NLP Café Brisbane

New & Classic Code NLP Practice Group for Brisbane, Australia – Bringing great NLP people together for practice

Posts Tagged ‘modeling’

An Announcement to The NLP community from John Grinder (the Co-Creator of NLP) and Carmen Bostic St.Clair. An Introduction by Robert Dilts.

Posted by Mark on February 3, 2010

Given that this year in our training, our business consulting and through NLP Cafe and other forums we will be focussing on Modeling, it would be a good time to re-publish some of the defining articles on the subject.

This entry is an article first published in The Model Magazine, Edition 3, 2005 – An Announcement to The NLP community from John Grinder (the Co-Creator of NLP) and Carmen Bostic St.Clair. It includes and Introduction by Robert Dilts.

Introduction by Robert Dilts to

A PROPOSED DISTINCTION FOR NEURO LINGUISTIC PROGRAMMING

Anyone who claims to know or care about NLP is aware that the process of modeling is the life blood of the field. The origin of NLP and its continued evolution come from the ability of NLP practitioners to model the verbal, cognitive and behavioral patterns (the “neuro-linguistic programs”) of exceptional people. It is frequently pointed out that the basis of NLP is modeling and not the “trail of techniques” that have been left in its wake.

For all of the acknowledgment and emphasis on modeling, however, there has not been a clear and shared perspective on exactly what NLP modeling is, nor an awareness that there are different varieties of modeling.

For some, modeling is essentially strategy elicitation. For others it simply means using NLP distinctions when describing some phenomenon. Others perceive modeling as the imitation of key behaviors.

The most powerful and generative models are those which capture something of the deep structure of the individual or individuals being observed. This is quite different than describing or imitating surface level behaviors. Reaching this deep structure has been one of the crowning achievements of NLP and requires a special methodology.

In the following article, John Grinder and Carmen Bostic St. Clair lay out a set of criteria for distinguishing between the unique form of modeling from which the initial techniques and distinctions of NLP were derived (“NLP modeling”) from other forms of modeling that apply NLP distinctions but use other means of information gathering and pattern fining.

The distinction presented in this article is a result of several ongoing discussions we have been having about the system of knowledge (or “epistemology”) of NLP. While different forms of modeling may be useful and even necessary in order address particular contexts or to reach particular outcomes, the distinction and criteria John and Carmen are proposing feel to me to be essential in order to more clearly establish and honor what is unique to NLP as a field as well as to respect its intellectual history.

I admit that my own modeling work frequently falls into the category that John and Carmen refer to as Analytic Modeling, and at other times applies a combination of Analytic and more pure NLP Modeling. I fully support John and Carmen in making this differentiation and believe it is vital that practitioners of NLP learn the unique form of NLP Modeling and understand its difference from Analytic Modeling.

As John and Carmen state, the distinction presented in this article are intended to be the beginning of a conversation for those committed to the field of NLP, an ongoing and hopefully fruitful conversation, to bring greater clarity, precision and understanding about the truly unique contributions of NLP.

As Gregory Bateson used to say, “Let it be heard.”

Robert Dilts

A PROPOSED DISTINCTION FOR NEURO LINGUISTIC PROGRAMMING

By John Grinder and Carmen Bostic St Clair

The development of any discipline, and especially one still organizing its initial patterning requires a certain attentiveness to precision in its fundamental vocabulary. Older disciplines have either clarified their fundamental terms (once or repetitively) and have established an apparent relatively stable platform on which further investigations and professional dialogue may be based.or they have fallen upon the sharp points that often protrude from their ill-defined terms, suffering debilitating and sometimes even fatal wounds that have precluded significant further development. Such ill-defined distinctions sway in the wind, impaled on these sticking points.

Some care must be given in making determinations with respect to a standardized vocabulary. In general, distinctions in experiences are awarded distinct descriptive terms while notional variants are assigned to equivalence classes. This is the normal business of a discipline during its formative stages: to achieve a richness of distinctions, a descriptive precision and simultaneously an economy of expression; in an ideal world, at any rate.

The distinction in question in this note is the term modeling as used in the field of Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP). In particular, the distinction between modeling as practiced in the field of NLP and modeling as practiced more generally.

NLP Modeling, in the creation of the initial models that founded the field of NLP, at present and in the future of NLP, references an appreciation of and respect for two criteria that apply to modeling in NLP:

  1. the suspension of any taxonomic and/or analytic attempt (all f2 transforms as described in Whispering in the Wind) see Whispering in the Wind) to understand consciously the patterning of the genius or model of excellence during the assimilation stage of patterning and until the following criterion is met
  2. the modeler must demonstrate the ability to reproduce the patterning of the model in parallel contexts and in such contexts elicit roughly the same responses from client with roughly the same quality and time commitment as the original genius or model of excellence prior to beginning the challenging and rewarding activity of codification of the patterning demonstrated by the modeler

We further note that all modeling work products failing to meet these criteria are to be classified as some other logical type of model – we suggest Analytic Modeling as a general term for such work products; employing the patterning and the distinctions available in the technology of NLP applications but failing to respect the definition of NLP modeling.

