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carldourish
10-11-05, 21:25
The Swish technique is not truly to do with hypnosis, though I have used it with many clients in that way. It is a very powerful technique for self-improvement

The swish technique is from a branch of psychology known as NLP (Neuro Linguistic Programming) and is used for a great many purposes by successful people all over the World. It is particularly suitable to help you deal with 'one-off' situations where you need a confidence boost, although there are many other times when it may be useful.

To use it successfully, you need to be in a comfortable place where you will not be disturbed. It's better if you are wide awake - you will have your eyes closed and it is easy to fall asleep during this technique because of its somewhat repetitive nature.

Sit or lie comfortably and close your eyes. Steady your breathing and relax your body as much as you can for a minute or two; play some favourite music if you find this helps. Now create, in your mind's eye, an image of you just at the moment of having to deal with the anxiety-causing situation. It must be as vivid and sharp as you can make it, filling your whole vision, the colours bright and alive, with you looking just as uncomfortable as you can possibly imagine. Make it seem like an enormous colour slide being projected in your mind, and include anything that will make it more lifelike; other people around you, their expressions, the scenery, sounds, smell, touch, etc. - anything. When you have that picture vivid enough that it actually makes you squirm, then you've got it right. We will call that picture the 'moment of anxiety'. Giving it a name makes it easy for you to recall later on, but for now, 'lay it to one side' in your mind.

Now for something more comfortable. This time you are going to create an image of you just at the moment when you have SUCCESSFULLY dealt with the problem in hand. Again make it as vivid as is humanly possible and do the same 'tricks' as before to make it truly lifelike. We will call this one the 'moment of achievement.' In it, you should be looking absolutely as if you truly have just been incredibly successful with the specific circumstance. When you get it right, when it makes you feel good, allow yourself to enjoy it for a moment, then imagine it shrinking, becoming smaller and smaller, with the colours becoming less and less pronounced, until you are left with a small black-and-white picture the size of a postage stamp. Then 'lay it to one side', just as you did the first one.

Now:

1. Pick up the 'moment of anxiety' picture, and make sure it fills your entire vision, just as sharp, just as lifelike, just as 'squirm-making' as it was before, but with an important addition. The small, black-and-white 'moment of achievement' picture is tucked into the bottom left-hand corner.

2. When you have that image clearly in your mind, just say to yourself:

'S-W-I-S-H', at the same time changing the pictures over in your mind so that the 'moment of achievement' becomes the large colour picture and the 'moment of anxiety' shrinks to the size of a postage stamp tucked into the bottom left-hand corner, becoming black-and-white as it does so.

3. Enjoy it for just a few moments.

4. Let your mind drift to some neutral place. This can be anywhere you like - a room in your house, the park, a deserted beach, anywhere, as long as it's a place where you are comfortable and at ease. It's very important that you perform this switch to a neutral place each time.

Now start again at step one and continue to repeat the sequence. After a while, you will find that the pictures change over so easily and so rapidly that you scarcely have any time to see the 'moment of anxiety' before it is replaced with the 'moment of achievement'. This can take as few as three or four attempts and should be repeated every day until the pictures change instantly right from the start, or you find that you simply cannot produce the moment of anxiety picture at all.

When that happens, you have programmed yourself for success, rather than failure.

Tan The Man
10-11-05, 22:50
Thanks for that Carl...:D. Really appreciate it.

Take Care
Tan

Barb
11-11-05, 10:28
Thanks Carl looking forward to trying that

Barb xxx

Piglet
11-11-05, 13:24
:)

Love Piglet

"Supposing a tree fell down, Pooh, when we were underneath it?" said Piglet.
"Supposing it didn't," said Pooh after careful thought.

jill
11-11-05, 13:25
Thank you soo much Carl :D[^]

Printing if off now [^]

LOVE JILLXXX

jill
11-11-05, 14:29
Thanks Nigel [^]

I try and read all threads, don't know how I missed the one you pointed out [:P]

TAKE CARE

LOVE JILLXX

carldourish
11-11-05, 21:08
I would just like to add a few pointers to something Nigel said.

I disagree about the emotional reactions to situations that happen very quickly that have the most profound effect on us. Those that occur more slowly don’t have such an impact.gree that emotional reactions

Has a therapist I have worked with many families whereupon one of the family members have been told they have Cancer. This is probably one off the worst outcomes. They our sometimes told that their family member has 3 months or 3 years to live. To me this is not a quick emotional attachment. This is a slow emotional impact, that lasts even when the member as passed away.

However I have used the swish method while working with the same families. Even thou the families have suffered a long slow process I have still easily altered their representational systems.

I alter each one of their sensory's inputs that alter that experience in their brain. This assimilation of the initial input transforms the experience into something different from the orginal stimulus. What we actual perceive are representations or models of what each of our sensory organs tranmits to us. These individual models ofassimilation are called representational systems.

At the moment we are recieving and prcessing input from all senses, even when we are not consciously aware of it. Each 'slice out of time' is composed of the element which make up the 4 - tuple (4T) Every 4T includes each of the representational systems: sight is the 'visual' (v); feeling is the 'kinesthetic' system (k); hearing is the 'auditory' system (A); and smell and taste making up the olfactory system (O).2 The 4T is written like this <VKAO>

In order to differentiate between experience of external origins and synthetic or internally generated experience, the subscripts e for external and i for internal can be used.

For example, I may be reading a magazine and turn to a page to see a full-colour picture of a sailboat (Ve) This in turn may instantly elicit the memory of the feeling of a boat rocking under my feet (Ki) the sound of sails slapping in the wind (Ai), and the smell and taste of the ocean (Oi). The 4T for that complete experience would be written like this.
<VeKiAiOi>

To review briefly, the 4T is a model of one moment in time, even if it is (FAST OR SLOW) It includes each of the four representational systems.

So it is their representational system that i wish to mess around with, and I can do that fast or slllllllloooooooowwwwwwwllllllllllllyyyy It all depends on understanding their 4T system & posture clues, like our they visuals, kinos, tonals or digitals.

Gone on a bit there, just got back from Germany giving a lecture on NLP, so my 4T's are working overtime

Sorry.

Carl.

milly jones
28-05-08, 15:27
thanks carl will try that this evening

millyx

samtheman
10-06-08, 21:35
I've heard Tony Robbins preach about this method, Never actually got around to trying it on myself