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VK Dissociation NLP
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Friday, 13 July 2007 |
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V/K dissociation and NLP Neuro-linguistic Programming.
VK Dissociation NLP
V/K dissociation is a very effective method that can cure panic attacks, trauma and phobias. V/K stands for visual-kinesthetic which incorporates the sight and touch sensations. The method is also called the fast phobia cure because it significantly removes all symptoms of trauma and fear. If you are experiencing stress or phobias, V/K dissociation will help you retell and re-experience the event to help you respond differently compared to the original situation. Instead of having the same traumatic reaction, you can alter the stress response pattern thus eliminating all anxiety and panic. V/K dissociation offers several benefits.
1. It's fast. After one session lasting approximately one hour, you can already experience reduction in trauma, anxiety or fear.
2. It's effective. Over seventy percent of your symptoms are significantly reduced.
3. It's comfortable. You don't have to share events in full detail or re-experience the traumatizing events. The method is very relaxing using guided imagery or hypnosis.
4. It's easy. You can achieve results immediately and even incorporate the techniques yourself.
5. It's simple. The techniques are direct with no need for other devices. Repeated sessions are optional as the methods applied are basically done in the same efficient manner. Here is how V/K dissociation is done step by step.
1. Phobia. Calibrate the patient to present a phobic response. Initially, the phobia should be triggered to create the experience and provide a mental image of the fear.
2. Visual submodality. Let the patient picture himself in a visual submodality (black and white, animated or cartoon, etc.) just before the phobic response. The point in this is that a visual submodality is required in the brain to trigger a phobic response. Usually, the imagination is initially primed before the phobic response is presented so if the priming is reduced to a manageable level, the response will be either mild or nonexistent.
3. Watch. Give the patient two choices. He can watch himself in black and white or in full color. By giving your patient the choice, he can effectively perceive an initial phobic situation in a different light. Depending on the visual submodality that you selected in step two, you can identify which one triggers the phobic response, thus let the patient overcome it. Do the same with the kinesthetic submodality.
4. Reverse. When you have identified the submodalities, forward to the end of the experience which your patient has imagined. Let the full experience run backwards adding the trigger submodalities. In this way, your patient will have overcome his phobias. The point is that you can't really get scared of something which already occurred, you have overcome or you know will happen.
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