
Avarah K'Davarah "I will create as I speak".
NLP stands for Neuro-Linguistic
Programming, a name that encompasses the three most influential
components involved in producing human experience: neurology, language
and programming. The neurological system regulates how our bodies
function, language determines how we interface and communicate with
other people and our programming determines the kinds of models of the
world we create. Neuro-Linguistic Programming describes the fundamental
dynamics between mind (neuro) and language (linguistic) and how their
interplay effects our body and behavior (programming).
NLP is a pragmatic school of thought -
an 'epistemology' - that addresses the many levels involved in being
human. NLP is a multi-dimensional process that involves the development
of behavioral competence and flexibility, but also involves strategic
thinking and an understanding of the mental and cognitive processes
behind behavior. NLP provides tools and skills for the development of
states of individual excellence, but it also establishes a system of
empowering beliefs and presuppositions about what human beings are, what
communication is and what the process of change is all about. At another
level, NLP is about self-discovery, exploring identity and mission. It
also provides a framework for understanding and relating to the
'spiritual' part of human experience that reaches beyond us as
individuals to our family, community and global systems. NLP is not only
about competence and excellence, it is about wisdom and vision.
In essence, all of NLP is founded on
two fundamental presuppositions:
1. The Map is Not the Territory. As
human beings, we can never know reality. We can only know our
perceptions of reality. We experience and respond to the world around us
primarily through our sensory representational systems. It is our
'neuro-linguistic' maps of reality that determine how we behave and that
give those behaviors meaning, not reality itself. It is generally not
reality that limits us or empowers us, but rather our map of reality.
2. Life and 'Mind' are Systemic Processes. The processes that take place
within a human being and between human beings and their environment are
systemic. Our bodies, our societies, and our universe form an ecology of
complex systems and sub-systems all of which interact with and mutually
influence each other. It is not possible to completely isolate any part
of the system from the rest of the system. Such systems are based on
certain 'self-organizing' principles and naturally seek optimal states
of balance or homeostasis.
All of the models and techniques of
NLP are based on the combination of these two principles. In the belief
system of NLP it is not possible for human beings to know objective
reality. Wisdom, ethics and ecology do not derive from having the one
'right' or 'correct' map of the world, because human beings would not be
capable of making one. Rather, the goal is to create the richest map
possible that respects the systemic nature and ecology of ourselves and
the world we live in. The people who are most effective are the ones who
have a map of the world that allows them to perceive the greatest number
of available choices and perspectives. NLP is a way of enriching the
choices that you have and perceive as available in the world around you.
Excellence comes from having many choices. Wisdom comes from having
multiple perspectives.
NLP was originated by
John Grinder
(whose background was in linguistics) and
Richard
Bandler (whose background was in
mathematics and gestalt therapy) for the purpose of making explicit
models of human excellence. Their first work
The Structure of Magic Vol. I
& II (1975, 1976) identified the verbal and behavioral
patterns of therapists Fritz Perls (the creator of gestalt therapy) and
Virginia Satir (internationally renowned family therapist). Their next
work Patterns of the Hypnotic Techniques of Milton H.
Erickson, M.D. Vol. I & II (1975, 1976) examined the verbal
and behavioral patterns of Milton Erickson, founder of the American
Society of Clinical Hypnosis and one of the most widely acknowledged and
clinically successful psychiatrists of our times. As a result of this
earlier work, Grinder and Bandler formalized their modeling techniques
and their own individual contributions under the name "Neuro-Linguistic
Programming" to symbolize the relationship between the brain, language
and the body. The basics of this model has been described in a series of
books including Frogs Into Princes (Bandler &
Grinder, 1979 ) , Neuro-Linguistic Programming Vol. I
(Dilts, Grinder, Bandler, DeLozier, 1980), Reframing
(Bandler & Grinder, 1982) and Using Your Brain
(Bandler, 1985). Through the years, NLP has developed some very powerful
tools and skills for communication and change in a wide range of
professional areas including: counseling, psychotherapy, education,
health, creativity, law, management, sales, leadership and parenting.
Contents of discription, Copyright ©
1999 by Robert Dilts
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