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Tim
Sheeran Learner Driving Tuition
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Nuero-Linguistic
Programming (NLP)
What is NLP
We're all born with the same basic neurology.
Our ability to do anything in life, wether its swimming the length of
a pool, cooking a meal, or reading a book, depends on how we control our
nervous system. So much of NLP is devoted to learning how to think and
communicate more effectively.
Neuro
is about your neurological system. NLP is based on the idea that we experience
the world through our senses and translate sensory information into thought
processes, both conscious and unconscious. Thought processes activate
the neurological system, which affects physiology, emotions, and behaviour.
Linguistic refers to the way human beings use
language to make sense of the world, capture and conceptualise experience,
and communicate that experience to others. In NLP, linguistics is the
study of how the words you speak influence your experience.
Programming draws heavily
from learning theory and addresses how we code or mentally represent experience.
Your personal programming consists of your internal processes and strategies
(thinking patterns) that you use to make decisions, solve problems, learn,
evaluate, and get results. NLP shows people how to recede their experiences
and organise their internal programming so they can get the outcomes they
want.
Where
it all started
NLP began in California in the early 1970s at the University of
Santa Cruz. There, Richard Handler, a master's level student of information
sciences and mathematics, enlisted the help of Dr John Grinder, a professor
of linguistics, to study people they considered to be excellent communicators
and agents of change. They were fascinated by how some people defied the
odds to get through to 'difficult' or very ill people where others failed
miserably to connect.
To diminish unpleasant
or stressful experiences:
This could be a bad experience whilst driving or on a driving lesson,
a failed driving test or even an accident.
- Relax and think of a stressful
or uncomfortable memory.
- As you notice what image
or images come to mind, step back out of yourself and continue to move
back from the image, mentally move as far away from the image as you
can, now step all the way out of the picture so you are now seeing the
image with yourself in it as you would on a cinema screen.
(This process of disassociating reduces the intensity of the feelings
the image was creating)
- Now freeze the image, slowly
drain all the colour from the image until it appears black and white,
and lower the volume until all sound has become muted.
- Now make the image smaller
and move it further away until it disappears altogether.
You can repeat this process
as often as necessary, but from now on if you think about the incident,
you should only ever do so dissociated from the image.
To
intensify positive or resourceful experiences:
This could be a previous positive enjoyable experience or imagine
and see yourself driving perfectly with minimum effort and passing your
driving test.
- Relax and imagine the image,
remember how great it feels.
- Bring the image closer
and step into the image, now make the image into a movie, making the
image larger and closer.
- Intensify and make the
colours vivid, increase the brightness and clarity, make the sounds
closer, louder and clearer.
- Continue to imagine the
image and step into yourself intensifying the good positive feelings
associated with the image. See the image through your own eyes. Hear
it through your own ears. Feel it through your own senses.
From now on if you think about
the situation always associate yourself with the image seeing and feeling
it positively through your own senses.
The
confidence switch
Before
you begin this technique read through it first so you know each step.
- Remember a time when you
felt really really confident. Full return to it now – see what
you saw, hear what you heard and feel how good you felt. (If you can’t
remember a time, imagine how much better your life would be if you were
totally confident – if you had all the power, strength and self-belief
you could ever need!)
- As you keep going through
this memory, make the colours brighter and richer, the sounds louder
and the feelings stronger.
- As you feel these good
feelings, squeeze the thumb and middle finger of either hand together.
- Now, squeeze the thumb
and middle finger together and relive that good feeling.
- Repeat the previous steps
1 - 4 several times with different positive memories until just squeezing
your thumb and finger together begins to bring back those good feelings.
- Still holding your thumb
and finger together, think about a situation in wich you want to feel
more confident. Imagine things going perfectly, going exactly the way
you want them to go. See what you’ll see, hear what you’ll
hear and feel how good it feels.
Practice this every day, and
you will begin to feel more confident. Whenever you feel challenged, simply
turn on your confidence switch by squeezing your thumb and middle finger
together, concentrate for a few moments, and access your inner state of
confidence.
Good Luck, and
remember, millions of people have passed the driving test.
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