reflective shield, the vessel glides towards the centre of our solar system in relative darkness whilst its inhabitants wonder whether they will succeed and what happened to Icarus I, the original vessel that disappeared 7 years previously. (more…)
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10
04
2007
Posted by: Matt in nlp & hypnosis
I’ve added a new site to my blogroll - Anchievement in mind, the blog covers quite a few of the topics I talk about, and many more, and is definitely worth a look if you find some of my NLP \ hypnosis articles of interest. Head over and say hello.
“This blog is about exploring opportunities. That’s right, opportunities! We take care of everything better than we take care of ourselves, mostly due to the lack of knowledge how to. We have forgotten how to deal with ourselves other than completely rationally, we have forgotten how to use our own brain properly.
That’s where the opportunity lies: Exploring new ways of thinking! I have devoted several years of my life now to studying different ways of exploring the human mind, from scientific approaches to even shamanic techniques, and this blog is about things that we can all do, easily, and that can help us reclaim peace of mind. If you are interested in finding out about what is really going on up there, and how to optimize its usage, then welcome to the journey with achievement in mind!”
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10
04
2007
Posted by: Matt in nlp & hypnosis
So last week, I was talking about maps. Maps of reality… how we don’t experience reality directly, but through a set of filters, our beliefs, meta-programs, our previous experiences etc etc, all of these contribute to our interpretation of reality. I like to think of it as our approach to filing, for example if you have a filing system for stuff at home - bills, statements etc etc.. where you file a letter from the water company might differ from how I might file it, and that may be because the importance or relevance of that letter for you will likely differ from the importance I put to it. This is true for reality. Let’s say you are a glass half full kind of person and I’m a glass half empty person.
So as these people, we are both driving to work and we both get stuck on red lights for six blocks. Now you, as the optimist, might not even notice that you’ve been stuck on red… you’re glad to be out in the car, listening to your favourite tunes, whilst I as the pessimist, am counting every single second I am stuck in traffic, wondering why the world is conspiring to make me late for work.
The same reality happened to both of us, but we “filed” it differently. The meaning of those six successive red lights was different for each of us, based on who we are and our mindset at that point. because how I interpret those lights will differ for me personally from day to day, and hour to hour, depending on my state of mind, what’s happened to me today, what’s on the radio (music is a great anchor for states) and a bunch of other stuff that I could write about all day.
Ok so revision lesson over. This stuff is cool to know because once you understand filters and the fact that people make meaning from reality, you can understand that people have opinions and views for a reason, and once you know this you are but one step away from having Jedi powers.
Once you are comfortable with the concept that the map is not the territory, you can lead people to new maps, or to enriching their map. Rather than the traditional argument of - “you don’t get it, that’s not true”, by meeting people at their map - letting them know that you understand why they think that… what must be true for them to think that way, you can begin to lead them to new maps, or ways and information that enriches their map and can help them break problems, see new opportunities or realise that they should buy your product.
So ditch lines like
“what you need to understand…”
“the truth of the matter is…”
“my point is this…”
and replace them with something like
“I understand that you believe that because of X, and that’s ok, I had a friend who also felt like that, however when he also understood Y, then he began to wonder whether Z was a realistic way forward…”
Here, you are meeting them at their map, letting them know that’s ok to think that given their circumstances, and then adding new information in a very gentle way to enrich their map and hence make them aware of new ways forward. There’s some other patterns in that suggestion too, which you can read more about if you take a look at Jamie Smart’s Influential Language Cards, or Kevin Hogan’s Covert Persuasion book.
Now, a lot of this might be new to you, and that’s ok, I wondered whether this stuff really works when I first read about it, and whether it was right to influence people like that. However then I realised that naturally persuasive people already do this unconsciously and get great results, and once I started to use this approach I found that it was comfortably easy to help people see new perspectives on their situation, without feeling like I’ve manipulated them…
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09
04
2007
Posted by: Matt in nlp & hypnosis
Aaah the relaxing sensation of a long, lazy weekend, basking in the hot easter sun, enjoying a cool, refreshing beer as I lean on my shovel and gaze at the cavernous hole that was once a little gravel and brick “feature” in my back garden…
I’m not a religious man, but I am thankful to whoever gave me this long weekend as a chance to recharge my batteries and begin the garden remodelling that will most likely be finished off by someone who knows about gardening.
