TrueLife - Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) # 4
Episode Date: August 9, 2020One on One Video Call W/George https://tidycal.com/georgepmonty/60-minute-meetingSupport the show:https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_US🚨🚨Curious about the future of psych...edelics? Imagine if Alan Watts started a secret society with Ram Dass and Hunter S. Thompson… now open the door. Use Promocode TRUELIFE for Get 25% off monthly or 30% off the annual plan For the first yearhttps://www.district216.com/NLP course # 4Self concept. How your self concept is a corner stone in building your life experiences. In this lesson we will explain & define our key terms. Then go over strategies to use these techniques in a defensive & offensive posture. https://app.podscribe.ai/episode/49444016Speaker 0 (0s): Hello friends. How was your day going? It's about to get better. We are about to get into some <inaudible> that's right next class, ladies and gentlemen. I hope you're enjoying the class. I hope you're enjoying spending some time with me because I am enjoying spending some time with you is probably because you're such a cool person. It's probably because you're so handsome or you're so beautiful. It might be your sense of humor. I don't know, but I like you get it. All right, let's do it. You know, we start this off, right? We start off with some Proverbs and these ones are going to be about the past. The present and the future yesterday is the past. Tomorrow is the future. Today's a gift. That's why they call it the present. Ladies and gentlemen, here we go past, we all know how time flies, how it is here today and gone tomorrow. How no hand can catch time? Indeed. Time is precious. Time is money. The wall too often. We must time. I am sorry. Although all too often, we want time badly. Then use it badly. For example, don't let yesterday take up too much of your today. Don't cry over spilled milk, and there are no birds in last year's nest in general. Hindsight is clearer than foresight. So remember four things do not return spoken words, flighted arrows, past life and lost opportunities. Indeed. Even a God can't change the past for a lost sheep can be recovered, but not lost time. Despite this, no matter how hard the past, you can always begin again. And when you do watch out history repeats itself, which is why so often things present are judged by things past today is the scholar of yesterday. Present. The only bird catches the worm for so often in life. It's first come first served. And if you get to the river early, you drink the cleanest water. Otherwise you can tell yourself better, late than never for everything has its proper time. Even maneuvering cabbages. Indeed. There's a time for adversity, a time for prosperity. And there's a first time for everything. Even the longest journey starts with a single step aim to experience each moment to its fullest. There's no time like now. And despite the fact that time and tide wait for no man, and the tide must be taken when it comes, don't forget to give time, time, suit yourself to the times. And remember that time brings roses. Indeed. Those who are happy, do not observe the passing of time. And one today is worth two tomorrow's future worrying about the future ruins the present. So relax tomorrow is another day and tomorrow's winds will blow tomorrow. So let us think of tomorrow. When tomorrow comes though tomorrow never comes. Of course, there are a few paths without peril. So be prepared for conflicts as they have already begun. And however good your intention, the food you give may come back as Pooh in the end time, heals all for everything has an end and things will work out all in good time. Just remember the past is the future of the present. Indeed. We are only visitors to this time and place with a sponge to wipe away the past arose to sweeten the present and a kiss to greet the future for flowers, bloom flowers fall. Well, isn't that beautiful? Doesn't it give you a little sigh of relief. Everything's going to be just fine. Okay. My friends. Well, that's the first part that we normally do. Let us dig in now to some NLP. I'm really enjoying this class guys. Thanks for spending time with me. So this one, I am going to go over a, I think we shall call this. I was going to go with self concept. I think we'll go with self concept, self concept. I like it. We're going to get into knowing thyself so you can know the other self-concept know yourself so you can know the other. And as always, we're going to define some key points. We're going to go over the key points in an offensive posture and a defensive posture. For those of you that haven't gone back and listen to the other classes you should do that. Otherwise you won't know what a defensive posture and an offensive posture are. All right. So the self concept, the first part I want everyone to think about in self concept is stress and stress management. How do you feel when you're stressed? How do you feel when you're not stressed? I think this is a good point. I think I got a really good story for you about stress. There was this great samurai and this is great. Samurai had lived his life as honorable as