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Thank you for taking time out of your busy lives to be here tonight. What this group is doing here really does remind me of how NLP started in the first place. There are not very many places I've been in the world where the community spirit of NLP is creating what you are creating here. And that is a really wonderful thing and you all do yourselves proud. It makes me want to cry because this is what I want to see happening. I was asked to write something for a brochure and I want to read it to you, "The discipline known as NLP began, before it had a name, with an interdisciplinary community of people. [Richard Bandler, John Grinder, Leslie Cameron, Mary Beth Megus, David Gordon, Robert Dilts, and myself, to name but a few.] We were motivated by a shared curiosity about how we know, about how we learn, how we communicate, and how we change. And how we can influence the process of change in a well-formed, ecological way. The patterns of NLP were not imparted to us, but unfolded in our learning." I want you to be aware of just how special what you are doing is. That you can get together on a regular basis and unfold knowledge in this group. Because it really is about unfolding knowledge in a group of people coming from different models of the world. So, bravo to you. I will carry this around the world and let them know what you are doing here. In The Beginning What I want to talk about tonight is the idea of mastery in NLP, especially with respect to New Code NLP. "New Coding" is what I call it. It is another description and actually has about seven different pieces to it. I also want to touch on the development of Systemic NLP. Old Coding And a lot came out of the answer to one question: "How do you know?" The epistemological question. People would say, "Oh, I'm going to the show tonight." And we would ask, "How do you know?" We began to notice that they made eye movements, and we would wonder what was going on. And they would say, "Well, I can see myself going to the show." And we found out that they really do see something. We started connecting together the patterns of physiology, of language and of internal state. Once you understand the level of what patterns are involved, you can create your own patterns. People would go out with just the meta model and start meta modelling the hell out of people. They couldn't understand why they were losing all their friends! They were viewing NLP as technology, as a procedure which I call a ritual. There is no wisdom in a piece of technology. Wisdom has to be in the carrier of that information. John Grinder and myself thought, "How are we going to get people to start thinking about where is the wisdom?" and that is how Turtles All The Way Down: Prerequisites to Personal Genius got written in 1984. New Coding (1) State That was the first piece. And then we went out and began to look at people who had done interesting modelling projects, like Carlos Castaneda. What they had in common was using what I call the 'nerk-nerk' state. A state of 'not knowing' -- when you don't know... yet. You're gathering information in the system. You have intuitions about it but you don't know what it is that you know. As soon as you have an intuition, someplace in there knows something; it just has not come into consciousness. The pattern has not presented itself yet. But if you wait, and the pattern continues to happen, it will. This connects with Gregory Bateson's idea that there are always two ways of knowing. There's knowing in the unit of mind, and then there is knowing cognitively what we know. There is also understanding the relationship between those two. In modelling mastery, certain patterns began to emerge. One being the idea of state management, that a person has tools to maintain the qualities in their breathing, physiology, representation and beliefs that support the outcome of demonstrating mastery or excellence in the world. For example, as you sit there, place tension in your shoulders, sit off balance; allow your shoulders to press towards your ears. A typical stress state. How is your breathing? Is this a comfortable state? Do you find the physiology useful for learning? Where is your attention? What beliefs about learning do you maintain in this state? Now change position, move a little, maybe stand up and sit down again. Find a balanced comfortable position. Go through the body and release any excess tension, breathe and repeat the questions above. Which state is more conducive to learning? Another pattern we discovered is how to have the highest quality contact with the model. It requires a state where a person drops the filters of internal dialogue, foveal vision and excess tension. This is a very clear state, sometimes referred to as the uptime trance. It is a state in which we have interfaced our attention with the model where patterns are to be placed in our neurology and later extracted for the purpose of building a transferable code. A modelling state is quiet, without internal dialogue, uses peripheral vision, not foveal vision. (2) Conscious-Unconscious Relationship How many people have done something called a "second-position shift"? Most of the group. Do you remember the first time you did it compared to