Still, it was good to make headway on the obsolete feature. This part of the garden had been there for a long time, but had served little positive purpose, rather it annoyed me and made me wonder if I was capable of doing something about it. I’m not that skilled with practical projects, so I had ignored it. However with a long stretch of good weather in front of me I began to dig, loosening the compacted earth and shoveling the unwanted gravel and dirt in to the wheelbarrow. Once I got moving I found that it wasn’t half as hard as I had halucinated that it would be. And how had I set myself expectations without a comparitive situation? Sometimes it’s good to put aside assumptions and experience things through doing, as it turns out that change is usually a lot easier than we imagine it might be.
In addition to gardening, I managed to listen to some of Richard Bandler’s “Personal Genius” CD set. Misleading title really because this is a recording of Bandler doing his trademark changework, layers upon layers of metaphors, loops, embedded commands and lots more that I can’t detect. It certainly tranced me out for long periods which made digging tough at times, but it is certainly fascinating listening. The thing I like about Bandler’s recordings is that they are great for listening to whilst doing something else (except driving) because for the most part he’s not talking to your conscious mind anyway.
So, back to the grindstone tomorrow. Shirts ironed. Clean pants. If only Easter could last a few more days, especially when the sun is shining, even so I’m sure I’ll get back to my gardening when I return from work tomorrow.
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05
04
2007
Posted by: Matt in nlp & hypnosis
I’ve done a lot of study in my time, and figured that I had a pretty good grip on the world, how it works, and what is behind the curtain. However, when I started studying NLP, my grip on the world turned out to be a grip on my perception of the world, which is a very different thing indeed.
What on earth does that mean (pardon the pun)? Ok, so one of the presuppositions of NLP is that “the map is not the territory”. My understanding of that is that people don’t experience reality directly. Sure, they see what they see, hear what they hear, and smells, sensations and tastes are all linked to reality. However, raw data from “reality” is filtered by your mind even before it hits the senses - remember, you don’t look at everything, you choose to look at certain things. And even the data you do choose to take in is filtered by many aspects - your view of life (are you a glass half full or empty person), your experience and how you’ve coded that, your beliefs and much much more. Effectively you receive and filter information which becomes your map of reality.
By map I mean this - is the London Tube Map ACTUALLY London? No it’s a representation of part of it, the parts of London that are useful for the purpose of navigating the underground. Is the Atlas ACTUALLY the world? No it’s just a map of the real thing. It doesn’t have every single rock and building on it, just the information useful for understanding the geography of the planet. Your map is a representation of reality created and maintained by you for the purpose of navigating life. It will always have parts missing… a child doesn’t have its map coded that fire hurts until it burns itself and very quickly modifies its map.
So although you are interacting with reality every day, you don’t experience it, and haven’t done, ever. You could argue that a baby doesn’t have any of those filters, and perhaps you are right, but perhaps you need to consider when a baby can possibly have NO filters at all? At birth? Before birth? Are they genetically coded? That’s a whole new discussion.

So what does this mean? Well one way of looking at it is that perhaps all of those things that you thought are true aren’t necessarily true. On finding out that his father was in fact Darth Vader, Luke complained to the spectral Obi Wan, who told him that what he had said was the truth “from a certain point of view”. And perhaps this is a way of seeing what the truth is… our “maps of reality” are all from certain points of view, and even if we dedicated our lives to seeing reality from every point of view, the map still wouldn’t be complete because we would have to interact with everyone and everything in the universe.
So the fact that your map of reality is incomplete means that everyone you meet and everything you do has the potential to enrich your map and give you new perspectives. This, for me, changed my view of other people, particularly those that I didn’t agree with. I went from thinking “he doesn’t know what he’s talking about” to “I wonder what must be true for him to think that”, and at that moment I immediately started to learn more from every person I met, every TV show I watched and every walk I took. For me, accepting that my view is just that, a perspective on reality shifted my attitude to what it meant to experience reality.
Of course everything I’ve written is my interpretation of my map, right at this moment, and not necessarily true, but perhaps an interesting perspective?
I was browsing this morning and found this excellent site run by Joanna Young, an Edinburgh-based Life Coach. She’s posted a great article on enriching your map, well worth a read, and it inspired me to write this.
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05
04
2007
Posted by: Matt in photoreading
When I wrote this post the other day about photoreading, prompted by an email, I realised that in the chaos of the last few months I hadn’t done any photoreading for many months, since before Christmas.
So long in fact that I’d forgotten the technique. I’d never got to unconscious competence with it, so I’m fairly annoyed at myself and determined to get back on the horse. I hadn’t experienced spontaneous activation but I had some good results with being able to recall specific facts when asked, and being able to mind map a book’s salient points in about a third of the time it would usually take me (I like to borrow books, mind map them then give them back, you see - it saves on storage space!)
