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John then asked us to tell him “ what people wanted” ... what are the sort of things people say they want (or, more truthfully, act as if they want). He arranged them into a hierarchy on a flip chart. This goes something like:
Transpersonal: Beyond words, as are all examples within the categories really, but something like 'being connected with the universe'
Ontological ('Being'): Very individual responses, (as seen in the exercise, which followed).
Epistomological ('Knowing'): "Happiness", "Joy", and other wheelbarrow terms
Pragmatic ('Behavioral'): "watching football", "swimming", "playing with my son" etc. For our purposes we include speech acts and thinking in this category
Material ('Stuff'): What most 'untrained' people would come up with; nice car, lots of money, house, bling, etc;.
--This became a 'hierarchy of experience' chart Time for us to do a bit more, apart from sitting and interacting to get our words on the flip chart. But before we got the chance to play Jon did a demonstration, and Eric was the guinea pig. This was brave of Eric as he is a non-NLPer just along to support his wife! He made an excellent subject and we all learned lots from watching the demo. So thanks Eric. (He must have enjoyed it too ‘cos he’s been back again!) I think we took the break here and came back to do the exercise in pairs.
The exercise was to elicit (or at least to begin to...) the singular state of BEING, without need or desire, when everything is possible, the basic steps are):
- establish rapport - find out when a person would say they were 'at their best'. This can have been a moment in time, or when they are doing something they really enjoy, are really good at, etc. - deepen this experience using the *somatic* information presented. What's going on in their body? play it back to them, including using rhythm, tone, muscle patterns, posture, as well as any words. - when this has been established as a singular point (the test question is "like this, what's possible for you?"), elicit a *semantic* marker: "What's a word of phrase you'd call yourself like this?"
When we came back together many of us had learned new ways to be our best and found ‘anchors’ for that ‘state’.
Once again two hours proved to be too short a time for as full an experience as we might have liked. So for more of this visit Jon’s website and maybe join him and Sam on one of their courses. www.alembis.co.uk
Thank you Jon & Sam for bringing us this insight into the Mythogenic self.
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