any samurai could. It's important to note that this particular samurai carried around a magnificent sword that he built with his father and it was in his mind, exquisite perfect in every way not to mention it reminded him of his father. And as the samurai went through his life about midway through a 35, he began having questions about the true nature of paradise and the true nature of hell of damnation. And while he was a educated and skilled philosophical, man, he couldn't quite pin down that of paradise. And that of condemnation that have held. So we sought out the wisest man in his lands, who lived way out in the back country on top of a Hill in a very remote part of the country. The samurai thought to himself, if anyone can explain to me that of paradise and that of condemnation, surely it would be this wise man in isolation. And so the samurai gets upon his horse and rides for days until he comes upon a humble abode of the isolated wise man, the wise man is working in his field and he looks up from his side and he sees this enormous samurai walking towards him. The wise man is quiet is the samurai approaches. He very respectfully bows. His head says my Lord and the wisest man, I seek to know that of paradise. And I seek to know that of damnation. I seek to know the Gates of paradise. I seek to know the Gates of hell. Are they real? Are they true? The wise man looks at the samurai and for a moment he's quiet. And he says to the samurai, you warrior or not worthy, you warrior with your weak soul and your fake ideals and morality. You should do not have the ability to comprehend the samurais beginning to give the language. Cause here's this wise man telling him how poor he is and his morals and his values. And the samurai had lived his whole life. Protecting people honoring the code. The wise man continues on you. Samurai was your weak weapon of war. What, what a poor sword, one like you carries. Did you find that in the shit house and the samurai upon hearing this, it triggers him and he thinks of his father and he thinks of everything he's done. And the people he's protected. The Samurai's begins to lose his cool and he reaches for his sword and he pulls it out and begins to unseat it. And he cou...
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Darkness struck, a gut-punched theft, Sun ripped away, her health bereft.
I roar at the void.
This ain't just fate, a cosmic scam I spit my hate.
The games rigged tight, shadows deal, blood on their hands, I'll never kneel.
Yet in the rage, a crack ignites, occulted sparks cut through the nights.
The scars my key, hermetic and stark.
To see, to rise, I hunt in the dark, fumbling, fear.
through ruins maze, lights my war cry, born from the blaze.
The poem is Angels with Rifles.
The track, I Am Sorrow, I Am Lust by Codex Seraphene.
Check out the entire song at the end of the cast.
Hello there, my friends.
How's your day going?
It's about to get better.
We are about to get into some NLP.
That's right. Next class.
Right. Next class, ladies and gentlemen. I hope you're enjoying the class. I hope you're enjoying spending some time with me because I am enjoying spending some time with you. It's probably because you're such a cool person. It's probably because you're so handsome or you're so beautiful. It might be your sense of humor. I don't know, but I like you. You get it? All right. Let's do it. You know how we start this off, right? We start off with some proverbs.
and these ones are going to be about the past,
the present, and the future.
Yesterday's the past.
Tomorrow's the future.
Today's a gift.
That's why they call it the present, ladies and gentlemen.
Here we go.
Past.
We all know how time flies.
How it is here today and gone tomorrow.
How no hand can catch time.
Indeed, time is precious, time is money.
Though all too often we must time, I'm sorry.
Although all too often, we want time badly, then use it badly.
For example, don't let yesterday take up too much of your today.
Don't cry over spilled milk.
And there are no birds in last year's nest.
In general, hindsight is clearer than foresight.
So remember, four things.
do not return spoken words flighted arrows past life and lost opportunities indeed even a god
can't change the past for a lost sheep can be recovered but not lost time despite this no matter
how hard the past you can always begin again and when you do watch out history repeats itself
which is why so often things present are judged by things past.
Today is the scholar of yesterday.
Present.
The early bird catches the worm.
For so often in life, it's first come first served.
And if you get to the river early, you drink the cleanest water.
Otherwise, you can tell yourself better late than never.
For everything has its proper time.
even manoring cabbages indeed there is a time for adversity a time for prosperity and there's a first time for
everything even the longest journey starts with a single step aim to experience each moment to its fullest
for there's no time like now and despite the fact that time and tide wait for no man
and the tide must be taken when it comes don't forget to give time
Time, suit yourself to the times.
And remember that time brings roses.
