Here’s a great demonstration of the NLP’s Mapping Across technique. Tad James and his wife Adriana demonstrate how to use this pattern on bad nutritional habits.
WoW, this was the first one I clicked on very clever. I am booked in to do a Hypnotherapy course with the Tad James Company in February here in Australia, am I in for a treat.
Thank you for this NLP for beginners I look forward to the rest.
This is a great example and I mention it my book as probably one of the best available on video of mapping across. Mapping across is a great way of showing the “magic” of the quick fix – and is really unobtrusive.
I’ve used it where I get someone to see a picture of themselves doing something they are really good at and finding a spatial location for that (those) images. I then get them to see a picture of themselves doing (or attempting) something they are not good at, perhaps even embarassed at their crass attempts. I then get them to map across the “poor attempt” picture to the location of the thing they are really good at. They are always agreeably surprised at the way they now feel about the “poor attempt”. Its a great trick to get pople feeling better about trying new tasks. There’s plenty of really good practical applications. Go for it!!
Adriana was going through the list in the NLP Practitioner manual though, because they wanted to follow the same list which the students would then follow in the exercise (I did my NLP Prac. with them a few months ago in Sydney).
I really love the way Tad and Adriana work together – seemed strange at first, but then you realise just how well matched they are, and one would fill-in any gaps in the other’s teaching.
WoW, this was the first one I clicked on very clever. I am booked in to do a Hypnotherapy course with the Tad James Company in February here in Australia, am I in for a treat.
Thank you for this NLP for beginners I look forward to the rest.
This is a great example and I mention it my book as probably one of the best available on video of mapping across. Mapping across is a great way of showing the “magic” of the quick fix – and is really unobtrusive.
I’ve used it where I get someone to see a picture of themselves doing something they are really good at and finding a spatial location for that (those) images. I then get them to see a picture of themselves doing (or attempting) something they are not good at, perhaps even embarassed at their crass attempts. I then get them to map across the “poor attempt” picture to the location of the thing they are really good at. They are always agreeably surprised at the way they now feel about the “poor attempt”. Its a great trick to get pople feeling better about trying new tasks. There’s plenty of really good practical applications. Go for it!!
very nice, do you have a youtube channel?
like to see more
Yes, great demo and this method is a great quick convincer.
I think Adriana would do better to be looking at the client though, rather than reading the submodalities off a list!
Adriana was going through the list in the NLP Practitioner manual though, because they wanted to follow the same list which the students would then follow in the exercise (I did my NLP Prac. with them a few months ago in Sydney).
I really love the way Tad and Adriana work together – seemed strange at first, but then you realise just how well matched they are, and one would fill-in any gaps in the other’s teaching.
Why did Adriana touch the clients hand when she was showing where the image was positioned? She did this for both the Jelly Donut and the fat.