by William Wood | Apr 9, 2010 | Articles, Modern Jedi
Part of the art of using submodalities to make changes to internal representations is to identify the most important distinction for the client. This ability to correctly identify a driver is key to actually making change with submodalities. For example, when...
by William Wood | Apr 9, 2010 | Uncategorized
A modality is a technical term to describe the six ways we represent information to ourselves internally: pictures, sounds, feelings, smells, tastes and self talk. A submodality is a fine distinction of one of the modalities. For example, a mental picture might be...
by William Wood | Apr 9, 2010 | Articles, Modern Jedi
I like this story because Elijah is an important figure in many cultures and countries. But even if Elijah is not an important figure in your culture, the story of Elijah is a profound one story about listening and finding answers. This story is paraphrased, so any...
by William Wood | Apr 9, 2010 | Articles, Modern Jedi
The agreement frame is a much more gentle way to give feedback. Typically, when giving feedback, people will say something like this: “I really think that you did a great job on the West project, John. But really I need you to do is be more punctual.” The word...
by William Wood | Apr 9, 2010 | Articles, Modern Jedi
The Milton model was developed by Richard Bandler et al by observing the language patterns of Milton Erickson, who would help his clients change through conversational hypnotic patterns. While the meta model is comprised of linguistic patterns to gain specificity in...