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The swish pattern uses rapid-fire submodality shifts to associate two mental constructs so that one automatically leads to the other.
Guru wants to get in shape. His only problem is an ice cream truck that swings by his village every day at noon. So far, every time Guru's seen the rasberry-vanilla ice cream cone printed on the side of the truck, he's felt he had to buy one.
Guru realizes that one way to change his behavior is a swish pattern. He closes his eyes, and pictures the rasberry-vanilla ice cream cone right in front of him. He puts an image of himself with the body he's always wanted off in the distance. Now he pushes the cone off to the horizon and snaps the picture of himself into its place as fast as he can.
After doing this a few times, he brings up the image of the cone. Before he can think about it, the new image of his ultra-buff body pops into his head.
Now when Guru sees the ice cream truck, he instantly remembers this image. The thought of buying ice cream no longer even occurs to him!
The swish pattern is one of the simplest bits of submodality work. The idea is to rapidly swap the submodalities of two representations (images, sounds, or feelings) so that the first becomes a stimulus for the second:
NLP'ers tend to swish visually, as it has the best effect on most people. In this case, we've used distance as the varying submodality, but you could swish with size, brightness, color, or just about any other submodality or set of submodalities that effects the user. You can also swish in any rep system (auditory, kinesthetic, etc.) - whatever works!
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