Training new trances By John Overdurf
Training new trances By John Overdurf
Archive : John Overdurf – Training new trances
This audio is a four day version of My 8 Day Training New Trances & Beyond training. Lots of new patterns and exercises. Outstanding Demos and Inductions. I revised the classic Training Trances material with newer processes I developed in attention-shifting, directionalized ambiguity, principles from my Linguistic Alchemy material as well as other processes drawn from new neuro-scientific research.
Advanced calibration of verbal and non- verbal unconscious processing
How to use underlying principles and conditions which create the context for hypnosis
Facilitating direct communication with unconscious processing
Critical elements in delivering hypnotic language patternas
How to use elements of the problem to create the solution or outcome
Simultaneous resolution of multiple issues using hypnosis
Utilization of uncertainty, confusion and not-knowing for significant change
and deeper trance phenomena
What is Hypnosis & NLP ?
Neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) is a pseudoscientific approach to communication, personal development, and psychotherapy created by Richard Bandler and John Grinder in California, United States, in the 1970s. NLP’s creators claim there is a connection between neurological processes (neuro-), language (linguistic) and behavioral patterns learned through experience (programming), and that these can be changed to achieve specific goals in life Bandler and Grinder also claim that NLP methodology can “model” the skills of exceptional people, allowing anyone to acquire those skills. They claim as well that, often in a single session, NLP can treat problems such as phobias, depression, tic disorders, psychosomatic illnesses, near-sightedness, allergy, the common cold, and learning disorders. NLP has been adopted by some hypnotherapists and also by companies that run seminars marketed as leadership training to businesses and government agencies.
There is no scientific evidence supporting the claims made by NLP advocates, and it has been discredited as a pseudoscience. Scientific reviews state that NLP is based on outdated metaphors of how the brain works that are inconsistent with current neurological theory and contain numerous factual errors. Reviews also found that all[dubious ] of the supportive research on NLP contained significant methodological flaws and that there were three times as many studies of a much higher quality that failed to reproduce the “extraordinary claims” made by Bandler, Grinder, and other NLP practitioners.
Training new trances By John Overdurf
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