The current Pegasus NLP Newsletter is about incessant talkers – the people who talk at us – and talk and talk and talk.
Really skilled Incessant Talkers don’t just bore us, they actually affect our mood and our effectiveness – by scrambling our thinking.
I had an experience of this not so long ago whilst driving with an incessant talker as a passenger. As I began negotiating a tricky traffic situation I recognised that I couldn’t concentrate because their flow of verbage was preventing me from assessing how to handle things. Fortunately I recognised this in time and asked them to stop talking until I had got into the traffic flow. This they did – and immediately resumed their flow and continued for the rest of the journey.
Once I had recognised their style – and when to stop them from talking – it became a fascinating experience.For example:
From an NLP standpoint it was quite an amazing feat. And, as I listened, I tried to figure out, or model, what must be happening inside them to be able to function like that. (And, yes, I did ‘try’ to figure it out – without a lot of success).
The newsletter is the result of my subsequent thinking. It offers a few ideas on what makes them tick – and some insight into how their talking may be affecting their listeners…
It goes like this; you’ve been interested in NLP for a while and have found that it has made a difference in your life. You’ve used it to solve some problems and make a few valuable breakthroughs in how you think, feel and communicate. And you want to let other people know about it.
So you begin enthusiastically telling them about this wonderfully effective and powerful body of knowledge and how easily you can use to change your lie and so on and on and on!
Already you’re getting sceptical looks; you’re beginning to sound like a born-again convert to some cult or religion. Continue reading
What you do when you slip up? When you make a mistake, forget something, screw up, open your mouth and (metaphorically) put your foot in it, do something embarrassing, etc.
If you’re like most of us you give yourself a hard time about it. You pile on the guilt. Harangue yourself. Resort to endless self-criticism. Relive the awkward or embarrassing or failure moment over and over again.
All accompanied by the self talk: why can’t you ever get anything right! You stupid, stupid person! How can you be so foolish/silly/careless/short-sighted/… (plus anything else you’d like to add). Continue reading
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