Indeed, those who are happy, do not observe the passing of time.
And one today is worth two tomorrow's.
The future.
Worrying about the future ruins the present.
So relax.
Tomorrow is another day.
And tomorrow's winds will blow tomorrow.
So let us think of tomorrow when tomorrow comes.
though tomorrow never comes.
Of course, there are few paths without peril.
So be prepared for conflicts as they have already begun.
And however good your intention, the food you give may come back as poo.
In the end, time heals all.
For everything has an end, and things will work out all in good time.
Just remember, the past is the future of the present.
Indeed, we are only visitors to this time and place.
With a sponge to wipe away the past,
a rose to sweeten the present, and a kiss to greet the future.
For flowers bloom, flowers fall.
Well, isn't that beautiful?
Doesn't it give you a little, ah, a little sigh relief?
Everything's going to be just fine.
Okay, my friends.
Well, that's the first part that we normally do.
Let us dig in now to some NLP.
I'm really enjoying this class, guys.
Thanks for spending time with me.
So this one, I am going to go over.
I think we shall call this.
I was going to go with self-concept.
I think we'll go with self-concept.
Self-concept.
I like it.
I'm going to get into,
knowing thyself so you can know the other self concept know yourself so you can know the other
and as always we're going to define some key points we're going to go over the key points in an
offensive posture and a defensive posture for those of you that haven't gone back and listen to the
other classes you should do that otherwise you won't know what a defensive posture and an
offensive posture are. All right? So the self-concept. The first part I want everyone to think about
in self-concept is stress in stress management. How do you feel when you're stressed? How do you feel
when you're not stressed? I think this is a good point. I think I got a really good story for you about
stress. There was this great samurai. And
This great samurai had lived his life as honorable as any samurai could.
It's important to note that this particular samurai carried around a magnificent sword that he built with his father.
And it was, in his mind, exquisite, perfect in every way.
Not to mention it reminded him of his father.
And as the samurai went through his life,
about midway through about 35
he began
having questions about
the true nature of paradise
and the true nature of hell
of damnation
and while he was a
educated and skilled
philosophical man
he couldn't quite pin down
that of paradise and that
of condemnation
that of hell
So we sought out the wisest man in his lands
who lived way out in the back country
on top of a hill
in a very remote part of the country.
The samurai thought to himself,
if anyone can explain to me that of paradise
and that of condemnation,
surely it would be this wise man in isolation.
And so the samaner,
Samurai gets upon his horse and rides for days until he comes upon a humble abode of the isolated wise man.
The wise man's working in his field and he looks up from his side and he sees this enormous samurai walking towards him.
And the wise man is quiet.
And as the samurai approaches, he very respectfully bows his head.
says
my lord
the wisest man
I seek to know
that of paradise
and I seek to know
that of damnation
I seek to know the gates of paradise
I seek to know the gates of hell
are they real are they true
and the wise man
looks at the samurai
and for a moment he's quiet
And he says to the samurai, you warrior are not worthy.
You warrior with your weak soul and your fake ideals and morality.
You sir do not have the ability to comprehend.
The samurai is beginning to get a little angry.
Because here's this wise man telling him how poor he is and his morals and his values and his values.
Samurai had lived his whole life protecting people, honoring the code.
The wise man continues on, you samurai, with your weak weapon of war.
What a poor sword one like you carries.
Did you find that in the shithouse and the samurai upon hearing this?
It triggers him and he thinks of his father and he thinks of everything he's done and the people he's protected.
the samurai begins to lose his cool and he reaches for his sword and he pulls it out and begins to unsheathe it and he can feel the anger in his body and the wise man says to him behold the gates of condemnation the gates of hell the samurai takes a deep breath and he realizes that that anger the fury the unbridled emotion of retribution rage
that is the gates of hell
and as the samurai realizes that
although his sword was sheathed halfway
he lets out a sigh of relief
and he resheathes his sword and puts it back into the holster
and the wise man says
behold the gates of paradise
the samurai bows his head and
leaves
rage my friends
rage, rage into the dying of the light.
That rage is the very gates of condemnation.
That rage is the very gates of hell.
Forgiveness, understanding is the gateway to paradise.
It's important to understand how stress.
