Home | Neurolinguistic Programming
You might be a counselor or therapist who has never heard of neuro-linguistic programming. It might be odd to consider learning it, because you might have been getting results with your current approach all this while. The truth is that in order to increase your own personal development and give your potential clients the flexibility to select their intervention options, you might want to seriously consider NLP not just as a therapeutic tool, but to help it enhance you ability to see the processes behind all the therapeutic methods far more clearly than you do right now. NLP is a process of modeling. If you've been on this site long enough, you would probably realize that it's really simple for someone to pick up NLP. All they need is to attend a properly structured training in NLP from someone in the mental health industry. It's also a much more effective way of creating change because you wouldn't need to explore different options. You'd be a little more effective in picking out mental strategies that a client is using, and utilize that information to create the necessary changes in your client. If you can define what their strategy is for being depressed, for instance, you can change that strategy. Some of you might think that this is odd. However, if you keep an open mind, NLP approaches will allow you to understand the process of thinking that your patient is going through, assess the belief patterns that they have, the patterns of thinking they are engaging in, and therefore allow you a much more educated guess about how they function. In other words, I'm not saying they 'created' the problem. I'm just suggesting that they unconsciously have a pattern of behavior that enabled them to live that problem, and they aren't conscious of how they do it. So, through a process of observation and clarification, it becomes easier for you to reach into the inner reality of the client, understand it, and challenge the inconsistencies or inappropriate ones that could serve to bring them closer to our shared reality. Eventually, continuing training in NLP is available online. At http://www.WorldOfNLP.com, there are multiple articles and reports that I've written that you can refer to and use. These can provide you with the insight needed to look at mental health in a slightly different way. Sometimes, I'd want mental health practitioners to learn additional skills such as persuasion - after all you will need to know how to persuade your clients more quickly, and break away their negativity or stubborness. I've also got http://www.NLPTeleseminars.com, where you can learn NLP in bite-sized chunks online. You can even ask questions directly and generate many learnings through the interactive teleseminar platform that we are using. For more information about this from me, you can visit http://www.NLPTeleseminars.com and register yourself for our next session, or enquire about our http://nlpteleseminars.com">Licensed NLP Practitioner training program in Singapore.
Stuart Tan is a Licensed NLP Trainer and has been creating applications and approaches for the purposes of mental health and positive living. For more information click to find out about the nlpteleseminars.com">NLP Practitioner and Master Practitioner training in Singapore.
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