[Neurons] 2023 Neurons #56 I THINK, THEREFORE I WRITE

Michael Hall meta at acsol.net
Sun Dec 3 21:14:00 EST 2023


From: L. Michael Hall

2023 Neurons #56

December 4, 2023

NLP A Thinking Model #9

 

 
I THINK, THEREFORE I WRITE

 

I do a lot of things as I live my life, yet at the core of everything, I
write.  And I've been writing for a long time.  It began when I was 14.
That's when I wrote my first paper that had nothing to do with school.  I
wrote out of the sheer pleasure of writing and out of discovering what I
thought.  From hearing, learning, reading, studying, and talking, I began an
adventure known as thinking.

 

Yes, I had superficially "thought" before I was 14, but mostly I was
thinking the thoughts that were given to me to think.  They came from the
textbooks the schools provided, from listened to the teachers explain facts,
ideas, principles, and understandings.  Yet all of that borrowed thinking
and learning.  At first, the learning was not something I "thought up."
Someone else, or many others, had originally thought it, and then wrote it
down.  Eventually it had become the school curriculum.  And that is how we
all learned when we're children.  By learning we inherit the wisdom of our
culture, our elders, our traditions.  It grounds us in the various subjects.
And ideally, along the way, we learn how to learn.  We learn how to think.

 

My first thinking, as I remember it, began when I was 14.  After I had
learned enough about a particular subject, I was then able to reflect on it
and actually do my own thinking about it.  I did not know it at the time
that I was engaging in the essence of thinking-"working an idea over in your
mind" (John Dewey).  As I considered the subject, I began asking questions
about it.  Then I did a most radical thing, I started doubting that things
were exactly as I had been told they were.  So as I dived into the subject
even more, I was able to detail facets and make distinctions that I had
never made before (the five essential or core thinking skills).

 

Now while I no longer remember the specifics of what I was learning, I do
remember the experience itself.  As I used my mind in that way, the effort
of mentally turning an idea over and around, and upside-down and considering
it from multiple perspectives, I felt like a little scientist exploring and
experimenting in a lab.  It felt great!  It was as exciting and as much fun
as physical sports or exploring in the woods or building a tree-house.  And
I wanted more.

 

>From that first experience of engaging in some actual and true thinking, I
began to write.  At first I wrote everything out in "long hand."  But that
was also the year I took "typing" in school and shortly thereafter I learned
to write on a typewriter.  But there was a difference.  Unlike the
typewriters at school, this was a mathematical typewriter with extra
mathematical symbols (my dad was a mathematician).  In that way, I began to
learn how to think and write simultaneously.  

 

Now if you have learned how to think and write at the same time, then you
know this experience.  You are writing about something and as you write, you
discover what you thinking.  It's an amazing experience.  I have often sat
back and looked at a page in the typewriter, or today, on the screen, and
thought, "Wow!  I didn't know that I knew that!"  Then sometimes, just
sometimes, I'll be writing and what comes out will be a string of words
describing something that creatively came together as I was writing so that
when I end the sentence and look at it- it is an entirely new learning.  I
didn't just write what I knew, but didn't know that I knew, I wrote
something entirely new.  As an act of synergy, somehow things come together
in a way unexpected and that represents an actual discovery.  If you're a
writer, you know what I mean.  If you're not, it is one of the real joys of
writing.

 

Over the years I have always used writing as a method for learning.  In
college, I would take notes, type the handwritten notes, and use them for
reviewing.  I continued the same whenever I read a book-I would jot down
notes and then use the book to type out notes.  When I took my NLP training,
I took notes on a small lap-top, and then would go back to write out the
notes in full.  That accidently is how I wrote my first NLP book, The Spirit
of NLP (1996).  Yet in 1989 I wrote that manuscript for myself!  I did not
write it to be a book, I was just consolidating the notes that I had
written.  It turned how others wanted to read it as well.

 

The same occurred for years as I published a monthly journal.  It's name
changed over the 18-years.  It began as Wineskins, then became
Metamorphosis, and finally Meta-States Journal.  After the Neuro-Semantics
movement took off, I began a weekly newsletter or blog, Neurons, not to
represent any official "word" for Neuro-Semantics, but simply as "here's
what I'm now thinking."  Often, I write articles to "test" ideas.  I will
put an idea out and see what kind of response I get. 

 

Every once in a while someone will disagree and ask to write a counter to
it.  That happened with John Grinder and then later with Steve Andreas.  I
welcomed that.  So I would publish their counter arguments and then write a
reply to it.  You can still find those "debates" on the website (
<http://www.neurosemantics.com)./> www.neurosemantics.com). 

 

That brings me to the writing I did when the Israel-Hamas War began.  As a
psychologist, I decided to write about a psychological solution.  I studied
the facts and perspectives from all sides and then presented my thinking.
It was just my thinking.  It was not an official statement of
Neuro-Semantics.  It was not a creedal declaration or a manifesto that
others were required to accept.  It was just my thinking at that time given
the facts as I could detect them.

 

I state this because of the misunderstandings.  Some thought I was declaring
"God's truth from heaven."  I have no idea where they thought that I, or
anyone else, could actually do that!  Some thought I was speaking for
everyone in Neuro-Semantics.  But given that we encourage everyone to think
and decide for themselves, there is no "official" Neuro-Semantic press
releases like that.  Others thought that if I took such-and-such position,
then they could no longer be associated with us.  Some wrote to me stunned,
"How dare I think such things!"

 

The truth is, we are all fallible human beings and thinking- real thinking
and learning- is our only tool for relating to the world, to each other, and
even to ourselves.  So let there be thinking -lots of thinking, and diverse
thinking.  In the end, it is just thinking-a map and not the territory.

 

 

 

About Voting

While I will never get use to the designation "gurus" because of all that it
implies, every year they run this thing.  I do it because it gives more
credibility and publicity to Neuro-Semantic NLP and what we are trying to do
in raising the quality and professionalism of this field. 

 

Voting helps with that promotion, so if you would be so kind as to vote for
myself as the most public face for Neuro-Semantics at this time.

 

At the top click "Vote Here" then NLP (9th one down).

   <https://globalgurus.org/nlp/> https://globalgurus.org/nlp/

 

Voting will end on 20th December 2023.

 

 

 

L. Michael Hall, Ph.D.

738 Beaver Lodge

Grand Jct., CO. 81505 USA

(970) 523-7877

meta at acsol.net

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://pairlist8.pair.net/pipermail/neurons/attachments/20231203/3e7440e9/attachment-0001.htm>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image001.emz
Type: application/octet-stream
Size: 1081608 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <https://pairlist8.pair.net/pipermail/neurons/attachments/20231203/3e7440e9/attachment-0001.obj>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image002.png
Type: image/png
Size: 67855 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <https://pairlist8.pair.net/pipermail/neurons/attachments/20231203/3e7440e9/attachment-0001.png>


More information about the Neurons mailing list