It is also quite clear that there are applications (e.g. modeling a story teller) or contexts (e.g. the model is not available, deceased) in which the rather more extended and demanding commitment implied by NLP modeling may not be either applicable or the most efficacious or efficient strategy for explicating the patterning of a genius or extraordinary individual whose patterning is of interest. We intend this statement to be a recognition that there are other forms of modeling perfectly legitimate as strategies for learning which, nevertheless fail to meet the criteria that we are proposing defines NLP modeling.

The essential difference of consequence between the process of NLP modeling and Analytic modeling is the relative contributions of the model and modeler to the final work product. This difference resides principally in the degree of imposition of the perceptual and analytic categories of the modeler during the modeling process. – in the case of NLP modeling, the imposition is minimal; in the case of Analytic modeling, the imposition is maximal. These two extremes define a continuum of possibilities and it may well be that other practitioners of other forms of modeling may wish to propose further distinctions. We would welcome such refinements but at present will content ourselves with the one proposed here.

The requirements that the development of all cognitive representations be systematically suspended during the unconscious assimilation phase and the requirement that the modeler demonstrate the ability to perform as does the origin model or genius prior to beginning any cognitive coding describes the source of these profound differences.

The intention behind this description is to ensure that this distinction – arguable the most revolutionary contribution of NLP – is preserved and that by the systematic use of this distinction, the public may appreciate the differences between the two logical classes of models and the distinctive processes of modeling thereby implied: NLP modeling and Analytic modeling. We invite well-intentioned practitioners of NLP to join us in preserving the distinction herein proposed or to offer commentary about how such an essential distinction can be preserved in the field of Neuro-Linguistic Programming..

We further invite members of the NLP community who are considering participating in courses presenting modeling to request clarification of the type of modeling being presented. Such activity will ensure that the distinction is maintained in the field and that participants in courses will be able to determine whether the type of modeling is what they wish to master.

Carmen Bostic St. Clair

John Grinder

Bonny Doon, California October, 2005

References

“A Proposed Distinction for Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP)”
St. Clair, Carmen Bostic; and Grinder, John. The Model Magazine, Vol. 3, pp. 1-3, 2005. The Model Magazine is issued free of charge to members of The British Board of Neuro-Linguistic Programming and is also available for non members on subscription and per copy. © BBNLP 2005. Published quaterly, printed by Target Printing, www.TargetPrinting.co.uk. (The Model Magazine is not in circulation any more)
“Whispering in the Wind”
St. Clair, Carmen Bostic; and Grinder, John. . Scotts Valley CA, J & C Enterprises, 2001

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NLP Café News (Jan 2010)

Posted by nlpcafequeensland on January 28, 2010

Welcome to another year of wonderful NLP Café Brisbane activities. As we enter into our third year of operation and continue to evolve NLP Café Brisbane, we hope to bring you sessions that can elevate your NLP skills and ours!

Our particular interest this year is “Modeling”. Modeling is so critical yet not many NLPers seem to actively “Model”. NLPers who do model often are on their own in their endeavour and when they need assistance, experienced Modellers are few and far in between. This year we will organise special sessions for NLP Practitioners to practice Modeling. For members who are interested in running special modeling projects we are interested to hear from you and work with you outside of the NLP Café Brisbane setting too.

Another interest for us this year is the different ways to expand our sensory experiences, such as the Night Walking will provide.
The open coaching session with the public was a great hit last year and we will continue the session this year.

We will be adding cross-marketed events such as Jonathan Altfeld in April (scroll to April) and other great trainers as their events come up.

Be sure to watch for other schedules during the year as the training and NLP Cafe’s grows…

NLP Café’s in Queensland:

NLPCaféGoldCoast.com.au

NLPCaféSunshineCoast.com.au

NLPCaféBrisbane.com.au

Posted in Cross Marketing Events, Free to public, NLP Cafe - NLP Practice Group, NLP Training, modelling | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

“A Taste of Wizardry” evening event in Brisbane 27/Oct/2009

Posted by Mark on October 6, 2009

“A Taste of Wizardry” evening event in Brisbane!

Here’s some exciting news for those of you who could benefit from becoming more charismatic, more influential, and more effective as a leader.

We’re about to get our very first visit in Brisbane from NLP Trainer Jonathan Altfeld, based in the USA, who’s been training in Sydney & Melbourne about once a year for the past 8 years. Jonathan trained primarily with NLP co-founder Richard Bandler but has also trained with many others.

