Sunday 19 January 2014

Positive Intentions in NLP

Below is an example of just one of my many everyday observations in which I am constantly seeking to unearth the underlying positive intentions I see displayed in the madcap behaviour of human being, including myself, on a day-to-day basis.


What's your Intention?

Here is my small gift to you, an insight into how the use of intentions is integral to almost everything in NLP.

For instance, there are around 15 presuppositions or operating beliefs of NLP which are a list of principles for best practice which state such things as, 'Each Individual Lives in their Own Unique Model of the World.'

One of the most controversial and powerful presuppositions is, 'Behind Every Behaviour is a Positive Intention.'

This confuses many NLP newbies and I have hear comments such as 'well, how do you find a positive intention in something as horrific as child abuse?' Good question. One thing you must understand though is: the behaviour is not the intention.

In fact, the person is not the behaviour they are presenting and in some case we might discover a Father who beats his son and says hypocritically, 'I only want you to do well, son,' or the jealous lover seeking sweet revenge, totally out of character, because the intention they seek is love.

We use intentions in such NLP techniques (patterns) as Parts Integration where we separate two visual representations on each hand of two conflicting parts of self; one a part of you that wants 'this' and the other part that sabotages your positive intention and wants to do 'that.'

As we continue to chunk up and ask 'what's the intention or positive intention' of that (behaviour) we arrive eventually arrive at place where the common intention of both parts is the same.

It's as if both parts were unconsciously seeking the same intention on a much higher level, whether this was deep peace, love, freedom, whatever, this is the stage when the hands representing the parts begin to unconsciously move together and release the resistance.

Another NLP pattern the N step Reframe uses intentions to explore the positive underlying meaning of an unwanted behaviour. One of the ways we do this after noting the behaviour is to ask  the unconscious to generate 'a minimum of three new behaviours to satisfy the positive intention.'

Let me highlight how we can misread intentions with a humorous example:

The other day I was walking along Newcastle's High Level Bridge when a man wearing tight lycra cycle shorts and a fluorescent top sped past me on a racing bike ironically puffing (as if his life depended on it) on a kingsize cigarette.

In the heat of the moment, I performed what is known in NLP as a negative Mind Read saying, 'what an idiot,' observing his paradox of fitness and fags. Then I remembered positive intentions. He was riding extremely fast. Headed in the direction of Newcastle Job Centre.

I thought: 'what if his intention was to get to the Job Centre as fast as humanly possible?

If it was, then with the careful streamlining of his lycra and the effects of increased heart rate from the nicotine, given his enthusiasm, he could well have broken all land speed records! 

After all, that is his choice, isn't it?

So the lesson here is that 'the behaviour we see may not always be' the underlying or positive intention.


That's all. 

www.nlpnewcastle.com