NLP: The Essential Guide to Neuro-Linguistic Programming Audiobook by NLP Comprehensive, Susan Sanders, Tom Hoobyar, Tom Dotz
Listen to this audiobook in full for free on http://hotaudiobook.com [http://hotaudiobook.com]
Title: NLP: The Essential Guide to Neuro-Linguistic Programming
Author: NLP Comprehensive, Susan Sanders, Tom Hoobyar, Tom Dotz
Narrator: Tom Dotz
Format: Unabridged
Length: 11 hrs and 14 mins
Language: English
Release date: 01-08-18
Publisher: NLP Comprehensive
Genres: Self Development, Motivation & Inspiration
Publisher's Summary:
NLP (neuro-linguistic programming) has helped millions to overcome their fears, increase their confidence, and achieve greater success in their personal and professional lives and relationships. Now, from the company that created NLP: The New Technology of Achievement - one of the best-selling NLP books of all time - comes NLP: The Essential Guide to Neuro-Linguistic Programming.
This user-friendly guide, written by three seasoned NLP master practitioners and coaches, leads you on a personal journey in using and applying NLP in everyday life. Through their real-life stories, you will experience the NLP strategies you need to achieve specific results in business and in life.
As you read NLP: The Essential Guide, you'll find yourself thinking in new ways and applying the techniques to your own personal challenges and opportunities for greater satisfaction.
Members Reviews:
My first experience with Tom Hoobyar's NLP expertise
My first experience with NLP was with Tom Hoobyar himself, doing an impromptu session with me at a conference in a hotel. He said he could fix some of my "inner head trash" and asked me if there was an issue I'd like his help with. This was a decade ago.
I knew NLP worked because a lot of top platform presenters and sales people use it effectively to persuade - with embedded commands etc. Take-no-prisoners sales guys don't give a rip about theory, as long as it works. So I knew NLP wasn't hocus-pocus.
I explained how my oldest son, who then was 3 years old, had this odd way of being able to push my buttons and make me angry. I knew it was irrational and it was MY problem. And I didn't like it. I tended to get mad at him very easily. (But not either of the other two kids.) I knew it was damaging my relationship with the little guy.
Tom says, "OK Perry, describe a scene where your son does something that sets you off."
I think for a minute and say, "He walks to the refrigerator, opens it, pours himself a glass of milk. Then he drops the milk jug on the floor. It splits open and sprays milk all over the kitchen and I get MAD at him."
Tom says, "Great. Now when do you actually feel yourself getting angry? Is it when he spills the milk, or is it some other time?"
He talks me through the scene one frame at a time. I realize I get mad just *before* he spills the milk, not after.
Tom slows down the film strip even more and asks me if I'm seeing, hearing, smelling, or feeling anything else.
This is odd. Like. . . what??? I don't know what he's talking about.
But he helps me slow down the frames in my mind even more. Suddenly I realize that at a certain moment there's this sort of blue flash of light in my mind and it's a flash of ANGER. It actually has a location in space. It has color and texture.
"Great!" Tom says. "Now I want you to do something for me."
He stands up and walks across the room diagonally, from one corner to the other. He points to an invisible line on the floor and says, "This is the time line of your life. This corner is when you were born, that corner is someday when you die. Come stand here in the middle, in the present." (One of Tom Hoobyar's favorite techniques is helping you understand how you perceive your own time line. Everyone is different.)
I comply with his request.