Anyhoo so I’m not back to square one but I’m back on the squares in some way. How am I going to do it? Well I am setting myself the challenge of photoreading 3 books a day. Actually photoreading 3 books a day is pretty easy - 10-20 minutes in the office before everyone comes in… finding the time to postview and activate them is the challenge, so I think I’ll have to go and have a look at my “to read” book pile and decide how I’m going to achieve this. My aim is, by the summer, to be able to get in to PR state in an instant and to have a handful of spurious activation examples documented on this site. Once you can get in to state spontaneously, then no-one can actually tell that you are doing anything different, other than the fact that you are turning the pages really quickly… but lots of people do that as they browse a book anyway.
All this and a little baby? Challenge I know but my books are piling up again and I need to crack on!
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04
04
2007
Posted by: Matt in nlp & hypnosis
So last night I worked with someone on becoming a non-smoker. Smoking is a tough nut to crack because there is more going on than a simple habit. After all, for smokers, being a smoker is a habit, a belief and an identity, and you really need to work on all 3 to effect a change.
We did a whole bunch of work around the triggers for smoking, and worked to break the unconscious behaviours around those triggers. The idea here is to make the decision to smoke in certain situations and conscious one rather than unconscious. Once it is conscious then you have choice over whether to smoke or not. We didn’t have time to work on every single trigger, instead we focused on the most important ones. If you are interested in more detail of what I did, contact me and we’ll chat about it on email.
One of the coolest things we did was something that I haven’t tried before, and that is getting the client to make contact with their unconscious mind. You see, a lot of NLP seems just like fun on the surface, and it’s easy for a client to go away a little tranced, wondering what the point was and spending effort disbelieving that any change was made. In my experience I haven’t had anyone disbelieve all of the change, but they can affect the impact of the change if they disbelieve it strong enough.
So inspired by part of the reframing technique in my lovely new copy of Bandler & Grinder’s ‘Frogs Into Princes’, and similar to the technique used by Richard Bandler in ‘The Bandler Effect’, I decided to get the client to have a conversation with her unconscious. Tad James uses this in hypnotherapy to check that the information will be acted upon (see Hypnosis - A Comprehensive Guide), but you don’t need to be ‘in hypnosis’ (whatever that means) to have it work.
The idea was, to close the sesssion, that I would have her speak to her unconscious and ask it if it was ready to make the changes necessary to become a non-smoker. The intent was that she would experience something very unique that would serve as a convincer that deep-down, parts of her resonsible for unconscious behaviour had been listening and were invested in making the change that she wanted to make consciously.
So here’s how I did it. You can try this at home if you like…hey it’s a pretty cool thing to be able to do… to converse with the part of you that handles almost all of the operations required to keep you alive… it also happens to be much smarter than you and have a better memory, so getting in touch with your unconscious can have significant impacts on your life, career, performance, wellbeing and many other things. (more…)
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02
04
2007
Posted by: Matt in books, nlp & hypnosis
A big thanks to Kate, who found me a copy of Bandler & Grinder’s Frogs Into Princes for a paltry £12 including package. Finally I can ditch my knackered old photocopy and enjoy the book for real.
Now if I can just find Structure of Magic I&II, Reframing and Trance-Formations to go with it I’ll have my own personal NLP reference library!
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02
04
2007
Posted by: Matt in nlp & hypnosis
I often get asked what the heck NLP is. And I usually give a new answer depending on what my distortions, generalisations and deletions are at that time.
Tonight I came across this post on a blog explaining the communication model - how we experience reality. This post is a great place to start if you want to understand NLP, so why not head over there and have a read. There’ll be a test tomorrow…
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01
04
2007
Posted by: Matt in who cares?
So saturday saw the arrival of the day of reckoning. The sphering experience bought for me by my Mum and Sister arrived, and off Andy and I, with Kate, Jenny, Mum and a snotty Ben, to a hill near Ratcliffe on Soar power station, where we got in a big ball and rolled all the way down.
After being strapped in, the guy explained to us how to “ride the ball”, which was a waste of time…you just basically hold on and hope that the pile of earth at the bottom is enough to slow you down so you don’t roll off in to the next county.
It’s a very disorienting experience, but was a lot of fun. Having watched us roll down on video, small external bounces feel like you’ve left orbit, and the lack of any reference means you just have to hang on and enjoy it. It only really lasted 30 seconds or so, but it seemed an awful lot longer, and was great fun. I’m not sure I would have done it again straight after, in an effort to retain my lunch, but I’d do it again if given the opportunity!
Thanks to Mum and Katy for buying it for me, and to Andy for being a sport and coming in with me!
You can see our adventure over on youtube or by clicking the picture beneath. Finally I got the Youtube plugin working, hurrah!.
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