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Originally posted by yyyyyyyyyy
reply to post by Hitotsumami
Yeah its a really good point and I deleted a line that was going to explain how if my dog died I would be upset - but i thought it would be obvious that emotions have to be suitable for the situation That's why the drill has you thinking about things that are only mildly upsetting, it would be a bad thing to feel happy about something that is really bad because it would not be suitable for the situation.
So just for you, say your MP3 is lost and you feel bad, the next day you think about it and feel bad again - rinse wash and repeat - before too long your entire mindset is pre-occupied with unhappy thoughts of the past, and the subconscious cannot distinguish between the past present and future.
Its not irrational to want to change - why do we have consellors? and its not difficult - its possible to cure a lifelong phobia in 20 minutes if you know what your doing.
If you want proof do this little bit of NLP, think of the time you were really angry or really aggressive - stay in that state for at least 10 seconds and notice if your body language, posture or thought process changes. Your voice might change and there would be a raise in blood pressure and all manner of other effects. Give it a try and see how thinking of nice things brings everything back to 'normal'
Don't think of a dog not chasing a cat and see what happens
Originally posted by andy1033
For me in life i am going to be negative always. Uk gov and police has taught me being negative is the only way.
Cheers uk.
Originally posted by andy1033
For me in life i am going to be negative always. Uk gov and police has taught me being negative is the only way.
Cheers uk.
Originally posted by pikypiky
I do not see how NLP would help someone who is dumb, deaf, blind and mute.
I wonder if such systems would have helped Helen Keller back then.
[edit on 2010-6-27 by pikypiky]