[Neurons] What's the difference between...
Sharon Chong
setfree.x at gmail.com
Fri Jul 25 14:22:27 EDT 2008
Reply from Sharon Chong
setfree.x at gmail.com
just for share, off the top of my head:
The biggest benefit of understanding "frames" or "beliefs" and such, for me,
is that they are words; just words.
At some point as i was exploring Neuro-Semantics, i decided to stop being a
practitioner for a while
and imagined myself as a "semantic being" - a package of meanings FIRST,
without words to describe them yet.
This imagination helped me create bodily sensations for how something means
for me, how it feels like
to have meanings, enjoying the feeling of understanding the simplest things.
having these feelings worked for me. As i continue living, observing,
reading, learning,
i constantly go back to enjoying how new information (new frames) tweak the
way i feel about certain meanings.
And i find it liberating, to lose the adamant insistence to label it as a
"frame" or "belief" or "value"...
to allow meanings to just be what it means for me, without having to
classify each wave of them.
Along the way, i slowly discovered that meanings became what was ultimately
important to me,
regardless of whether i knew their "right" names or their "wrong" names.
having said that, trainers, i guess would have a bigger burden than just
experiencing.
so they may have a different take on this.
Sharon
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 9:34 PM, Graham Jepson <jepsong at iafrica.com> wrote:
> From: Graham Jepson jepsong at iafrica.com
>
>
>
>
>
> Hi Martin,
>
>
>
> I'm very much a novice exploring this world of neuro-semantics and I
> wouldn't want to give any definite answers to your questions. Like you, I'm
> keen to receive feedback. Questions help me think about things from a
> different point of view and that is what your questions did.
>
> It seems to me that we can have belief frames - frames where the content
> is beliefs. Perhaps we can also have frames where the content is something
> else - perhaps the content could be speech patterns or colour combinations
> or the way we see time. I don't want to diminish the power of beliefs,
> just to explore a difference in meaning between frames and beliefs.
>
> I guess anything could be called a framework, even NLP. Whether or not it
> is a useful framework is another question.
>
>
>
> Going away from your topic a little, I find the word 'belief' does itself
> arouse all kinds of non-useful emotions. The most common one I encounter in
> talking with people is its connection with religion and, in general, it's a
> big turn-off.
>
>
>
> (Martin – se vc seja brasileiro, o seu ingles e otimo!)
>
>
>
> Regards,
>
>
>
> Graham.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Neurons mailing list
> Neurons at neurosemanticsegroups.com
> http://lists.neurosemanticsegroups.com/mailman/listinfo/neurons
>
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://eight.pairlist.net/pipermail/neurons/attachments/20080726/e053ba08/attachment.htm>
More information about the Neurons
mailing list