the last time? Is the quality much different? Would you say that each time you do it, it goes up in quality? Well, that is what I'm talking about. So what kind of mechanisms do you have that continually develop this relationship? How many people meditate? How many people pray? How many people do self-hypnosis? How many people do something that requires that the whole unit of mind act in a one hundred percent and honest way, as Gregory Bateson would say? Gregory also recognised that masters of anything have a highly developed quality relationship between their conscious and unconscious resources. In his words, a master knows when to use the tight thinking of the cognitive conscious mind, and when to use the loose thinking of the more creative unconscious mind. Take Milton Erickson's metaphor of the horse and the rider. The horse being our unconscious mind and the rider being our conscious mind. Of course all of us who have ridden a horse know what happens when the rider wants to go in one direction and the horse another. Neither one easily reaches their destination and it requires a lot of time and uses up a lot of energy. So that was the second part of mastery and the New Coding. (3) Balance Between Practice and Spontaneity I like the Aikido metaphor: you are on the mat and you practice and you practice, and when you go to meet an opponent you are not going to stop and talk to yourself. You are not even going to decide beforehand what manoeuvre to use. You really can't know until you interface with the opponent, because this is a dance with the outside world. (4) Perceptual Positions I have found that for some of us, this is the difficult one. We would go there, and we didn't want to say, "Well, it's only information." We wanted to say, "God, how stupid. I can't believe I did that." This is making sense of a pattern at another level. I can now see a bigger part of the world and understand it from a different position than when I was caught in first position or even when I occupied a second. From third position I can see the dance.
Those perceptual positions then began to trigger off a whole set of other possibilities and it began to connect back to the meta model. Take the cause-effect pattern. When I think of how a pattern demonstrates itself in my life, I begin to understand the part I play, the part they play, and if I go to blame, or where I feel blamed, I realise it is a cause-effect relationship.
So the idea of perceptual positions is that out of this dance of multiple perspectives, wisdom may begin to unfold. To really consider the movement from my personal map to an understanding of your personal map and then to an objective position of the relationship gives us a basis of wisdom. (5) Attention What happens if you move your attention to listening to the sound of the birds while you are interacting with a person? Does it drive your attention in a different way? Does it inform your behaviour in a way that is more creative? Does it make a difference? If your attention is in a certain representational system, with certain submodalities, what happens if you change just one aspect? You can change something very small, or very big. For example, here I am communicating with somebody, and I become... a woman from Honduras. Does it make a difference? Have you read the story of 'The Phantom Tollbooth'? The part that I liked is about the race of people who, when they are born, float around at the height that they are going to be when they are fully grown. They then grow down to the ground. And that is so that they never have to change their perspective. If we use characterlogical adjectives again, we can apply the idea of attention to discover how it might be driving the relational loop. For example, while in the interaction, I can notice where my attention is fixed, i.e. on a voice tone, a gesture, a facial expression, an internal sensation. I may discover how fixing my attention on some small aspect of the interaction is driving my state to a value judgment that may make the interaction uncreative, difficult or problematic. The idea is to discover where I fix my attention, to move it to some other aspect of the interaction and, of course, to notice if the quality of the interaction changes in a positive direction. This is another way of looking at the system; sometimes I want to chunk it down into small pieces, and sometimes I want to look at the big picture. Along that continuum of possibility there are places where I can begin to influence the system in a positive direction, with the least amount of effort for myself and the other person. (6) Filters We are designed to filter information. A big filter could be a belief. Something becomes believable to me because I sort the information in a certain way. If I am sorting for just certain information, I am going to connect that with my deeper experience and think, "Ah ha, I'm right. I believe this now." So not only is it important to look at belief systems and filters, it is also important to look at disbelief systems. If I maintain a certain filter and I do not have a way of moving my attention outside of that filter, then it is very easy to have the deeper experiences that are going to build a belief based on just that one filter. What mechanisms and processes