Recorded in 1989, Part #1 of a multi-part Advanced NLP Training. Record if possible, No idea how long I'll keep up !!! ENJOY!!! Part #2 at: • 1989 Therapeutic Chang...
I have so much respect and admiration for this man. No matter what people say - freud, con-artist, charlatan, insane. This guy, this one guy, changed modern psychology, absolutely. Think about it. Every psychology magazine, every bussiness training or courses are based on NLP. It started in 1960. Just to gather all the facts - Richard Bandler started NLP, he was the creator. Through decades people changed it, modified, re-name it etc. That's why there are such controversial opinions on NLP.
I totally agree. I have been using NLP since the mid 1970s.... I have both of my children totally natural (without drugs) because of the forefathers of NLP.
Thanks for uploading these old tapes as I purchased these tapes some 23 years ago and they are no longer useable. I loved the education I had while doing my NLP training
I uploaded the full three videotapes of Unstoppable Confidence almost an year ago for people who want to learn from Ross Jeffries one of Richard Wayne Bandler's best students th-cam.com/video/gltN-EH5o80/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/pFwE6dFPlEs/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/HF001gVunMs/w-d-xo.html
Just one more example of his language. 39:05 "Run him through the bill, they'll come out the other side fine!" In the context, he's talking about people who failed. If you hear it as " run em through the mill," it makes sense in context. But listen to the analog marking, how his voice changes. Bandler is being assertive in his tonality. And hasn't he spoken about billing software before this point? I mean, listen, get a sense of what his story is. And then listen again, and get a sense of what he says to your unconscious. Absolutely amazing!
I don't know if you can see this, but, a really sneaky technique is that ... you can get someone to automatically associate the world 'bill' with the word 'mill', ... by, yes, saying bill, (b) but then intoning/ accenting the letter "m" in one of the words that readily is following. The accented syllable. You can do this through an entire paragraph, and their subconscious will be tying so many strings together that you the so-called critical factor will be wide open. Very dynamic technique, you see. This, and analog marking can make you positively dangerous. By the way, read Erickson's "Stage Hypnotist Back Syndrome" for powerfully designed instance of this. Be careful with that article, only the BEST students, it influences you. It's some of his finest writing all time.
So i noticed that he starts a sentence like, "if you can break away in the course if this weekend from thinking about NLP as a way to diagnose people and start to really get into the process..." then he doesnt finish this statement and continues with "Because it's what makes NLP fun and fascinating, it's when you really begin to see how these things interact... Because TO ME..." are these embedded commands? And throught the whole presentation he starts sentances with... "if" and doesnt finish the statement and throws in the word "because" and starts another statement... why? What happens to the unconscious mind when it hears the word, "because"?
I like his teaching... its different... but i disagree with not asking "Why" or "For what" because knowing why will easily find a new outcome. If someone is depressed, it could be simple as them watching the news 8 hours a day.
+Jonathan Andrews I think it's true that the why question can get us into "story time," yet I can understand the example of an abundance of TV news being a gateway into having the experience of feeling depressed. I prefer "tangents" of some of the outcome questions. How do you know when to feel depressed? What happens right before you feel depressed? These types of questions can give us a more useful sense of the causes than the "why" question. "Why," often creates a blame frame of reference, when the situational questions give us more of a structural frame.
Hello. What is the specific title of this NLP Video? I'm interested in purchasing the set if it's for sale somewhere. I might try to search for the set on ebay on occasion or amazon, and/or just google it. Thank you, Chris
+Lee R Who has it for sale, Richard Bandler? and where specifically? Can you send me the link. Originally, I later noticed this was part of a Seven Video set, I think called "Creating Therapeutic Change"
+Chris DesRochers search on google for the nlp store it's the first search result that comes up. What is your email address so I can send you more info.
download all of these on your personal computers to be sure you got them for future generations this is worth big bucks other people paid thousands even tens of thousands of dollars in therapy or even watered down nlp courses and still can live the life they want to live today it's a big luck we have now with internet nad youtube to see these powerful self help things for just cheap price of monthly internet service and an average desktop pc
my questions are based on the metamodel a part of NLP@@henryvillalona7833 good for deconstructing the client's limitied impoverished map with new choices new models new resources it's all in the sequences of what the client focuses his her attention to how and what images sound voices and feelings the choose to think or focus towards I learned this by watching almost all the free videos Richard Wayne Bandler during those decades ago workshops
Commenting to keep it fresh; this material still getting some love ❤
I have so much respect and admiration for this man. No matter what people say - freud, con-artist, charlatan, insane. This guy, this one guy, changed modern psychology, absolutely. Think about it. Every psychology magazine, every bussiness training or courses are based on NLP. It started in 1960. Just to gather all the facts - Richard Bandler started NLP, he was the creator. Through decades people changed it, modified, re-name it etc. That's why there are such controversial opinions on NLP.
When you said, "freud," was that a Fraudian slip?
@@gregjones9201
Hahahaha ... that is what I thought at first too.
I totally agree.
I have been using NLP since the mid 1970s.... I have both of my children
totally natural (without drugs) because of the forefathers of NLP.
Actually, NLP is based on psychology and hypnotherapy. NLP is a modelling system
I'm pretty sure richard was 10 years old in 1960
Thanks for uploading these old tapes as I purchased these tapes some 23 years ago and they are no longer useable. I loved the education I had while doing my NLP training
I uploaded the full three videotapes of Unstoppable Confidence almost an year ago for people who want to learn from Ross Jeffries one of Richard Wayne Bandler's best students
th-cam.com/video/gltN-EH5o80/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/pFwE6dFPlEs/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/HF001gVunMs/w-d-xo.html
Just one more example of his language. 39:05 "Run him through the bill, they'll come out the other side fine!"
