NLP: The New Technology of Achievement

Dr. John Grinder defines Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP)
February 18, 2010
John Grinder PhD., “What is NLP?”
February 19, 2010
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  • ISBN13: 9780688146191
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description
NLP has already helped millions of people overcome fears, increase confidence, enrich relationships, and achieve greater success.  Now the NLP Comprehensive Training Team has written a book that reveals how to use this breakthrough technology to achieve whatever you want. Short for neuro-linguistic programming, NLP is a revolutionary approach to human communication and development. In NLP: The New Technology of Achievement, you’ll be guided step-by-step through specifi… More >>

NLP: The New Technology of Achievement

Ed Andriessen
Ed Andriessen
Ed currently holds two certifications as a Trainer of Neuro-Linguistic Programming, one from the NLP Center of New York and one from NLP University at the University of California at Santa Cruz.He is also Co-director of the Princeton Center for NLP and is a Dilts/NLP University Distance Learning Affiliate. Ed has dedicated himself to understanding human communication in its many forms, and works as a trainer, coach, consultant and professional speaker.For twelve years, Ed has designed and led trainings and seminars in NLP, Management Development, Professional Development and Selling skills.Ed has studied with some of the best trainers in the world including Steven Leeds, Rachel Hott, Joseph Yeager, Susan Sommers, Richard Bandler, Robert Dilts, Judith DeLozier, Suzi Smith, Sid Jacobson, Michael Colgrass, Shelle Rose Charvet and Steve Andreas.

5 Comments

  1. This book and the new bestseller – The Exclusive Layguide: When Dating and Having Sex with Incredibly Hot Women is No Longer Mirage Even If You Don’t Look Like a Model or Don’t Make a Fortune

    – are my favourite books! I am sure you will think the same after reading them! Amazing books!
    Rating: 5 / 5

  2. FrogDog says:

    This NLP stuff does not lead to any lasting change, do an excercise and you will feel good for about a minute but no real change.
    Rating: 1 / 5

  3. I bought this book thinking that there was some secret “neural” or “linguistic” programming (like a certain set of instructions) I could follow to gain some sort of advantage in life, and what I got was just a lot of the same self-help stuff that seems to have been already covered by many others. The “technology” is really just learning how to think of things differently; particularly negative things that drag you down.

    There are also some ideas related to communications and establishing rapport with others that could come in handy.

    That said, precious little in this book struck me as being “new”. And to add bewilderment to my dissappointment there were also two particularly logic defying ideas that form the foundation of this “technology”.

    First, “Every behavior is useful in some context”. Hmmm, this was written in 1994. Did having a bunch of fanatics fly airliners into the World Trade Center maybe cause this presupposition to come into question?

    Second, “If one person can do something, anyone can learn to do it.”

    That’s right. One person figured out that mass equals energy times the speed of light squared, and so anyone could learn to figure out the profound principles that govern our universe. If one person can design a microprocessor chip, anyone can learn to. If one person can compose a recording like “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts” or “Pet Sounds”, then anyone can learn to. If one person can carve a statue of David out of marble (who did that again?), anyone can learn to!

    I could be a nuclear physicist, a computer engineering genious, a classical music composer, an opera star, a nobel prize winning economist –you name it — simply because someone else did! Brilliant.

    Well, I gotta cut this short because today I’m writing a bestselling novel, recording the next great love song, and designing an ion-propulsion engine for space travel. After all, one person has done those things. I can learn to do them too.

    Seriously, I gave this book two stars instead of one because if the reader has geniunely never been introduced to some of the thought pattern changing techniques in this book, then he or she could actually benefit from reading it. I could probably stand a little more “inner alignment” myself.
    Rating: 2 / 5

  4. This book has some valuable sections burried in a morass of New Age hype and cheerleading. I think it was the text for a series of tapes published by Conant. There is a lot of fluff, and the whole book probably could have been condensed into about 100 pages. Some of the examples are a bit far fetched. Why would I want to model myself on someone who spurns human society and lives to be a dog sled racer in Alaska? Oh, I guess she was following her bliss and we all should do that to fully realize ourselves and reach our highest potential. Blah, blah, blah, etc.!
    Rating: 3 / 5

  5. I recommend this CD very much. It is interesting, very easy to understand, simple and fun. It is a good begining on NLP.
    Rating: 4 / 5

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