Why be your real self when you can be something really worthwhile?
How much pleasure can you stand?
The meaning of a communication is the result you get.
Remember, it’s your own body, your own brain. You’re not a victim of the universe, you are the universe.
Most people plan by disaster. They think of what can go wrong and then they master it.
It’s an attitude that has to do with curiosity, with wanting to know about things, wanting to be able to influence things, and wanting to be able to influence them in a way that’s worthwhile.
Kate Benson is an expert in applying NLP in the education sector. She is thoroughly organised, highly skilled and the love for what she teaches comes across in her presentations. I guarantee you will have a thoroughly enjoyable experience.
You can’t change people by removing something. You must create a void and then fill it...
We should all rehearse and practise the positives in our life, rather than doing what so many people do.
People always tell me with absolute certainty that they don’t trust themselves.
The fact is that there is nothing wrong with most of us that a good, clean change of attitude and some new skills wouldn’t fix.
NLP is an attitude and a methodology, not the trail of techniques it leaves behind.
Brains aren’t designed to get results. They go in DIRECTIONS.
You can stop anything but a person with a good attitude.
The currency of living is how you spend the moments of your life.
I don’t think that understanding produces change. Learning produces change.
Physics changes, but reality stays the same.
Our biggest limit is not in what we want and cannot do; it is in what we have never considered that we can do.
If at any point you discover yourself hesitating, or being incongruent, or putting off until tomorrow something you could try now, or just needing some new choices, or being bored, glance over your right shoulder and there will be two madmen there, sitting on stools, insulting you.
Reframing is also the pivotal element in the creative process: it is the ability to put a commonplace event in a new frame that is useful or enjoyable.