microdot
Thinker
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2009
- Messages
- 229
Hiya JFrankA 
Thanks for the explanation, it's given me some food for thought and, of course, more questions.
How do you know what he remembers and how do you know it never works after the night is over? Do you always conduct post-show debriefs?
But surely if it's permanence _relied_ on desire, the response wouldn't happen automatically, they'd have to _remember_ to do it every time?
Returning for a moment if I may to my personal example of a particular piece of music invoking a vivid and immersive memory, I don't remember at the time having any desire whatsoever that every time I heard that piece of music in the future this memory would automatically pop into my head an amazing techni-colour.
And it happens automatically.
So I still have to disagree with you on that one.
Wow! As a performer, I have instant rapport I wish I had your confidence!
Your argument only seems to include for scenarios where the anchoring is explicit i.e done with the full knowledge of the person being anchored. So therefore you must explain to the shoe-guy before you touch his shoulder exactly what you are doing and why, and how great it's going to be (so he can want it to work). Do you do that with the audience present?
I think I've explained why desire isn't always a necessary part of the equation.
Where I can agree with you is that many anchors persist longer with periodic reinforcement. And still there are many anchors which seem to persist for very long periods of time without reinforcement.
Pretty much agree with that.
It is incredibly unlikely that they could and - for clarity - I never said otherwise.
First meeting? From a cold start? No, I couldn't.
Excellent! Much better use of your time than stuck behind a keyboard
Thanks for the explanation, it's given me some food for thought and, of course, more questions.
JFrankA said:But once the night was over, he remembers the experience, but not the details of how it came to be. If anchoring worked, those guys would not only react what triggered the event, but it would still work. Never does.
How do you know what he remembers and how do you know it never works after the night is over? Do you always conduct post-show debriefs?
JFrankA said:I disagree. The only thing that makes it work, and on a permanent basis, is if the person recieving wants it to work. If there is no desire, there is no effect. That is true with hypnosis, that is true with any NLP.microdot said:One of the reasons that it wouldn't make the woman interested is that anchoring depends on the person already being in the state to be anchored _before_ the anchor is set (unless of course you want to anchor disinterest )
But surely if it's permanence _relied_ on desire, the response wouldn't happen automatically, they'd have to _remember_ to do it every time?
Returning for a moment if I may to my personal example of a particular piece of music invoking a vivid and immersive memory, I don't remember at the time having any desire whatsoever that every time I heard that piece of music in the future this memory would automatically pop into my head an amazing techni-colour.
And it happens automatically.
So I still have to disagree with you on that one.
JFrankA said:Yes, I agree. That's because the better one has a rapport with, the more likely they want it to work. As a performer, I have instant rapport.microdot said:And the successful setting of the anchor is also much more likely when you have rapport - something which we don't have with this fictional woman (but hopefully something you have with your audience )
Wow! As a performer, I have instant rapport I wish I had your confidence!
Your argument only seems to include for scenarios where the anchoring is explicit i.e done with the full knowledge of the person being anchored. So therefore you must explain to the shoe-guy before you touch his shoulder exactly what you are doing and why, and how great it's going to be (so he can want it to work). Do you do that with the audience present?
JFrankA said:I'm using the shoulder touch as an example. But without desire on the recipient's part and repeated consistant stimulus/constistant reward, it's not going to last.
I think I've explained why desire isn't always a necessary part of the equation.
Where I can agree with you is that many anchors persist longer with periodic reinforcement. And still there are many anchors which seem to persist for very long periods of time without reinforcement.
JFrankA said:True, there are memories that happen from one occurance, but those kind of memories that usually have a lot of emotion attached to it.
Pretty much agree with that.
JFRankA said:How can someone duplicate that in a bar with someone they've just met? How does someone know how to find the right "previous positive anchors" in such a situtation?
It is incredibly unlikely that they could and - for clarity - I never said otherwise.
JFrankA said:Can you give an example of how anchoring would work in a bar setting to meet a woman?
First meeting? From a cold start? No, I couldn't.
JFrankA said:We did. We played World of Warcraft for hours then went to the state fair!microdot said:Hope you have a geat time with your son![]()
Excellent! Much better use of your time than stuck behind a keyboard