This is the first key point.
First key point.
Stress can create a cascade of negative reactions.
Having stress management strategies for dealing with emeritus,
and preventing the buildup of stress enhances someone's options for positive behaviors and outcomes.
Defensive posture.
Understand what your mental state is.
If you are in a position of stress, usually it's because you're tired, you're hungry.
It's usually one of those two things or perhaps an environmental.
Having a defensive strategy is something you should all have and you probably already have them, whether it's going out and exercising,
whether it's counting to 10, doing some breathing exercises.
It's important to recognize the immediate trigger or onset of stress.
This is the first step on the gateway to condemnation.
These small stressful situations can lead to rage, can lead to anger,
can lead to misguided judgment.
You should know that in yourself.
Know thyself.
Self-concept, defensive posture.
Offensive posture.
You can wield stress against someone else.
Be it physical, be it mental, be it humorous.
Know that you can use your words.
You can use your ideas.
You can use your language.
You can use the situation to put other people in stressful situations.
when wielding this particular offensive posture,
it's best to be used in a way,
if you're going to put someone in a stressful situation,
you should be doing it in order to make them see their own mistakes.
Does that make sense?
You can ask them a series of questions
that will inevitably lead them to an answer
that will help them understand
why they're doing the things they're doing.
there are plenty of other offensive postures you can use in a stressful situation
but i'm going to leave those for the people that would want to go and dig and understand them
again a lot of these techniques can be used for good or bad it's not the technique that's good
or bad the technique is neutral which you decide to use them for is on is your decision key point
number two each of us is a product of our experiences and the thought patterns and
conclusions we've created in response to those experiences.
Defensive posture, know your history, know your experiences.
What you do sometimes, you do all the time.
If you can understand your pattern, your mental map for making decisions,
then you can understand and even predict how you're going to react in the future.
It sounds easier than it is.
once you've done it for a while,
you will be able to chart your course.
You will be able to use your mental map
to predict the future,
or at least outcomes that could possibly happen in the future.
Additionally, understanding your thought patterns.
Can you think of a situation in which you did something
that didn't work out the way you thought?
Picture it.
Now go back and try to remember
where the incongruence was
between what you thought was going to happen
and what actually happened.
If you can find that incongruence,
you may be able to find a pattern
in your thinking, something that you overlook,
something that you failed to factor in,
a missing variable.
That's the defensive posture,
understanding how you build your own experience.
The offensive posture.
Know that we all build experiences
similar. We all use our five senses to build experiences.
If you can understand the history of someone else's experience,
if you can understand someone's mental thought patterns,
if you can take a look at their mental map,
then you have an opportunity to either interrupt their thinking patterns.
You have the opportunity to maybe understand their mental map
and how they get there.
and if you can understand their decision making,
you can understand how to come up with a strategy
to beat their situation.
Does that make sense?
If you can put yourself in someone else's skin,
if you can think how they would think,
then you can think of a strategy that they haven't thought of.
It's important.
I know that's kind of a mouthful, but it's true.
Next key point.
Beliefs are generalized thoughts.
and they act as automated filters that determine what information we let in.
This is tricky because a lot of the times our beliefs, right?
We go back to Lao Zhu, remember him?
Your thoughts become your ideas, become your beliefs, become your actions.
So we watch our thoughts.
Because once they've gone, once the thoughts have solidified into your ideas,
and once your ideas have solidified into your beliefs,
Now, it's very difficult to make those solids malleable again.
It can be done.
But once your thoughts have solidified, they can become a weak point for you.
Once a thought has become a belief, it's like you, your mind has decided you no longer
need to think about it because it's already been thought of.
It's already become a belief.
It's already been solidified.
And a lot of times, the beliefs we have today are presented.
predicated on ideas we had when we were young and foolish.
We've never gone back and changed them.
So it becomes a blind spot.
It's a lot of work that needs to be done there.
And you can do it if you take time and write things out.
Think about your beliefs.
Why do you think that?
What thoughts led to that idea that led to that belief?
Did that belief lead to this action?
More than likely.
That's the defensive posture.
Offensive posture.
You can listen to people's speech patterns.
You can listen to the words they use to understand their belief.
