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.
NLP is a constantly evolving set of models,
presuppositions, patterns, techniques, and observation-based theories resulting
from the study of the structure of subjective experience, behavior and
communication. Beyond understanding, NLP seeks to enable remedial and
generative change quickly and ecologically.
NLP is a bit like an ‘owner’s manual’ for your
brain! At school and college we learned wonderful things like history and
geography and algebra, but we did not learn much about how to feel good or to
have great relationships. That is where NLP comes in. NLP is a set of insights
and skills with which you can actively use your mind and your emotions to run
your own life more successfully and to communicate with other people with
extraordinary effectiveness.
How can NLP help me?
NLP is an ever-growing collection of information,
insights, and mental techniques that can enable you to improve how you think,
behave, and feel—and assist others do the same. Becoming skilled in NLP will
enable you to:
Do whatever you already do reasonably well, even
better.
Acquire skills and attitudes to do what you cannot
do right now, but would like to be able to do.
Communicate more effectively with others.
Think more clearly.
Manage your thoughts, moods, and behaviors more
effectively.
NLP has been variously described as the technology
of the mind, the science of achievement, and the study of success. It is based
upon the search for and the study of the factors which account for either
success or failure in human performance.
For over a quarter of a century NLP explorers have
studied or ‘modeled’ the behavior and thinking styles of particularly effective
and successful people in business, education, sales, therapy, sport, and
personal development.
The results of this work are nowadays presented in
workshops and extended trainings which, in effect, provide shortcuts to more
successful living—you learn in hours what may have taken the experts years to
discover by trial and error.
NLP is, in effect, the study of what accounts for
these types of performance. It is the practical and pragmatic study of the
ingredients of excellent performance and the transfer of these ‘ingredients’ to
others.
What are the
presuppositions of NLP?
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 are 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.
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
money’s value, didn’t you?).
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.
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. 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.
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.
Choice is better than no choice.
Has it been scientifically
proven that NLP works?
It is difficult to prove that something does not
work or does not exist, e.g. smoking has not yet been ‘scientifically proved’
to cause cancer. There is massive anecdotal evidence that NLP works. Few
studies have been done on particular aspects of NLP with mixed results.
NLP is a model of what works in individual
performance. It is based on the principle that if one person can do something
then, given similar physical characteristics, anyone else can learn to do the
same by modeling and integrating into their own repertoire the skills and
attitude of the successful person.
While this principle may or may not be literally
true, it leads to some quite remarkable improvements in personal performance.
What tools does NLP use to
effect change?
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.
Many of the models in NLP are created by studying
people who did things exquisitely well. Models such as meta-model,
meta-program, sensory acuity, Milton-model, representational systems, and
sub-modalities, 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 an expert in the field something like
this—Instead of asking the 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, or how often they changed their oil, among other
factors.
Can’t I achieve the same
results through hypnotherapy?
No. NLP is not ‘just’ hypnosis. Milton Erickson was
a strong influence on NLP’s founders, but NLP includes aspects of many other
disciplines as well.
Many people use NLP as a form of self development.
The popular belief is that we do not pay much attention
to what is going on in our unconscious. If you considered the enormous amount
of information your brain has to process each day, it is probably best that we
do not spend that much time dwelling on it.
An example of NLP
Let us use something called sub-modalities as an
example of how a model works. By understanding how we perceive the world though
our five senses, we can then understand how some people can respond very
resourcefully in a situation and others do not. Once your learn how those who
remain resourceful set up their representations, then it is 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. 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 are creating?
The popular belief is that we do not pay much
attention to what is going on in our consciousness.
Well, what do we do about our friend with the
phobia? 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 proportionately 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 to the
spider-lover’s.
The above example may sound complicated, but phobia
treatments often take less than half an hour to treat. A 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 that
NLP is about what works, not what should work.
In other words, if what you are doing is not
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 is one reason NLP has made so much progress in
an area where such is not the norm.