do you have that allow you to move your attention around, to create opportunity, to ask, "What else is out there?" Because it is the differences that are going to be what makes the difference. In parts of the United States there is not much distinction between discomfort and difference. I grew up in Oklahoma where the attitude was, "There's a difference. Shoot it." You got your membership to the National Rifleshooter's Association at the same time you got your driver's license. These were really wonderful people but there was not a lot of moving around of those filters and accepting of difference. And the world is changing now. We can talk about filtering philosophically: "Am I really seeing what is in the world or am I seeing what is happening in the back of my brain?" But it is more useful to ask, "What are the filters that we can potentially let go of?" Then we find the edges of our map that allow us to know there is more territory on the other side. Most of us think of what is on the other side of that edge as uncomfortable, as opposed to merely different. Take the difference between a person having stage fright and a person really being frightened. There are certain physiological signals for both experiences. There are certain parts that are the same and there are other parts that are very different. Being able to find those small disparities in those states is a beginning of dropping certain filters. Am I seeing this person as directly as I can, or do I already have a set of filters, of hallucinations, about this person? As Don Juan's Castaneda said, every baby is born a sorcerer, every baby is born in the nerk-nerk state, not knowing... completely open to all possibilities. And then comes foveal vision and language. Those two big filters begin to get fixed. That fixing is a relationship between language, the external world and what happens internally as the child builds that deeper structure. If the rules in that deeper structure have relationships like cause-effect, nominalization, huge deletions, over-generalisations, then there are natural consequences for the child. How many people speak more than one language? Do you feel different when you speak that other language? This is one way that you adopt certain filters. Politics is another, so is religion, male/female, and animate/inanimate. Just because I can't see this chair moving does not mean that it is not moving. It is just that I do not have the apparatus to notice. You can't know what you can't know, but knowing that, you can begin to build a belief that operates at another level. If I know that I don't know, then what kind of things can I do to move my filters so that I can discover the edges of my map? We used to say, everything that you have never seen looks the same. In Winnie the Pooh , there is this great line, "The more Piglet looked, the more Pooh wasn't there." It's a question of knowing that and then saying, "What sorts of arrangements can I make in my life to move myself to the edge so the surrounding unknown becomes available?" (7) Multiple Descriptions Active Dreaming
Exercise
For me, the outcome for this exercise is to discover information. I want to use my consciousness to set the intent because that is where the problem is perceived. It presupposes that the lines are open to the larger unit of mind. Also it is a vehicle to continue to deepen the connection between conscious and unconscious. Systemic NLP When you have a way to move yourself, change filters, notice when you are in a loop with another person, recognise you're using characterlogical adjectives; when you are in there, when you are communicating with that person, where is your attention? And if you move it somewhere else does it make a difference? That is the only point. When these descriptions start to interact, you get Systemic NLP, which is just starting to develop. When I go right back to the beginning, NLP is systemic anyway. "Systemic" means this whole unit of mind. But then when I start to code it, it becomes not so systemic. Right? Because coding is never this whole unit of mind, it is only what consciousness can pull out and say, "Well, this will represent this, and this will represent that." Coding. That is the paradox. As soon as we code something, is it systemic anymore? At what level do we have to go to in our thinking to maintain the systemic nature of it? For me, there is not any new meaning we discover, rather it is something that we have sort of forgotten and need to recover. The question is then, how do we put it back in the body? We look at how the system emerges naturally. We look at how the system punctuates itself naturally. We look at how it goes out of bounds and then rebalances itself naturally. That is holistic, that is systemic. And I think this really is the next challenge for NLP. References: Richard Bandler and John Grinder, The Structure of Magic I and II, Science and Behaviour Books, Inc., Palo Alto, California, 1975 and 1976. Gregory Bateson, Mind and Nature: A Necessary Unity, New York: E. P. Dutton, 1979. Judith DeLozier and John Grinder, Turtles All the Way Down: Prerequisites to Personal Genius, 1077 Smith Grade, Bonny Doon, California, 95060: Grinder, DeLozier & Associates 1987.
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