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Mindworks: An Introduction to Nlp: the Secrets of Your Mind Revealed | 
| Author: Anne Linden Publisher: Crown House Publishing Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $16.43 You Save: $8.52 (34%)
New (9) Used (2) from $16.43
Avg. Customer Rating: 17 reviews Sales Rank: 143158
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 288 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 5.9 x 0.7
ISBN: 1845900863 Dewey Decimal Number: 158 EAN: 9781845900861 ASIN: 1845900863
Publication Date: April 30, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New, Mint condition, Still in shrinkwrap! Limited Quantity, Order Today!
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Amazon.com Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP), a group of psychological techniques developed in the early 1970s, has been a huge influence on today's motivational writers (particularly Tony Robbins). As its name suggests, NLP is based on the idea that the human mind is a sort of computer; our verbal and body language are the programming that allows us to change our thoughts and influence other people. Annee Linden, director of an NLP training center in New York City, provides easy-to-understand descriptions of techniques such as mimicking someone's movements to create an instant sense of rapport and intimacy, or creating a conditioned response in yourself to feel certain emotions on demand. Some might find these techniques uncomfortably manipulative, but Linden says people do them on an unconscious level anyway; NLP is just a new way of coming to terms with what you already know.
Product Description Mindworks breaks open the toolbox of Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) to show readers how to use what s inside in order to accomplish goals and take control. Among the touchstones of the book: -You have all of the resources you need -Success is the ability to achieve intended results -You can turn failure into feedback -The map is not the territory -There is a positive intention behind every behavior -There are always more choices
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| Customer Reviews: Read 12 more reviews...
NLP focuses on the concept that the human brain is a sort of computer June 9, 2008 Everyone has the ability, says "Mindworks: An Introduction to NLP - The Secrets of Your Mind Revealed". It just needs to be unlocked and brought forward to the front of one's mind. NLP focuses on the concept that the human brain is a sort of computer, and that it can be programmed how one wants it to be - to bring the most out of one's thoughts. An intriguing and informative book from first page to last, "Mindworks: An Introduction to NLP - The Secrets of Your Mind Revealed" is highly recommended for community library psychology collections.
NLP made easy. September 26, 2006 This book is chapter after chapter of how NLP can be used in a persons life to better the way we communicate. Especially with ourselves. Nothing difficult in this book. It's all well explained so not to complicate things. Each chapter is an NLP journey. Such as >.. if someone tells you not to think of a cat chasing a mouse, we immediately think of a cat chasing a mouse. Read the book to see how Linden explains this.
Excellent Intro To NLP January 18, 2004 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
Anne Linden's Mindworks is a bit different than most NLP books I've read so far. For one thing, the book is highly organized, and reads as much like an encyclopedia as anything else. You won't find the author hop-scotching from one subject to the next or throwing things at you out of context. The book is well laid out, and is truly aimed at those with little to no previous knowledge of NLP. It helps you learn the basics from the ground up.My only real complaint about the book is that so much is devoted to theory, and so little is devoted to practical implementation of NLP. You'll find far fewer "exercises" in this book than you will in other NLP volumes. All in all, this book is a great place to start learning about NLP, and is an excellent reference on basic NLP concepts. If you want to put NLP to work for you in a practical manner though, you'll need to look elsewhere.
Excellent book July 20, 2003 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
This as an excellent intro and overview into the field of NLP. Linden has done a great job with this book, though it is a bit slow to get into, the wealth of information that it contains, is well worth the persaverance. It is a shame that it is out of print. If you are looking for a good book to introduce you to NLP, I suggest this book (if you can find it), and O'Connor's Intro to NLP. Both are excellent choices, that together give a thorough overview.
Big on ambition, poor on delivery February 8, 2003 6 out of 10 found this review helpful
Given such a low cover price you might think this was a pretty cheap book - until you discover how poor quality it is, information and accuracy-wise.For example, this is supposed to be an introduction to NLP, yet it makes no mention whatever of a key feature of NLP - the meta programs (mental filters). And whilst the authors do at least mention the meta model - another key concept in NLP - it gets far too little coverage (just 28 pages in a book 354 pages long). On the subject of accuracy, the authors invent presuppositions that are not merely unknown in mainstream NLP but actual contrary to NLP thinking, such as: Genuine NLP presupposition - "There is no such thing as failure, only feedback" (using the cybernetics definition of "feedback") Mindworks pseudo-NLP presupposition - "You can turn failure into feedback" How do you turn something INTO feedback if it already IS feedback? The authors appear to be equally at a loss when it comes to simple matters of fact. For example, they baldly state that: ' "The map is not the territory" is an NLP presupposition that's taken from Noam Chomsky' Oh really? So why does everyone else (correctly) attribute the epigram to Alfred Korzybski, creator of General Semantics? To cut to the chase, this book is too long-winded, too inaccurate, and too poorly written to be worth even the original cover price. Definitely NOT recommended.
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