This is where the, I would say that this particular offensive strategy is best wielded with active listening.
And what I mean by that is not thinking of what you're going to say while someone is speaking,
but listening intently on what they say so you can recognize their mental map and or
their beliefs.
People want to tell you their beliefs.
And if you think about that,
once someone tells me their belief,
now I could pretend that their belief is my belief.
And that's instant trust.
It's instant lifting
of the swords of the guardsmen.
It's allowing me to get close.
Hey, this guy believes what I believe.
He must be okay.
That's the offensive maneuver.
And beware of that on defense.
another point I'm going to add two beliefs is that they can be both empowering and limiting again it's neutral
but think about what beliefs you have and what beliefs someone else has are those beliefs empowering
or are they limiting and why are they empowering why are they limiting the next key point
the deep structure of what we mean
is not always clearly communicated
by what we say.
Our linguistic shorthand
often reflects an overgeneralization.
You know, this is a...
This is one of those ones that seems so simple,
but it's actually one of the most complex.
The structure of what we mean
is rarely, clearly communicated.
So many times you sit down with someone
and in your mind you think you've spoken clearly,
but that person didn't understand a word you said.
Maybe because they've been blinded by emotion.
Maybe they're in a state of fear.
Maybe they're in a state of stress.
Or maybe you failed to articulate what it is you meant.
Maybe you wanted to be nice,
so you pulled your punches and you didn't use the right word.
Maybe you're speaking to someone
who grew up in a different part of the world
and the speech you use, the tone you use,
is not conveying the message you think it should,
or is not conveying the message that it needs to convey.
When it comes to overgeneralization, it's so easy to do.
No one ever defines their terms before they begin the conversation.
Thus, overgeneralization becomes a symptom,
of the sickness that plagues our communication.
It's a good idea.
If you're going to be in a crucial conversation
to define the terms
you're going to use with the other person.
That's the defensive posture.
The offensive posture
would be to allow the person
with whom you're speaking to use over-generalization terms,
to use this ambiguous language.
That's going to allow you to,
not be held accountable for whatever it is they're asking you to do.
That would be the offensive posture.
These are going to be meta-programs, or I guess you could think of them as thought patterns,
and they're usually based on generalizations.
I'm not going to go over a lot of them, but I'm going to go over you the main ones
that'll give you an opportunity to understand which program you're using,
and if you might want to switch to a different program,
once you learn them,
you'll be able to go through them
and find out which one you use
and which one's best for you.
Let's jump into them.
Meta program.
Options versus procedures.
Is it more important for you to do something
the right way
than it is to have
alternative ways of doing it?
Toward versus away from.
Are you more motivated by moving towards something that has a potentially positive outcome or away from a potentially negative outcome?
Proactive, reactive.
Are you more likely to take the initiative to act or wait for someone else to do it or for something else to happen?
Internal, external.
When you evaluate something, are you more likely to use an internal, personal standard?
or to ask for someone else's feedback.
General versus specific.
Do you most often deal in the big picture or the details?
Match, mismatch.
When making comparisons, do you notice how things are alike
or where there are differences and discrepancies?
You see, everyone's going to fall a little bit different on that spectrum.
But you can go back and you can listen to that and you can apply
those meta-programs to your strategies.
You can apply those meta-programs to your offensive strategies
and your defensive strategies.
It's very important to take time and understand
which of those programs you're running.
Next key point.
Predicates are sensory-based words
that telegraphs someone's preferred
representational channel.
Visual, auditory,
or kinesthetic.
This one is really good.
This is one that most people never pick up on.
Have you ever heard someone say,
hey, that sounds good to me?
Oh, I hear you loud and clear.
That rings true in my experience.
See, phrases like that,
if someone used those phrases,
you would understand that that person
is an auditory learner.
The visual learner is going to say things like,
Can't you see the truth?
Oh gosh, you're blind.
You can't see that.
Or it's spelled out right in front of you.
Right there.
Look it, boom, boom.
How could you miss that?
That's a visual learner.
Which one are you?
Do you use those phrases?
Which phrases do you use?
That will explain who you are.
