MikeSun5 said:
...I should have typed the appearance of positive results.
OK, if that's what you meant.
MikeSun5 said:
DB is a conjurer/illusionist as well as a clever bastard. Sometimes things aren't as they seem.
You don't have to convince me of that
MikeSun5 said:
remirol said:
It's a technique to get people to do things that _you_ wish them to, ideally bypassing any conscious decisions they may make to _not_ do those things.
Like it or not, this is an accurate representation of what NLP claims.
Sorry Mike (and remirol), I don't entirely agree. I think the subject is far more complex than that and to at least partially explain why I think that way I'll use a scenario which is entirely theoretical (I'll make it up as I go along) but which I believe is fairly common in the _real_ world.
Scenario
A person with a phobia of some kind, let's take a fear of swimming as an example. That person has negative feelings about swimming and water in general which may well lead them to decide to _not_ swim.
At the same time it's not uncommon for that person to have even more negative feelings - this time about what they are missing out on by not going swimming.
And for good measure they have some more negative feelings about the belief that they hold that they are powerless to do anything to get over, under, through or around this problem.
So far we have three sets of negative feelings and a person who has decided to _not_ swim but still wishes that they _could_ swim.
Assuming that they are physically capable of swimming, the thing that's stopping them from swimming is entirely in their head and thus _should_ be under their control.
Let's now imagine that this person has asked for our help and we've chosen to help them using NLP.
(I know you don't believe in the efficacy of NLP and that's your view and you're entitled to it - your view is not being questioned here - it's perfectly safe. All I'm asking you to do is suspend that belief just long enough to consider this theoretical scenario fully).
Before I continue I'll just pop in another quote here 'cos I think it fits wiith what I've said so far:-
MikeSun5 said:
Some of the "changeable" things claimed on microdot's page (the bits in bold), are things that a lot of people don't have much control over. It can be extremely difficult for some people to change certain behaviors, and this is what NLP claims it can do. Beliefs, fears, cravings, and addictions are things that most people have trouble changing, so NLP looks like a good product. The problem is there's no scientific evidence that shows NLP is any more of an effective treatment than say, crystal therapy.
I've crossed through a section of what you said because that's the only part that I don't fully agree with and I thought it better to separate it from the rest in this way rather than omit it and possibly give the impression that I was trying to put spin on your words
On the subject of scientific evidence I can only say that the few articles I've seen which state that they are based upon or influenced by scientific studies came to, IMHO mixed conclusions.
I'm very glad that you've said all of the above because I now know that at least have some common ground for the purposes of this thread.
So, to recap, we have this imaginary person who has decided to _not_ swim but is capable of swimming, feels that their life is the poorer for not swimming and has asked for our help.
_IF_ we use NLP here to assist them we're not just getting them to do something that _we_ wish them to do and we're certainly not tricking them into it by...
remirol said:
bypassing any conscious decisions they may make to _not_ do those things.
Even if some aspects of the NLP tools or our use of them is not immediately overt, if we're using them to provide the person we are assisting with a context in which their _natural response_ is to make the useful changes _they are looking for_ then I think that's a fair enough reason for
bypassing their conscious decisions as you put it.
I realise I've been a
little verbose on this but I wanted to try to make my point as clearly as possible.
I'll move on.
MikeSun5 said:
For example, the method described in microdot's Swish Pattern article is no different from having someone lie on a couch, press a piece of blue quartz to their temple, and transfer the pizza cravings from their psyche to the crystal, then smash it with a hammer. Both methods may or may not work.
At a conceptual level I would tend to agree. I suspect though that I'd draw less attention to myself in the pizza parlour by quietly doing a swish pattern in my head than you would with your crystal / hammer routine, and you would spend a fortune in crystals, especially if you had to do it 21 times

(Plus _everyone_ knows that blue quartz doesn't work for cravings

)
MikeSun5 said:
microdot's site says that "Swish patterns usually become fully automated after 3, 7, or 21 repetitions."
Hey, if at first you don't succeed...
OK, so the number of repetitions is possibly arbitrary but your advice is good - afterall practice makes perfect.
MikeSun5 said:
microdot said:
NLP provides a collection of models of human behaviours which occur regularly and naturally in everyday life.
...and since everyone is different, the collection can't be universal or even mostly accurate.
At it's largest chunk size (broadest sense) NLP is predicated upon the belief that:-
--- snip --
All distinctions human beings are able to make concerning our environment and our behaviour can be usefully represented through the visual, auditory, kinesthetic, olfactory, and gustatory senses.
--- snip ---
Which basically says that any measurements that we make of our world and our behaviour are taken using the senses of sight, hearing, feeling (visceral and tactile) smell and taste.
While not universal (some people are unfortunately blind for example) I think it's a concept that's fairly reasonable, inclusive and wide-ranging, don't you?
MikeSun5 said:
That's why NLP yeilds a success rate that's pretty much consistent with guessing.
Who says?
Is this _always_ true?
You do have evidence to back that up, don't you?
Joking apart, I think this would only be true where the '
practitioner' paid absolutely _NO_ attention to the feedback they were getting.
MikeSun5 said:
Besides, if NLP is all about subjective experience, what's all the business with reading body language and physical behavior? Doesn't make much sense...
Not quite sure what you're getting at here?
I'm inclined to believe that you probably already realise that
body language and
physical behaviour are enormously important aspects of human communication for a whole host of reasons.
So if you want me to respond to that question you'll have to give me a little more to go on
JFrankA said:
I would agree you, but there is one thing I would add. I think NLP supposed to be all you've said, but not only to communicate with others but to manipulate (suggest, command, inspire, etc) that other person.
Absolutely.
The only word I'm not entirely comfortable with is
manipulate, but only because I'm not sure which definition you're applying to it i.e.
to treat or operate with or as if with the hands or by mechanical means especially in a skillful manner
or
to manage or utilize skillfully
or
to control or play upon by artful, unfair, or insidious means especially to one's own advantage
I strongly suspect that the more skeptical posters here on JREF when considering the uses of NLP which triggered this particular thread would apply the the third of the above definitions - and I'd probably agree with them if the practices were, let's say, unsavoury.
Even the first two definitions have negative connotations.
So I'm going to
cherry pick ('cos I know how you guys like that

) from definition number 1:-
to treat or operate in a skillful manner
Which I think is the way that an ethical Practitioner would use NLP - for ethically sound mutual benefit.
I imagine that most people have at some time in their lives tried to help another person with a problem or difficulty that they were really struggling with by talking it through with them and offering helpful suggestions. I also imagine that most people would invest significant energy/effort and take great care to ensure that any advice/guidance they offered was suitable/useful/fair/ethical/safe etc.
In doing so, in wanting to do our best to give helpful advice to people we care about, it's not uncommon for us to attempt to gently steer them from 'negative' ways of thinking to more 'positive' or useful ways of thinking.
Thus these efforts that we go to and behaviours that we exhibit _could_ accurately and fairly be described as manipulation and _certainly_ require that we operate in a skillful manner.
Doncha think?