In the context, he's talking about people who failed. If you hear it as " run em through the mill," it makes sense in context.
But listen to the analog marking, how his voice changes. Bandler is being assertive in his tonality. And hasn't he spoken about billing software before this point?
I mean, listen, get a sense of what his story is. And then listen again, and get a sense of what he says to your unconscious. Absolutely amazing!
mill
I don't know if you can see this, but, a really sneaky technique is that ... you can get someone to automatically associate the world 'bill' with the word 'mill', ... by, yes, saying bill, (b) but then intoning/ accenting the letter "m" in one of the words that readily is following. The accented syllable. You can do this through an entire paragraph, and their subconscious will be tying so many strings together that you the so-called critical factor will be wide open. Very dynamic technique, you see. This, and analog marking can make you positively dangerous.
By the way, read Erickson's "Stage Hypnotist Back Syndrome" for powerfully designed instance of this. Be careful with that article, only the BEST students, it influences you. It's some of his finest writing all time.
@@lawofoneacim9467 I couldn't find the article you referenced, would you link to it
This is great. Thank you
To think this was 35 years ago he was still ahead of the curve
"People are NOT BROKEN. Theyy work PERFECTLY. The trick is to find out HOW"
Great mix of computer science and linguistics! :)
I love this guy, thanks for the post!!!
NLP is great AND back then it was more complicated than it needed to be.
Genius...way ahead of his time.
Ray Stein I believe he's right ON TIME
American Jews are clever people not all but a lot of them (Michael Dell, Zuckerberg, Larry Page, Sergey Brin and many many others)
Part 2 of this series is UP at - Link not allowed BUT it's on THIS Channel !!!!
I love you, Richard.
1:36:40
I love this guy,
so smart, so simple, so sweet
Thanks for the post ! Happy New Year
Brilliant performance Bandler forever
What are the best dvds for learning about NLP today?
This is great. Thanks for posting!
Take this heroine it's free, after all that all you have to talk to is me and the needle.
LMAO this is why I love him.
Part #2 in this series has been posted on TH-cam at: watch?v=cN9ztUGCc_U (Full link not allowed) ENJOY !!!!!
This is great thanks Dave!
brilliant! Thank you.
So i noticed that he starts a sentence like, "if you can break away in the course if this weekend from thinking about NLP as a way to diagnose people and start to really get into the process..." then he doesnt finish this statement and continues with "Because it's what makes NLP fun and fascinating, it's when you really begin to see how these things interact... Because TO ME..." are these embedded commands?
And throught the whole presentation he starts sentances with... "if" and doesnt finish the statement and throws in the word "because" and starts another statement... why?
What happens to the unconscious mind when it hears the word, "because"?
Sounds like complex equivalance + cause + effect statements.
Nested loops
What does that mean?
49:20 Great take on secondary gain.
I like his teaching... its different... but i disagree with not asking "Why" or "For what" because knowing why will easily find a new outcome. If someone is depressed, it could be simple as them watching the news 8 hours a day.
+Jonathan Andrews I think it's true that the why question can get us into "story time," yet I can understand the example of an abundance of TV news being a gateway into having the experience of feeling depressed.
I prefer "tangents" of some of the outcome questions. How do you know when to feel depressed? What happens right before you feel depressed? These types of questions can give us a more useful sense of the causes than the "why" question.
"Why," often creates a blame frame of reference, when the situational questions give us more of a structural frame.
Hello. What is the specific title of this NLP Video? I'm interested in purchasing the set if it's for sale somewhere. I might try to search for the set on ebay on occasion or amazon, and/or just google it. Thank you,
Chris
Yeah, he has it for sale online.
+Lee R Who has it for sale, Richard Bandler? and where specifically? Can you send me the link. Originally, I later noticed this was part of a Seven Video set, I think called "Creating Therapeutic Change"
+Chris DesRochers search on google for the nlp store it's the first search result that comes up. What is your email address so I can send you more info.
Fascinating
In a setting of stupid a clown looks like a genius but a big fish in the ocean is only a little fish
Volume up pls
Any chance you have part 3?
+Misslink8 if was here before but assholes keep reporting them for copyright
download all of these on your personal computers to be sure you got them for future generations
this is worth big bucks
other people paid thousands even tens of thousands of dollars in therapy or even watered down nlp courses and still can live the life they want to live today
it's a big luck we have now with internet nad youtube to see these powerful self help things for just cheap price of monthly internet service and an average desktop pc
It's a shame that someone who co-created such a great technique isn't a very nice person and quite nasty at times.
How come?
A: I am depress.
B: So what
how do you know you are depressed?
how do you succeed in choosing to feel depressed now?
@@opreadumitru1 Your thoughts make you depressed
my questions are based on the metamodel a part of NLP@@henryvillalona7833
good for deconstructing the client's limitied impoverished map with new choices new models new resources
it's all in the sequences of what the client focuses his her attention to
how and what images sound voices and feelings the choose to think or focus towards
I learned this by watching almost all the free videos Richard Wayne Bandler during those decades ago workshops
57:30 OCD Medical phobias
Wow, Connirae Andreas is creepy as fcuk.
Just give me a day or two so I can buy a gift card, it is just internet security, but keep it up man.
right around 1:37:24
Brilliant Thank You
Duffy ffbggertisaac
Hey bro, thank you, get a paypal and I will send you a donation of $ 20 bucks. I really appreciate you sharing.