Читаем Frogs into Princes: Neuro Linguistic Programming полностью

Then ask auditory questions: What's your favorite kind of music? Which door in your house sounds the loudest when it's slammed? Can you hear somebody very special that you are close to saying your name in a particularly delightful way? Can you hear yourself sing "Mary Had a Little Lamb"?

Visual accessing cues for a "normally organized" right-handed person.

Those are all ways of accessing auditory experience. The cues that the person will offer you non-verbally will be systematically different from the cues they offer you to the previous sets of questions. Then ask a set of kinesthetic questions: How do you feel early in the morning? What does cat fur feel like?

Visual accessing cues for a "normally organized" right-handed person.

Vc – Visual constructed images.

Vr – Visual remembered (eidetic) images.

(Eyes unmoving and defocused also indicates visual accessing)

Ac – Auditory constructed sounds or words.

Ar – Auditory remembered sounds or words.

K – Kinesthetic feelings (also smell and taste).

A – Auditory sounds or words.

Woman: Is there a difference between the eye movements people make when they are remembering something that they've heard in the past, and when they are trying to imagine what something would sound like?

When you say "imagine" that presupposes images or pictures. Ask them to create a sound they haven't heard before. There will be a difference, yes. Discover that for yourself.

I'd like to warn you of two pitfalls. You may think that the word "think" is one representational system. It's not. The words "think, understand, be aware of, believe, sense, know," are all unspecified. Do not use those words because the response you get will be random.

You will also get confusing responses if you say "Do you remember the last time you felt the feeling of swimming through the water?" You've asked them to do two things. You've asked them to remember and then to feel. They may remember visually; that is, they may search or scan visually, they may repeat it auditorily, or they may do it directly kinesthetically. However they do it, you are going to get a two-step process. One will be the remembering portion, following your instructions, and the other will be actually recovering those feelings of swimming.

If you get responses which do not make any sense to you, ask the person what they did internally. Your job is to correlate what you can observe on the outside with the questions you ask. Correlate the relationship between the kind of information you are asking for and the non-verbal eye movement responses you're getting from your partner. If you don't understand it, ask. "I saw this on the outside. What does that correspond to in your internal processing?" If they don't know, ask them to guess.

If you're not getting the kinds of eye movements we were talking about, make the question more difficult. "What color shoes was your mother wearing the last time you saw her?" If you ask "What color are your mother's eyes" and you don't see any movement, make the question more complex. "Your eyes are blue, too. Is the color of your eyes brighter or deeper in color than your mother's eyes?" That's a more complex, comparative question. She will then have to form an image of the color of her eyes and her mother's eyes and then make a visual comparison.

After four or five minutes of asking your partner these sets of questions, you should have an idea about what eye movements you can see which indicate unequivocally which of the internal representational systems that person is utilizing at that moment. Switch roles, so that both of you have the opportunity to ask questions and observe responses. If you run into things you don't understand, we will be wandering through the room—wave to us. We will come over and assist you in making sense out of it. We are offering you generalizations, and every single generalization anyone has ever offered you is going to be false at some time and some place. The generalizations are only tricks—as most of what we will do here is—to get you to pay attention to your experience, to notice a certain dimension of sensory experience which culturally you've been trained not to notice. Once you notice it, it constitutes a really powerful source of information about the other person's unconscious processes.

You will find people who are organized in odd ways. But even somebody who is organized in a totally different way will be systematic; their eye movements will be systematic for them. Even the person who looks straight up each time they have a feeling and straight down each time they have a picture, will remain consistent within themselves. The important thing is that you have the sensory experience to notice who is doing what. Go ahead now and discover what, if any, patterns you can discover.

* * * * *

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

10 глупейших ошибок, которые совершают люди
10 глупейших ошибок, которые совершают люди

Умные люди — тоже люди. А человеку свойственно ошибаться. Наверняка в течение своей жизни вы допустили хотя бы одну из глупых ошибок, описанных в этой книге. Но скорее всего, вы совершили сразу несколько ошибок и до сих пор продолжаете упорствовать, называя их фатальным невезением.Виной всему — десять негативных шаблонов мышления. Именно они неизменно вовлекают нас в неприятности, порождают бесконечные сложности, проблемы и непонимание в отношениях с окружающими. Как выпутаться из паутины бесплодного самокопания? Как выплыть из водоворота депрессивных состояний? Как научиться избегать тупиковых ситуаций?Всемирно известные психологи дают ключ к новому образу мыслей. Исправьте ошибки мышления — и вы сможете преобразовать всю свою жизнь. Архимедов рычагу вас в руках!

Артур Фриман , Роуз Девульф

Психология и психотерапия / Психология / Образование и наука
111 баек для тренеров
111 баек для тренеров

Цель данного издания – помочь ведущим тренингов, психологам, преподавателям (как начинающим, так и опытным) более эффективно использовать в своей работе те возможности, которые предоставляют различные виды повествований, применяемых в обучении, а также стимулировать поиск новых историй. Книга состоит из двух глав, бонуса, словаря и библиографического списка. В первой главе рассматриваются основные понятия («повествование», «история», «метафора» и другие), объясняются роль и значение историй в процессе обучения, даются рекомендации по их использованию в конкретных условиях. Во второй главе представлена подборка из 111 баек, разнообразных по стилю и содержанию. Большая часть из них многократно и с успехом применялась автором в педагогической (в том числе тренинговой) практике. Кроме того, информация, содержащаяся в них, сжато характеризует какой-либо психологический феномен или элемент поведения в яркой, доступной и запоминающейся форме.Книга предназначена для тренеров, психологов, преподавателей, менеджеров, для всех, кто по роду своей деятельности связан с обучением, а также разработкой и реализацией образовательных программ.

Игорь Ильич Скрипюк

Психология и психотерапия / Психология / Образование и наука

Все жанры