He’s known in NLP circles not only as being an expert at the casual & practical use of NLP in normal everyday circumstances, but also as a true innovator, having authored a range of very unique NLP home study materials and creating a line-up of very unusual courses not found anywhere else.

Jonathan does not teach the usual certification trainings anymore, or even believe that the typical common single path through all 3 certification trainings (Practitioner, Master Practitioner, Trainers
Training) is necessarily right for everyone. He believes what trainings we each take should begin with a great Practitioner training for a solid foundation, and then explore shorter courses from a range of high quality trainers, that are more targeted for your particular desired outcomes and life goals. After all, do we all buy the same brand and size of shoes? Of course not. If we do something as mundane as buying shoes in such a highly personal way, we should certainly do the same with something as important to us as our own training path and personal development truly is.

So, Jonathan has become known for his unique short courses in APPLIED NLP. He trains NLP for use in voice development, or public speaking, or sales, or training design, or modeling, or body language mastery, etc.

Sign up for “A Taste of Wizardry”, and… get 5 mini seminars in one evening!

This evening is only $39 for 3+ hours and 5 skills.

To check out the specific dates for each City and book now, go to Jonathan Alfeld’s website.



You’ll get a taste of each of the NLP courses Jonathan delivers and Jonathan will teach one skill from each of 5 of his applied NLP courses:

  1. From his “Finding YOUR Irresistible Voice” 3-day weekend course: Jonathan will teach powerhouse *Embedded Commands* delivery skills. As perhaps the top “voice development” guy in NLP today, Jonathan is arguably one of the top authorities on the optimal way to create this hypnotic auditory effect. Most NLP’ers, in Jonathan’s experience, have needed fine-tuning here.
  2. From his “Holographic Communication” 5-day Speakers course (which is being taught in Melbourne on this trip!): Jonathan will teach *Semantic Priming*: Here’s how to ensure people interpret what you say… the way you want them to. Why leave Interpretation to Chance or Free-Will, if you don’t have to?
  3. From his “Knowledge Engineering” 3-day Modeling/Belief Systems course: Jonathan will teach the distinctions (comparisons/contrasts) between *Inductive vs. Deductive* reasoning, more commonly known as backward vs. forward thinking. Further, you’ll learn WHY you benefit from knowing the distinctions, and knowing which you’re using at what time. Any NLP’er wanting/claiming to do truly clean, content free work — may not be quite as clean/content-free as they think, but this knowledge/skill will help get you there.
  4. From his “Silent Exchanges” 3-day Body Language weekend course: Jonathan will train *Unusual Nonverbal Pattern Interrupts and Handshake Interrupts.* Ever the Pragmatist… you’ll learn both obvious and subtle ways to interrupt someone’s attention without causing someone to think you’re being rude. And you’ll learn some extraordinarily subtle nuances to doing this well and influentially — even in a modern corporate environment.
  5. From his “FAST* Training Design” 2-day weekend course: Jonathan will train *Chunking Oscillation* for maximum interest, integration, and maintained attention span. This course teaches people how to (a) structure seminars for maximum impact/response, and (b) design exercise drills on the fly to meet any unique need (partly based on Ericksonian tasking). Oscillating chunking is one specific skill that helps fractionate an audiences attention, and create learning tension (not stress, but a push-pull effect during the learning process). In short, people will become and remain riveted to your delivery.

Upon arrival, you’ll be handed one complimentary copy of a CD valued at $25 from Jonathan Altfeld, as well as Handouts with Notes useful for reminders after the evening.
The tuition fee for this evening is AU$39 per person for ~3 hours of content training, one of Jonathan’s bonus CD’s, and a packet of notes to take home.

More information or Register on Jonathan Alfeld’s website

You can go to “A Taste of Wizardry” on Jonathan Alfied’s website, or straight to one of the Event Registration Pages if you are ready to register now.

NOTES: All Evenings begin at 7:00pm & go to ~10:00pm. Also. Each venue being reserved is of limited size; So book your place(s) now to ensure you don’t miss out!


     * BRISBANE: Tuesday 27 October 2009, 7pm-10pm
      A Taste of Wizardry - an evening with Jonathan Altfeld
      Venue: Mercure Hotel, 85-87 North Quay, Brisbane.
      Tel (07) 3237 2300

See Jonathan Altfeld’s website to check out the specific dates for each City and book.

Cross-Marketed with NLPCafeBrisbane

Cross-Marketed with NLPCafeBrisbane, raising the standard of NLP Practice groups.

To obtain any of the products that Jonathan Altfeld displayed or mentioned during the evening, visit NLP Products page to review or order now.

Posted in Cross Marketing Events, NLP Cafe - NLP Practice Group, NLP Training, NLP Training Brisbane, NLP Training for Business, Process, Schedule, Self Management | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »