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Learn a new way to use language that makes you more persuasive and compelling, allowing you to influence people like never before.
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If you’ve read anything about hypnosis, you probably already know about the legendary hypnotherapist Milton Erickson. Read a book by or about Erickson and you’ll feel two things – awe and confusion.
You feel awe because of the incredible things Erickson was able to accomplish, often just by telling a story.
You feel confusion because you (or the authors) seem to have little idea of how he did it!
But it’s not just Erickson and a few other geniuses who have used storytelling as a powerful form of hypnotic communication.?
This type of storytelling can often be seen in our day to day lives. Pay attention to any successful politician, religious leader, or any other compelling speaker, and you will notice one thing they all have in common. They can tell a powerful, entrancing story that engages emotions and imagination, leading their audience to an intentionally designed conclusion.
Parables from the bible, Sufi stories, fairy tales, Native American storytelling, Norse sagas, Indian Puranas (stories of wisdom), children’s fables, government propaganda – you name ’em, they all have stories.
These aren’t just random stories. They’re often used to teach folks valuable moral principles and life lessons.
And they’re stories designed to have a specific effect on the listener.
These stories powerfully engage the conscious mind and the unconscious mind at the same time. Engaging the mind at both levels allows you to transmit ultra-compelling communications deep into the mind to make them permanently powerful.
Even if you already tell a good story, you’ll want to learn how to build a metaphor that is hypnotic and moves your subject toward a conclusion that serves them.
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Storytelling can be a powerful form of hypnotic communication. Pay attention to any successful politician, religious leader, or compelling speaker, and you will notice one thing they all have in common. They can tell a powerful, entrancing story that engages emotions and imagination, leading their audience to an intentionally designed conclusion.
Even if you already tell a good story, you’ll want to learn how to build a metaphor that is hypnotic and moves your subject toward a conclusion that serves them.
Elicit powerful emotions in people so they are moved to take action