On a defensive posture, it'll help you to know how to better
interpret information. On a defensive posture, it's going to help you find methods of learning
new subjects by understanding how you learn best, be it visual, be it auditory or kinesthetic.
It's going to help you explain things to yourself. On an offensive posture, if you can figure out
the phrases somebody use, the sensory-based predicates someone else uses,
then you're going to be able to better explain to them what it is you want them to know
using their preferred method of explanation, be it auditory, be it visual, or be it kinesthetic.
You're going to be able to drive that point home for them.
That is the offensive posture.
Next key point.
Your self-concept is a generalization about your behavior that is based on selecting examples of events
that demonstrate your qualities,
collecting them together into a database,
and then using one example as a sort of summary,
what cognitive linguist call a prototype.
It's important to understand
that the very way you think of yourself is a generalization.
And if you can just say that to yourself,
if you can think it out loud or know,
your self-concept is a generalization.
Your self-concept is a generalization.
your self-concept is a generalization.
Now apply everything we've learned about generalizations to your self-concept.
All these previous key points.
Apply the knowledge that you can change your self-concept.
Apply these key points to not only change your generalization of your self-concept,
but physically change
the parameters in which you use to generalize.
The way you do that is you want to integrate counter examples.
Does that make sense?
If your self-concept is based on qualities
and examples of events in your life
where you've acted a certain way,
chances are they're going to be similar.
So you've got to do the hard thinking.
You've got to think of other times you did things that were different.
And then you compare and contrast those two.
It's tricky.
That's the defensive posture, though, is finding out who you really are and using your
past experiences to come up with your own self-concept.
And the fact that you know it's based on generalizations means that you can tailor your
self-concept to be true enough.
A true concept of yourself is the one you're looking for.
On a defensive posture, if you can understand,
how someone feels about themselves,
you know, what their,
what their self-concept is,
then you could feed them counter examples.
If they say to you,
look, I'm this type of person,
I always do this.
And then you say, well,
let me give you a different example.
You say you always do that,
but on Monday you did this.
On Tuesday, you did that.
On Wednesday, you did that.
If you can provide someone else
with multiple counterfeit,
examples of who they think they are, then you can change their self-concept.
It's powerful and it's provocative.
And you should be very careful with it.
Because once you learn how to do it, it's a very effective tool.
You can change the way you think about yourself.
You can change your self-concept.
And you can change other people's self-concept by feeding them counter examples of what they think.
It's kind of dangerous
Be careful with that one, please.
I think I'll leave you with another quick little story.
It is about generalizations
and it is about self-concepts
and it is about some of the key ideas.
I think it kind of...
I think that it ties together
the end of this course,
beautiful.
I heard a story once about
a Buddhist retreat
and people from all over Japan.
all over America and all over these different countries
came to this Buddhist retreat.
And on the first day, a couple people noticed
that one particular gentleman had stole some of their things,
some of their personal items.
And so they went to the Buddhist monk
that was putting on the retreat.
And they said to him,
hey, we've noticed that this man is stealing our things.
And the Buddhist just, he kind of waved his hand,
he didn't do anything.
thing, the Buddhist monk. And the next day, the same guy stole even more things. And now people
were beginning to get really angry. And more people went to the monk. And they said, listen,
this guy has to go. We need all our stuff back. This guy has to get out of here or we're leaving.
So the third day, the Buddhist monk calls everybody to the front of the temple. And to his audience,
He stands up on the platform and he says, to all my brothers and sisters here, some of you have told me about this young man stealing and how wrong it is and how ashamed of himself he should be.
To all of you, you are very lucky.
you are very wise and intelligent and good people.
You know that stealing is wrong.
You know that stealing from someone you don't know,
stealing their personal goods,
can have long-lasting consequences.
And you're free to leave if you want to.
But I cannot kick out this man that's stealing,
for he does not know it's wrong.
And if no one is going to teach him,
then I must teach him.
The young man in the crowd begins crying.
He begins understanding interesting story, right?
That's all I got for you guys.
I love you.
I hope you are having an amazing day.
I hope you are truly understanding
the linguistic pathways of success.
I hope you're beginning to navigate them
and use these techniques in your life
to make your life better
and your family better.
I love you guys.
Aloha.
